
Nassau County candidates clash over NUMC controversy as pressure mounts for state, federal action
Democratic challenger Nicole Aloise called Republican incumbent DA Anne Donnelly to take action and fully investigate former CEO Meg Ryan and other former leadership over what she called a 'blatant pattern of public corruption' on Wednesday outside the Nassau County Courthouse.
Aloise called recent reports 'concerning,' referencing thousand-dollar dinners charged to the hospital, allegations of Ryan funneling $3.5 million in improper payouts to herself and 12 other employees, and an mysterious break-in at former NUMC chairman Matthew Bruderman's home.
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3 Aloise said that incumbent DA Anne Donnelly should take actions and investigate former CEO Meg Ryan.
Nicole Aloise/Instagram
'Since this came out, Nassau County legislators have called on the Nassau County District Attorney to fully investigate what has been happening at NUMIC, and after almost four years in office, it is well past time for Anne Donnelly to put a stop to these blatant acts of public corruption in the county government,' Aloise told reporters.
County Legislators echoed the calls for accountability, holding a press conference of their own in Mineola, calling for federal investigators to step in since the county won't.
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'NUMC exists to save lives – not bankroll lobster dinners and luxury perks for politically connected insiders,' Legislature Minority Leader Delia DeRiggi-Whitton said. 'This pattern of abuse is a betrayal of public trust, and we are taking the next step to ensure full accountability.'
Nassau County police have said they're still investigating the break-in at Bruderman's home, and have yet to announce any arrests or updates — but Bruderman previously said that some hospital-related documents that went missing were recovered by police from an unidentified couple before his firing.
3 Minority Leader Delia DeRiggi-Whitton speaking at the podium and calling for a federal investigation into Matthew Bruderman's sudden firing in April.
When asked for comment, Donnelly said she opened an investigation into NUMC's previous management in June, which her office said remains active.
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But Aloise said she believes that investigation only exists on paper, and told The Post she doesn't believe any resources are actually being allocated into that case — pointing to thousands of dollars in political donations from Ryan to Donnelly.
'She either isn't being truthful about an active investigation or she's demonstrating just how unfit she is for the job by taking money from someone her office is supposed to be investigating,' Aloise said.
3 Nassau University Medical center located at 2201 Hempstead Turnpike, East Meadow, NY.
Edmund J Coppa
Campaign finance records show that Ryan donated to Donnelly's campaign in 2023, two years before the DA's office opened its investigation into NUMC.
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Ryan, who was officially terminated 'for cause' in May, has denied any wrongdoing and is suing the hospital over her dismissal, calling the accusations against her a 'political hit job'
'Any suggestion that she did anything improper or was reimbursed inappropriately is just another effort to distract from the State's Medicaid corruption, now under investigation by Congress, the millions in illegal no-bid contracts approved by Hochul's new appointees and NHCC's violation of Ms. Ryan's employment contract,' Ryan's spokesperson, Tom Basile said.
NUMC, Nassau's only safety-net hospital, remains more than $1 billion in debt and is currently under audit by the global accounting firm Deloitte, which Ryan's team accused of being awarded an illegal no-bid contract by the hospital's new leadership, after state lawmakers restructured the hospital's board earlier this year.
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CNN
24 minutes ago
- CNN
Live updates: Texas Republicans push ahead with redistricting after Democrats flee state
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The Hill
25 minutes ago
- The Hill
Greene talks about her ‘genocide' comment and being an ‘early indicator' of GOP discontent
The Movement is a weekly newsletter tracking the influence and debates steering politics on the right. Sign up here or in the box below. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) says that Republicans should take her vocal criticisms of the GOP — which she insists are not criticisms of President Trump — as a warning about coming troubles with their base. 'I'm an early indicator, and my complaints are felt and being said far and wide among your average American people who voted for the President and Republicans in 2024,' Greene told me in a phone interview on Monday. 'The Republican Party is the one drifting away from what we campaigned on.' Greene also expanded to me on being the only Republican in Congress to call Israel's actions in Gaza a 'genocide.' Far from backing away from the term, Greene said: 'It's easy to call it a genocide.' More on that in a moment. I had reached out to the firebrand Georgia congresswoman in wake of her comments to the Daily Mail that the GOP had 'turned its back on America First' and that she was unsure of whether 'the Republican Party is leaving me, or if I'm kind of not relating to Republican Party as much anymore.' The comments surprised some, given Greene's ardent support of Trump, who is the leader of the GOP. She told me it is 'ridiculous' to suggest she does not support the president. But they are part of a pattern of Greene breaking with leaders in the GOP, including Trump. In recent weeks, she called the crisis in Gaza a genocide; raised the alarm about U.S. strikes in Iran; critiqued the U.S. continuing to sell weapons to help Ukraine; and pushed for more Jeffrey Epstein disclosures despite resistance from Trump, among other gripes. Just on Monday, Greene in a post lamented that there have been zero arrests in a number of MAGA-amplified scandals like the 'Russian Collusion Hoax,' 'COVID,' 'Mar-A-Lago Raid,' and 'Epstein Pedophile Arrest,' among others. She posted: 'Don't talk about it if you aren't going to do it.' Who was she talking about in that post, and who needs to change? Greene declined to name specific names. 'That criticism is to everyone, literally everyone, and no one's left out of that,' Greene said. 'If you're going to go on television — and this is for everybody — and point their fingers at all these people and call them criminals, say they committed treason, then do something about it,' Greene said. 'If they make these accusations, but yet hold no one accountable, they're going to lose everybody. They're going to lose a vast majority of people who really were told they had to care about this, and they cared about it, but yet nothing got done.' After Greene and I spoke on Monday, CNN reported that Attorney General Pam Bondi was directing federal prosecutors to start a grand jury probe into Obama administration officials over their role in the 2016 Russia election interference investigation. The question is whether Greene is a canary in the MAGA coal mine, or whether her criticisms just put her on an island. She is a giant figure in terms of followers and attention, but some could dismiss her concerns as representing only a minor faction on the right. Greene said she is reflecting what she is hearing in her deep-red Georgia district. But there is clearly some annoyance with the criticism from Greene. Asked about Greene's comments in the Daily Mail and on X, a White House official told me: 'President Trump campaigned on securing the border, signing tax cuts, and ending the genital mutilation of minors. He's accomplished all three within the first 200 days. Those are all promises MTG campaigned for and should be happy about.' 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Greene said she dubbed the situation a 'genocide' by 'simply looking at the truth and being willing to speak,' saying that there are 'many others' who agree but 'they're afraid to say it.' 'I support Israel, and we want to see every single hostage released …. It was horrific what happened on October 7,' Greene said. 'But it's also horrific what's happening in Gaza and many innocent people are being killed, have been killed. Christians have been killed, and children have been killed and are being starved.' 'It's easy to call it a genocide. And I think Israel has made clear what they want to do. They really want to, basically, move all the Palestinians out of Gaza, and that's what they're in the process of systematically doing,' Greene said. I noted that even many progressive Democrats critical of Israel have not used the term 'genocide' to describe what's happening in Gaza, since the term implies targeted destruction of an ethnic group based on their identity. American Jewish groups, not to mention Israel itself, strongly reject accusations of 'genocide.' 'I think it's pretty easy to understand. It's targeted at who they are, so that's their identity,' Greene said. 'I mean, they've bombed it to the point where it's unlivable … They are in talks of trying to get other countries to take Palestinian refugees. So I don't think it can be any more clear.' Welcome to The Movement, a weekly newsletter looking at the influences and debates on the right in Washington. I'm Emily Brooks, House leadership reporter at The Hill. Tell me what's on your radar: ebrooks@ STRANGE BEDFELLOWS FOR 'ORGASMIC MEDITATION' CONVICTS Can the right-wing outrage over 'weaponized' prosecution give a boost to those involved with a salacious case? Those defending the sexual wellness company OneTaste are finding strange bedfellows on the right as they fight convictions of the group's founder and former CEO Nicole Daedone and its former head of sales Rachel Cherwitz. Daedone and Cherwitz were convicted in June for 'forced labor conspiracy in connection with their coercive scheme to obtain the labor and services of certain OneTaste employees.' The company, which taught 'orgasmic meditation,' turned from a start-up celebrated for its focus on female sexuality to being criticized for alleged abuse of employees. It was the subject of a controversial 2022 Lena Dunham -produced Netflix documentary, 'Orgasm Inc.' It's not the type of case that immediately invites a conservative defense, but defenders of Daedone and Cherwitz see an opening with those skeptical of overzealous prosecutors — like those in the MAGA movement supportive of Trump and outraged about his prosecutions, as well as those of Jan. 6 rioters. 'The bulk of the support has come from the conservative movement,' said Juda Engelmayer, the crisis publicist for Daedone and Cherwitz. Getting others to take a deep look at the underlying legal issues, he said, requires 'getting your head around that concept is an ick factor.' The libertarian magazine Reason's senior editor Elizabeth Nolan Brown in February outlined a key argument of those defending OneTaste heads: 'The two face a single count of conspiracy to commit forced labor … Neither woman is charged with actually forcing labor or engaging in other criminal acts.' Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), who was once investigated by the DOJ for alleged sex trafficking but never charged, has criticized the case on his One America News show. Trump adviser Roger Stone has critiqued the FBI over the case, as well. And it doesn't end in the conservative media space. There are people privately pressing the DOJ to look into the case. One member of Congress wrote to FBI Director Kash Patel with concerns about the case earlier this year, the Daily Mail reported. 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'Nearly all gamblers lose money, leading to further financial, health, and family problems. Congress should encourage a pro-growth tax code by declining to reinstate full expensing for gambling losses,' the memo said. ON MY CALENDAR It's a quiet August here in Washington. Send me your interesting upcoming seminars, Capitol Hill forums, and galas to be featured in this section: ebrooks@ Monday, August 25 to Thursday, August 28: State Policy Network annual meeting in New Orleans, La. THREE MORE THINGS The Trump administration is not planning to mandate coverage for in vitro fertilization, contrary to the president's campaign pledge, the Washington Post reported. The Young Republicans honored four leaders at its national convention in Nashville, Tenn., over the weekend, inducting them into the 1856 Society: Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Political Affairs Matt Brasseaux; former National Director of Election Integrity for the Trump Campaign and RNC Christina Norton; The Washington Reporter Editor-in-Chief Matthew Foldi; and Trump 2024 National Delegate Selection Director John Findlay. Douglass Mackey, whose conviction over posting memes about the 2016 race was overturned by an appeals court this year, was celebrated at a bash at MAGA Capitol Hill hangout Butterworth's on Friday. Napkins at the event featured the meme telling voters to text to vote that Mackey posted under an anonymous Twitter account that was the center of the conviction of conspiracy to suppress voters. WHAT I'M READING


The Hill
25 minutes ago
- The Hill
Texas Republican: GOP ‘will never have the White House again' if state lost to Democrats
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