A serious claim, made by sources involved in the New York Police Department's ongoing ticket-fixing scandal, accuses officers of burying a speeding ticket New York Yankees shortstop Alex Rodriguez got in 2009.
According to the New York Daily News, former-Yankees team owner George Steinbrenner was also a beneficiary of mishandled summonses.
The NYPD ticket-fixing probe has widened in the past few weeks. Police Commissioner Ray Kelly has extended the probe after the initial drug investigation concentrated on only one precinct but has now mushroomed into a wide-spread scandal. It now involves over 100 cops and their superiors in various station houses.
Two sources said A-Rod was pulled over for hot-rodding on the West Side Highway around 57th Street two years ago. He was issued a speeding ticket by a highway cop, but an NYPD sergeant had it disappear.
According to the Daily News, three sources gave accounts of numerous politicians and celebrities having summonses squashed.
"It was very easy for a big name to walk away from a summons," one source said. "[Celebrities] have contacts everywhere. There's an eagerness to help because of who they are."
Steinbrenner, according to the source, used his influence to get rid of tickets for friends and family many times over the years.
The practice was so blatant, some celebrities were bold enough to have representatives call Police Headquarters, outright, and ask to get their clients tickets fixed.
The sources claim rapper Jay-Z's driver was also nabbed for speeding in almost the exact spot as A-Rod. The paperwork was "lost" and the case never saw the day of light. The cop must have been in an Empire State of Mind.
Even former-Knick and current-Denver Nugget Raymond Felton was called for a moving violation outside Madison Square Garden and it disappeared faster than the Knicks against the Celtics.
The long-standing practice of NYPD cops fixing tickets was always considered a professional courtesy and not a crime. Up to 40 cops are now facing departmental charges for fixing the tickets for cash or gifts.
Spokespersons for Rodriguez, the Yankees or the Knicks had no comment about the allegations or if they were part of the Bronx grand jury probe.
I'm just wondering if Mets owner Fred Wilpon would be able to talk his way out of a speeding ticket these days. He has such a special way with words.
Showing posts with label Jay-Z. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jay-Z. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Thursday, March 31, 2011
New Jersey Nets: Kiss Those Forty-Three Cent Seats Goodbye
New Jersey Nets tickets went on sale yesterday for their future home in Brooklyn. The long delayed Barclays Center is scheduled to open in the summer of 2012 and start hosting the Nets that season. The team is offering a variety of "All-Access" seating packages which run from $99 (in the lower deck) to $1500 (courtside) per game. The team's new slogan should be "Come For Vujacic; Stay For A Kardashian."
The Nets are offering the few die-hard season-ticket holders first crack at the 4,000 All-Access premium seats which offer perks like unlimited food and soft drinks, private entrances, concierge service and early access to the arena.
If you are one of those Nets fans, in the witness protection program at Newark's Prudential Center, and are used to snagging a 43-cent ticket on StubHub, fugeddaboudit. There will be 2,000 tickets priced about $15 at the team's new location, but the chances of snagging a bargain-basement Nets ticket for the newer and trendier Brooklyn locale will be out of the question---no matter how bad the team is.
The flash factor alone will go through the fast-rising roof top. The Knicks may boast their Big-Three, but the Nets have Jay-Z. The rap star mogul and a state-of-the-art arena. That means Beyonce and a slew of celebrities not named Woody, Dustin or Spike. The curiosity factor will draw new Nets fans in droves, even if the 43-cent tickets will have as much of a chance as a Net victory.
Years of legal haggling and zoning red-tape had turned the 18,000-seat Barclays Center project into a construction quagmire even the woeful Nets front office couldn't get into. But it was the Nets image which has really gotten stuck in the mud.
New majority owner, Mikhail Prokhorov, and his partner, Jay-Z, took over a team that hadn't contended since 2006-07 season and failed to land a big-name player last year. Deron Williams is a start.
The Nets watched as LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony played footsie with the Nets big aspirations, only to be left at the PATH station. The Knicks had the hubris to taunt their incoming rivals by placing a billboard of their prized player, Amar'e Stoudemire, staring down at the giant hole at the corner of Flatbush and Atlantic--the site of the Nets new home.
The Nets are counting on luring fans, new and old, by not charging personal-seating licenses. They said the All-Access deals are just as good and will allow purchasers first-shot at buying tickets for other non-Nets events like concerts and boxing matches.
"I think this is the best entertainment buy in all of New York," claims Brett Yormark Nets CEO, "Especially when factoring the ability to see top acts like Madonna before tickets hit the secondary market."
If you are a Nets fan, that is definitely a perk---maybe the highlight of the deal---especially when you have to commit to purchasing the locked-in priced seats for the first three years.
The average price of a current Nets ticket is $60---one of the lowest in the league. The new average price at the Barclays Center will be around $132--more than the Knicks current average ticket price of $88 and one of the highest in the league.
The Nets cross-borough rivals price will be rising next season after the Knicks announced a 49% increase to cover the on-going renovations at Madison Square Garden.
The Los Angeles Lakers currently get an average price of $113 per seat--the costliest ticket in the league.
It's hard to believe the Nets, in their inaugural season will be getting more than Kobe and company, but if more money means more wins...Go Kris Humphries.
The Nets are offering the few die-hard season-ticket holders first crack at the 4,000 All-Access premium seats which offer perks like unlimited food and soft drinks, private entrances, concierge service and early access to the arena.
If you are one of those Nets fans, in the witness protection program at Newark's Prudential Center, and are used to snagging a 43-cent ticket on StubHub, fugeddaboudit. There will be 2,000 tickets priced about $15 at the team's new location, but the chances of snagging a bargain-basement Nets ticket for the newer and trendier Brooklyn locale will be out of the question---no matter how bad the team is.
The flash factor alone will go through the fast-rising roof top. The Knicks may boast their Big-Three, but the Nets have Jay-Z. The rap star mogul and a state-of-the-art arena. That means Beyonce and a slew of celebrities not named Woody, Dustin or Spike. The curiosity factor will draw new Nets fans in droves, even if the 43-cent tickets will have as much of a chance as a Net victory.
Years of legal haggling and zoning red-tape had turned the 18,000-seat Barclays Center project into a construction quagmire even the woeful Nets front office couldn't get into. But it was the Nets image which has really gotten stuck in the mud.
New majority owner, Mikhail Prokhorov, and his partner, Jay-Z, took over a team that hadn't contended since 2006-07 season and failed to land a big-name player last year. Deron Williams is a start.
The Nets watched as LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony played footsie with the Nets big aspirations, only to be left at the PATH station. The Knicks had the hubris to taunt their incoming rivals by placing a billboard of their prized player, Amar'e Stoudemire, staring down at the giant hole at the corner of Flatbush and Atlantic--the site of the Nets new home.
The Nets are counting on luring fans, new and old, by not charging personal-seating licenses. They said the All-Access deals are just as good and will allow purchasers first-shot at buying tickets for other non-Nets events like concerts and boxing matches.
"I think this is the best entertainment buy in all of New York," claims Brett Yormark Nets CEO, "Especially when factoring the ability to see top acts like Madonna before tickets hit the secondary market."
If you are a Nets fan, that is definitely a perk---maybe the highlight of the deal---especially when you have to commit to purchasing the locked-in priced seats for the first three years.
The average price of a current Nets ticket is $60---one of the lowest in the league. The new average price at the Barclays Center will be around $132--more than the Knicks current average ticket price of $88 and one of the highest in the league.
The Nets cross-borough rivals price will be rising next season after the Knicks announced a 49% increase to cover the on-going renovations at Madison Square Garden.
The Los Angeles Lakers currently get an average price of $113 per seat--the costliest ticket in the league.
It's hard to believe the Nets, in their inaugural season will be getting more than Kobe and company, but if more money means more wins...Go Kris Humphries.