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Friday, May 17, 2024

NYPD could access shops’ surveillance cameras — in real time — under new plan to combat theft

It sounds a little like Big Brother, but cops say it’ll be a big help.

The city announced a new program Thursday to combat soaring retail crime – and it relies on store owners letting the NYPD tap into their security cameras to gather “real-time intelligence.”

The pilot program will be purely voluntary but those who opt-in to the city’s integration platform will be able to directly share information through their existing survelliance system, according to Mayor Eric Adams’ office.

Mayor Adams announced Thursday a new city program that would let the NYPD tap into retail surveillance cameras — as long as the business agrees to it.Matthew McDermott

“The prerequisite to prosperity is public safety,” Adams said at a press conference announcing the program, which will cost the city $1.5 million but be free to businesses.

“Anything that erodes that feeling of safety is going to get in the way … and nothing erodes it more than going into your local store, and you have to call someone to unlock the toothpaste, unlock the hair shampoo when I had hair, unlock all of the items that we have.”

The administration says the direct access to the closed-circuit systems will help cops catch thieves more quickly and offer a new layer of protection for local businesses.

“New York is saying we’re not sitting back and throwing up our hands —that’s a signal of urban surrender,” Hizzoner continued. “We refuse to surrender to any form of criminality. We’re not going to allow shoplifters and organized crime rings to prey on businesses.”

The move comes as retail theft continues to spike in New York City — larceny rose by 51% between 2017 and 2023, according to Chain Store Age, a retail-focused news website.

Meanwhile, robberies, grand larceny and petit larceny in the Big Apple jumped by 86% during the same period, the outlet said.

Business owners would have to agree to let the NYPD peak through their cameras — but some remained wary that cops will check up on everything they do.meepoohyaphoto – stock.adobe.com
A pair of NYPD officers make their rounds and stop by the Adol store on 42nd Street, which has been robbed several times by criminals.Aristide Economopoulos

Adams said the NYPD made 25,480 retail theft arrests last year — and about 542 repeat offenders were responsible for a third of them.

“We’re able to identify them early and take them off the street, they do not become a menace to our retail community,” Adams said. “We cannot keep letting these recidivists back on the streets without consequences. That is our concern.”

Last June, the mayor’s office partnered with the NYPD and Fusus, a third-party camera integration platform, on a smaller, free pilot program in the 109th Precinct in Flushing, Queens, the Adams administration said in a statement.

About three dozen businesses enrolled — meaning New York’s Finest knew where their cameras were, and could access the footage in real-time feeds, it added.

During the first two months, the NYPD traced a citywide burglary spree back to two people allegedly involved in a national retail theft operation, city officials said. They arrested an alleged shoplifter who stole more than $1,000 in merchandise from an eyeglass store, according to officials.

This image, released by the US Attorney’s Office, shows two robbers charging into a Manhattan jewelry store.U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York

“When we look at the 109 Precinct, and we look around that Main Street corridor … we saw, again, a sharp increase in arrests and a decrease in shoplifting complaints,” Chief of Crime Control Strategies Michael Lipetri said at the press conference.

Afterward, the NYPD signed a one-year agreement with Fusus, in which the city will spend $1.5 million to expand the program to nine other precincts that were selected because of quality-of-life complaints and crime data, the statement said.

“This is a home run,” Adams said Thursday.  

The city’s $1.5 million price tag will go toward installing about 15,000 cameras over the next year — and installing devices in participating stores that will help them connect their security cameras to the NYPD, officials said.

There’s no cost for businesses to join the program.

Security guards and retail managers told The Post they appreciate the help.

“It’s a good idea because crime is so high,” said Rafael Ortiz, a 40-year-old store manager at Home Appliances on East Fordham Road in the Bronx.

“We have 10 cameras in the store, which deters thieves and robbers, but also we have the evidence if anything is taken,” Ortiz told The Post. “There’s a lot of stealing and robbing going on.”

Adams said 542 repeat offenders were responsible for about a third of the city’s 25,000 retail theft arrests in 2023.nuruddean – stock.adobe.com

Shawn Washington, a security guard at jeweler Alex Diamond nearby, agreed with Ortiz.

“It’s a good idea to allow law enforcement better access,” Washington, 50, told The Post. “CCTV solves a lot of crimes … We don’t get a lot of crime in this store because I’m standing here all day, but the crime around here is insane.”

But it’s still only part of the puzzle, he said. Bail reform must also be addressed.

“This is a stunt to get a story in the newspaper saying Adams is tough on crime,” he said. “But think about it: If the judicial system isn’t going to put people behind bars, then what’s the point? It’s like sweeping a dirt floor.”

In the announcement, city officials were careful to say that business owners can choose how and when the NYPD can access their cameras.

Many agreed that the program was a good idea — especialyl in the wake of armed robberies like this, when gun-wielding robbers busted into a jewelry store in Manhattan in broad daylight last June.U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York

But some aren’t convinced, according to Francisco Mata, president of the NY Bodega and Small Business Association.

“I’ve been trying, but some owners are worried [the police] will be checking everything they do,” he told The Post. “Some have been willing to. It’s a good idea, but it’s going to take time for people to understand that the government isn’t watching everything you do.”

Others, like Tom Grech of the Queens Chamber Of Commerce, had fewer concerns.

“Contrary to some people’s perspectives, there are bad actors out there looking to rip people off and hurt small businesses,” Grech said.

“At the end of the day, I’m on the side of law enforcement,” he continued. “The more we can share information among small businesses and the NYPD, the more we can move on from catch and release. If these people are out there and believe they can steal with impunity they will.

“The only way to get to prosperity is public safety,” he went on. “Bad actors are running around in areas and doing whatever they please.”

Businesses interested in participation or seeking further information can visit the NYPD’s Fusus pilot program online to sign up

https://nypost.com/2024/05/16/us-news/nypd-could-access-shops-surveillance-cameras-in-real-time-under-new-city-plan/

Common Medications For ADHD Linked To Increased Risk Of Glaucoma

  by Marina Zhang via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Common drugs prescribed to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with an increased risk of glaucoma, a recent Canadian study found.

Glaucoma is a progressive eye disease that causes vision loss. Angle-closure glaucoma is a subtype that contraindicates with popular ADHD drugs.

Dr. Rami Darwich, an ophthalmology resident and the study’s lead author, told The Epoch Times that the study “does not establish causation but rather highlights an elevated risk of glaucoma.”

Common ADHD Drugs

Many popular ADHD drugs are sympathomimetic drugs, meaning they activate the sympathetic nervous system to help people focus. However, their downstream effects can inadvertently contribute to elevated eye pressure.

High eye pressure is a significant risk factor for glaucoma, though Dr. Darwich added that some glaucoma has developed even without significant pressure changes in recent years.

Common ADHD drugs include sympathetic stimulants such as methylphenidate and amphetamines. These are often first-line treatments for people with ADHD due to their greater efficacy. Psychostimulants are effective for about 70 percent of ADHD patients.

Non-sympathomimetic drugs, such as atomoxetine, increase chemicals in the brain to help the brain work and concentrate. Atomoxetine is usually prescribed when the patient is unresponsive to first-line drugs.

The study authors followed 240,257 newly prescribed subjects who took either methylphenidate, amphetamines, atomoxetine, or a combination of these drugs for a year or more.

Study participants were then followed and compared to people who had not taken ADHD drugs to determine glaucoma risks.

People who took amphetamines and atomoxetine had a higher risk of angle-closure glaucoma (ACG), while people who took methylphenidate had a higher risk of open-angle glaucoma (OAG).

Our eyes are made up of fluids. Comparing a person’s eyes to a sink, Dr. Darwich explained that ACG occurs when “the drainage pipe of the sink gets blocked, causing the water (fluid inside your eye) to build up suddenly.”

With OAG, “the drainage pipe is open, but it’s like it’s clogged or narrow, so the water (fluid inside your eye) drains too slowly,” he said.

One might experience “severe eye pain, headache, and blurred vision” with ACG. “It can feel like there’s pressure building up in your eye.”

OAG is more chronic and doesn’t present with noticeable symptoms at first. Over time, blind spots can appear in the periphery, which can then progress to the center of one’s vision. However, much of the eye damage has already been done by that stage.

The authors also noted that atomoxetine and amphetamines were weakly linked to the development of OAG, though they said the correlation wasn’t statistically significant.

How ADHD Drugs Contribute to Glaucoma

The authors were surprised that methylphenidate was not strongly linked to ACG, which is contraindicated by psychostimulants that activate the nervous system.

In general, sympathomimetic drugs such as methylphenidate and amphetamines are not recommended for individuals with known or suspected ACG.

Since these medications activate the sympathetic nervous system—the system that prepares the body for fight or flight—the pupils dilate, which can mechanically obstruct the eye’s natural drainage pathway. This fluid buildup can increase eye pressure and damage the optic nerves, causing glaucoma and progressive vision loss.

OAG is more common than ACG, though it has a lower risk of vision loss, and its link to ADHD drugs is not well-established.

Methylphenidate, the drug shown to increase the risk of OAG, has also been found to be toxic to eye cells. The three medications studied have also been known to induce redox reactions, which may lead to oxidative damage, potentially impairing optical nerves and affecting eye health.

People whose bodies don’t properly metabolize ADHD drugs may also be at greater risk of drug-related glaucoma.

“Given the prevalence of ADHD medication use (medically and recreationally), further studies are needed to confirm our findings and investigate associations of ADHD medication use and glaucoma,” the authors wrote.

https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/common-medications-adhd-linked-increased-risk-glaucoma

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Detailed trial data show Bayer drug alleviates menopause symptoms

 New data from two late-stage studies of an experimental Bayer drug show it reduced the frequency and severity of common symptoms of menopause, supporting the company’s case for seeking regulatory approval.

The results were disclosed by Bayer Thursday and will be presented at this year’s annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in San Francisco.

Bayer shared the trials’ success in January, but didn’t reveal specific findings. The company also announced positive results from a third Phase 3 study in March, when it confirmed plans to file for marketing authorization of the drug.

Known as elinzanetant, Bayer’s drug would, if approved, compete with a medicine from Astellas called Veozah, which is approved in the U.S. to treat moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms caused by menopause.

Often described as hot flashes, vasomotor symptoms commonly occur during menopause, the natural period when a woman’s menstrual cycle stops. Caused by the resulting decrease in estrogen levels, symptoms can last for many years and are severe for some women.

Hormonal therapies are sometimes used to treat vasomotor symptoms, but they may increase the risk of heart attacks, blood clots and breast cancer. The Food and Drug Administration recommends that, if prescribed, hormone therapies be taken at the lowest dose and for as short a time as possible.

“There are limited approved non-hormonal treatments for bothersome menopausal symptoms, such as hot flashes and sleep disturbances,” said JoAnn Pinkerton, professor and director of midlife health at UVA Health, in a statement provided by Bayer. “Consequently, many women experience discomfort for months or even years, with the majority of symptoms left untreated.”

With its approval last year, Veozah became the first drug that works by blocking a protein known as neurokinin 3, or NK3, that’s involved in regulating body temperature.

Bayer’s drug works along the same lines. Also a neurokinin receptor antagonist, elinzanetant targets the NK1 and NK3 receptors.

In the Oasis 1 and Oasis 2 studies, Bayer respectively enrolled 396 and 400 postmenopausal women between the ages of 40 and 65 years with moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms. Women either received a once-daily dose of elinzanetant or placebo, and were evaluated over 26 weeks.

From Oasis 1, Bayer reported treatment led to an average reduction of 3.29 occurrences of vasomotor symptoms at week 4, and of 3.22 at week 12, as recorded by a hot flash daily diary. The reductions Bayer reported are adjusted for placebo, a spokesperson confirmed. Significant decreases in symptom severity were also reported at weeks 4 and 12, compared to placebo.

Million Texans Without Power As Storm Topples Transmission Towers

 Powerful storms tore through eastern Texas on Thursday evening, decimating transmission towers and plunging over a million residents into darkness. 

"Severe thunderstorms moving across the Houston metro area have a history of producing damaging winds! This destructive storm will contain wind gusts to 80 MPH! A tornado is possible!" the National Weather Service of Houston wrote on X.

\X users shared shocking footage of transmission towers that were toppled by the storm. 

According to poweroutage.us, more than a million Texans are without power, mainly in the eastern part of the state. 

The Texas power grid can't catch a break.

https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/million-texans-without-power-storm-topples-transmission-towers

No, left-leaning bully Andrew Cuomo hasn’t suddenly changed his spots

 By Karol Markowicz

Just what is former Gov. Andrew Cuomo up to these days?

It sure seems like he’s gearing up for another run —   but under which political party?

The first clue is his bid at massive COVID revisionism.

In a recent interview, Cuomo claimed he hadn’t forced anyone to close their business or wear a mask, and in fact had no power to do so.

Indeed, to hear Cuomo tell it, people all did it voluntarily.

Please. For those of us who lived through Cuomo’s New York in 2020 and haven’t somehow had our memories erased, the truth was quite different.

In fact, Cuomo’s leadership was uber-authoritarian, not to mention erratic.

He absolutely closed businesses, schools, bars, gyms and houses of worship in certain areas and forced even toddlers into masks (while he himself was rarely seen in one).

His rules, of course, never made any sense and had nothing to do with science.

Remember having to order a “substantial” snack with a drink at the bar with a curfew of 11 p.m.?

Or when he fined New Yorkers $1,000 for failing to social-distance outdoors?

He now wants us to think we did that all on our own.

Praised for his calm and steadiness at the start of the pandemic, the hothead gov we’d known all along soon emerged.

He had open fights with then-Mayor Bill de Blasio. He was belligerent, nonsensical.

He’d insist he was in control, as he famously did when he bloviated, “[DeBlasio] didn’t close schools, and he can’t open them” — but then did nothing to actually open the schools.

His biggest sin: forcing nursing homes to take in COVID-positive patients, while knowing it can spread in such facilities “like fire through dry grass,” as he himself put it.

That likely led to hundreds of avoidable deaths.

Cuomo’s team then concealed the real number of nursing-home deaths, and though he eventually apologized, it was only to fellow Democrats feeling political heat over the lies.  

In the years since COVID, plenty of people have tried to rehabilitate their image and cover up their atrocious pandemic failures.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer says she never banned seeds or gardening, though she did just that.

American Federation of Teachers boss Randi Weingarten now insists she tried to open schools, even though she fought tooth and nail to keep them closed — and even helped write Centers for Disease Control policies to ensure they wouldn’t open.

Yet Cuomo is going further: In November 2022, the ex-gov began appearing on WABC Radio in New York.

This was odd because the station is essentially right-of-center, home to conservatives like Mark Levin and Sid Rosenberg.

That December he was spotted dining with Kellyanne Conway, Donald Trump’s campaign manager in 2016 and close adviser through his 2020 run.

Cuomo spent February of 2023 criticizing the Biden administration on immigration, adding that maybe the “southern states were right.”

By March 2023, Cuomo had a spot guest-hosting on the WABC network.

In April and May, he blasted Alvin Bragg’s case against Donald Trump and bashed fellow Democrats on crime.

In March, he opposed congestion pricing, which he himself signed into law.

In December, a Republican group paid for a poll testing Cuomo’s chances in a primary against Mayor Eric Adams.

And now comes his claims that he never locked anyone down or made anyone mask.

What a shift!

In 2014, he told conservatives to leave New York, because they didn’t belong here.

Of course, he was on top then and didn’t need those icky Republicans.

Now he sees that the path to his next political role will require conservative support, if not the GOP ballot line itself.

Don’t fall for the charade: Cuomo didn’t suddenly become open-minded; this is all a political calculation.

He may be marginally better than some New York Democrats, but he’s still just out for himself — and the same old Cuomo: You can be sure the mean-spirited, dictatorial left-leaning bully will eventually reemerge.

As for Republicans, building the party in Blue York is hard work.

Yet taking a chance on a failed Dem suddenly saying all the right things will only create a roadblock for the right.

Republicans shouldn’t forget what the governor actually did and said back when he didn’t need them.

https://nypost.com/2024/05/16/opinion/no-left-leaning-bully-andrew-cuomo-hasnt-suddenly-changed-his-spots/