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I'm Dana Carving.
I'm David Spade.
Flying the Walls back for another season now on audio and video every Monday and Thursday.
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To good be true.
Local people, local stories.
This is the All Local from 1010 Wins.
I'm Linda Lopez and here are today's top local stories.
These are looking for the two suspects that they say through Molotov cocktails through
the window of a home on Staten Island.
Our Glenn Schuck has the story.
Two men jumping out of a car tossed three Molotov cocktails directly at this house on Roma
Avenue.
One of them shattering a window, though it's unclear how many of the devices if any made it
inside.
The homeowner is not injured.
Rudy DeValle, one of the few neighbors who wanted to speak, the others, too afraid.
Everybody's fine here.
But here's something like this.
It's worried some.
Yes.
I want to see what you want.
Some more patrols around here.
Yes.
I would think more patrols will be perfectly fine, especially if they throw stuff.
Well, into the morning, police continuing to guard the home that's surrounded by police
tape as surveillance footage being reviewed from homes all up and down this block.
Glenn Schuck, 1010 Wins, 92, 3 FM, Newdorp, Staten Island.
An update now on a story we've been telling you about on 1010 Wins, a man is now in custody
after that random stabbing in East Elmhurst on Monday.
Twenty-teen-year-old Lewis Immanuel Valencia Bonse is accused of targeting a 29-year-old
woman near a bus stop at 23rd Avenue and 94th Street.
The mother of three was headed to the bus stop when she was stabbed multiple times.
Valencia was caught after a cop's released photos of him.
He's now charged with attempted murder and assault.
Community groups and city leaders are rallying on city hall steps today, pushing against,
pushing for rather than NYC against hate, policy proposal.
Leo Ferguson with Jews for racial and economic justice tells 1010 Wins that it would fund
with $30 million anti-hate programs outside the NYPD, like de-escalation training.
The key focus here is to move the city towards prevention rather than reacting after the
fact, after a crime has occurred when it's already too late.
We need to get into communities early and resolve tensions before they blow up.
Ferguson also says the funding would be a big win for Mayor Mamdani, who during his campaign
run, promised to address how the city approaches hate crimes across the five burrows.
Public advocates, Umani Williams and several council members are also expected to rate
today's rally.
The NYPD on the lookout for a pair of moped bandits in a string of chain snatchings in
the Bronx.
Suspects have just been riding up to victims from behind on the two wheel ride, before ripping
the chains right off their neck.
This has happened four times over February and March, both in Norwood and in Fordham Heights.
So far, the victims have suffered just minor injuries, none of them have been hospitalized.
Photos of the suspects up now on the Crime Stoppers X-Page.
The Long Island man, who would already say was speeding when he crashed and killed two
19-year-old passengers in his car, is back in court today after being indicted.
The BMW was barely recognizable after prosecutors say the driver, Frank Labidi, was going 80 miles
per hour when he crashed into a tree in Hicksville.
The crash killed his two 19-year-old passengers.
One of the passengers was a volunteer firefighter.
Labidi is accused of disabling the stability control on the car so that he could drift,
and he's also accused of never breaking before the crash.
Sophie Hall, 1010 wins, a 92-3 FM on the Long Island.
Landing that first job is getting harder for CUNY grads, a new report from the Center
for an Urban Future, finds that entry-level job postings in the city are down, about 37
percent since 2022.
Eli DuVorkin, who's their editorial and policy director, says that internships are a major
issue too.
Only about 12 percent of CUNY undergraduates report ever having a paid internship during
their college careers.
The national average is closer to 60 percent.
At colleges like Columbia or NYU, you're talking about 90-plus percent, so CUNY students
have some real barriers when it comes to gaining the kind of work experience that opens
the door to job.
He tells 1010 wins the Mamdani administration needs to expand paid internships and build
stronger ties between CUNY and employers, especially since college is still one of the
biggest paths to economic mobility for people in New York's working class communities.
Some dramatic new video shows the moments that NYPD officers tackled the bombing suspect
outside Gracie Mansion, and what police called an ISIS-inspired attack.
Officers are seen running around the sidewalk barriers, pursuing 18-year-old Amir Balat,
who allegedly hurled an explosive device outside Gracie Mansion during some protests.
The video shows one officer tackling him to the ground, then a group of other officers
surrounding him, and gathering around to restrain him.
A lot and his alleged accomplice are now facing federal charges.
You can see that video on any of our social media pages, Instagram, Twitter, at 1010 wins.
Mayor Mamdani is creating a new office to overhaul how the NYPD and the city handle mental
health crisis calls.
The mayor is creating an office of community safety.
His rollout of a program to respond to 911 calls regarding people in mental health crises.
The mayor pressed the issue during his campaign, suggesting that a police response wasn't
always the way to go.
In January, the mayor visited a queen's man in the hospital.
He'd been shot by police when family members called and asked for a transport to the hospital.
The man had experienced prior mental health episodes and had approached police with a knife.
Julia Papa, 1010 wins on 92-3 FM.
Mayor Mamdani and Governor Hoekol are joining the New York Immigration Coalition and other
groups in welcoming home the city student who was detained by ICE 10 months ago.
Dylan Lopez Contreras was detained at a routine check-in at a court in Manhattan in May
of 2025.
At the time, he was the first high school student in New York City known to be taken by ICE
since President Trump returned to office.
Lopez Contreras returned home to the Bronx Wednesday morning after being released from
a detention facility in Pennsylvania.
His lawyers say he now hopes to graduate, adding his asylum case will resume.
Mayor Mamdani and a statement saying he wishes him a smooth and joyful return to his
life, his community, and his future here in New York City.
Police are searching for the three people they say pulled off a string of robberies at
jewelry stores in Manhattan and Brooklyn in broad daylight.
Cops say that in each instance, two of the suspects would walk into the store and distract
an employee with conversation while the third would steal jewelry from the case.
They got away with about 40,000 in jewelry in all from two stores in Williamsburg,
one in lower Manhattan.
You can see videos of the suspect on Crime Stoppers X-Page.
Someone with any information about them is asked to call 800-577-TIPS.
Its federal charges for one New York City teacher who's accused of possessing child sexual
abuse material.
32-year-old Joseph Taylor McKeill was arrested yesterday, this on his way to Independence
High School, where he reportedly teaches at-risk students.
Prosecutors say McKeill had a thumb drive on him containing 150 disturbing images of
minors and found a pipe used to smoke meth.
His lawyer said he's addicted to drugs and now is suspended from his position at the
high school.
The Education Department called the allegations deeply disturbing and completely unacceptable.
McKeill is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center, a judge will rule later today whether
he should enter a drug treatment program.
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1010 WINS ALL LOCAL

1010 WINS ALL LOCAL

1010 WINS ALL LOCAL