News Scarpino

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Aug. 11, 2017 -- Westchester County District Attorney Anthony A. Scarpino, Jr. today announced the creation of the Office of Immigrant Affairs (OIA), which will be dedicated to assist various immigrant communities navigate the criminal justice system.

“Too often, members of the immigrant community are victims of crimes of economic exploitation or crimes of violence. With the creation of the Office of Immigrant Affairs, there will be one point of contact within the District Attorney’s Office where immigrants will be able to receive help” said D.A. Scarpino. As of the 2010 census, the Hispanic population in Westchester County was close to 22 percent. As such, the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office handles many cases involving this community.

Victimized immigrants may report any type of crime, including violent crimes, human trafficking, domestic violence and fraud. The emphasis will be on making the process easier for immigrants to come forward to be a witness to a crime and not fear that they will be deported. “This office will provide better coordination of these prosecutions and provide greater outreach to the immigrant community” said Scarpino.

The Westchester County District Attorney’s Office has joined the New York State District Attorneys League of Immigrant Affairs (DALIA), an organization committed to protecting all the residents of their respective counties, when they become victims of crimes. As a member of DALIA, we join with the District Attorneys of New York County, Queens, Kings, Nassau, Orange and the Bronx. Regardless of status, OIA will assist members of the immigrant community who have fallen victim of crimes to obtain justice within our legal system:

  • The OIA will ensure that complaints received through the hotline or Web site, are directed to the appropriate bureau within our office.
  • As part of this initiative, we will be undertaking outreach and education efforts, and working with advocates to spread the word about the new OIA.
  • In addition to examining crimes targeting the immigrant community, the OIA will serve as a liaison to foster cooperation—we want victims and witnesses to work with us to investigate and prosecute cases.
  • OIA will assist members of Westchester’s immigrant communities navigate and access the criminal justice system.  Immigrants are often exploited for their vulnerability and are often unfamiliar with their rights.

Common schemes targeting immigrant residents:

  • “Notarios”, or others that represent themselves as attorneys who can provide legal advice or promise to process immigration paperwork
  • Individuals pretending to be ICE agents that promise special treatment or demand payments in order to avoid deportation
  • Persons or business that promise to provide employment or work visas that they cannot provide
  •  False investment opportunities
  • Sale of fake government documents, such as social security cards and passports
  • Businesses that hire immigrants to work on construction projects but fail to pay wages

In creating the Office of Immigrant Affairs, District Attorney Scarpino also announced that Lila E. Kirton, Deputy Bureau Chief of the Office’s Bureau of Strategic Planning and Community Outreach will serve as its inaugural director. In addition to being the daughter of immigrants, Lila brings many years of prosecutorial experience having served as an Assistant District Attorney in Queens as well as having worked in the office of the New York State Attorney General. She will build upon the extensive program of public education and outreach efforts already undertaken by the Bureau and serve as a liaison to immigrant communities in Westchester, to make them aware of how to access the criminal justice system if they are victimized and to assist with questions or concerns, and coordinate with the appropriate bureaus and divisions within the Westchester County District Attorney’s office.

Anyone who believes that he or she may have been the victim of a crime is encouraged to call the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office of Immigrant Affairs hotline at (914) 995-1616.

The Immigrant Affairs Unit was expressly created to serve members of all immigrant communities, regardless of immigration status.

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Media contacts:
Paul Noto: (914) 995-6385

Robert Wolf: (914) 995-3586

111 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd.
White Plains, NY 10601
Fax: (914) 995-2116

July 27, 2017 -- Westchester County District Attorney Anthony A. Scarpino, Jr. and County Executive Robert P. Astorino today announced the formation of a joint Task Force to address the region’s growing heroin and opioid epidemic.

Scarpino and Astorino said members of the County Department of Public Safety would serve on the Task Force alongside prosecutors and criminal investigators from the District Attorney’s Office. In addition, the Westchester County Intelligence Center, established by the District Attorney’s Office in 2008, will dedicate three analysts to assist the Task Force in compiling, analyzing and reporting on statistical and evidentiary trends and patterns.

Scarpino and Astorino said the Task Force would work closely with local police departments to combat illegal heroin and opioid trafficking through enhanced intelligence gathering and coordinated investigations, arrests and prosecutions.

“It’s not enough to put our best resources into the fight against opioid addiction,” Astorino said. “They must be coordinated and that’s the idea behind the Task Force — to have Public Safety, the District Attorney, and local police all working together to get illegal opioids off the streets and arrest and prosecute the people selling them.”

Last month, Astorino announced the launch of Project WORTHY — Westchester Opioid Response Teams Helping You, an initiative that brings together the county’s health, mental health, and law enforcement resources, as well as broad-based business and community support to save lives and families put at risk by opioid addiction.  The County Department of Public Safety’s participation in this Task Force is an outgrowth of Project Worthy. 

Both Scarpino and Astorino noted that heroin and opioid abuse is a major and rapidly growing public health threat in the United States. In 2015, there were more than 52,000 deaths attributed to opioid abuse. Many of those were teenagers and young adults. Opioid fatalities in Westchester County increased more than 200 percent from 2010 to 2015.

They believe partnering together and pooling their resources is Westchester’s best bet to win the battle against Westchester’s growing opioid epidemic.

“This epidemic is destroying too many of our young people and tearing families apart,” Scarpino said. “We know that solving this problem requires a combination of expanded education and treatment, additional drug courts, and an aggressive and coordinated investigative effort by all law enforcement agencies in the county. This Task Force will vigorously investigate and prosecute the suppliers in an effort to reduce the number of overdoses. At the same time, we will continue to support alternatives to incarceration for those who are willing to get the help they need.”

Scarpino said the Task Force would complement his Overdose Response Initiative (ORI), established last year in an effort to track, map and investigate all suspected accidental heroin and opioid overdose deaths in Westchester County. The goal is to determine the source of supply of the controlled substances that led to the victim’s death and to arrest and fully prosecute those responsible. The ORI works in collaboration with local police departments, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the FBI, the Westchester Intelligence Center, and the Westchester County Medical Examiner, and each overdose is treated as a crime scene. Certain data is then immediately reported to an Assistant District Attorney in the DA’s Narcotics Bureau. Until recently, overdoses treated as “accidental overdoses” were not investigated as potential homicides.

Scarpino said that one of the most effective results of the ORI has been the ability to identify potentially new, lethal “brands” of heroin and to distribute that information to all area law enforcement agencies, fire departments, and EMS departments.

“This allows for better medical response to overdose victims, as well as aiding in identifying the source of these newly created brands, and prosecuting these suppliers to the fullest extent of the law,” Scarpino said.

Specifically, the new Task Force will work to reduce heroin and opioid-related deaths by:

  • Analyzing, investigating and prosecuting heroin and opioid trafficking on a coordinated basis across Westchester
  • Removing heroin and opioid dealers from our streets and county by putting the best law enforcement resources in the field and the courts
  • Assisting local departments that lack the resources  or otherwise have jurisdictional limitations to adequately investigate multi- jurisdictional trafficking on their own

Project WORTHY is one the latest efforts to grow out of the County Executive’s Safer Communities initiative, which was started in 2013 and has since tackled some of our most intractable problems, from developing safety protocols in our schools to protect against active shooters and terror attacks, to preventing youth suicide and examining the root causes of violence. The strategy in all these efforts is break down bureaucratic and geographic silos so that the county’s full array of public and private resources can be marshalled and coordinated in the most effective ways possible.

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Media contact: Robert Wolf
111 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd.
White Plains, NY 10601
Tel: (914) 995-3586
Fax: (914) 995-2116