The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

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The Port TIMES RECORD Port Jefferson • Belle terre • Port Jefferson station • terrYVille Volume 29, No. 7 January 14, 2016 $1.00 91 Gnarled Hollow Rd. EAST SETAUKET 631–751–1515 CHARIOT COLLISION CENTER We work with all insurance companies and we will handle all your claim needs Annie O’Shea grabs gold Port Jefferson Station athlete earns first place in skeleton World Cup race in Lake Placid Photos by Pat Hendrick at top, annie o’shea practices in lake Placid prior to the World Cup race. above, o’shea flaunts her new gold medal. BY Daniel Dunaief Everything started turning around for Port Jefferson Station’s Annie O’Shea this past summer. A veteran of the high-speed world of skeleton racing, O’Shea had a reputation for her extraor- dinary sprinting speed. She just had to put it all together. In skeleton, where racers use the same tracks as bobsled, com- petitors clad in aerodynamic suits and helmets, sprint at top speed with their hands on their sleds for five seconds, until they dive on top of the sled, steering through treacherous turns at speeds faster than 80 miles per hour by shiſt- ing their body weight. “For years, she’s been known for having one of the fastest starts in the world, and then los- ing that on the way down,” said Tuffy Latour, the head coach of the United States skeleton team. But not anymore. At an International Bobsleigh & Skeleton Federation World Cup race last week, O’Shea was poised to do something she’d never done on her home track in Lake Placid: collect a medal. Behind the leaders by a tenth of a second aſter the first of two heats, she visited with her skel- eton coaches and her condition- ing coach, Brett Willmott, who is also the associate head track and field coach at the University of Vermont. “Her first run, she was a little sloppy” with her sprint, Willmott said. “I told her to be aggressive in the last four steps. at’s all she needed to know.” With a physical game plan, O’Shea, 28, stood at the starting gate, waiting her turn to dig her SKELETON continued on page A11 Swearing is caring Town officials take oaths to start new terms PAGE A4 Barns’ last hurrah Exhibit makes final stop in Port Jeff Also inside: celebrating black history, Sandy Hook children’s book review PAGE B1

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Transcript of The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

Page 1: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

The Port TIMES RECORDPort Jefferson • Belle terre • Port Jefferson station • terrYVille

Volume 29, No. 7 January 14, 2016 $1.00

91 Gnarled Hollow Rd.EAST SETAUKET 631–751–1515

CHARIOT COLLISION CENTERWe work with all insurance companies and we will handle all your claim needs

Annie O’Shea grabs goldPort Jefferson Station athlete earns first place in skeleton World Cup race in Lake Placid

Photos by Pat Hendrick at top, annie o’shea practices in lake Placid prior to the World Cup race. above, o’shea flaunts her new gold medal.

BY Daniel Dunaief

Everything started turning around for Port Jefferson Station’s Annie O’Shea this past summer.

A veteran of the high-speed world of skeleton racing, O’Shea had a reputation for her extraor-dinary sprinting speed. She just had to put it all together.

In skeleton, where racers use the same tracks as bobsled, com-petitors clad in aerodynamic suits and helmets, sprint at top speed with their hands on their sleds for five seconds, until they dive on top of the sled, steering through treacherous turns at speeds faster than 80 miles per hour by shift-ing their body weight.

“For years, she’s been known for having one of the fastest starts in the world, and then los-ing that on the way down,” said Tuffy Latour, the head coach of

the United States skeleton team.But not anymore.At an International Bobsleigh

& Skeleton Federation World Cup race last week, O’Shea was poised to do something she’d never done on her home track in Lake Placid: collect a medal.

Behind the leaders by a tenth of a second after the first of two heats, she visited with her skel-eton coaches and her condition-ing coach, Brett Willmott, who is also the associate head track and field coach at the University of Vermont.

“Her first run, she was a little sloppy” with her sprint, Willmott said. “I told her to be aggressive in the last four steps. That’s all she needed to know.”

With a physical game plan, O’Shea, 28, stood at the starting gate, waiting her turn to dig her

SKELETON continued on page A11

Swearing is caringTown officials take oaths

to start new terms PAgE A4

Barns’ last hurrahExhibit makes final stop in Port Jeff

Also inside: celebrating black history, Sandy Hook children’s book review

PAgE B1

Page 2: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

PAGE A2 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2016

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File photoSchool officials are projecting a modest increase in taxes next year for Port Jefferson residents.

By Elana Glowatz

If all goes according to plan, Port Jef-ferson school district residents will pay almost the same in taxes next year.

Between those taxes, state aid and other revenues, the total budget for 2016-17 could actually go down, according to a presentation from Assistant Superin-tendent for Business Sean Leister at the school board meeting on Tuesday night. That’s largely because the district would not spend as much on capital projects next year, with the new high school el-evator being one big-ticket item that will not be repeated, and because the district will see a drop in its debt repayments.

Those two significant decreases would offset increases in health in-surance payments and transportation costs, among others.

The proposed $41.3 million plan would maintain all academic programs and staffing levels, despite the 2.5 per-cent decrease in spending as compared to the 2015-16 budget. But Leister noted that the tax levy would go in the op-posite direction — residents would see a slight increase of 0.11 percent. That levy bump would come in just below the state-mandated cap on how much it could increase next year, which Leister

estimates at 0.16 percent.Leister’s estimate for next year’s in-

crease in state aid is larger: He’s putting that at 6 percent, a number he called “conservative,” especially in light of the recent discussion between state officials about the Gap Elimination Adjustment.

The adjustment, a deduction taken out of each New York school district’s state aid, was enacted several years ago to help get the state government out of a fiscal crisis. The deduction has been decreasing lately, and there is talk that it could be removed completely in the coming cycle.

Leister is not as optimistic.“I’ll believe it when I see it,” he said.If, however, Port Jefferson receives

more state aid than it allots for in the budget, Leister said school officials would decide together how to spend it.

And Superintendent Ken Bossert as-sured the school board that the district also has a plan in the event of receiving less state aid than estimated in the bud-get proposal.

There are “still a lot of moving parts” in the budget planning process, Leister said. In addition to the question about state aid totals, school districts are still waiting on final numbers for their tax levy caps.

Port Jefferson looks at budget decrease

Page 3: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

JANUARY 14, 2016 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A3

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By Elana Glowatz

Code enforcement officers in Port Jef-ferson will get a raise for the first time in several years once their union contract is finalized.

At the Jan. 4 village board of trustees meeting, the board approved the new agreement, settled upon a couple of years after negotiations began.

The Port Jefferson Constable Associa-tion union was scheduled to ratify the contract this week. However, the result of the membership’s vote was not avail-able by press time.

The new agreement will be retroactive to June 2014 and run through the end of May 2018, Trustee Bruce D’Abramo said in a phone interview. With part of the contract being retroactive, so is part of the pay increase — the union mem-bers will receive an extra $1.50 for each hour they worked between June 2014 and the end of May 2015, and another $1.75 per hour worked from June 2015 and onward.

Moving forward, the officers from the Code Enforcement Bureau will receive an hourly bump of $0.25 each new year of the contract, meaning they will get a

raise in June 2016 and June 2017.The few dozen staff members covered

under the contract includes code en-forcement officers and sergeants as well as appearance ticket officers, D’Abramo said. The union does not include code Chief Wally Tomaszewski or three lieu-tenants in the bureau.

According to both village officials and the union, it has been a while since the officers received a raise.

Port Jefferson Constable Associa-tion President Tom Grimaldi has been a code officer for more than seven years, he said, and the last salary increase was “way before I got there. Probably at least 10 years ago.”

D’Abramo noted that before the raises kick in, the pay for code enforcement officers is $16 per hour. For sergeants, the pay is $18.25 per hour, and appear-ance ticket officers currently get $13.50 per hour.

The contract is “a long time coming,” Grimaldi said.

And D’Abramo said village officials are happy to put the negotiations be-hind them so they can finally “give the code officers, who do such a good job for the village, the kind of remunera-

tion” that is comparable to such officers in other villages.

The constables have been particularly visible recently with some high-profile incidents in Port Jefferson Village.

In mid-December, a Belle Terre man was killed when he lost control of his Lamborghini while driving up a steep East Broadway hill and crashed into a pole near High Street. Officer Paul Bar-bato was the first on the scene, finding a “horribly mangled vehicle with a person still alive inside,” Trustee Larry LaPointe

reported at a board meeting shortly after the crash. Barbato got inside the car and attempted CPR on 48-year-old Glen Nel-son, but the driver later died.

“You can only imagine the scene he came upon,” Mayor Margot Garant said on Jan. 4.

In a phone interview, Tomaszewski said that Barbato “tried desperately to save his life. Believe me, his boots were filled with blood.”

A couple of weeks later, on New Year’s

File photos by Elana Glowatzofficers James Murdocco, left, and Paul Barbato, right, have been recently noted for their work with the code enforcement bureau.

Bringing pay up to codeContract with officers’ union includes more per hour

CODE continued on page A9

Page 4: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

PAGE A4 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2016139212

By Giselle Barkley

Brookhaven is back in business.Elected officials, their family members

and other residents packed into the Town of Brookhaven auditorium in Farm-ingville on Jan. 7 to witness Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) being sworn into his second full term in office alongside fellow recent-ly elected and re-elected board members, including board newcomer Councilman Michael Loguercio (R-Middle Island) and other town officials.

Back in November, Loguercio won the

race for the 4th District — a position pre-viously held by former Councilwoman Connie Kepert, a Democrat.

Valerie Cartright, the councilwoman from Port Jefferson Station, is now the only Democrat on the seven-member board.

Councilwoman Jane Bonner (C-Rocky Point) said last week’s ceremony was a day of celebration that helped validate how residents voted during the 2015 elections.

In light of the board’s past work, Suf-folk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) highlighted Romaine’s performance as the supervisor, saying that he has always

been one of the fiercest and most passion-ate advocates for what he believes in.

Although residents saw the supervi-sor and Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro (R) officially sworn into their terms on Jan. 7, other elected officials re-cently elected to the board were officially sworn in at a previous event two days earlier.

While several councilmembers were no strangers to the ceremony, the swear-ing in process still never gets boring, one North Shore lawmaker said.

“I’m really excited to get started again,”

Councilman Kevin LaValle (R-Selden) said before the ceremony. “It was a great first two years — we accomplished a great deal. I’m really looking forward to the next two years.”

Romaine was sworn in last by Judge Judith Pascale.

“I pledge to work with my town board to find common purpose,” Romaine said in his speech following his oath. “To ad-dress these challenges head on and to make decisions necessary for a prosper-ous future and one that serves all the resi-dents of this town.”

They solemnly swear

Photos by Giselle Barkleysupervisor ed romaine, at left, and Highway superintendent Dan losquadro, above, are sworn in as their families watch.

Page 5: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

JANUARY 14, 2016 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A5

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By Alex Petroski

Comsewogue kids got another view of their education system this week.

“Beyond Measure,” a documentary by director Vicki Abeles about “Amer-ica’s troubled education system,” was screened on Tuesday in the high school auditorium, in an event hosted by TASK, Comsewogue High School’s student government.

The film is a follow-up to Abeles’ 2010

documentary “Race to Nowhere,” which provided a close-up look at the pressures placed on young students in America.

“In ‘Beyond Measure,’ we find a revo-lution brewing in public schools across the country,” according to a description on the film’s official website. “From rural Kentucky to New York City, schools that are breaking away from an outmoded, test-driven education are shaping a new vision for our classrooms.”

Comsewogue school district and its

superintendent, Joe Rella, have been at the forefront of the battle against the Common Core and standardized test-ing, standing out as one of the strongest voices on Long Island and in New York State. In addition to appearing at local protests, last year the district even went as far as considering a proposal to refuse to administer state exams unless the state delivered more education aid and re-duced the weight of student test scores on teacher and administration evaluations.

The description of “Beyond Measure” on the documentary’s website echoes some sentiments expressed by educators and parents who oppose the Common Core and state testing.

“We’re told that in order to fix what’s broken, we need to narrow our curricula, standardize our classrooms, and find new ways to measure students and teachers,” it says. “But what if these ‘fixes’ are making our schools worse? In ‘Beyond Measure,’ we set out to challenge the assumptions of our current education story.”

Screenings of the film have taken place across the United States over the past year, with more scheduled to take place in the coming weeks.

“I am thrilled that our high school students are actively playing a role in exploring education policy, and look forward to their insight,” school board member Ali Gordon said in an email.

“I believe that the issue of standardized testing is central to the debate about the direction of public education all over the nation, not just here. Education policies created at the federal and state level fo-cus heavily on data collected from stan-dardized testing, which has resulted in a huge shift away from student-centered learning.”

For more information about the film, visit www.beyondmeasurefilm.com.

Students explore state of education with film

Photo above right from Reel Link Films; file photo above A new documentary about education directed by Vicki Abeles, above right, was screened at Comsewogue High school this week.

Page 6: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

PAGE A6 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2016

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POLICE BLOTTERIncidents and arrests from Jan. 2-10

Ale House to JailhouseA 20-year-old man from Port Jefferson

Station was arrested on Jan. 8 for robbery. Police said the man approached another person with a silver semi-automatic hand-gun and stole cash and a cellphone from the victim outside Miller’s Commack Ale House on Veterans Memorial Highway in Commack. Police arrested the man that day around 1:15 p.m. at his residence.

Double the troublePolice arrested a 24-year-old man and

an 18-year-old woman from Coram for loitering and unlawful possession of a controlled substance on Jan. 5. The man allegedly injected himself with heroin before throwing the needle into the woods near Crystal Brook Hollow Road in Port Jefferson Station and was also found to be in possession of marijuana.

Tools of the tradeOn Jan. 8 at 5 p.m., police arrested a

24-year-old man from Mount Sinai for criminal possession of stolen property. Police said he had three power tools that he received in December from another unidentified person, who had stolen them. Police said the man was also in pos-session of a plastic bag of cocaine, but he was not charged with drug possession.

The seat warmerA 19-year-old Miller Place resident

was arrested on Jan. 5 for unauthorized use of a car. Police said the man entered a 2011 Jeep Cherokee at a residence on North Country Road, then a 2002 Chev-rolet on the same road shortly afterward. Police said the man didn’t steal anything but remained in the car. He was arrested around 2 a.m.

Swipe leftAccording to police, an unknown

person stole an iPhone from a home on Beaver Lane in East Setauket. Police said the individual didn’t break into the home. The incident happened on Jan. 7 at 7 p.m.

A handy heistPolice said someone entered the

Lowe’s on Nesconset Highway in Stony Brook on Jan. 8 at 11 p.m. and stole an electric heater and leaf blower.

Push it, push it real goodAccording to police, two unidentified

males got into a physical altercation on Jan. 10 on West Broadway in Port Jef-ferson. The two men shoved one another multiple times. One was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital for a laceration.

Idling while intoxicatedPolice arrested a woman from Port Jef-

ferson for driving while ability impaired

after receiving a call about the 45-year-old woman sitting in a 2010 red Toyota Prius outside the Applebee’s on Route 25A in Miller Place. Police said the en-gine was running when officials arrested the woman on Jan. 4 at 9:40 p.m.

Stopped in a flashPolice arrested a 26-year-old man

from Setauket on Jan. 7 at 12:23 a.m. for driving while ability impaired in a 2006 Honda Civic. According to police, officials pulled the man over on Route 25A in East Setauket for speeding and discovered he was intoxicated.

Path to prisonA 35-year-old man from Centereach

was arrested for driving while ability im-paired in a 2008 Jeep on Jan. 5. He was heading west on North Bicycle Path in Selden when he got into a car crash. Police discovered the man was impaired by drugs and he was arrested at the scene.

License to stealOn Jan. 7 at 1:35 a.m., a 47-year-old

Holbrook man was arrested for steal-ing two license plates from a 1998 Ford Explorer on South Coleman Road in Selden. And between Jan. 6 at 5:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. on the following day, an unknown person stole license plates from a car parked on Old Town Road in Port Jefferson Station. It was not clear whether the two incidents were related.

A safe decisionOn Jan. 8 between 6 and 8 p.m., an

unknown person broke into Old Coach Motors in Mount Sinai and stole a safe that stored money and papers.

Hickory dickory smashAn unknown person broke a win-

dow of a residence on Hickory Street in Mount Sinai on Jan. 4 at 2:56 p.m.

Mad for musicOn Jan. 10, an unknown person stole

headphones and batteries from the Walmart on Nesconset Highway in East Setauket. The incident happened around 12:25 p.m.

Lost and foundSomeone stole a 2000 Honda Civic

from a residence in Lake Grove on Jan. 9. Police said the owner of the car didn’t know it was stolen until after the car was recovered on Elwood Road in Centereach on Jan. 10, around 1 a.m.

Shell gameAccording to police, just past midnight

on Jan. 10 someone stole a television from a shed at a residence on Shell Road in Rocky Point.

— Compiled by Giselle barkley

Page 7: The Port Times Record - January 14, 2015

JANUARY 14, 2016 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • PAGE A7

Supervisor Romaine calls for SBU fire safety reformsBy Phil Corso

A serious dormitory blaze at Stony Brook University has Brookhaven Town’s supervisor calling for fire safety reforms.

The fire broke out on Saturday, Nov. 21, in a student’s room on the second floor of O’Neill College — one of four residential buildings in Mendelsohn Quad — forc-ing about 115 students to relocate to temporary housing, the university said in a statement.

Setauket Fire Department responded to the call and received mutual aid from Stony Brook, St. James and Port Jefferson departments, but officials soon discovered that they had to carry hoses up to the second floor be-cause there were no standpipes there to connect to due to the building’s decades-old architecture, the Setauket Fire Department said in a statement.

While the flames were eventually tamed, the incident still sparked Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) to call on the university to upgrade its fire protection systems and to contribute to the cost of fire protection.

In a statement provided to Times Beacon Record Newspapers, Romaine said that O’Neill College was built more than five decades ago and was outfitted with a fire alarm system that only warns of a fire, without a sprinkler system to combat it. He said the univer-sity lacked necessary fire-prevention measures, like a standpipe system in the building, to allow firefighters to access water for their hoses.

Romaine also noted that the most recently built dormitories at SBU include fire alarms and sprinkler systems, which he said would have prevented the size and magnitude of the fire at O’Neill.

“Two lessons emerge from this fire,” Romaine said. “First, Stony Brook University needs to upgrade the system in the dormitories that lack these essential fire protection systems. Second, New York State and the university should contribute to the cost of fire protec-tion; it should not be borne by the taxpayers of Stony Brook and Setauket Fire Districts alone.”

A spokesman for the Setauket Fire Department said the cause of the fire was still under investigation and there were no reported injuries.

The SBU campus resides within the Setauket, Stony Brook and St. James fire districts, the university’s envi-ronmental health and safety department said.

Lauren Sheprow, a spokeswoman for Stony Brook University, said the university was operating in full compliance with state building code requirements and that all campus residence halls were equipped with “state-of-the-art fire alarm systems that are monitored 24/7 at university police headquarters.”

Over recent years, Sheprow said, SBU has taken ad-ministrative, engineering and educational steps to reduce fire alarms, minimize the impact on nearby fire depart-ments and facilitate its own emergency response.

“At Stony Brook, student safety is a top priority and we take that responsibility very seriously,” she said in a statement. “The university has implemented numer-ous initiatives over the years to enhance fire safety and prevention and to reduce unnecessary response by community fire departments to the campus. The uni-versity has a great deal of respect for the community volunteers who dedicate their time to fire emergencies — in fact many of these volunteers work at Stony Brook University — and we are grateful for the swift response in November.”

The university’s most recent annual fire report and statistics reported eight fires throughout 2014, across all on-campus residence halls, resulting in a total of $20 worth of property damage. Most of the incidents were reported as grease fires, and none of the eight occurred at O’Neill College, where the most recent reported incident before this dated back to two trash can fires in 2013.

Photos from SFD/R. O’Rourk

setauket firefighters set a ladder so they can approach the second-floor dormi-tory as soon as interior firefighters put water on the fire.

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PAGE A8 • THE PORT TIMES RECORD • JANUARY 14, 2016

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Featuring Pets on The North Shore

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©13

8728

LegalsSUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS

INDEX # 10429/12

Original Filed With Clerk on

Plaintiff Designates Suffolk County as the Place of Trial

The Basis of Venue is that the Subject of the Action is situated in Suffolk County.

Plaintiff resides at

3415 Vision Drive

Columbus, OH 43219

County of Franklin

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF SUF-FOLK

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NA-TIONAL ASSOCIATION S/B/M TO CHASE HOME FINANCE LLC S/B/M TO CHASE MANHATTAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION,

Plaintiff,

— against —

JEFFREY I. BAUM, as Temporary Administrator for the Estate of Vincent Capuano, his respec-tive heirs-at-law, next-of-kin, distributees, executors, admin-istrators, trustees, devisees, lega-tees, assignees, lienors, creditors and successors in interest and generally all persons having or claiming under, by or through said defendant who may be de-ceased by purchase, inheritance, lien or otherwise, any right, title or interest in the real property described in the complaint here-in, NICOLETTA CAPUANO INDI-VIDUALLY AND AS HEIR TO THE ESTATE OF VINCENT CAPUANO, WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK, A FEDERAL ASSOCIATION, DANI-ELLE NICOLE CAPUANO A/K/A DANIELLE N. CAPUANO A/K/A DANIELLE CAPUANO AS HEIR TO THE ESTATE OF VINCENT CAPUANO, CYPRESS FINANCIAL RECOVERIES LLC, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXA-TION & FINANCE, INTERNAL REV-ENUE SERVICE – UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Defendants.

TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFEN-DANTS:

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the Complaint

is not served with this Summons, to serve a notice of appearance, on the Plaintiff’s Attorney(s) within 20 days after the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is com-plete if this Summons is not per-sonally delivered to you within the State of New York); The United States of America may appear or answer within 60 days of service hereof; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief de-manded in the Complaint.

TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEN-DANTS: The foregoing Summons is served upon you by publica-tion pursuant to Order the Hon. Daniel Martin a Justice of the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, dated Nov. 12, 2015 and filed with the complaint and other papers in the Suffolk County Clerk’s Office, Riverhead, NY. Prem. k/a 53 Elmwood Avenue, Selden, NY 11784 a/k/a Section 491.00, Block 02.00, Lot 057.00.

NOTICE OF NATURE OF AC-TION AND RELIEF SOUGHT:

THE OBJECT of the above cap-tion is for the foreclosure of:

Mortgagor, to Premier Mortgage Corp., d/b/a PMC Mortgage Co., as Mortgage, to secure the sum $100,153.00 which Mortgage was duly recorded in the Suffolk County Clerk’s Office on Aug. 18, 1997 in Reel 19233 at Page 251

NOTICE

YOU ARE IN DANGER OF

LOSING YOUR HOME

If you do not respond to this Summons and Complaint by serving a copy of the an-swer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the an-swer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home.

Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further informa-tion on how to answer the summons and protect your property.

Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action.

YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERV-

ING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COM-PANY) AND FILING THE AN-SWER WITH THE COURT.

Dated: Elmsford, New York

December 1, 2015

Respectfully submitted,

KNUCKLES, KOMOSINSKI &

ELLIOTT, LLP

By: HEINO J. MULLER, ESQ.

Attorneys for Plaintiff

565 Taxter Road, Suite 590

Elmsford, NY 10523

(914)-345-3020- #87200

514 12/24 4x ptr

Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, on the 11 day of December, 2015, bearing Index Number 15-18371, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 310 Center Drive, Riverhead, NY 11901 grants the infant NATALIA CAMILLE CARRION-BUXO the right to assume the name NATA-LIA CAMILLE CARRION. Present address is 48 Meadow Ponds Circle; infant’s date of birth is February 13, 2012; infant’s place of birth is Port Jefferson, Suffolk County, New York.

549 1/14 1x ptr

Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, on the 11 day of December, 2015, bearing Index Number 15-18371, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 310 Center Drive, Riverhead, NY 11901 grants the infant FA-VIOLA ZOE CARRION-BUXO the right to assume the name FA-VIOLA ZOE CARRION. Present address is 48 Meadow Ponds Circle; infant’s date of birth is August 22, 2007; infant’s place of birth is Port Jefferson, Suffolk County, New York.

550 1/14 1x ptr

Day, patrolling code officers James Mur-docco and John Vinicombe responded to an overdose at the Islandwide Taxi stand near the Port Jefferson Long Island Rail Road station. The victim did not have a pulse.

LaPointe said at the board meeting on Jan. 4 that Murdocco administered the anti-overdose medication Narcan and

“saved the person’s life by doing so.”Tomaszewski described another re-

cent incident in which officer Gina Savoie “thwarted a burglary” on Crystal Brook Hollow Road. He said after Savoie took action and called for police assistance, the two suspects, who are from Coram, were arrested for loitering.

“My hat goes off to the code enforce-ment bureau,” Garant said at the most recent board meeting. “They’re out there handling things that are unimaginable for us to even contemplate.”

CODEContinued from page A3

File photoA Port Jefferson code officer recently used a Narcan kit to revive an overdose victim near the Long Island Rail Road tracks.