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City Police Make Multiple Arrests in Connection with Saratoga Springs July Protests

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Four people were charged Tuesday night in connection with protest-related activities that occurred in July, and a fifth person is facing multiple misdemeanor charges following an alleged altercation with an officer, according to a statement released by Saratoga Springs Police Department Wednesday afternoon.

A July 14 protest that started in Congress Park spilled into the streets and interfered with traffic, resulting in motorists stuck inside their vehicles, police said, in a statement.  “This included one motorist who suffered from a heart condition, which was openly shared with protestors blocking his vehicle in. After learning of these added details regarding this protest, Chief (Shane) Crooks ordered that an investigation be conducted and that those identified be charged and held accountable, where appropriate.”

Subsequent to the investigation, arrest warrants were obtained on Aug. 31, and arrests made Sept. 7.  They include: Samira K. Sangare, 23, of Halfmoon, Chandler M. Hickenbottom, 25, of Ballston Spa, and Molly B. Dunn, 44, of Saratoga Springs, each charged with disorderly conduct: obstructing traffic, a violation. Dunn was additionally charged with unlawful imprisonment in the second-degree, a misdemeanor.

Alexis A. Figuereo, 34, of Saratoga Springs, was charged with disorderly conduct violation, and two misdemeanor counts of obstructing governmental administration – the latter charges in connection with Figuereo’s alleged disruption of Saratoga Springs City Council meetings on July 6 and July 20, according to police.

Police said the charges from July 14 allege “the protestors not only obstructed traffic, but by doing so they prohibited the movements of those on Broadway by Phila Street for many minutes. One of these people was the individual with the medical condition noted above.”

According to court documents, a voluntary witness whose name was redacted in court records provided police with a statement dated Aug. 12 that read, in part, that the July 14 protest resulted in halting vehicle traffic. “They had the traffic stopped for about 15 minutes before they let the cars go. At one point while I was stopped, one of the protesters thanked me for waiting…I have never been in a situation like that. I was surprised it was happening in Saratoga.”  

Gabrielle C. Elliot, 27, of Ballston Spa, was charged Sept. 7 with attempted assault, resisting arrest, and endangering the welfare of a child. All three charges are misdemeanors.

While officers were affecting warrant arrests Tuesday night, Elliot is accused of throwing and striking a uniformed officer with a full water bottle who was involved in the arrests. When informed she was under arrest, Elliot refused to comply and pulled away from officers, according to police, and grabbed on to the stroller where her small child was seated until she was taken into custody. Police said “the child was fine and sent with another family member at the scene.”

“The Saratoga Springs Police Department recognizes the right to peacefully and lawfully protest but many of the acts committed on July 14 are not only unlawful acts, but they placed the protestors and the public in harm’s way,” Chief Crooks said, in a statement.

The investigation of the events of July 14 is ongoing and additional arrests are likely. Police ask anyone with information regarding unlawful acts committed during the protest contact them at: 518-584-1800 or 518-584-TIPS.

The Saratoga Springs Police Department was assisted by the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office and the New York State Police.

Assemblywoman Woerner: Landlords Should Not Be Punished

ROUND LAKE — Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner (D-Round Lake), released the following statement on Aug. 31: 

“When the eviction moratorium was put in place 17 months ago, it was meant to mitigate the unforeseen challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and to ensure no one would be left homeless due to a pandemic-related loss of employment or income. 

“Earlier this spring, I supported allocating $2.3 billion in federal and state relief funds to help both landlords and tenants. This money was intended to pay landlords back for the loss of income. The state has been unacceptably slow in getting this money to the people who need it: only 7.8% of the applications submitted from Saratoga County tenants/landlords have been paid out to-date, and 10% of applications from Washington County. Landlords have been covering expenses out of pocket for over a year and a half and should not be expected to be the sole protectors of this safety net. Many have suffered from a significant loss of income due to the lack of rent money and will be put in an even more difficult situation when property taxes come due next month. 

“The moratorium has gone on long enough. In April, I opposed extending the eviction moratorium… I will again vote against this legislation. We must work to restore balance in the housing market. Landlords should not be punished for the state’s failure to distribute rent relief in an expeditious manner.”

New Albany Med Research Sheds Light on Infectiousness of Covid-19

ALBANY — Researchers at Albany Medical College and Albany Medical Center Hospital found that patients with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, are infectious only during the initial onset of symptoms.

The study, published in the August 2021 issue of the Journal of Clinical Virology, and released Aug. 31, was a collaborative effort between Albany Med’s Departments of Immunology and Microbial Disease, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Emergency Medicine, and Epidemiology.

“This illuminating study has implications within the hospital, as we work to effectively isolate infectious patients, and for the larger community, in terms of knowing when we can safely discharge patients who no longer need the high level of care offered in the hospital,” said Dennis P. McKenna, M.D., president and CEO of Albany Med, in a statement.

A nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) from nasopharyngeal and throat swabs is the gold standard for diagnosing Covid-19. However, this test doesn’t distinguish between active virus and other viral genomic fragments that no longer contain active virus, said Dennis W. Metzger, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Department of Immunology and Microbial Disease at Albany Medical College and one of the lead authors of the study.

Beginning in the early days of the pandemic in 2020, instead of relying solely on the NAATs, also known as the PCR test, Albany Med researchers used complex virus culture methods combined with assays to analyze antibodies in samples from congregate care Covid-19 patients hospitalized at Albany Medical Center Hospital.

As expected, they found that the patients expressed infectious virus very early after being admitted to the hospital. However, subsequent samples from the same patients showed that the patients quickly developed mucosal antibodies that suppress viral replication – that is, the virus was no longer reproducing itself. This was the case even when the patients continued to test positive for Covid-19 by PCR, sometimes weeks after the initial infection.

Dr. Metzger explained that active virus was likely present in the early stages of infection because antibody levels were low. “But as the disease progresses and the body produces larger amounts of antibody, the virus is effectively neutralized and the patient becomes noninfectious,” he said.

The study was done using patients with the original Covid-19 virus, not the Delta variant, but researchers say the results would be applicable to the Delta variant and other variants as well.

In Saratoga County, the 7-day rolling positivity infection rate was 4.6%, as of Aug. 31. According to Saratoga County Public Health Services, 67.8% of county residents have completed the vaccine series.   

Resources for Veterans of Afghanistan

BALLSTON SPA — The Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency announced it has multiple resources and programs available for Afghanistan Veterans. 

The Saratoga County Veterans Peer Connection Program offers mentoring, informal meet-ups, structured assistance, and one-on-one peer matching to help veterans manage the unique stress and challenges they may feel. The program also helps to foster relationships within the veteran community that will build resiliency through encouragement, personal connections, and access to support and crisis intervention measures. All Veterans are welcome regardless of military discharge. 

Veterans looking for a way to meet other veterans in a stress free, no obligations environment, are invited to gather at Saratoga Coffee Traders (447 Broadway, Saratoga Springs) on Tuesday evenings from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Participants will receive a free coffee and sandwich along with encouraging and supportive conversation with other veterans. No agenda, just veterans spending time together. 

Veterans seeking structured assistance are encouraged to up at 1 p.m. on Sept. 17 for a Mental Health Summit. The Summit is open to all veterans and family members. Representatives from VA programs and community organizations will provide information and resources to those who attend. That takes place at the Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency Office, 2144 Doubleday Ave., Ballston Spa.

The Agency’s mentoring program pairs established, local veterans with returning veterans who are experiencing post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or other re-acclimation challenges. Personalized and informal, these pairings yield relationships intended to ease the transition from combat to civilian life. 

The Agency also offers a one-on-one peer matching program for those who prefer individual interaction. 

Additional resources that may be helpful to veterans:

• Veterans Crisis Line – 800-273-8255
• Saratoga County Mental Health – 518-584-9030
• Albany Vet Center – 518-626-5130
• VA Rapid Access Clinic  – 518-626-5339
• Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency  – 518-884-4115
• VA Caregiver Support  – 1-855-260-3274
Elizabeth Dole Foundation Hidden Heroes Hotline  – 202-249-7170

For more information about the Saratoga County Veterans Service Agency and its Veterans Peer Connection Program, please call 518-884-4999 or visit www.veteranspeerconnection.org.

The 2021 Saratoga Showcase of Homes Tickets Now On Sale

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Tickets for the areas premiere new home tour, the 2021 Saratoga Showcase of Homes, are now on sale! This event is now celebrating 25 Years of exception homes! Tickets are available at all Adirondack Trust branch locations, Curtis Lumber in Ballston Spa, Saratoga National Bank on South Broadway in Saratoga Springs and Roohan Realty on Broadway in  Saratoga Springs. Tickets are always conveniently available at any showcase home during tour hours of 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. or can be purchased online at www.saratogashowcaseofhomes.com. Once again this year, each showcase ticket holder will receive a free shoe/tote bag at the first home visited!

The 2021 Saratoga Showcase of Homes is being proudly presented over two fall weekends this year beginning October 9-10-11 (open Columbus Day) and October 16-17. Tickets are $25 in celebration of the event’s Silver Anniversary. This year’s edition has 13 locations from 12 of our area’s finest builders on display in Saratoga County. 

Participating award-winning builders in this year’s event are; The BDC Group, Beechwood Homes, Bella Home Builders, Belmonte Builders, Bonacio Construction, Caruso Builders, Kodiak Construction, Kohler Homes, McPadden Builders, R & M Homes, Trojanski Builders and Witt Construction. To view an interactive map of the home locations, directions and much more, please visit the mobile friendly website.

Now celebrating its 25th year, this annual community event has contributed over $1.3 MILLION DOLLARS to our local charities. Proceeds from the Saratoga Showcase of Homes benefit Rebuilding Together Saratoga County (www.rebuildingtogethersaratoga.org) and Habitat for Humanity of Northern Saratoga, Warren and Washington Counties (www.glensfallshabitat.org). 

For more details on the Saratoga Showcase of Homes, please visit www.saratogashowcaseofhomes.com. Check us out on Facebook and follow all the updates on this year’s event.

About Saratoga Builders Association

The Saratoga Builders Association, Inc. (SBA) is a specialized professional trade association representing an industry basic to the wellbeing and economy of the people of Saratoga County. Its membership includes residential and commercial builders, developers, remodelers, building material suppliers, sub-contractors, financial institutions, architects, engineers, realtors, attorneys and other industry professionals. For more information, please visit www.saratogabuilders.org or contact Barry Potoker, Executive Director at 518-366-0946 or bpotoker@saratogabuilders.org

Saratoga Giant Pumpkinfest Returns This Month

SARATOGA SPRINGS —The Saratoga County Chamber Of Commerce, the Saratoga Springs City Center, and the Saratoga Farmers Market will host their Annual Saratoga Giant PumpkinFest September 25 from 10-4 p.m. at the Saratoga Springs City Center Parking Garage.

Giant pumpkin growers from the Northeast will again compete at this Festival to find the biggest pumpkin of the year. 

In 2019, the festival had over 40 giant pumpkins and a crowd of 10,000 people in attendance. Last year, pumpkins were safely weighed and transported to locations for families around the county to view for the month of October.

The Saratoga Giant PumpkinFest is a free family-friendly event. Giant pumpkins begin arriving in the early morning with the weigh-off starting at 11 a.m. The Saratoga Farmer’s Market will be next door on High Rock Ave. open from 10-3 p.m. with vendors and special exhibits. There will also be opportunities to take selfies with the giant pumpkins to share with friends and family. Contest Winners will be announced at the end of the festival.

For a schedule of activities, to become a vendor or to register your giant produce visit www.saratoga.org/tourism/giant-pumpkin-fest

Reminder for Drivers of the Dangers of Passing a Stopped School Bus as Schools Reopen

LATHAM — The New York Association for Pupil Transportation (NYAPT) is reminding drivers to be extra careful this year as school districts begin to reopen across the state. 

The Association is also alerting parents and caregivers that there could be disruptions to school transportation this year as school districts face an unprecedented shortage in school bus drivers driven by the COVID-19 pandemic, extension of extra unemployment benefits and demand for drivers in the package handling industry.

According to a statewide survey conducted by NYAPT of school bus drivers across the state, an estimated 50,000 motorists in New York illegally pass stopped school buses every day school is in session, endangering students and putting their lives at risk. 

“Providing New York’s school-age children a safe school bus ride to and from school each day is our top priority, and we urge all drivers to do their part and be extra cautious as schools reopen,” NYAPT President Ted Nugent who is the school transportation director at the Coxsackie-Athens CSD, said in a statement.  “We are asking drivers to avoid distractions while driving, be aware that school buses are back on the roads, and to always stop when they see those red lights flashing on a school bus because students’ lives depend on it.” 

New York State Vehicle and Traffic law requires all vehicles to come to a full stop when approaching a school bus stopped with red lights flashing. Red flashing lights indicate that a child is either boarding or disembarking a school bus. New York state law prohibits the passing of a school bus that is stopped with red lights flashing regardless of your direction of travel, even if there is a multi-lane or divided highway. 

Penalties for a first-time offense include a fine from $250 to $400, five points on your license and the possibility of 30 days in jail. A second conviction within three years will result in a $600 to $750 fine and up to 180 days in jail; while three or more convictions will result in a fine from $750 to $1,000, mandatory revocation of your driver’s license and up to 180 days in jail. 

The New York Association for Pupil Transportation (NYAPT) is a statewide organization dedicated to the support, development, and representation of school transportation professionals who are responsible for the safe and efficient transportation of more than 2.3 million school children across New York State. www.nyapt.org

Déjà Vu: Local Vietnam Vets Reflect

“My God, everything was different that morning. The radio traffic. The panic. The confusion,” recalled Bill O’Brien of the last days of what was the longest war before the most recent one. It was springtime 1975. 

“The flight from Cubee, the first hour-and-a-half was normal. All of a sudden, you’re into this hornet’s nest. The end of that day, landing at U-Tapao, which is a Royal Thai base, was a surreal experience,” recalled O’Brien, who retired a Navy Captain in 2006 – a rank equal to the Army rank of colonel.

“The South Vietnamese aircraft had been running for their lives. Coming into U-Tapao they weren’t calling anybody for permission to land. They were landing in the trees. They were landing in the grass. They were upside down,” he said. “It looked so weird taxi-ing in. And they were bulldozing planes off the runway so we could land. It looked like you took an airshow with vintage military aircraft and just…shook it all up.” 

Vietnam. Afghanistan. 

“Sometimes, what you find are amazing parallels between what’s happening now and what happened back in Saigon,” says Roy McDonald, president of the Friends of the New York State Military Museum. O’Brien and Barry Hartman, both Saratoga County residents, are members of the board. The museum includes exhibits from the French and Indian war to displays remembering 9/11. The artifacts of Vietnam feature instructive signage of things like the Paris Peace Accords and the Fall of Saigon, as well as the cloths and tools, uniforms and equipment of the era. 

“I was in Da Nang, that was the north part when we brought all the troops out. I was there ’67-’68 and June ’72 to March ’73. I came out on the last plane out of Da Nang, we closed the thing down,” says Barry Hartman who retired twice – once an Army Colonel as well as a Brigadeer General in the New York Guard.  “That was in ’73. The pictures everybody sees of the end of the war – that was two years after we left.” 

Hartman pointed to the differences between his first tour in Vietnam in 1967 and his last in 1973. “It was kind of quiet when we first got there, but November ended all that. The battle of Dak To. There were periods of absolute terror,” he says.  “My camp troop, C-Troop, was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for actions during the Battle of Dak To. And during that whole time, I only had to write one letter home,” he says, his voice choked with emotion. “That’s probably the toughest thing I ever did.”

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Vietnam and Afghanistan. Now and then.  “The end results are the same. The Vietnamese are unified, however you want to define that. The Taliban has got Afghanistan, however you want to define that. The difference was there was an International Peace Treaty at the end of Vietnam signed by the combatants in Paris. There were also two international commissions set up – you didn’t have any of this in Afghanistan,” Hartman explains. “There were a lot of checkpoints, and it was set up in advance. The peace talks had been going on for some time and we had been moving troops out. Jan. 28, 1973 was the ceasefire. That was when everybody was supposed to stop firing and stay where you are. We closed down Da Nang. On the last airplane out on the tarmac there were about 45 of us.  It was a clean leave, but we were watching them. They were building up. We knew it was coming, we knew the North Vietnamese sometime in the future were going to attack,” he says. 

As operations officer, Hartman made arrangements for those leaving. “We got them out of country. Some brought their Vietnamese families with them. We had the time to do it, we had the plan to do it, and the leadership let us do it.  We had two months trying to get everybody out. We’re going out in the countryside there to try and find the bodies missing in action. We knew, well, a helicopter went down in this general area. We found several of them and we were able to bring the U.S. bodies out. That’s what we did during that period of time.”

Saigon and Da Nang were the two U.S. hubs. “Now this is two years before what everybody understands as the end of the war, and what you see on TV with all the pictures.” In March 1973, he joined about four dozen other Army and Navy personnel, boarded a blue bus to the airport, then on to a World Airways charter flight. It was the last plane out of Da Nang. “I couldn’t wait to get back home,” he says. 

O’Brien first got to Vietnam at the end of 1971 and started flying in January 1972.” I was just a kid. It’s funny, I took a MAC flight into Okinawa, met my squadron and didn’t even know where the hangar was. But it started right away. Soon as I hit the ground – boom – fly.”

His squadron consisted of about 15 airplanes and 450 to 500 people who deployed en masse. “We staged out of Okinawa my first tour, and my airplane had great range. You could fly for 12 hours, so we could cover the whole South China Sea. We could fly low and slow, we had a four-engine turbo prop, shut two off, and we could fly at 200 feet for 10 hours. We were looking at shipping, looking at what the Soviets were doing, at what the Chinese and North Koreans were doing off the coast.  We were used heavily for surveillance, and to see what was going on,” O’Brien says.   

“In those early days, we were very basic. The cameras were all hand-held. And they were terrible, which would cause some problems later on when they were looking for intelligence and unhappy with the pictures we were taking. So, then we started taking pictures with the Nikons we bought in Japan when we were on liberty. Those were much better quality. The camera would be taken by anyone who wasn’t flying,” he laughs. 

The cockpit consisted of two pilots and a flight engineer. “There were two radar cabinets behind, in the cockpit. It was enough of a surface where you could get your butt on it and go out over the pilot or the co-pilot’s shoulder and take a picture. Some of the most famous pictures we took were taken by our inflight technician. They fix things when they break and he wasn’t having to fix anything so he took the pictures. If we located a Soviet ship or a Chinese or North Korean ship, they wanted a lot of intelligence on the ship, so we would have to fly around the ship and take pictures from five different angles, drop a sonobuoy to pick up the engine noise of the ship to see if there was a submarine behind it, things like that. My airplane was not armored, we didn’t have any guns. We were not really meant for combat. All our fuel was in our wings mostly – 60,000 pounds of jet fuel in our wings.” 

Even after Hartman had left Da Nang in 1973, O’Brien says he flew 150 hours per month into the spring of 1975. Operations did not slow down and surveillance flights continued along Vietnam, from Diego Garcia to Iran to the east coast of Africa watching Soviet ship activity. 

“Starting in 1974, the North Vietnamese Army started coming south. They weren’t abiding by any agreement,” O’Brien says. 

“My airplane had been upgraded. We had the very first FLIR in the western Pacific – which is Forward-looking infrared camera. So, our airplane was in high demand. We were in the Philippines. I was supposed to fly from the Philippines to Thailand to Diego to Iran when on the morning of April 30, 1975 I was flying from (U.S. Naval Air Station) Cubi Point in the Philippines across south Vietnam to Thailand. And that’s when I ran into the morning of the embassy evac. All the airplanes in the air. The (USS) Blue Ridge. And all the chaos. And all the radio traffic. Some poor sailor on one of the ships, I never was sure which one, was trying to control all this massive air traffic in the air. 

“You had the entire South Vietnamese air force flying anything they could fly trying to land on the ships in the South China Sea, and also trying to go into Thailand. You’ve seen the pictures of the chaos.  So many helicopters were coming in to the (USS) Coral Sea that, I read later that they pushed $10 million of our helicopters off to the side, to make room for the ones coming out. The South Vietnamese pilots were being instructed to land on the Blue Ridge or any other carrier that had a helo platform. Land. Drop your passengers. Then go back out and ditch your helicopter in the water and jump out. And maybe we’ll pick you up,” he says. 

“The evacuation started in early March with fixed-wing aircraft. They evacuated somewhere between 45 to 50,000 people. When they started to come under some heavy fire they went to helicopters. They evacuated like 7,000 people with helicopters. Incredible. Now the compound – the embassy annex and the Pittman apartment building – basically where some embassy people, some CIA people stayed. The iconic picture of the helicopter on the roof with the people going up to the roof which some people think is the embassy, is the Pittman building,” O’Brien says. 

“The compound where all of these people crammed in and tried to get out was a chaos I think similar to Kabul. There was a code word that had been passed a month before to all our friendlies and our allies in and round the Saigon area that was going to be broadcast on Air America: ‘The temperature in Saigon today is going to be 105,’ followed by the playing of ‘White Christmas.’ The song. Bing Crosby. That’s the code to get to the embassy. Get there. Get your families there.” 

 “There’s one more chapter to the Vietnam thing, and that’s the Mayaguez,” Hartman says. “How many? 41?” 

“Forty-one,” O’Brien says. “That’s where my airplane got shot. After three tours and two weeks after the fall of Saigon.” A picture taken by O’Brien’s in-flight tech appeared in both Time and Newsweek. 

The final 41 names on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall represent 25 Air Force pilots and crew, 2 Navy corpsmen, and 14 Marines; these were the men killed in the operation to rescue the crew of the Mayaguez, according to U.S. Department of Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. 

“We were taking .50-cal. fire from gunboats. There were about 250 Khmer Rouge on the ship, and they were also in the tree line. We were flying between the ship and the island, and I’ve always said: if these guys had been duck hunters, we would have been dead. But all their rounds went through our tail. Terror. It was terror. I never want to forget that day. I really shouldn’t be sitting here talking to you because we were close. We were low and these guys… it was May 13 of ’75.” 

O’Brien says the emotional impact of that day didn’t hit him until two years later. 

“I was watching a movie, and then I just broke down. But during that day, I remember we all just did our jobs. It didn’t hit me for almost two years later. That’s weird, I know,” he says. 

“They didn’t shoot us down. After I made the initial call, it went all the way back to the White House. And then they were contacting us through this satellite, so I could hear Kissinger’s voice on the radio. They were asking us questions, but they said: you’ve got to stay there. Is the plane still fly-able?” And it was. So they said: you’ve got to keep your eye on the ship and let us know what’s going on because they had the crew hostage. This was an American merchant ship. So we had to go back, and keep looking at it. We went back for another five hours, and they were shooting at us. I called up and asked: How high can a .50-cal. shoot?  I didn’t know. They had to research it. 5,000 feet. That’s what I did. I got to 5,000 feet. They eventually pulled into a different island, Koh Tang Island and that was the island they started bombing and strafing and then the Marines invaded it. And they lost 41 Marines. Almost instantly, because there were a lot of Khmer Rouge on the island,” O’Brien says.

“The tragedy of it all is they left three Marines behind. In their rifle pits. Firing,” says O’Brien, his voice slowing to a whisper. “They survived for a week by stealing food from the Khmer Rouge. They were eventually captured, tortured and killed by the Cambodians. And those are the last three names on the wall. Those three marines,” he says.  “That’s an awful postscript to that war.”   

The New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center is located at 61 Lake Ave. Saratoga Springs. For more information, go to: www.museum.dmna.ny.gov or call 518-581-5100.