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R.I.P.
 
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This one sucks. Michael K. Williams found dead at NYC apartment.
Legendary characters on The Wire and Boardwalk Empire.

1 of 4 arrested over Michael K. Williams’s fatal OD had prior deal via NY’s bail laws

https://nypost.com/2022/02/02/four-...e-overdose-death-of-actor-michael-k-williams/
Four men were hit with federal charges Wednesday in the overdose death of “The Wire” star Michael K. Williams — including one who walked free after cutting a sweetheart deal last year on two felony drug sale cases, sources said.

Irving Cartagena, Hector Robles, Luis Cruz and Carlos Macci are each charged with with narcotics conspiracy for distributing fentanyl-laced heroin that led to Williams’ overdose death in September 2021, federal prosecutors in Manhattan said.

The crew sold the cocaine laced with fentanyl in plain view outside 228 South 3rd Street near Havermeyer Street, stashing them behind garbage cans, according to a federal complaint.

Cartagena, also known as “Green Eyes,” was busted at the same Williamsburg corner in August 2020 and hit with third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell, a class B felony, sources said.

Released without bail under state’s bail reform law, Cartagena was arrested again on drug sale charges on Feb. 10, 2021, for allegedly selling $40 in heroin.

.The cases were combined, however, allowing him to plead guilty to disorderly conduct — a violation, according to sources.


Surveillance footage shows Cartagena allegedly completing a hand-to-hand drug sale with Williams the day before he was found dead.
SDNY

“He pled it all out to nothing and he’s back on the street,” one law enforcement source told The Post. “Ten days after pleading out to a violation he’s back to selling.”

“The NYPD treats these cases the same — we were after him,” the source continued. “We locked him up twice.”

Cartagena’s sweetheart plea deal was first reported by The Daily Beast.

Surveillance footage obtained by investigators shows Cartagena allegedly completing a hand-to-hand drug sale with Williams the day before he was found dead in his Williamsburg apartment on Sept. 6, with drugs and drug paraphernalia near his body.

“More specifically, the NYPD found, among other things: a white plate with white powdery residue on it, a straw on the plate, and several glassines that were marked with the stamp ‘AAA Insurance’ and scattered on and around the white plate,” the complaint said.

The residue was sent to an NYPD lab and tested positive for heroin and fentanyl, according to the complaint.

The crew had set up shop outside a building next to where Macci, 70, lives, prosecutors said in court.


Irving Cartagena had previously been released without bail for an August 2020 crime.
SDNY

According to the federal complaint, Cartagena had sold drugs to undercover informants for months prior to Williams’ death.

In addition to Cartagena, the other three defendants also were known by their street names — Robles as “Oreja,” or ears, Cuz as “Mostro,” and Macci as “Carlito,” according to the feds.

The four men continued to sell the deadly drugs at residential buildings in Brooklyn and Manhattan — even after learning their stash allegedly killed Williams, the feds said.

In fact, federal prosecutors said undercover informants made another drug buy from the dealers the day after Williams’ body was found.

“This is a public health crisis. And it has to stop. Deadly opioids like fentanyl and heroin don’t care about who you are or what you’ve accomplished. They just feed addiction and lead to tragedy,” US Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement announcing the arrests.


The men continued to sell the deadly drugs in Brooklyn and Manhattan — even after learning their stash allegedly killed Williams, feds said.
SDNY
Cartagena was arrested in Puerto Rico on Tuesday and is expected to make an initial court appearance Thursday in federal court there.

Cruz, Robles and Macci appeared before Manhattan federal court Magistrate Judge Steward Aaron on Wednesday and were ordered held without bail.

Robles already served 18 years in prison on a manslaughter conviction and Macci has 23 prior drug convictions, according to records and federal prosecutors.

Robles tried to run when police showed up Tuesday but slipped and fell and was taken into custody — with 700 envelopes of heroin on him, according to federal prosecutor Micah Fergensen.

Fergensen said Cruz’s apartment was believed to be the gang’s “stash house,” and said police found 500 glassine envelopes of heroin there during a search Tuesday night.

He said they suspected the heroin was also laced with fentanyl.

“They knew they sold these drugs to Michael Williams and he died,” the prosecutor told the judge. “They continued selling these drugs to customers knowing that might be the last thing they did.”

Michael K. Williams died at the age of 54 on September 6, 2021.

Macci’s lawyer, Ben Zeman, maintained that this client is “not so much a lifelong drug dealer as a lifelong drug user.”

Williams, 54, a Brooklyn-born actor, was best known for his role as Omar Little on the hit HBO series “The Wire.”

He sported a trademark scar on his face, which he got when a fight broke out while he was celebrating his 25th birthday.

At the time he was working as a dancer in music videos, including for Madonna and George Michael.

His career later took off, with roles in “Law & Order” and “The Sopranos” before he landed his breakthrough part in “The Wire.”
 
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Publishing innovator Jason Epstein has died at 93
https://www.npr.org/2022/02/04/1078382704/jason-epstein-died-new-york-review-books
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NEW YORK — Jason Epstein, a publishing innovator and bon vivant who helped put the classics in paperback, co-founded The New York Review of Books and worked with such novelists as E.L. Doctorow, Vladimir Nabokov and Philip Roth, has died at age 93.

Epstein died Friday "surrounded by his books" at his home in Sag Harbor, N.Y., said his wife, the author and former New York Times journalist Judith Miller. The cause was congestive heart failure, she said.

The book world has its share of accidental lifers and Epstein was one. Once a young bohemian who desired only enough money to have time for reading, he took a job at Doubleday in the early 1950s, joined Random House in 1958 and remained for decades as editorial director. He became one of the industry's most honored executives, receiving lifetime achievement awards from the National Book Foundation, presenters, of the National Book Award, in 1988; and from the National Book Critics Circle in 2002.

Epstein was not just a man of letters, but of food and drink, whose own books included the memoir Eating and whose dining companions ranged from Buster Keaton to Jacqueline Kennedy to the notorious attorney-political operative Roy Cohn. In Making It, a 1967 best-seller about the literary world, Norman Podhoretz wrote affectionately of Epstein's tastes for imported shoes, first-class travel and "appallingly expensive" restaurants.

"He was beautiful to watch," Podhoretz observed.

He was as well-read and as opinionated as the authors he worked with, "so damned intelligent," Mailer would joke, once telling The Associated Press that he had to adjust to an editor "who might be a lot brighter" then he was. Epstein published an early excerpt of Nabokov's Lolita and fought unsuccessfully to convince Doubleday to publish the scandalous novel about a professor's obsession with a 12-year old girl. Epstein also feuded bitterly with Gore Vidal and became a critic of the Library of America, believing that the imprint he helped establish had grown bloated. Random House co-founder Bennett Cerf would call him the "cross I bear," while Epstein labeled Cerf "the bear I cross."

Among the many books edited by Epstein: Doctorow's Depression-era novel Billy Bathgate, Jane Jacobs' classic of urban studies The Death and Life of Great American Cities and Mailer's CIA epic Harlot's Ghost.

Epstein admittedly passed over the occasional best-seller, although he was proud of rejecting Shirley MacLaine's New Age favorite Out on a Limb.

"We were friends and she actually wrote much of that book at my house in Sag Harbor (on New York's Long Island). But she never told me what it was about," Epstein told the AP in 2000. "I read this and I said, 'Come on, Shirley, you're nuts.'"

The son of a successful textile salesman, Epstein grew up in Maine and Massachusetts, where he acquired his longtime passion for fine cuisine and spent so much time at the library that one librarian saved his card while he and his family spent a year in New York City. In the late 1940s, he entered Columbia University, when the school's president was Dwight D. Eisenhower. Epstein met the future U.S. president once, and, by accident, made a fine impression.

"I had spent the night downtown with a girl," Epstein told the AP. "I could hardly stand up. I had been up all night and he thought I was a bright young fellow, up bright and early. He was beaming, and he shook my hand."

In his early 20s, his quest for affordable classics inspired him to start one of publishing's first literary paperback imprints, Anchor Books, now part of Penguin Random House. He also helped launch two other major and lasting projects. One came in the early 1960s when a newspaper strike and the general tedium of literacy criticism led Epstein and his then-wife, Barbara, to help found The New York Review of Books, along with critic Elizabeth Hardwick and editor Robert Silvers among others. In the late 1970s, he was among the creators of the Library of America, which offers hardcover editions of the country's most influential writers.

He had two children with Barbara Epstein: daughter Helen Epstein, a contributor to The New York Review of Books; and son Jacob Epstein, a television writer whose time in the book world was brief and unfortunate. His novel The Wild Oats was published in 1979 and was soon found to contain numerous similarities to Martin Amis' The Rachel Papers.

"Epstein wasn't influenced by 'The Rachel Papers,'" Amis wrote at the time, "he had it flattened out beside his typewriter."

Jason Epstein was the rare publishing veteran to show early and unforced enthusiasm for technology. He looked for ways to sell books online before the rise of e-books and Amazon.com and was a strong advocate for in-store machines that could print and bind works on demand. Epstein essentially advocated a system that enabled authors to bypass the industry that employed him, looking back to the days when Parson Weems could sell books about George Washington by simply sitting under a tree and hitting on a drum.

"Soon writers and readers will be able to meet again on a worldwide green where writers may once more beat their drums or hire a Weems to drum up business for them," Epstein wrote in Book Business, a memoir published in 2001. "On the World Wide Web, future storytellers and their readers can mingle at leisure and talk at length."
 
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