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Friday, November 15, 2024

Why you’re still smelling smoke today in New Jersey and around NYC

 Don’t hold your breath — the smoky air and fire smell aren’t going anywhere fast.

New Jersey residents woke up on Friday to yet another day of haze and a distinct burning scent as teams continue to battle the Jennings Creek blaze in Passaic County — and experts warned that the wind could shift the poor air conditions over New York City.

The Jennings Creek Fire in northern New Jersey has burned through hundreds of acres.Julian Leshay Guadalupe/NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

As of Friday morning, the brush fire was about 75% contained, according to FOX Weather meteorologist production assistant Joseph Davis.

“Anywhere directly south of that should be seeing some smoke right now,” he told The Post, noting that the air quality index for the eastern half of the Garden State was listed as “poor.”

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The smoke conditions extended out over the water, and could shift around New York City later on Friday due to high winds, Davis said.

An area burns from the Jennings Creek Fire in Greenwood Lake.Getty Images

The air quality in the Big Apple was teetering between “good” and “moderate” around 9:30 a.m., but those conditions could deteriorate if the New Jersey fire smoke inches closer, he explained.

“The wind is going to shift more towards New York, we could see more poor air quality later today,” Davis noted.

The conditions were set to last through Saturday and Sunday — making for a haze-covered fall weekend in the region.

NJ wildfire sends smoke billowing into NYC on Nov 9
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A helicopter drops water over the wildfire in Greenwood Lake.AFP via Getty Images

The risk of brush fires is also still active throughout the tri-state area, including parts of Pennsylvania and into Connecticut, Davis said.

“The elevated fire right is pretty expansive over the tri-state due to the drought and winds,” he explained.

Over 20 million people in the Northeast were under fire threat this week.

Emergency services respond to a brush fire in Inwood Hill Park.Getty Images

The New Jersey Forest Fire Service said Wednesday that the Jennings Creek Fire will have burned as much as 5,000 acres (7.8 square miles) once it is fully contained.

As of midweek, nearly 2,300 acres (3.5 square miles) had burned in New Jersey alone — while firefighters in New York City grappled with brush fire outbreaks in Prospect Park and Inwood.

14-year-old boy was arrested last week for allegedly igniting one of the New Jersey fires that destroyed 52 acres, police announced.

https://nypost.com/2024/11/15/us-news/why-youre-still-smelling-smoke-today-in-new-jersey-and-around-nyc/

Migrant with loaded AR-15, suspect Mexican cartel member freed after alleged assault on NYPD

 A Big Apple migrant armed with a loaded AR-15 assault rifle and his Mexican cartel pal are both back on the streets — despite allegedly ganging up on NYPD cops at a Bronx subway station.

Abraham Sosa, 20, a migrant living above a Bronx day care center, was hit with assault, gun possession, resisting arrest and trespassing charges after being nabbed urinating in a subway tunnel on Nov. 5 — while lugging the assault weapon in his backpack, according to sources and records.

His pal, 21-year-old Christopher Mayren, allegedly jumped into the fray when Sosa got into a scuffle with New York’s Finest, leaving two cops injured, according to a criminal complaint.

AR-15 rifle seized from migrant.
Police said migrant Abraham Sosa was carrying this AR-15 rifle in his backpack when he scuffled with cops at a Bronx subway station on Nov. 5

Yet both thugs are free, Sosa after posting a $25,000 bond and Mayren released without bail.

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Sources said a tattoo on Mayren’s arm links him to a vicious drug cartel.

“This is crazy,” one frustrated Bronx detective told The Post Thursday. “You have a member of a Mexican cartel running around. That tattoo is a billboard for ‘I am a criminal. I don’t care about your laws.’

“Can it get more dangerous than riding a subway with a loaded rifle? And when he’s not on a train, he’s upstairs from little children in the day care center,” they said. “These are two very dangerous scenarios.”

It was not immediately clear if one or both of the suspects are in the US illegally.

According to police, the melee unfolded after Sosa strolled past a “No Trespassing” sign at the Kingsbridge Road B and D train station around 4:30 p.m. Nov. 5.

Bronx B and D train station.
Police said migrant Abraham Sosa was stopped by cops after trespassing and urinating at a Bronx subway station.Christopher Sadowski

Cops spotted him urinating in the subway tunnel and questioned him.

“Really?” Sosa allegedly told the officers, according to a criminal complaint. “For using the bathroom?

“I hurt my ankle,” he told the cops. “Let me show you my ankle.”

But when police started to handcuff him, Sosa allegedly went nuts and fought back — and Mayren jumped in and started fighting with the officers, knocking two of them to the ground.

Both men were busted and charged, and arraigned in Bronx Criminal Court the following day.

However, Mayren was released without bail and Sosa was sent to Rikers Island on a $25,000 bond — which he posted on Nov. 12, jail records show.

Both are due back in court on Dec. 9.

“Police officers are doing our part, getting dangerous gang members off the streets and subways — and we’re getting hurt in the process,” said Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Hendry said.

“But the rest of our criminal justice system is still failing at its job. We need New Yorkers to join us to demand better.”

https://nypost.com/2024/11/15/us-news/migrant-with-loaded-ar-15-suspected-mexican-cartel-member-freed-from-jail-after-alleged-assault-on-cops/