Medigap or Medicare Supplement Insurance in, New York

Medigap or Medicare Supplement Insurance in, New York I am helping New Yorkers turning age 65 or disable to enroll in Medicare Supplement & Medicare Part

I am helping New Yorkers turning age 65 or disable to enroll in Medicare Supplement & Medicare Part D . I also help with options regarding changes of Plans coverage for beneficiaries which have them existing coverage lapse or discontinue by the Insurance Companies/work related with a short time notice. Don't wait to long after you lost your coverage even if you are healthy, you may subject yourself to penalties for the rest of your life.

GoFundMe pulls all campaigns for Luigi Mangione as donations pour in for his defensehttps://www.yahoo.com/news/gofundme-...
12/16/2024

GoFundMe pulls all campaigns for Luigi Mangione as donations pour in for his defense

https://www.yahoo.com/news/gofundme-pulls-campaigns-luigi-mangione-192700038.html

GoFundMe pulls all campaigns for Luigi Mangione as donations pour in for his defense
Jessica Schladebeck, New York Daily News
Sat, December 14, 2024 at 2:27 PM EST·

NEW YORK — GoFundMe is yanking any and all campaigns supporting Luigi Mangione, but donations for his defense continue to pour in on other online platforms.

Mangione, who’s accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, has become somewhat of an internet sensation in the days since the shooting.

The health insurance executive had been visiting the city from Minnesota for an investor conference in Midtown Manhattan, where he was slated to give a speech later in the day.

Police said Thompson was walking from his hotel toward the venue when he was ambushed by a masked gunman around 6:45 a.m. He was shot in back and the leg and pronounced dead some 30 minutes later.

The brazen violence sparked a dayslong manhunt, which ended with Mangione’s arrest at a McDonald’s in Atloona, Pennsylvania.

He was allegedly found with a silencer and 3D-printed gun, which police said matched three shell casings found on the scene. The ammo had been marked with the words “deny,” “defend” and “depose” — echoing a phrase commonly used to describe the insurance industry’s tactics for delaying claims and maximizing profits.

In wake of the killing, social media has become flooded with rage-filled posts expressing frustration with the insurance industry. Many netizens reveled in Thompson’s death as others dubbed 26-year-old Mangione a hero.

Campaigns aimed at funding Mangione’s defense also started cropping up online, though they’ve since been scrubbed from the internet’s most popular fundraising platform.

“GoFundMe’s Terms of Service prohibit fundraisers for the legal defense of violent crimes,” a spokesperson for the website said in a statement. “The fundraisers have been removed from our platform and all donors have been refunded.”

Content related to Mangione will however remain live on the crowdfunding website GiveSendGo. One campaign, creating by a group calling themselves “‘The December 4th Legal Committee,” had raked in over $96,000 as of Saturday afternoon, with anonymous donations coming from all across the world.

“We believe every person is entitled to due process in a court of law — not in the court of public opinion,” Alex Shipley, GiveSendGo’s communications director, said in a statement to NBC News.

“To be absolutely clear, we do not support or condone vigilante justice,” she continued. “However, people have a constitutional right to a strong legal defense, and access to that defense should not be reserved only for the wealthy or those who fit a particular narrative.”

It’s unclear if Mangione will accept funds for his defense. Thomas Dickey, his attorney in Pennsylvania, previously said he felt uncomfortable accepting money from his client’s supporters.

The organizers of the The December 4th Legal Committee said they had written a letter to Mangione in prison informing him of the fund, and saying it could go toward “the defense of other political prisoners” should he choose not to accept the money.

View comments (1.2k)

NEW YORK — GoFundMe is yanking any and all campaigns supporting Luigi Mangione, but donations for his defense continue to pour in on other online platforms. Mangione, who’s accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, has become somewhat of an internet sensation in the ...

https://www.yahoo.com/news/7-takeaways-from-kamala-harriss-cnn-town-hall-042029088.html7 takeaways from Kamala Harris's ...
10/24/2024

https://www.yahoo.com/news/7-takeaways-from-kamala-harriss-cnn-town-hall-042029088.html

7 takeaways from Kamala Harris's CNN town hall

David Knowles Editor
Thu, October 24, 2024 at 12:20 AM EDT

Vice President Kamala Harris held a town hall on CNN Wednesday in the key battleground state of Pennsylvania, where she went after former President Donald Trump and laid out her vision for how she would govern if elected.

Hosted by Anderson Cooper, the town hall, a stand-in event for what would have been the second presidential debate of the 2024 campaign had Trump not declined to participate, featured questions from undecided voters and offered some of the least scripted exchanges of the campaign.

It came with just 13 days remaining until Election Day, and with millions of early votes already cast, in a race that most polls show could go either way.

Here were the key takeaways from the town hall.

Harris says she views Trump as a fascist
As she had on the campaign trail earlier in the day, Harris seized on remarks made by Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly, who recounted to the New York Times Trump’s private praise of N**i generals and his belief that Germany’s fascist leader Adolf Hi**er “did some good things.”

Cooper asked Harris what she would say to voters who still support Trump, despite the testimonials from former members of his administration.

“I do believe that Donald Trump is unstable, increasingly unstable, and unfit to serve,” Harris said, “and I don’t necessarily think that everyone has heard what you and I have heard repeatedly, which is the people who know Donald Trump best, the people who worked with him in the White House, in the Situation Room, in the Oval Office, all Republicans by the way, who served in his administration, his former chief of staff, his national security adviser, former secretaries of defense and his vice president have all called him unfit and dangerous.”

Cooper later followed up by referencing Gen. Mark Milley’s assertion that Trump is “fascist to the core,” and asked Harris if she believed Trump “is a fascist.”

“Yes, I do,” Harris responded.

‘The price of groceries is still too high’
Asked by an independent, undecided voter who was to blame, Biden or Trump, for the spike in inflation, and what she would do to bring grocery prices down, Harris started by acknowledging that “the price of groceries is still too high.”

She then added that it would be her priority to bring prices down and touted her work combating price gouging as California’s attorney general, as well as her new plan to enact a “national ban” to address the practice.

She also promoted her plan to build affordable housing units to bring rent prices down for the average American. “I bring to it my experience, knowing what has been happening in terms of corporations buying up blocks of property to diminish competition and then rents get jacked up,” she said.

Harris then offered her first mild criticism of President Biden, saying, “For too long, frankly, both administrations, both administrations and both parties, Democrats and Republicans, haven’t done enough to deal with the issue of housing. We need a new approach.”

Cooper quoted Harris’s plan on price gouging, noting that it specifically related to times of emergency. “How does that help someone like” the man who asked the question, Cooper asked.

Harris said that price gouging was a real and ongoing issue in states like Georgia and North Carolina, which are trying to recover from Hurricane Helene. “I took this issue on because it affects a lot of people,” she said.

Harris says she supports building more border wall

Harris speaks during the town hall as moderator Anderson Cooper looks on. (Matt Rourke/AP)
A registered Republican voter who said he was leaning toward voting for Harris asked her how she would ensure that “every immigrant to the U.S. is integrated into American society safely” and what benefits and subsidies they would be provided with, whether American taxpayers would pay for them and how much would be spent.

“Let’s start with this: America’s immigration system is broken, and it needs to be fixed,” Harris began, before pivoting to her support for a bipartisan border bill scuttled by Trump in early 2024.

Cooper pointed to the record number of border crossings of migrants in 2022 and 2023, which led the Biden administration to issue an executive order in June 2024. “Why didn’t your administration do that in 2022, 2023?” he asked, while acknowledging that the number of migrant crossings had fallen significantly.

“First of all, you’re exactly right, Anderson,” Harris responded, “and as of today, we have cut the flow of immigration by half, in fact the numbers I saw most recently, illegal immigration...”

“But if it was that easy with executive action,” Cooper interrupted, “why not do it in 2022, 2023?”

“Because we were working with Congress and hoping that actually we could have a long-term fix to the problem instead of a short-term fix,” Harris said, adding that “ultimately this problem is going to be fixed through congressional action.”

Another back-and-forth on immigration then followed, with Cooper asking about the part of the bipartisan bill Harris supports that funds further construction of the wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.

“You’re agreeing to a bill that would earmark $650 million to continue building that wall,” Cooper said after noting Harris’s past criticisms of the barrier.

“I pledge that I am going to bring forward that bipartisan bill to further strengthen and secure our border,” Harris said, later adding, “Let’s just fix this thing. Let’s just fix it.”

Ditching the filibuster to codify Roe v. Wade
After Harris repeatedly brought up Trump’s appointment of conservative Supreme Court justices who voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, Cooper pressed her on her pledge to codify the decision that guaranteed the right to an abortion nationwide.

“That would obviously require 60 votes in the Senate, a majority in the House. That’s a big leap. We don’t have that yet,” Cooper said, adding, “What do you do?”

“I think we need to take a look at the filibuster, to be honest with you,” Harris replied in reference to a carve-out that would require a simple majority in the Senate to pass national abortion protections.

In an appeal to undecided voters, Harris noted the flood of strict anti-abortion laws that have been passed in the wake of the high court’s decision, some that make no exceptions for cases of r**e or in**st. She had been campaigning with former Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who she said is “unapologetically pro-life and will also tell you that she doesn’t agree with what’s been happening.”

Addresses her own policy changes
A male Republican voter who said he was leaning toward voting for Harris asked her about some of her changing policy positions such as fracking.

“First of all, on fracking, I’ve been very clear. We kind of dispensed with this in 2020. I am not going to ban fracking. I did not as vice president,” she responded, adding, “My value on the issue of what we need to do to invest in a clean energy economy and a clean energy future has not changed, but frankly I now have the experience and perspective of having been vice president for almost four years. I have traveled the country. I know that we can invest in a clean energy economy and still not ban fracking and still do what we need to do to create more jobs.”

Cooper then brought up Harris’s past support for Medicare for All and the view that border crossings should be decriminalized: “Are all of those issues that you’re saying — through consensus and getting stuff done — you have evolved on?”

“Let’s take, for example, the issue of Medicare. My point has always been that access to health care should not just be a privilege of those who can afford it. It should be a right for all people,” Harris responded.

Cooper followed up by asking Harris whether she thought fracking, which releases methane emissions, was bad for the environment.

“I think that we have proven that we can invest in a clean energy economy, we can mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, we can work on sustaining what we need to do to protect this beautiful Earth of ours and not ban fracking,” Harris said.

‘I do pray every day’
Harris showed a personal side of herself at various points during the town hall, like when Cooper asked her about a report that she sought out her pastor after hearing from Biden that he was dropping out of the presidential race.

“Well, my pastor, Rev. Dr. Amos C. Brown, the Third Baptist Church, it was an extraordinary day that Sunday when the president called me. I instinctively understood the gravity of the moment, the seriousness of the moment. I didn’t predict or know how that day would play out,” Harris said, adding, “I just called him. I need that kind of spiritual connection. I needed that advice. I needed a prayer.”

Harris added that she and Brown discussed the “part of the scripture that talks about Esther” and that “it was very comforting for me.”

Cooper asked if she prayed every day.

“I do pray every day,” she said, “sometimes twice a day.”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/liz-cheney-issues-dire-warning-165145740.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cueWFo...
10/13/2024

https://www.yahoo.com/news/liz-cheney-issues-dire-warning-165145740.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cueWFob28uY29tLz9ndWNjb3VudGVyPTE&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAJq3xMYW5SSEUH_pHdELSnWM80jCd4WbWympARRfVDipUuWXQb_YkC-jWTyD5WGN8ZfewR2iocd5jxu5TEcwNIVGw9feRqtLJSKrYfJF9D498LuW6YSzoX8aZ_ozglX1LS6XD_1jZKbKt9yYMGRQl68Yxd7atIB_T7nEAg1DF0ai

Liz Cheney issues dire warning about ‘fundamentally cruel’ Trump, agrees he’s a ‘fascist’

Alexandra Marquez
Updated Sun, October 13, 2024 at 3:24 PM EDT

Former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney on Sunday issued a series of dire warnings about a potential future Trump administration, telling NBC News’ “Meet the Press” that people ought to “carefully” consider what another Trump presidency would look like.

“Donald Trump believes he will be immune for anything he does once he’s in office,” Cheney, a fierce Trump critic, told moderator Kristen Welker.

The former Wyoming congresswoman, who has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris and has campaigned with her, pointed to the Supreme Court’s ruling in July that the former president is immune from criminal prosecution for certain official actions he took while in office as a cause for concern.

“Donald Trump believes he will be immune for anything he does once he’s in office,” she said. “He will not respect the rulings of our courts, and people have to realize our courts can’t enforce their own rulings. So if a president refuses to carry out his obligation to do so, then we are no longer a nation of laws.”

“The people that stopped him from his worst desires last time around won’t serve again,” she added.

Cheney also declined to disagree with remarks from retired Gen. Mark Milley, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Trump and President Joe Biden, calling Trump “a fascist to the core” in a forthcoming book by Bob Woodward.

“I have tremendous respect for for Gen. Milley, and I see no reason to disagree with that assessment,” Cheney said.

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to NBC News' request for comment.

Cheney said Trump’s actions on Jan. 6, 2021, when his supporters rioted at the U.S. Capitol for hours while the then-president watched without condemning them, were “fundamentally cruel,” drawing a comparison to Trump’s repeated false statements that the federal government under Biden is preventing aid from going to hurricane-stricken areas. Cheney was vice chair of the House committee that investigated the attack on the Capitol.

“Think about the fact our fellow citizens are in dire straits, they’re in dire needs, people’s lives are at risk, and he’s lying to them for his own political gain about where they can get relief,” Cheney said. “That kind of cruelty makes somebody unfit.”

The former congresswoman also warned that another Trump administration would bring an “erratic and a chaotic” foreign policy agenda because she said “Donald Trump is embracing tyrants. Donald Trump loves tyrants. He idolizes them.”

“JD Vance and Donald Trump both support a very isolationist foreign policy and an erratic and a chaotic foreign policy,” Cheney said, referring to the Republican senator from Ohio, who is the former president’s running mate. Cheney cited an internationalist foreign policy, including strong support for Ukraine in its defensive war against Russia, as an area where she agrees with Harris.

Cheney was also asked to address her previous comments blasting Harris and Biden. In 2020, she told Fox News that Harris was a “radical liberal” and that “her policies are simply, completely inconsistent with what most Americans believe in and stand for.”

On Sunday, the former congresswoman said her previous comments “reflect absolutely that we had a policy disagreement on a series of issues,” but added, “that’s why it’s so important for people to focus on the fact that I am supporting her now, and that there’s such a broad coalition that’s coming together to support her.”

“It’s based in part on who she is, on the fact that she will lead with a sincere heart, on the fact that she is somebody who’s dedicated her life to public service, and looking at what Donald Trump poses, the kind of of chaotic, absolute depravity that he would bring if he were ever to be elected again,” Cheney added.

The former congresswoman also criticized House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who appeared on the program before her, for saying there was a peaceful transfer of power to Biden after Trump lost in 2020.

“We have the peaceful transfer of power,” Johnson told Welker when asked whether he was committed to certifying the results of the upcoming election, regardless of who wins.

“We did in 2020. We will in 2024. Everybody can sigh and take a deep breath that our system is going to work,” Johnson added.

Cheney disputed Johnson’s claim, pointing to the Jan. 6 riot as evidence that the transfer of power was not peaceful.

Johnson “has a record repeatedly of doing things that he knows to be wrong, that he knows to be unconstitutional, in order to placate Donald Trump,” Cheney said, citing Johnson’s role in the efforts to overturn the 2020 election. “And frankly, you saw that sycophancy just now on display. So I think that it is very concerning. I do think that Donald Trump has consistently said again and again and again, you know, in the last few months, that this election is going to be rigged, and that if he loses, that’s why. So I think it’s very important that that the Republicans not be in the majority in the House come January 2025.”This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

Former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney issued a series of dire warnings about a potential future Trump administration, telling NBC News' "Meet the Press" that people ought to "carefully" consider what another Trump presidency would look like.

10/13/2024

Important Medicare Supplement Information

A Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan helps to cover some of the out-of-pocket costs associated with Original Medicare.
Consumers must be advised that:
A Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan does not pay any cost sharing incurred under a Medicare Advantage Plan,
A Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan will not automatically terminate when they are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage Plan, and
They generally must contact their Medicare Supplement insurer directly (generally in writing) in order to cancel their Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan. Furthermore, if they later leave the Medicare Advantage Plan, they may not be able to get the same Medicare Supplement Plan they were originally enrolled and/or may be subject to underwriting, which may increase the Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan’s premium amount.
If they remain enrolled in a Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan after their Medicare Advantage Plan has taken effect, plan premiums for the Medicare Supplement Insurance Plan will still be payable despite not being able to use the plan while enrolled in the Medicare Advantage Plan.

Send a message to learn more

Miami police make arrests linked to $1 million Patek Philippe watch stolen in Beverly Hillshttps://www.yahoo.com/news/mi...
09/12/2024

Miami police make arrests linked to $1 million Patek Philippe watch stolen in Beverly Hills

https://www.yahoo.com/news/miami-police-arrests-linked-1-195632008.html

Miami police make arrests linked to $1 million Patek Philippe watch stolen in Beverly Hills

Miami police make arrests linked to $1 million Patek Philippe watch stolen in Beverly Hills
Jay Weaver
Wed, September 11, 2024 at 3:56 PM EDT

In mid-August, two members of a “South American theft group” were arrested on charges of stealing a $1 million Patek Philippe watch from a man at gunpoint while he was dining with his wife and daughters at the Beverly Wilshire in Los Angeles, according to federal authorities.

But the diamond-studded watch traveled quickly, across the United States, all the way to Miami. Now, Miami police have arrested three more suspects in connection with the armed robbery of the man at the Beverly Hills hotel, saying they were trying to fence the stolen watch in the Magic City.

Last week, police received a tip that the watch stripped from the man’s wrist in the Aug. 7 robbery “was going to be sold in Miami,” according to an arrest affidavit.

That led detectives to the Miami apartment of Kerwin Campos, a 20-year-old Venezuelan with a prior criminal history who was “trying to sell the watch,” according to an arrest affidavit. A rifle reported stolen in St. Lucie County was also found in Campos’ apartment, police said.

Two other suspects were also arrested last week: Yeison Jose Bolivar, 25, who was implicated not only in the Beverly Hills robbery but also in similar luxury watch thefts in Miami, New Jersey and New York, police said. Bolivar was charged with robbing a $50,000 Patek Philippe watch from a Miami man on April 13 when he was with his child in the 3500 block of Biscayne Boulevard.

Also arrested last week: Venezuelan Yiever A. Capote-Diaz, 26, who was caught after a foot chase with Miami detectives. Capote-Diaz, who police say illegally possessed a handgun, was charged with resisting a police officer with violence and openly carrying a weapon.

Miami police carried out the investigations with Homeland Security Investigations and Alcohol, To***co, Fi****ms & Explosives. One senior law enforcement official said it remains to be seen how the suspects will be charged in either state or federal court.

“We’re looking to see how to go forward with this case,” the federal agent said, adding that the men arrested in Miami and Los Angeles are suspected of being members of the Venezuelan street gang, Tren de Aragua, which have gained a notorious reputation in several major American cities.

‘Stolen watch capital of the world’
South Florida private investigator David Bolton, who is familiar with the Patek Philippe robbery probe, said that it is not unusual for such pricey watches to be stolen or end up in Miami. “Miami is the stolen watch capital of the world,” Bolton said. “All of the stolen watches are coming to Miami.”

According to federal authorities, here is the back story to the Patek Philippe robbery:

The robbery occurred in the afternoon on Aug. 7, when two men walked up to a man dining with his wife and twin daughters at a Beverly Wilshire restaurant and robbed him at gunpoint, according to a federal complaint affidavit. While one aimed a handgun at the victim, a second took the watch off his wrist.

“The theft occurred within seconds,” according to the affidavit. “Fearing for his family’s lives, [the victim] let [the suspect] take the watch without a struggle.”

The pair then fled to a car parked on South Rodeo Drive.

Three days after the robbery, the Beverly Hills and Santa Monica police officers carried out a search of an Airbnb where the two suspects were believed to have been staying. During the search, they found a handgun registered to Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles Police Department officer who killed four people while running from the law. He died in a standoff in 2013.

Police in Riverside County, California, detained the two.

In Los Angeles, the U.S. Attorney’s Office charged Jamer Mauricio Sepulveda Salazar, 21, of Colombia, with one count of interference with commerce by robbery (Hobbs Act) and one count of possessing a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence.

Jesus Eduardo Padron Rojas, 19, of Venezuela, was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery.

According to the affidavit, the suspects were driving a Chevrolet Equinox linked to an earlier robbery in Beverly Hills on Aug. 5, when members of the same South American theft group held up a victim at gunpoint and stole a $30,000 Rolex.


Miami police make arrests linked to $1 million Patek Philippe watch stol...
A man was robbed of his $1 million Patek Philippe watch while dining with his family at a swank hotel in Beverly...

A man was robbed of his $1 million Patek Philippe watch while dining with his family at a swank hotel in Beverly Hills.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/colorado-officials-reach-8-5-035642891.htmlColorado officials reach $8.5 million settlement w...
06/06/2024

https://www.yahoo.com/news/colorado-officials-reach-8-5-035642891.html

Colorado officials reach $8.5 million settlement with woman who was left handcuffed in a police car that was hit by a train
Joe Sutton and Elizabeth Wolfe, CNN
Tue, June 4, 2024 at 11:56 PM EDT·

Local Colorado officials have reached an $8.5 million settlement with a woman who was hospitalized in 2022 after being left handcuffed in a police SUV that was then hit by a train.

The city of Fort Lupton and town of Platteville, Colorado, agreed on the settlement with the victim, Yareni Rios-Gonzalez, according to a release from the Fort Lupton Police Department. The settlement amount will be split equally between the town and city and paid by their insurers, according to attorney Eric M. Ziporin, whose office represents the city.

Rios, who was a suspect in a road rage case, survived the September 2022 collision but suffered nine broken ribs, a broken arm and other injuries.

“This voluntary settlement is to the mutual satisfaction of the parties, recognizes the gravity of this matter, and allows all parties to move forward,” the Fort Lupton police department said.

Fort Lupton police officer Jordan Steinke, who placed Rios in the vehicle, was found guilty last year of reckless endangerment and third-degree assault in the crash and was sentenced to serve 30 months of supervised probation and 100 hours of public service.

On the day of the crash, Steinke joined a traffic stop in which officers had pulled over Rios, who authorities said was suspected of brandishing a gun at another driver earlier in the evening. Steinke put Rios into the cruiser of Platteville police officer Pablo Vasquez, who had parked in the middle of a railroad crossing.

Body and dash camera video released by police showed Rios screaming for help as the train approached and slammed into the vehicle.

Steinke argued during her trial that she didn’t notice the location of the railroad tracks despite several warning signs, including one next to where she parked her vehicle.

The officer said she was not fully aware of her surroundings because she was concerned about approaching a suspect who may have a gun. “You can only divide your attention so much,” Steinke testified.

CNN has sought comment from the Town of Platteville and an attorney for Rios regarding the settlement.

Fort Lupton is about 30 miles north of Denver.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com

Local Colorado officials have reached an $8.5 million settlement with a woman who hospitalized in 2022 after being left handcuffed in a police SUV that was then hit by a train.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/AuihaQbhKc0Life in Brooklyn, New York. The working class goes to work at the same time wi...
04/30/2024

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/AuihaQbhKc0

Life in Brooklyn, New York. The working class goes to work at the same time with the criminals.

NYC Subway Goers Huddle inside the train as a man shot with own gun, critically wounded

https://www.yahoo.com/news/brother-airport-director-shot-atf-000654225.htmlBrother of airport director shot by ATF agent...
03/22/2024

https://www.yahoo.com/news/brother-airport-director-shot-atf-000654225.html

Brother of airport director shot by ATF agents speaks out about shooting
Associated Press
Wed, March 20, 2024 at 8:06 PM EDT

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — The brother of the Little Rock airport executive shot by federal agents serving a search warrant said he fears his brother may not survive.

Bryan Malinowski, 53, was injured in a shootout Tuesday with agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, To***co, Fi****ms and Explosives at his west Little Rock home.

His older brother, Matthew Malinowski, told NBC News that the family was not sure if the Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport executive director was “going to make it in the next 24 hours” while confirming his brother was shot in the head during the exchange of gunfire.

ATF officials said agents were serving a search warrant at Bryan Malinowski's home just after 6 a.m. The agents said he fired at them from inside the home, at which point they returned fire. One ATF agent suffered a non-life-threatening injury and was hospitalized.

Matthew Malinowski questioned why agents came to his brother’s home so early instead of approaching him at work. He contends the agents “broke down his door” leaving his brother no choice but to “defend himself.”

“There’s something fishy here. The ATF went after him in the worst possible way,” he said. “There’s no reason why they couldn’t have arrested him at work at the airport.”

Malinowski also said it seemed odd that his brother could be entangled with the law, noting that he was well connected in Arkansas, had an annual salary of more than $250,000, lived in a nice suburb and had collections of guns and coins.

“When someone makes that much money, there’s no incentive to do anything wrong,” the brother said. “He has so much to lose.”

Meanwhile, Matthew Malinowski said doctors are keeping his brother on life support and not performing surgery because they don’t think he would survive.

“We don’t know how much longer he has to live,” he said.

With the family still wondering what sparked the shooting and federal investigators still not releasing any details, Matthew Malinowski feels the case against his brother doesn’t add up.

“Something stinks to high hell,” he said.

The brother of the Little Rock airport executive shot by federal agents serving a search warrant said he fears his brother may not survive. Bryan Malinowski, 53, was injured in a shootout Tuesday with agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, To***co, Fi****ms and Explosives at his west Little Rock home. A...

Address

5014-16th Avenue , Suite 298
New York, NY
11204

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12019841824

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Medigap or Medicare Supplement Insurance in, New York posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Medigap or Medicare Supplement Insurance in, New York:

Share