Photo Credit: Jewish Press

New York Top Court Has New Pistol-Packing Chief Judge

Former NY State Court of Appeals chief judge Jonathan Lippman

A 33-year stretch of Jewish chief judges on the New York State Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, has come to a screeching halt with the swearing-in of former Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore, 60, a Republican-turned-Democrat. DiFiore’s husband, Dennis Glazer, a retired lawyer, told The Jewish Press he grew up as a Conservative Jew but his children were brought up Catholic.

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DiFiore is the only child of Italian immigrants, raised in Mount Vernon. She graduated from Mount Vernon High School, C.W. Post College at Long Island University, and St. John’s University School of Law. DiFiore and Glazer met on the first day of law school, and married in 1981. DiFiore and Glazer, Bronxville residents, are the parents of three children, Alexandra, Joseph, and Michael, all now adults.

During her confirmation hearing, DiFiore acknowledged she has a pistol permit and carries a gun.

Since 1869 there have been 115 jurists on the Court of Appeals. Since 1914 there have only been 12 Jewish jurists on the high court including associate judges Samuel Rabin, Jacob Fuchsberg, Bernard Meyer, Howard Levine, Albert Rosenblatt, and Leslie Stein along with Chief Judges Benjamin Cardozo, Irving Lehman, Stanley Fuld, Sol Wachtler, Judith Kaye, and Jonathan Lippman.

“As a Jew I’m proud of all the great judicial talent that’s been on the court and that tradition will, I’m sure, continue,” Lippman told The Jewish Press. Lippman was forced to step down because he reached the mandatory retirement age of 70.

Associate Judge Leslie Stein says she doesn’t think of her colleagues in an ethnic or religious way.

“We are all just trying to do the same thing which is to achieve justice and as we may at times disagree we are not disagreeable. It’s a wonderful hard-working group of jurists,” she said.

 

Health Commissioner Earns Outside Income

New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker earns $136,000 a year in his post overseeing a $64 billion agency aimed at providing and protecting the health care for all New Yorkers. However, most people do not know about Health Research, Inc., a little-known not-for-profit agency based in the Albany suburb of Menands, NY, where Zucker holds the title of board president for which he earns a second income.

At a recent health care budget hearing Zucker, 56, told Assembly Health Committee member Andrew Goodell (R – Jamestown, Chautauqua County) he did not know exactly how much he earns as board president of HRI but said it is around $50,000 to $60,000 annually. Attempts to extract an exact amount of the compensation from the agency were not successful. The organization boasts a $700 million annual budget, according to the 2014 IRS 990 form filed by HRI.

While the Cuomo administration is seeking to limit outside income for state lawmakers there does not seem to be a definitive answer as to whether that would include a situation such as Dr. Zucker’s.

 

Schumer, Cuomo Opponents Surface

Republican opponents are lining up to challenge U.S. Senator Charles Schumer this year and Governor Andrew Cuomo in 2018. Although the adversaries are not well known, you will be hearing their names later this year.

Lining up to take on Schumer is Frank Spotorno, a Yonkers resident. Spotorno is the CEO and founder of Park Avenue Elevator Designs, a company that constructs elevator cabs. Spotorno says he wants to give Schumer a run for his money because he doesn’t want the Brooklyn-born Democrat to go unopposed.

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Marc Gronich is the owner and news director of Statewide News Service. He has been covering government and politics for 44 years, since the administration of Hugh Carey. He is an award-winning journalist. His Albany Beat column appears monthly in The Jewish Press and his coverage about how Jewish life intersects with the happenings at the state Capitol appear weekly in the newspaper. You can reach Mr. Gronich at [email protected].