NYC NOW - Midday News: Brooklyn Woman Sues Landlord Over Fatal Shooting, Winter Weather Advisory Issued for NYC, and Mayor Adams Pushes for Changes to Discovery Law
Episode Date: February 5, 2025A Brooklyn woman is suing her former landlord for $10 million, alleging the property management failed to address threats made by a neighbor who later shot and killed her husband and son. Meanwhile, t...he New York City area will be under a winter weather advisory on Thursday, with up to two inches of snow expected overnight. Plus, Mayor Eric Adams is calling for changes to New York’s discovery laws, which dictate how and when prosecutors share evidence with defendants. WNYC’s Sean Carlson speaks with Director of Policing and Public Safety at the Manhattan Institute, Hannah E. Meyers, to explain the old process.
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Welcome to NYC now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC.
It's Wednesday, February 5th.
Here's the midday news from Michael Hill.
A Brooklyn woman is suing her former landlord for allegedly failing to protect her family from a neighbor who shot and killed her husband and son.
Marie DeLeal is seeking $10 million in damages from the landlord of Flavkish Gardens.
the sprawling complex where the shooting happened in 2023.
DeLeal and police say the violence stemmed from a dispute over noise.
She says she complained multiple times about threats from the neighbor,
but the management did not take action.
I never do anything.
Even after what happened, they don't even call me.
A spokesperson for the landlord Flatbush Gardens,
Clipper Realty says the incident was tragic but declined to comment on the laws.
suit, citing pending litigation.
NYPD officials say,
Justin passed. The neighbor who
shot the men died when police shot
and killed him in a confrontation
several days later.
The New York region will be under a
winter weather advisory tomorrow
because of a wintry forecast
for the day. Meteorologist James
Tomasini with the National Weather Service
says the city and surrounding areas
could see an inch or two of snow
overnight and then some rain
by late tomorrow morning.
There's going to be a changeover eventually in the middle of the night into early Thursday morning with some sleep mixed in there.
Tomicini says ice on roads could make the morning commute dangerous.
Temperatures are expected to drop into the upper 20s tonight, then rise to the upper 30s by tomorrow.
New York City, by the way, is suspending alternate side parking rules for tomorrow.
32 with sunshine now, partly sunny and 35, feeling as cold as 20 degrees today.
Stay close.
There's more after the break.
On Y.C.
On W. N.C. I'm Sean Carlson.
Tin Cup Day.
It's the day when mayors from across the state ask Governor Hokel and lawmakers to make the case for their local priorities.
Mayor Adams Big asks was about something more than money.
When I speak with my district attorneys, they tell us we need to have a close examination of discovery to make sure that we're not getting any unintended consequences.
discovery laws are at the very heart of the criminal justice process. Those are the rules that
determine when and what evidence is shared by prosecutors to defendants, and they're at the
heart of this year's budget negotiations. So here to tell us how a seemingly arcane procedural
process has taken on an outsized role in this year's budget talks is Hannah E. Myers. She's
the director of policing and public safety at the Manhattan Institute and used to work in the NYPD's
Intelligence Bureau. Hannah, can you just explain to us in like very basic terms?
what we mean when we talk about discovery laws?
Absolutely. And thank you for having me on to talk about discovery.
I think one reason it hasn't gained the public attention of bail reform,
which passed at the same time in 2019,
is because it's a lot harder to understand,
especially for the layperson in its mechanics
and in how it has so damaged not just public safety in New York,
but the fairness and even the functioning of New York's criminal justice system.
So what the law changed was the rules of evidence collection
for prosecutors in New York, for the district attorney's offices.
So that whereas before, prosecutors only had to collect material that had a bearing on the
outcome of the case and turn it over to the defendant, something that would have an act,
affect the innocence, have implication for the innocence or guilt of the defendant.
And anything else that the prosecutor might have handy, he could turn over in an open file policy.
And usually that was connected to cases that were going forward to trust.
there would be more evidence turned over. What the 2019 reform changed is that now prosecutors have to
collect and share everything, all material at all, related to a case, even if that material is
irrelevant, redundant, has no bearing at all on the outcome of the case. Prosecutors still have
to collect it, even if the case is not going to trial, and they have to do it in a very short time frame,
20 to 35 days. This is an enormous compliance burden for each and
every case that a prosecutor brings in New York. So imagine real quickly if you have a fight that
breaks out in Times Square and it's a crowded place with lots of onlookers and cameras and cops,
now in order to prosecute the people fighting, you know, for assault or whatever, a prosecutor
has to collect every witness statement. Every piece of surveillance footage has to be reviewed,
redacted and shared, body camera footage. Every police memo book from a police on the scene has
to be collected and shared, even if it has no pertinent material at all to the outcome of the
case. So one of the largest impact that this has had is that prosecutors simply can't do that
for each and every case. And that's one reason Mayor Adams is so involved is that New York City
bears the brunt of this because we have such a high caseload in the five boroughs compared to
upstate. So we have seen, so what do prosecutors do? They can't collect that material for every case.
Yeah.
Now, yeah.
The initial revisions to the discovery laws happened when the criminal justice reform event was at its apex at the end of the last decade.
Many of the Democrats who voted for the initial package are still in office.
So what's changed that leads you to believe they'll vote to pair back those very reforms that they voted on not too long ago?
Right.
That is a great question.
And I'm sure, you know, along the progressive side of the Democrats and the legislature in New York, which is still a very powerful body, you know,
there's a lot of real ideologues in the group who it doesn't matter the impact and data on how
many cases have been dismissed, which is now about 60% of cases in New York City of prosecuted cases.
But I think what's changed is that you saw in the implementation hearings in 2019, advocates were
making the argument, hey, if prosecutors run at a time to prosecute these cases, it just means
they never had to prosecute them to begin with. And I think that that could fly.
in 2019 with the zeitgeist of criminal justice reform. But I think voters now are a little more concerned,
or certainly more concerned, much more concerned about public safety and about how responsive
the criminal justice system is to public safety, are criminals, you know, who are guilty
of their crimes, simply having their cases tossed routinely, which they are. And I think that
the argument, well, you know, they never need to prosecute these cases that have merit,
especially a lot of these cases getting dismissed,
they're domestic violence,
they're forcible touching,
they're shoplifting,
they're, you know,
things that affect people's lives.
We're not hearing those arguments
in the legislature right now.
We're hearing more, well,
the felony, you know,
kind of slicing the data.
That's how legal aid is approaching it
and trying to say the felony dismissals
weren't so much.
But, you know, at this point,
the data is so strong,
you know, in Manhattan criminal court,
a third of cases are now getting dismissed
simply because prosecutors run out of time,
to prosecute them. No consideration of justice involved. They have just run out of time. That's a third
of cases in Manhattan criminal court. And, you know, it's hard, it's hard to run away from that data,
especially when you consider that even with all the amendments being considered, New York would
still have the most progressive discovery regime in the whole country. Yeah, very, very complicated
issue. That's Hannah Meyer. She's the Manhattan Institute's director of policing and public safety.
Hannah, thanks so much for joining us. Thank you very much for having me.
Thanks for listening. This is NYC now from WNYC. Check us out for updates every weekday, three times a date, for the latest news headlines and occasional deep dives. And subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. We'll be back this evening.
