Roslyn 2022_07_29

Page 1

Serving Roslyn, East Hills, Roslyn Estates, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Greenvale, Old Westbury and North Hills

$1.50

Friday, July 29, 2022

Vol. 10, No. 30

HEALTH, WELLNESS AND BEAUTY

DEADLY CRASH ON LIE IN ROSLYN

ROP OFFICIALS ON ANTISEMITIC FLIERS

PAGES 23-26

PAGE 2

PAGE 19

Staffer charged in $8.4M theft from Schechter West Islip man allegedly purchased 5 homes on Fire Island with stolen funds BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z An employee of the Schechter School of Long Island in Williston Park allegedly stole more than $8.4 million from the school to purchase homes on Fire Island and pay for his daughter’s college tuition, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office said Monday. West Islip resident David Ostrove, 51, used the school’s PayPal and Stripe accounts to transfer funds into a personal PayPal account between March 2014 and April 2022, officials said. Ostrove then transferred the stolen funds into various other bank accounts that had him listed as the sole account holder, according to the DA. Ostrove is accused of using the stolen funds to purchase five homes on Fire Island between 2018 and 2021 by utilizing five different shell corporations, the authorities said. More than $1.4 million in stolen funds were allegedly used to renovate the Fire Island properties, resulting in Ostrove receiving roughly $600,000 in rental income, officials said. He also purchased two Mercedes Benz vehicles, a 1965 Mustang, a 2021 Lincoln Navigator and collectible coins with the stolen funds, the DA’s office said. Ostrove also allegedly used the stolen funds to finance his daughter’s college tuition and make home equity payments on his West

Islip home. Because some of the alleged activity was related to his West Islip home, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office is prosecuting the case, despite the private school being located in Nassau County, officials said. Ostrove, who spent 11 years at the school and served as its chief financial and technology officer and director of operations, is charged with firstdegree grand larceny and first-degree money laundering, officials said. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of up to 25 years in prison, according to the release. “As alleged in the indictment, this defendant was trusted to oversee and safeguard the funds of this institution. However, he violated that trust and instead stole money earmarked to educate children to fund his own lavish lifestyle,” Suffolk District Attorney Raymond Tierney said in a statement. “These alleged violations are clearly not only a breach of the trust between an employee, employer, and students, they are against the law.” John LoTurco, Ostrove’s attorney, said in a statement that his client “adamantly denies” the charges handed down by the district attorney’s office. “In the meantime, we will closely scrutinize the district attorney’s evidence and financial records by retainContinued on Page 39

PHOTO COURTESY OF ROSLYN PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Lilian Berrezueta, a senior at Roslyn High School. she is the first student in Roslyn to receive the biliteracy seal in two languages: French and Spanish. See story on page 47.

MTA plans public hearings on proposed LIRR schedule BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z

Shore commuters and elected officials in recent weeks. The proposed changes, residents Metropolitan Transportation Authority officials announced dates for and officials said, would short change two virtual public hearings for resi- commuters throughout Port Washdents to discuss the proposed chang- ington, Plandome, Manhasset and es to the Port Washington branch, Great Neck by decreasing express which has raised the ire of North service. The changes are part of the

MTA’s $11.2 billion East Side Access Project. While Long Island Rail Road officials maintained a majority of Port Washington line commuters would benefit from the updated schedule, saying that there will be a 70% inContinued on Page 39

Th e I s l a n d360.co m Come visit for the latest in breaking news.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.