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Thinker’s Notebook: The Horrible Truth about Paddy Duke

By Marlon Rice

Paddy Duke. Anyone who has listened to WQHT 97.1FM in the last 20 years has heard that name.
Although he spent years behind the scenes as a radio executive and programmer at Hot 97, his name was well known to loyal listeners, especially to those listeners who tuned into the Angie Martinez show daily. The Angie Martinez show on Hot 97 was the highest rated urban radio show in that time slot in the entire Northeast Region, and Paddy Duke was part of its rise to prominence. Angie would often joke with Paddy Duke while on air, and their banter was significant enough that anyone who listened to the show would know the name.

The powerful documentary “A Storm Over Brooklyn” premiered on HBO a couple of weeks ago. The documentary unpacks the tragic murder of Yusef Hawkins which took place on August 23,1989,exactly 31 years and 2 days to the day that I am writing this article. Yusef was a 16-year old from East New York that traveled out to Bensonhurst with a friend that wanted to look at a 1982 Pontiac that he found in the classifieds. When Yusef and his friends arrived in Bensonhurst, they were met by a mob of white men from the neighborhood. The men had bats, and they surrounded Yusef and his friends. A man in the crowd, later identified as Joey Fama, fired at Yusef Hawkins, striking him in the chest and killing him. The documentary exposes the racist mindset of the young men involved in the mob-style murder, as well as the true feelings of many in that Bensonhurst neighrbohood in the late 80’s. For the first time, the documentary also offers up a closer look at many of the men who were in that wolf pack.

A total of eight young men faced charges in the incident, and although only Fama was convicted of the murder, others were convicted of some of the lesser charges such as menacing and unlawful possession of a weapon. One of the young men convicted of the lesser charges was Pasquale Raucci. You see Pasquale a few times in the documentary as a child being interrogated right after the murder and then again in the courtroom during thetrial.
Late last week, I received a text from an old friend. In that text, my friend asked me if I saw the documentary, and then he said that he heard that the guy Pasquale Raucci was actually Paddy Duke from Hot97. I didn’t even reply to the text because I was working. The next day, news came out that Hot 97 had fired Paddy Duke. Paddy Duke was indeed Pasquale Raucci, one of the guys convicted of being part of the mob that murdered Yusef Hawkins.


The context of the whole thing is astonishing. One of the white boys from Bensonhurst that chased down and murdered Yusef Hawkins spent over 20 years working with notoriety for one of the biggest Black radio stations in the country. According to his LinkedIn page, Raucci started working for the station in 1994. That’s just five years after Yusef was killed. Raucci rubbed elbows with some of the music genre’s biggest stars, and was invited into the Hip Hop culture by many of its architects. All the while, this man was directly responsible for one of the most heinous and racist acts of the Hip Hop era. The mere thought of him in that building, in those rooms, while songs like Chubb Rock’s Treat ‘Em Right played through the speakers disgusts me. When Chubb rhymed, “In your hearts and minds never forget Yusef Hawkins” did those words trigger Raucci to feel so troubled by his prior actions that he confided in someone about his true identity? Or, did he stand there just nodding along to the song as if he was really an ally, lying to everyone including himself?


In this era of cancel culture, consumers readily withdraw their financial support from celebrities, brands or corporations that have done something ethically or morally offensive. I cannot think of something more ethically or morally offensive than for one of the leading urban radio stations in the country to hire someone responsible for such a brutal hate crime as the murder of Yusef Hawkins. If the corporation that owns Hot 97 knew Pasquale Raucci’s true identity and they hired him anyway, that corporation should never again be afforded a place in the Hip Hop community. How dare they make a mockery of the death of Yusef Hawkins by hiring one of his killers to manage the programming of Black music. Unbelievable.

What’s Going On

2020 U.S. PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION

The Presidential convention season has ended. President Donald Trump was renominated Monday night by the Republican Party in Charlotte, NC. Vice President Mike Pence said that the economy is on the US ballot this year. Didn’t President Barack Obama say at the Democratic Convention, last week, that Democracy was on the ballot? Democracy and/or the economy, POTUS 45 does not get high marks in either category. He has no platform nor record which merits a second term. The GOP Convention opening night was peopled by a confederacy of liars. It is imperative that all Americans who still love the country and its promise must get out and vote before or by November 3.

NEW YORK
EDUCATION: The NYC Department of Education has a few problems with brief classroom encounters this school year. The United Federation of Teachers and the Principals unions vow not to return to schools until all parties to school environment are COVID tested, which sounds like a plan considering the experiences at schools of higher learning since the fall semester began. Failure to do so will result in teacher absence, boycott, despite state laws banning those actions. Last week, the Department of Homeland Security classified teachers as essential workers. On Monday NYC’s Schools Chancellor referenced the possibility of outdoor classes. Some NYC K-12 private schools open this week.
BUSINESS: NYC Mayor de Blasio moves forward with the Sale of Tax Liens on Real Property by the City Of New York on September 3 like he is impervious to the disruptions to the economy since the advent of COVID19 this year. Many of the houses on the list are based in Harlem, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx, disproportionately affecting Black homeowners. Fortunately, NYS Senator Leroy Comrie is urging Albany legislators to defer NYC tax lien date. Hizzoner needs money … but at the expense of the city’s homeowners.
A NYC initiative with Ernst & Young, Goldman Sachs and Mastercard will aid Black Entrepreneurs anchored at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The aid consists of one-on-one consulting, access to affordable financing, and creating virtual storefront. This initiative should be duplicated throughout NYC, customized to community needs.

BLACK ENTERPRISE
America’s richest Black billionaire/philanthropist Robert Smith, founder of Vista Equity Partners, who paid full four-year tuition costs for the Morehouse College Class of 2019, is the subject of a four-year tax inquiry. Did Smith failed to pay US taxes on $200 million in assets that moved from Vista’s first private equity fund through offshore entities? The problem: Was Smith the beneficial owner of the offshore structures that received subject proceeds or were funds directed to a charity? The Justice Department has not filed any charges against Smith whose net worth is $5.2 billion.
The Black Business Empowerment Commission, BBEC, is a national organization focused on the Economic Health of the Black community, a group which boasts $1.5 trillion in annual disposable income. It is a collective of Black business owners, community and religious groups whose purpose is to devise a plan for Black economic empowerment via business growth and workforce development, which should be a priority for all elected officials. Some of the key BBEC organizers include the Harlem Business Alliance, hbany.org; WEG, a group of Harlem entrepreneurs, wegnyc.org; the National Black United Front, Dallas Texas; and DMG Global Media, umbrella for HarlemBusinessJournal.com and Bmorenews.com, which established the National Black Wall Street Foundation in 2019. BBEC which will host three virtual Town Hall Meetings focused on political accountability and the November US elections. For more info and to register for Town Hall meetings #2 and 3, visit bbecommission.org
There is a C-Suite opportunity for Director of the World Trade Center and Campus Complex in NYC for the Port Authority of NY & NJ. Director is responsible for oversight of WTC facility, its safe and effective operations which includes management of a $200M annual budget. Contact Billburgess@TheBurgessGroup.com or call 212.406.2400

AFRICA WORLD
On August 18, a group of Colonels headed Assimi Goita, staged a peaceful coup in Mali, ousting President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who resigned and dissolved Parliament. For weeks, tens of thousands of Malian protesters hit the streets venting their discontent re: government corruption. The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) intervened holding summits aimed at détente. Coup leader “pledged to restore stability and oversee a transition to elections within a reasonable period.” ECOWAS members have closed their borders with Mali –which has some of the largest gold deposits in Africa. Three West African countries – Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Ghana – hold national elections this year.

ARTS/CULTURE
SIP.EAT.HARLEM Join Angie Hancock and Black-owned restaurants for SIP.EAT.HARLEM on restaurant row, whose participants are Chocolat, Cove Lounge, Lolo’s Seafood Shack, Londel’s Supper Club, Ponty Bistro, Renaissance Harlem, Ruby’s Vintage + Sexy Taco Pop Up, Settepani, and Vinateria, on Wednesday, August 26, from 5 pm-9 pm. SIP.EAT.HARLEM tickets are $25 which includes one appetizer and a cocktail and must be purchased in advance. Some event proceeds will be benefit the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem. Contact: www.experienceharlem.com. About 41 % of Black businesses have closed permanently since COVID-19s arrival.
The 51st African American Day Parade will be held virtually on Sunday, September 20 at 12 pm. The Harlem parade is the largest and oldest procession in America which celebrates African American culture. Four trailblazing business leaders are honored as Parade Grand Marshals. They are Elbert Shamsid Deen, Thruway Builders; Cheryl McKissack Daniels, McKissack & McKissack; Dapper Dan, Dapper Dan Harlem; and Michael Garner, Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

NEWSMAKERS
The NFL Washington team named Jason Wright, 28, as its team president, a first for an African American in National Football League history. Former NFL running back Wright played with the SF 49ers, Atlanta Falcons, Cleveland Browns, Arizona Cardinals. He retired in 2010, earned an MBA at the University of Chicago, before joining McKinsey & Company, a management consulting firm, as a partner.
Wedding Anniversaries: Congratulations to New York based African American scholars Linda and Edgar Ridley who celebrate their 49th wedding anniversary in September. Congrats to New Yorkers Nerissa Rivers and Steve Lawrence who celebrated their 12th wedding anniversary on August 9.

Happy Birthday Anniversary greetings to Virgoans…Dr. Thelma Adair; Bishop William Barber II; Dr. Janet Dewert Bell; Beyonce; Saniyya Brannon; Carlton Brown, real estate developer; Ursula Burns, former Xerox CEO/Chair; Misty Copeland; Edris Elba; Geoffrey Eaton, NY NAACP/Harlem politico; Jon Haggins, TV travel host; Tamron Hall; Julian Alexander Arriola-Hemmings, Morehouse Class of 2020; Ruth Hunt; Fern Khan, Dean Emerita, Bank Street College; Justin Khan; Debi Jackson, WBLS; Errol Louis, NY1; Gerald Peart, photographer/videographer; Ashley Sharpton; Charles Dion Springfield, lifestyle author; Twins Skylar and Daniel Torruella; Torie Stewart; and Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

A Harlem-based media/branding specialist, Victoria is reachable at Victoria.horsford@gmail.com

The Young Progressives & Kamala Harris

By Ryan Brooks

As a 20-year-old Afro-Puerto Rican progressive college student, who organized for Bernie Sanders during the Democratic Presidential Primaries, I’m not the first voter demographic that comes to mind when election experts chart an electoral path for Democratic Presidential nominee Joe Biden. Sanders overwhelmingly won young voters, especially the 18-29 age group, in the Democratic primaries; and many young progressives have shown hostility to a Biden candidacy. Truth to tell, approximately 80 percent of Sanders supporters say that they will support Biden this fall. However, that number masks the skepticism felt by millions of young progressives who believe that Biden will not pursue the policies for which they care so deeply. Their mistrust should not be dismissed. According to a Pew Research study, people aged 18 to 23 will make up around 10 per cent of eligible voters, enough to make a difference in battleground states such as Florida and Pennsylvania, in cities like Miami and Philadelphia. So, a rational, progressive case must be made in order for Biden to sway these voters.
Fortunately, Joe Biden’s Vice-Presidential nominee Kamala Harris has the potential to be the backbone of this case. A woman born to Jamaican and Indian immigrants, Harris’s path to the vice presidency was just as improbable as it was sensational. An HBCU alumna, she burst on the political scene in 2003, when she was elected San Francisco district attorney in convincing fashion. As DA, Harris showed her inclination for progressive policy, introducing the “Back on Track initiative,” which created GED courses along with job training and drug testing programs for nonviolent first-time drug offenders. The initiative is widely seen as a primary reason the city’s recidivism rate which dropped from 54 to 10 per cent in 6 years. Never complacent, Harris created the city’s first environmental justice unit, which goes after crimes involving illegal dumping and air pollution. Upon the unit’s creation, Mrs. Harris stated, “Crimes against the environment are crimes against communities, people who are often poor and disenfranchised.” Helping the poor and disenfranchised is at the core of what it means to be a progressive.


In 2010, Kamala Harris was elected California Attorney General, where she secured around $25 billion from the big banks to assist consumers devastated by the nation’s foreclosure crisis. While many progressives sharply criticized the deal for not going far enough, it indicated that Harris was willing to take a progressive stand when needed. In addition, the Harris AG office directed the state justice department to adopt body cameras, ordered California police to undergo racial bias training, and refused to defend Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in California. In her roles as SF DA and California AG, Harris has enacted and defended numerous progressive policies.


In the 2020 Democratic Presidential primaries, Kamala Harris emphasized progressive policies such as Medicare-for-all, the green new deal, and a $15 minimum wage, which proves that she has a willingness, and at times even, a predisposition to meet progressives halfway or further on several key issues. She knows how the wind is blowing; she knows that the Democratic Party, and the electorate as a whole, are getting younger, browner, and more progressive. If Harris holds 2024 aspirations, she must consider these demographics and fight for policies supported by this new electorate. Still, all of this is contingent on one crucial factor, voter turnout. Voting is power, and if young progressives like me choose not to show up this fall, we lose any potential power gained in a Biden-Harris administration. In her memoir “The Truths We Hold,” . Harris wrote, “When activists came marching and banging on doors, I wanted to be on the other side to let them in.” Well, Mrs. Harris, this door happens to be located on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. All we ask is that if we show up, you let us in.

OTP Q & A: With Judith Harrison, Borough Commander for Patrol Brooklyn North, NYPD

A lot of folks don’t understand what your title entails and the kind of skills you need to be there. So, could you give us a picture of what your Monday morning would look like and then your Monday afternoon?


Chief Judith Harrison: As Borough Commander for Patrol Borough of Brooklyn North, I am responsible to oversee everything that occurs in 10 precincts. I won’t give you the precinct numbers but geographically we go from Cypress Hills in East New York into Brownsville, into Bushwick, Bedford Stuyvesant, Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, the downtown area. As well as Greenpoint and Williamsburg.
So I’m responsible for overseeing the operation of 10 precincts, My Monday morning starts before I even get into the office. The first thing I do when I get out of bed, is I look at my phone and go through my emails And I go through all notifications so that I have an idea of what has happened.
Actually, I’m getting notified pretty much throughout the night if there are any major occurrences. Any shooting incidents, any stabbing incidents, any incidents that would be newsworthy, anything that I would have to address.
So I get up, I read through my emails I red through my notifications, and that pretty much dictates how my day starts. When I go in on Monday morning, I read through complaint reports to get an idea of all the things that have happened. Any robberies, burglaries, shootings, any thing of major concern that would affect the residents that live within the confines of Brooklyn North, or would affect the business owners or anyone that comes in to visit Brooklyn North. So that’s pretty much how I start my day.
I start my day everyday like that. Getting an idea of what has happened. Anything I need to do, any people I need to contact, anything major, I’m communicating with the Borough President, I’m communicating with DA Gonzales, I’m communicating with key stakeholders and of course I’m communicating with my staff. My precinct commanders. I’ve got some great precinct commanders that really care about the community. So just making sure they are on task and serving the community to the best of their ability.


And what about the afternoon?
Even today (Sunday), I’m going to go in. You’re constantly reading, constantly keeping abreast of what’s happening. You can’t play catchup. You lose a day, you lose a lot. You can’t play catchup. You have to stay immersed in it. To always insure you’re doing to the best of your abilities.
And your communications with the community? How do you fit that into your schedule?
I think that’s probably one of the most important things. So many things happen and people look to the police. But police, and I know certainly I, leverage my relationships with key stakeholders. And those people are members of the community, they’re members of faith-based organizations, whether they’re bishops or clergy liaison. They are local elected officials, an assemblywoman or anyone of that nature, it’s very important to have that communication.
So I’m very open, we have a Whatsapp Chat with several community stakeholders and anytime there’s a shooting, I let them know what’s going on in their communities, because obviously, they live there, they want to know.
Not only letting them know what’s happening there but letting them know what our plans are. What we plan to do. What we want to do. How we plan to combat crime. It’s very important to keep communications open and to have a partnership with people.
I’ve spoken with several members of block associations and if you live there on the block and Covid has you restricted in terms of your movement and you’re there all the time. There may be things that you see that I don’t see. There may be different pieces of information that we can use to follow up on to help solve things, so we have to communicate.


As a mother, what concerns do you share with others?
Thankfully, I don’t have small children. My children are working, and are doing their own thing. And when we get time to spend together it’s great. I raised my children in New York City, I was raised in New York City, so I don’t just work here, I live here still, I’ve always live here so I have a vested interest in what goes on in the city.
I have a one-year-old grandson, and several weeks ago there were four people shot in Bedford Stuyvesant and one of the four was a one-year-old baby, Davell Garner. I heard about it. I immediately jumped up out of bed. I went to the hospital where the baby was. I was there, and when they cleaned the baby up, and allowed the baby’s parents family to see him, in my mind I said “don’t do it.” But I wanted to see him and when I saw him, I saw my grandson. So, I immediately made that connection that it’s such a shared responsibility.
Raising children here, raising grandchildren here, I see similarities. It’s heartbreaking what I see people doing to each other. There’s really a need for police. I know there’s talk about defunding us, but we really need to be out there because we owe it to every person. We know that there’s a small amount of people that’s responsible for these crazy acts that are taking people out. The overwhelming number of people are good, honest, hardworking people. Law abiding folks and we owe it to them to make the streets safe for them.

Community Leader:Take Control and Vote

Shutting down the USPS; closing polling places; developing new voting regulations that reek of voter suppression tactics are topics of discussions all over the media.
In early July, OTP reader Deborah Jacobs, emailed to us a letter of concern: “The need for all of us to protect our right to vote arose as soon as the country’s central administration claimed that Absentee Ballot Voting caused FRAUD IN VOTING!??? 


“Unfortunately, we as a high-risk group living through this COVID-19 pandemic of peaking infection and death rates, do not, for health reasons, need to vote in crowded, poorly ventilated polling sites during flu season.  We’ve got to take control and vote by every means available and necessary.”

New York State Absentee Voting
Election Day is Tuesday,
November 3, 2020
Early Voting Period is October 24,2020 – November 1, 2020

Qualifications to Vote by Absentee Ballot
Absent from your county or, if a resident of New York City absent from the five boroughs, on Election Day.
Unable to appear at the polls due to temporary or permanent illness or disability (temporary illness includes being unable to appear due to risk of contracting or spreading a communicable disease like COVID-19).
Unable to appear because you are the primary care giver of one or more individuals who are ill or physically disabled.
A resident or patient of a Veterans Health Administration Hospital.
Detained in jail awaiting Grand Jury action or confined in prison after conviction for an offense other than a felony.

When is it due?
You must apply online, postmark, email or fax a completed application or letter request for the General Election Absentee ballot no later than 7 days (October 27, 2020) before the election. You may apply in-person up to the day before the election (November 2, 2020). You may file an application at any time before the deadlines, but ballots will be mailed out beginning on or about September 18, 2020. (PLEASE BE AWARE THAT DESPITE THE ABOVE DEADLINES THE POST OFFICE HAS ADVISED THAT THEY CANNOT GUARANTEE TIMELY DELIVERY OF BALLOTS APPLIED FOR LESS THAN 15 DAYS BEFORE AN ELECTION.)

How to Apply for an Absentee Ballot
You may apply for an absentee ballot in any of the following ways:
Electronically through our Absentee Application Portal (COMING SOON)
By sending an email request to your local county board of elections
By sending a fax request to your local county board of elections
By going in-person to your local county board of elections
By mailing a paper application to your local county board of elections
You can download a PDF verson of the New York State Absentee Ballot Application Form at www.election.ny.gov