Showing posts with label Randall's Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Randall's Island. Show all posts

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Body Found Hanging From Chain Link Fence On Randall's Island


Randall's Island

The body of an Asian man was found hanging from a rope attached to a chain link fence on Randall's Island, NYC Park Advocates has learned. 

Police believe the man was in his late 20's. 

The body was discovered on Sunday night at approximately 7:00pm on the southern end of Randall's Island Park (technically Ward's Island)  opposite Field 63.

The cause of death was an apparent suicide according to authorities.  

- Geoffrey Croft

Friday, August 1, 2014

Arrest Made In Randall's Island Electric Zoo Overdose Death

On Wednesday Federal authorities arrested a Buffalo man for allegedly supplying the synthetic drug "Molly" which led to the fatal overdose of Jeffrey Russ, 23, an attendee at the electronic dance music festival on Randall's Island last year. Olivia Rotondo, 20, from North Providence, R.I., also died at the festival as a result of an overdose. A 16-year-old girl was also sexually assaulted, nineteen people were treated for drugs,  and  31 people were arrested in connection with the event.  

In June it was revealed that the Parks Department would be receiving 450 complimentary tickets to the Electric Zoo Festival worth as much as  $72,550 as part of a deal with the rave's organizer to bring the event back to Randall’s Island after last year's debacle.


Organizers are also required to pay $600,000 to the Randall’s Island Park Alliance. 


Randall's Island

Federal authorities arrested a man in Buffalo on Wednesday for allegedly supplying a synthetic drug that led to the fatal overdose of an attendee at an electronic dance music festival on Randall's Island last year, according to the Wall Street Journal. 
Patrick Morgan, 23 years old, was charged with one count of narcotics distribution and one count of conspiring to distribute narcotics.
Federal prosecutors said in a criminal complaint that Mr. Morgan sold pills, known as "molly," to Jeffrey Russ, 23, and two other people before the Electric Zoo music festival over Labor Day weekend.
Mr. Russ consumed the drug during the festival and died in the early morning on Aug. 31, 2013. City officials canceled the third day of the event after another person died and others grew sick.
Mr. Morgan appeared in U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York on Wednesday and was released on $100,000 bond, a spokeswoman for the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office said.
His attorney, Brian Comerford, didn't return a request for comment.
The two people who purchased the drug with Mr. Russ assisted law-enforcement officials from the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office and the New York division of the Drug Enforcement Administration with their investigation, the complaint said.
In the complaint, DEA Special Agent Louis Schmidt said Mr. Morgan sold the drug to Mr. Russ and the others at a different electronic music concert in Buffalo earlier in August.
About two weeks later, the three pooled their money and went back to Mr. Morgan, the complaint said. They paid $1,100 for 80 more pills for "themselves and to distribute to others" at the Electric Zoo event, the complaint said.
On Aug. 30, during the festival, Mr. Russ consumed some of the pills supplied by Mr. Morgan and collapsed into a seizure, the complaint said. He died at Harlem Hospital at 3:21 a.m. the following morning, the complaint said, adding that when he had a 108 degree temperature and rapid heartbeat while he was being transported by an ambulance.
The complaint said one of Mr. Russ' friends met with Mr. Morgan on March 24, 2014 to discuss the death. A text message was later sent by the informant, at the direction of investigators, to implicate Mr. Morgan in the matter.
"Glad we got to talk about Jeff a little it was bugging me," the informant texted Mr. Morgan. "Just know that I no longer blame us for giving the molly to him because it was him that made the mistake of taking too much," the text said, according to the complaint. According to the complaint, Mr. Morgan responded: "Yeah man u too call me whenever you want."
Mr. Morgan faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison on each charge.
A spokesman for Syracuse University confirmed Mr. Morgan was a student on campus. Mr. Russ was also a student at the school, a family member said.
Olivia Rotondo, 20, from North Providence, R.I., also died at the festival after collapsing from the likely intake of the same type of drug, New York City officials have said. A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office wouldn't comment on whether Mr. Morgan was being investigated in that matter.
Organizers of the outdoor festival, which attracted 130,000 people last year, are still waiting on the city to grant final approval for this year's scheduled concert on Randall's Island over the Labor Day weekend.
A spokesman for the mayor's office said the Parks Department approved the permit application submitted by event organizers on April 29 based on a proposal for better security and medical services for concertgoers.
A detailed site and security plan was presented to the City on July 22, the spokesman said, adding that those proposals would be reviewed "before the city grants final approval to proceed."
Read More:
Wall Street Journal -   July 30, 2014  - By Yoni Bashan


DNAinfo -  June 2, 2014  - By James Fanelli 

A Walk In The Park  - March 26, 2014

New York Daily News - September 9, 2013 - By Barbara Ross  

Wall Street Journal - June 28, 2013 - By Josh Dawsey 

A Walk In The Park - September 4, 2013

Saturday, October 5, 2013

DOI Investigators Find Inappropriate Texts On Phone of Parks Department Boss Embroiled In Randall's Island Pole-Dancing Scandal


NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
The Parks Department’s deputy chief of operations, James Cafaro, exchanged inappropriate texts with subordinates, The Department of Investigation (DOI) said.  The investigation found that Cafaro had 12,000 deleted images on his city-issued cell phone, several of which depicted male and female genitalia. It's the latest revelation springing from of the city's probe into raunchy Parks Department parties.   (Photo: Joe Marino/New York Daily News) 


Randall's Island


A Parks Department boss at the center of a scandal over a raunchy party featuring pole-dancing in an agency building was found to have 12,000 deleted pictures on his city-issued cell phone, several of which depicted male and female genitalia, according to city investigators. 

James Cafaro, the Parks Department’s deputy chief of operations, gave his phone to officials as the city Department of Investigation probed a horndog holiday party held last year in a so-called “Boom Boom Room” at the agency’s 5-Boro facility on Randall’s Island, according to the New York Daily News.  

Investigators found evidence that Cafaro had deleted several pictures of male and female genitalia, and also discovered images of what appeared to be a woman in a bikini, and an image of an unidentified female Parks Dept. employee in her uniform posing in a sexually suggestive way, according to a Department of Investigation report on sexual hijinks in the “Boom Boom Room.” The Daily News obtained a copy of the 11-page report through a Freedom of Information Law request. 

The investigation began after The News reported exclusively in May on the booty-filled bashes in which workers said booze was flowing and Cafaro and Parks supervisor Angelo Figueroa encouraged female workers to bare their assets and shimmy on the pole.

The May 29 edition of the Daily News revealed the raunchy Parks Department parties
The May 29 edition of the Daily News revealed the raunchy Parks Department parties

Through nearly five months of interviewing Parks staffers and poring over cell phone records, investigators substantiated claims from workers that a risqué soirée was held in the “Boom Boom Room” in Dec. 2012. The report called the down-low get-together “grossly inappropriate.” Investigators also said it was likely the notorious room was the site of parties prior to the December 2012 affair, but they noted witnesses couldn’t remember details due to “the large amount of alcohol they had consumed.”  


Investigators did not find evidence to substantiate female workers’ accusations of sexual harassment and that bosses gave preferential treatment to those who were willing to “get on the pole.” 

The News’ bombshell report in May also noted how two female Parks workers filed a report with Parks accusing Cafaro and Figueroa of harassing them through sexually charged phone messages. Both men were suspended by Parks on June 2.  


A Parks Department worker dances on a stripper's pole inside the Randalls Island Parks garage.

A Parks Department worker dances on a stripper's pole inside the Randalls Island Parks garage.


The Parks Department notified DOI after receiving complaints of misconduct at the 5-Boro facility, according to a statement issued by agency spokesman Arthur Pincus. 

“Parks has subsequently taken steps to address the misconduct,” the statement said, noting that Cafaro and Figueroa are both facing disciplinary action. 

Cafaro, 53, initially cooperated with investigators. He said he had a “unique” and “off-kilter” management style that included sending “flirty” texts to female parks workers, according to the report. 

In addition to providing his work-issued phone, the DOI report said he also handed over another phone that he said was for his personal use. It had no inappropriate material on it, the report noted.

 During the investigation, the department learned Cafaro had a third phone that he tried to conceal by claiming it belonged to a neighbor named “Jack Cooper,” whom he said had moved away, according to the report. 

Subpoenaed records show Cafaro used that phone to exchange numerous after-hours texts with one of his female subordinates, the report says. The phone was registered to a “Jim Cooper” at the address of the 5-Boro facility, where Cafaro was previously assigned. 

The phone’s account was closed two days after The News’ May 28 report, according to investigators. When investigators asked about the “Cooper” phone, Cafaro stopped cooperating and got a lawyer, the report states.   


Parks Supervisor Angelo Figueroa deleted six pictures of women’s breasts and buttocks from his  city-issued cell phone.

Parks Supervisor Angelo Figueroa deleted six pictures of women’s breasts and buttocks from his  city-issued cell phone.



Cafaro had denied knowing anything about the December 2012 party, the report says, but when confronted with evidence proving its existence he later admitted he’d been told about it. He said he didn’t attend, but instead sent Figueroa to look into it. Of the nine employees who admitted to being at the party, three said Cafaro was there, according to the report.    

Figueroa, 49, spoke once with investigators before getting a lawyer and invoking his Fifth Amendment rights. He said he would talk in exchange for immunity, which investigators refused to offer. 

Figueroa, who was found to have kept and then deleted six pictures of women’s breasts and buttocks on his work-issued cell phone, also denied attending the December party, the report notes. As with Cafaro, there were conflicting accounts from party attendees as to whether he was there. Some witnesses saw him there and others didn’t, while one said she was too drunk to remember, the report says. 

The Parks Department’s statement said that Figueroa, following his suspension, was transferred to a new location where he does not have supervisory authority. 

Cafaro, meanwhile, remains suspended “while Parks seeks to resolve his case.” 

“In addition, Parks will pursue disciplinary measures against a few other employees whose misconduct was documented by DOI,” according to the statement. 

The agency said it also enhanced training on matters of employee conduct and workplace standards.   

Read More:

New York Daily News  - October 4, 2013  - By Ginger Adams Otis

Randall's Island Park Supervisor Suspended Over Sexual Harassment 
Blames Lazy Workers
A Walk In The Park -  June 2, 2013

A Walk In The Park - May 31, 2013 

A Walk In The Park - May 29, 2013 



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Electric Zoo Founder Mike Bindra Once Ran Drug Club Shut By City After Fatal ODs



"People are overdosing and the fact they put an ambulance outside a nightclub should be enough to establish that nightclub should be closed."  - Deputy Mayor Rudy Washington  April 2001

Mike Bindra (l.) was the general manager of Twilo.

(from l) Mike Bindra,  Aimee Boden - President & Park Administrator of the Randall's Island Park Alliance RIPA -  Bindra's wife - Laura Tigz De Palma, and Anne Wilson,  Director of Planning & Public Funding for RIPA.   Bindra was the general manager of Twilo.    Bindra and his wife Laura are the founders of the Electric Zoo music festival.  RIPA  receives a large fee from Electric Zoo for the event. (Image: NY Daily News)

 In total two people died, a 16-year-old girl was raped,  at least four people were hospitalized in critical condition after apparent drug overdoses, and police made thirty-one arrests as a result of the Electric Zoo event.   

Randall's Island

The founder of the music festival where two people died of apparent drug-related causes on Saturday once ran a Chelsea nightclub that the city closed after accusations it acted like an Ecstasy emporium, played a role in two fatal overdoses and hid scores of unconscious patrons in a secret room without medical care, according to DNAinfo.  

In 2009 Miami promoter Mike Bindra, 44, and his wife, Laura De Palma, created Electric Zoo, the annual Labor Day weekend extravaganza at city-owned Randall's Island. Their company, Made Event, canceled the festival's remaining shows on Sunday after the two deaths and 31 arrests on charges varying from the sale and possession of drugs to disorderly conduct.
Bindra was once the general manager of Twilo, one of city's most popular dance clubs, which became a target of law enforcement agencies during Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's administration.
The West 27th Street hot spot — owned by impresarios Steve Dash and Phil Smith — drew the unwanted attention after two fatal overdoses inside of two years. The first occurred in 1998 when NYU student Bridgette Murray overdosed on the Ecstasy she took there.
After the co-ed's death, the city filed a public nuisance lawsuit in Manhattan Civil Supreme Court to shutter Twilo, accusing it of operating as drug den and being the scene of multiple arrests.
But the city lost the case, and techno music and drugs apparently kept flowing. 
In July 2000, Johns Hopkins University student James Wiest collapsed on the club's dance floor after taking Ecstasy and later died at St. Vincent's Hospital.

Exported.;
Twilo, a w. 27th Street club in Chelsea that the city identified as a designer drug den, was closed in 2001 after unconscious patrons were found hidden by employees.   (Photo: Kristen Artz)   


Wiest's mother later settled with Twilo and its associates for $250,000 after claiming in a lawsuit that club security dragged her unconscious son into a back room, where they left him without care for as long as three hours. The lawsuit also claimed that club officials later called a private ambulance.
City officials said the club used private ambulances to avoid police involvement.
"It is ludicrous," the city's then Deputy Mayor Rudy Washington told the New York Times in an April 2001 interview. "People are overdosing and the fact they put an ambulance outside a nightclub should be enough to establish that nightclub should be closed."
In October 2000, Twilo security guard Joseph Murray was arrested for hiding three unconscious patrons in a dark room while paramedics searched for them in the club. Bouncers had stymied the emergency responders by twice telling them no one needed medical attention, according to court records.
Murray told investigators that he had put two of the patrons in the room because his superiors instructed him “to hide those people,” court records show. He eventually pleaded guilty to obtructing government administration.
In fall 2000 the city again tried to close Twilo by refusing to renew the club's cabaret license. The move led to another court battle, but in May 2001 an appellate court ruled in the city's favor, shuttering the club after six years of operation.
During the legal battle, Joseph Murray filed an affidavit supporting the city's case, claiming he saw scores of patrons dragged into a back room and later taken by private ambulance to hospitals.
"During the three years that I have worked on security inside Twilo, I have seen at least 100 instances in which unconscious or semiconscious patrons have been placed in the safe area by security and left there," he said in his affidavit.



Electric Zoo co-founder Mike Bindra's event golf cart sits idle on Sunday. (Photo: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) 
Bindra was never charged with any wrongdoing in his role as Twilo's manager.
Stefan Friedman, a spokesman for Electric Zoo festival, said that Bindra did not oversee security at Twilo when the fatal overdoses occurred.
"Mike was only involved in booking talent and promoting, not operations," Friedman said.
He added that the head of security reported directly to two other general managers. 
However, during his days at Twilo, Bindra frequently discussed in news stories the security measures the club had taken to crack down on drug use.
"We're trying to make it difficult to sell or even do drugs on the premises," he told theNew York Times in a 1999 interview. "We want people to come here to dance, not to sprawl out on the floor and be a big mess. Sure, the security can be an inconvenience, but then again, so is living in Manhattan."
In an affidavit he submitted during the 2000 lawsuit against the city, Bindra also detailed the extensive lengths Twilo took to the combat the sale of drugs.
"I am also well informed of the extent to which this business has spent money and effort to successfully ensure that the allegations cannot be repeated," he said.
"We are the most professionally operated and safest caberet of its type in the city of New York among them, businesses with allegations of drug dealer employees, shootings and stabbings; yet we alone are faced with closure," he added.
Bindra has been organizing concerts and shows for the past two decade. He and another Miami entrepreneur, Henri Pferdmenges, also ran TriBeCa club Arc, which closed after two years in 2004.
Pferdmenges is currently suing Bindra in Manhattan Federal Court, claiming he was an early investor in the Electric Zoo festival and accusing his former business partner of cheating him out of his share of its profits. Bindra has denied the allegations. 
Jeffrey Russ, 23, and Olivia Rotondo, 21, were the two festival attendees who died Saturday, according to police. The cause of both deaths appear to be linked to MDMA consumption, also known as Molly or Ecstasy, officials said.
A spokeswoman for the city's medical examiner said further toxicology reports and tissue studies were pending to determine the exact cause of death.
Made Event leased the space for the Electronic Zoo festival through the Randall's Island Alliance, the nonprofit conservancy that maintains the city-owned grounds.
The city Parks Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bindra and his wife Laura Tigz De Palma are the founders of the Electric Zoo music festival.
Bindra and his wife Laura Tigz De Palma are the founders of the Electric Zoo music festival.   (Image: Mike Bindra/Via FACEBOOK)  
Read More:

DNAinfo -  September 3, 2013 -  By James Fanelli 

Electric Zoo deaths: Festival creator Mike Bindra ran reputed drug-fueled 
Chelsea club Twilo 
New York Daily News - September 3, 2013- By Barbara Ross, Tina Moore and Larry Mcshane     

New York Post -  September 3, 2013  - By David K. Li 

City Probing Randall's Island Electric Zoo Drug Deaths - NYPD Assisting
A Walk In The Park -  September 3, 2013

Electric Zoo Debacle - Teen Sexually Assaulted - 2 Deaths, 31 Arrests
At Randall's Island Music Festival
A Walk In The Park -  September 1, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 



City Probing Randall's Island Electric Zoo Drug Deaths - NYPD Assisting

Olivia Rotondo, 20, who was a student  at the University of New Hampshire, died Saturday at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City, where she was rushed after attending the Electric Zoo music festival on Randall's Island.
University of New Hampshire student Olivia Rotondo, 20, died Saturday at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City after attending the Electric Zoo music festival on Randall's Island.  NYPD  detectives  have reportedly launched a homicide probe into the deaths of Rotondo and Syracuse University graduate Jeff Russ, 23. 

In total two people died, a 16-year-old girl was raped,  at least four people were hospitalized in critical condition after apparent drug overdoses, and police made thirty-one arrests as a result of the event.  The Randall's Island Park Alliance receives a large fee from the event.  (Image: FACEBOOK)

Randall's Island


The NYPD is assisting the New York City Health Department’s probe into two drug-fueled deaths that led to the cancellation of the final day of the Electric Zoo festival, according to the New York Daily News. 

Jeffrey Russ, 23, a Syracuse University grad, and Olivia Rotondo, a 20-year-old student at the University of New Hampshire, died Saturday after being rushed to local hospitals. 

Both took doses of MDMA, a powerful form of Ecstasy known as “molly,” at the Randalls Island dance music festival, cops said.

 “The Department of Health did not want to see a reoccurrence on Sunday,” NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Monday of the cancellation. 

A photo of Jeff Russ, 23, (Left) who died at Harlem Hospital on September 1, 2013 after attending Electric Zoo music festival on Randall's Island. The photo comes from the facebook page of Russ.
Syracuse University graduate Jeff Russ, 23, died at Harlem Hospital on Saterday after attending the Electric Zoo music festival on Randall's Island in New York.  (Image: FACEBOOK)

Electric Zoo, in its fifth year, draws more than 100,000 revelers.

Initial autopsies for both victims were inconclusive.       

Read More:

NYPD will help in probe of Electric Zoo drug deaths
Both of the people who died took doses of MDMA, a powerful form of Ecstasy known as 'molly,' at the dance music festival, cops said. 
New York Daily News - September 3, 2013 - By Barry Paddock    

New York Post - September 3, 2013 - By Kirstan Conley and Bruce Golding 

New York Post  -  September 2, 2013 - By Kirstan Conley, Larry Celona and Bob Fredericks

New York Daily News -  September 1, 2013  - By Richard Zitrin, Barry Paddock and Bill Hutchinson

Electric Zoo Debacle - Teen Sexually Assaulted - 2 Deaths, 31 Arrests
At Randall's Island Music Festival

A Walk In The Park -  September 1, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 






Sunday, September 1, 2013

Electric Zoo Debacle - Teen Sexually Assaulted - 2 Deaths, 31 Arrests At Randall's Island Music Festival



31 People Arrested At The Electric Zoo Dance Music Festival on Randall's Island

ezoo 

The Randall’s Island Park Alliance  (RIPA) recieves a large fee for the event at the same location as the Governor's Ball debacle.   (Photo: Electric Zoo)  RIPA removed all photos of the event from its webpage.
  
By Geoffrey Croft

A 16-year-old girl was sexually assaulted at the Electric Zoo Music Festival on Randall's Island NYC Park Advocates has learned.

The teen woke up on Friday under a van in a parking lot with her pants undone and bruises and scratches on her legs, according to several city sources. 

Medical personnel at Cornell Medical Hospital later determined she was sexually assaulted.

The incident is being investigated by the Special Victims Unit.

Two concertgoers died at the planned three-day dance music festival from apparent overdoses on Saturday.   

Syracuse University graduate Jeffrey Russ,  23,  of Rochester, NY died at Harlem Hospital and  University of New Hampshire student, Olivia Rotondo,  20,  of Providence,  R.I.,  died Metropolitan Hospital.

The drug MDMA,  or "Molly," is suspected in the deaths.



























Two officers stand watch at the Ward's Island footbridge on Sunday. The NYPD blanketed Randall's Island on Sunday after the  Electric Zoo event was abruptly cancelled. (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge.



Map of the event.  (RIPA Facebook)


At least four other concertgoers were also hospitalized as well from apparent drug related issues officials said.

Officials cancelled the final day of the Electric Zoo dance music festival, citing “serious health risks, ” on Sunday after the incidents. 

Thirty-one people were also arrested according to the police including two felonies.  Offenses ranged from drug sales, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and possession of controlled substances.  

 A lack of screening for under age concert goers also came under fire from several sources.

"This is ridiculous," said a city employee at the event.  

"All the drug use and under-age activity that goes on here every year and now this. And this year they added a third day. And for what money.  These events have to go.  They are putting the public at risk."

The festival is organized by concert promoter  Made Event,  an organization that has also staged concerts on Governors Island.

The Mayor's office issued a press release:


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PR- 289-13
September 1, 2013

CANCELLATION OF ELECTRIC ZOO MUSIC FESTIVAL ON RANDALL’S ISLAND 


Due to serious health risks, the Electric Zoo music festival on Randall's Island on Sunday, September 1st has been cancelled. The City recommended cancellation and the event promoters have agreed. 

During the first two days of the Electric Zoo music festival, two concert-goers have died and at least four others became critically ill and have been placed in intensive care at area hospitals. Definitive causes of death have not yet been determined, however, both appear to have involved the drug MDMA (ecstasy, or molly).  The Electric Zoo organizers have worked with City officials to reduce health risks at this event, but in view of these occurrences, the safest course is to cancel the remaining day of the event


Electric Zoo


Electric Zoo co-founder Mike Bindra's event golf cart sits idle on Sunday.  Binda organized events at McCarren Park Pool location before it was renovated. Additional information is now surfacing regarding illegal drugs at a prior business of Mr. Bindra's, a Chelsea night club.


Randall's Island's largest unprogrammed area of the park has been allowed to be converted into commercial uses for up to five months a year by the Randall's Island Park Alliance in cooperation with the city.




Soccer field converted into a stage. Main Stage East.  "Expanded Grounds For 2nd Main Stage!" the event map boasts. 

Main Stage East.



Read More:


Metro - September 2, 2013 -  By Anna Sanders

NBC  - September 1, 2013 - By Richard Esposito, Tom Winter and Daniel Arkin 



Sunday, June 2, 2013

Randall's Island Park Supervisor Suspended Over Sexual Harassment Allegations Blames Lazy Workers

Angelo Figueroa says he is being targeted for being too tough on 'lazy' workers on Randalls Island park where he supervised.

Angelo Figueroa outside his Queens Apt., says he loved his job and wants it back. He was suspended without pay after allegations he helped organize organize employee gatherings where co-workers were encouraged to strip.   (Photos: David Wexler For NewYork Daily News)  

'The city hires these people to work with us. They’re lazy. My job is to make them work. In making them work, I become the bad guy,' Angelo Figueroa said outside his Queens home after facing allegations he helped orchestrate strip parties for female co-workers. 

Randall's Island

One of two Parks Department supervisors suspended amid allegations they held parties in a city building and had female co-workers dance on stripper poles says he’s the innocent victim of “lazy” underlings, according to the New York Daily News. 

Angelo Figueroa, 49, told the Daily News outside his Queens home Friday that he’s close to having a breakdown.

 “The city hires these people to work with us. They’re lazy. My job is to make them work. In making them work, I become the bad guy,” Figueroa said.

 “Some of the workers are very unprofessional. I gotta be the drill sergeant and you know who gets the bad rap? Me!”  

RELATED: PARKS DEPT. SUPERVISORS SUSPENDED OVER SEXUAL HARASSMENT ALLEGATIONS

“I’m innocent . . . I want my f------ job back. I love what I do.”

Figueroa and Deputy Chief of Operations James Cafaro, 53, were relieved of their supervisory authority last week and transferred from the Randalls Island Parks facility where they worked after two staffers filed reports of sexual harassment. The city Department of Investigation is investigating the claims. 

The women said the two supervisors had organized raunchy, booze-filled holiday parties that featured a stripper pole. They said female Parks workers were encouraged to work the pole and lose their clothes for the enjoyment of their liquored-up male colleagues — and if they wanted to be considered for better Parks positions. 

The stripper-pole shenanigans were reported in the Daily News on Tuesday. On the same day, the two men were suspended without pay pending the result of the DOI probe. 

Angelo Figueroa outside his Queens Apt., says he loved his job and wants it back.  Date: May 31, 2013.  Location:  74-05 Mrtle Avenue, Glendale Queens

Angelo Figueroa outside his Queens Apt., says he loved his job and wants it back. He was suspended without pay after allegations he helped organize organize employee gatherings where co-workers were encouraged to strip.  

Figueroa says he is being targeted for being too tough on 'lazy' workers on Randalls Island park where he supervised.    


Figueroa said being accused of horndog behavior in a front-page story in The News infuriated his wife of 22 years. 

He admitted knowing that at least one such party occurred at the Randalls Island facility, but denied attending it.

 “I knew there was a party downstairs (last December). I didn’t know what kind of party. I went home. I had nothing to do with it,” he said, noting he found out about the stripping “later on.” 

“I’m guilty of not following up on that,” he added. 

 But he defended his “impeccable,” 26-year work record and said he feels abandoned by the Parks Department.

 “I have no support. They’re hanging me.” 

The father of two, sporting a Mets hat, was choking back tears as he spoke.

“I’m ready to f------ break down here,” he said, holding out a trembling hand.

 “I’m sick of it. . . . Do I need this bull----?” 

He said he has been targeted by malicious rumors for years.

 “I heard one year I got four women pregnant. The Don Juan of the Parks Department. I mean, come on! It’s crazy,” he said.   


Read More:

Parks Department supervisor claims he's victim of being too tough on 'lazy' employees
New York Daily News - June 1, 2013 - By Rich Scharpiro and Ginger Adams Otis 


A Walk In The Park - May 31, 2013 

A Walk In The Park - May 29, 2013