truesee's Blog

Ex-prostitute awarded $200,000 in compensatory damages

The Boston Globe

Ex-prostitute awarded $200,000 in damages

Filed suit against Hub police officer

 

Stewart Bisho

Globe Correspondent
March 16, 2011
 
A former prostitute who was forced to perform sexual acts on a Boston police officer was awarded $200,000 in compensatory damages in federal court yesterday, officials said.

The judgment, handed down by Judge Douglas P. Woodlock in US District Court in Boston, follows the 2007 conviction of Michael LoPriore, 41, a 12-year veteran of the Boston police, who admitted to using his position as a police officer to force a 19-year-old prostitute to perform sex on him on several occasions in 2004. The Globe is not naming the woman, because it does not identify victims of sexual assault.

According to court documents, the assaults began after LoPriore followed the prostitute and a regular client from Chinatown to Quincy. After scaring the client off, LoPriore flashed his badge and demanded that the prostitute perform a sexual act or he would have her arrested.

Court documents show that LoPriore tracked down the woman in Chinatown on at least two more occasions and again forced her to perform sexual acts. During one encounter, she managed to steal LoPriore’s badge and later gave it to her lawyer, John Swomley, who turned it over to the FBI.

LoPriore later pleaded guilty in federal court to depriving the woman of her civil rights and served one year in jail.

Yesterday, Swomley said his client was pleased with the outcome, but added that given LoPriore’s current lack of employment, the prospects of collecting the money were dim.

“She’s quite happy to be given the opportunity to at least try to collect some money from LoPriore,’’ Swomley said. He said his client has turned her life around and is no longer working as a prostitute.

“She’s doing well,’’ he said.

Swomley’s client had tried to have the City of Boston held accountable for failure to supervise and adequately discipline LoPriore, who had a history of disciplinary actions against him and was on restricted administrative duty at the time of the 2004 assaults.

However, Woodlock rejected her argument, Swomley said, and found that the city could not have reasonably foreseen LoPriore engaging in the illicit activity.

LoPriore did not contest the judgment, Swomley said.

Entry #4,143

Grandmother wins lottery by accident

Atlanta grandmother wins lottery by accident

 

Kristi E. Swartz

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bobbie Ware didn't intend to play the $300,000 Taxes Paid game, but that was what she selected while standing in front of the Georgia Lottery vending machine at an Atlanta Kroger.

Bobbie Ware, 84, accidentally played the instant game $300,000 Taxes Paid game and won.
 
Georgia Lottery Bobbie Ware, 84, accidentally played the instant game $300,000 Taxes Paid game and won.
Her accidental selection proved to be the right one as Ware, 84, ended up buying the winning ticket.

"I can't believe this," she said. "It still hasn't sunk in."

Ware, a mother of four and grandmother of 10, said she will share her winnings of $300,000 after taxes with her family. She is a former social worker who retired after spending 35 years with the state's human resources department.

Ware bought her ticket at the Kroger on Caroline Street, in the Edgewood Retail District.

Entry #4,142

Blacks and Republicans The GOP Needs To Make Its Case To Win Blacks' Votes

Thomas Sowell

National ReviewOnline

March 15, 2011 12:00 A.M.

 

Blacks and Republicans
The GOP needs to make its case to win blacks’ votes.

San Francisco’s irrepressible former mayor, Willie Brown, was walking along one of the city’s streets when he happened to run into another former city official that he knew, James McCray.

McCray’s greeting to him was “You’re ten.”

“What are you talking about?” Brown asked.

McCray replied, “I just walked from Civic Center to Third Street and you’re only the tenth black person I’ve seen.”

That is hardly surprising. The black population of San Francisco is less than half of what it was in 1970, and it fell another 19 percent in the past decade.

A few years ago, I had a similar experience in one of the other communities further down the San Francisco peninsula. As I was bicycling down the street, I saw a black man waiting at a bus stop. As I approached him, he said, “You’re the first black man I have seen around here in months!”

“It will be months before you see another one,” I replied, and we both laughed.

Actually, it was no laughing matter. Blacks are being forced out of San Francisco — and out of other communities on the San Francisco peninsula — by high housing prices.

At one time, housing prices in San Francisco were much like housing prices elsewhere in the country. But the building restrictions — and outright bans — resulting from the political crusades of environmentalist zealots sent housing prices skyrocketing in San Francisco, San Jose, and most of the communities in between. Housing prices in these communities soared to about three times the national average.

The black population in three adjacent counties on the San Francisco peninsula is just under 3 percent of the total population in the 39 communities in those counties.

It so happens that these are counties where voters and the officials they elect are virtually all liberal Democrats. You might be hard pressed to find similarly one-sided conservative Republican communities where blacks are such small percentages of the population.

Certainly that would be hard to find in states with a substantial total population of blacks. In California, a substantial black population has simply been forced by economics to vacate many communities near the coast and move farther inland, where the environmental zealots are not yet as strong politically, and where housing prices are therefore not yet as unaffordable.

With all the Republican politicians’ laments about how overwhelmingly blacks vote for Democrats, I have yet to hear a Republican politician publicly point out the harm to blacks from such Democratic policies as severe housing restrictions, resulting from catering to environmental extremists.

If the Republicans did point out such things as building restrictions that make it hard for most blacks to afford housing, even in places where they once lived, they would have the Democrats at a complete disadvantage.

It would be impossible for the Democrats to deny the facts, not only in coastal California but in similar affluent strongholds of liberal Democrats around the country. Moreover, environmental zealots are such an important part of the Democrats’ constituencies that Democratic politicians could not change their policies.

Although Republicans have a strong case, none of that matters when they don’t make the it. The same is true of the effects of minimum-wage laws on the high rate of unemployment among black youths. Again, the facts are undeniable, and the Democrats cannot change their policy, because they are beholden to labor unions that advocate higher minimum wages.

Yet another area in which Democrats are boxed in politically is their making job protection for members of teacher unions more important than improving education for students. No one loses more from this policy than blacks. For many of them, education is their only chance for economic advancement.

But none of this matters so long as Republicans who want the black vote think they have to devise earmarked benefits for blacks, instead of explaining how Republicans’ general principles, applied to all Americans, can do more for blacks than the Democrats’ welfare-state approach.

— Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Entry #4,141

Obama AWOL While Crises Pile Up

March 15, 2011
 
FOX NEWS

Dereliction of Duty: Obama AWOL While Crises Pile Up

Obama Urged to Seize Reins as Crises Pile Up

A conflict approaching civil war in Libya. An end-times tsunami in Japan. A Congress that can't reach a budget.

And ... gender inequality?

The topic of President Obama's weekend radio address has raised some eyebrows, as Obama has met mounting crises with the same restraint and cool that characterized his slow-and-steady campaign for president. To some critics, the tone set by the White House in light of recent upheaval may hurt the president's public image.

Amid chaos around the world and on Capitol Hill, Obama's Saturday radio address was devoted to Women's History Month and a call to pass the Paycheck Fairness Act, a proposal meant to address the income gap between men and women. Then, the president went golfing at Andrews Air Force Base. Read more at foxnews.com.

Obama Lies Low in Deficit Debate

When President Barack Obama opened the first meeting of his fiscal commission last April, he promised to be “standing with them” as they produced recommendations for curbing the nation’s escalating debt.

Republicans and Democrats say they are still waiting.

While Obama has said he’s committed to deficit reduction, he has also has made clear it is secondary, at least for now, to his “winning the future” agenda. And that reflects a strategy driven by what his senior aides believe voters care about most — jobs, not deficits. Read more at politico.com.

Obama Talks Much, Does Little as He Begins to Focus on 2012 Re-election

The White House is still a busy place, but priorities and attention are increasingly being sucked away to Chicago, home of President Barack Obama’s 2012 campaign.

Congressional negotiations on budget disagreements are adrift, Libya’s anti-American dictator is brutally retaking control of the country, organized Islamists are using the democratic openings in Arab countries to push their way towards power, gas-price increases are draining dollars from the stalled American economy, and nervous American employers are trying to avoid hiring expensive U.S. workers. Read more at dailycaller.com.

Entry #4,140

'Green' price tag: $700 trillion to drop Earth's temp 1 degree

HEAT OF THE MOMENT


WorldNetDaily Exclusive

 

'Green' price tag: $700 trillion to drop Earth's temp 1 degree

Even EPA admits cost of regulating greenhouse gases 'absurd'


 

March 14, 2011
8:19 pm Eastern

Drew Zahn

WorldNetDaily

 

New calculations applied to a U.S. Senate report reveal the Environmental Protection Agency's plan to combat global warming through regulation of greenhouse gases would theoretically take over $700 trillion, seven times the world's gross production, to drop the earth's temperature only 1 degree Celsius.

The report released last year by Sen. James Ihnofe, R-Okla., then-ranking minority member of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, quotes the EPA's own stats and experts to break down the numbers, including one researcher who called the Obama administration's plan "absurd."

Citing a study by the EPA's Dr. Linda M. Chappell and various other sources, the Senate report asserts, "EPA has called the consequences of regulating greenhouse gases under the [Clean Air Act] 'absurd,' affecting 6.1 million sources, introducing $78 billion in annual costs, causing 'at least a decade or longer' of permit delays, 'slowing' construction nationwide for years, 'introducing burdens that are administratively 'infeasible,' 'overwhelming,' that will 'adversely affect national economic development,' while impacting sources 'not appropriate at this point to even consider regulating.'"

You've suspected it, now here's the proof: A top meteorologist documents how "global warming" is just a cynical, Marx-inspired wealth-grab.

And the net effect of the greenhouse gas regulations that the Republican senators are decrying?

The EPA calculates in 75 Federal Register 25,495: "Global mean temperature is estimated to be reduced by 0.006 to 0.015 degrees Celsius by 2100."

So in effect, by the year 2100, 90 years worth of $78 billion per year in spending – a total of over $7 trillion dollars – would have lowered the earth's temperature by about one-hundredth of a degree Celsius.

In other words, the U.S. would be paying for a global warming elixir that reduces temperatures at the net rate of $700 trillion per degree. Numbers-crunchers estimate that would amount to roughly 700 warehouses filled with $100 bills, or a stack of the bills nearly 70 miles high.

"[A critic] indicated that the projected changes in climate impacts resulting from this action are small and therefore not meaningful," the EPA admits in the Federal Register. "EPA disagrees with this view, as the reductions may be small in overall magnitude, but in the global climate change context, they are quantifiable, showing a clear directional signal."

Republicans on the EPW Committee, however, have joined the critics.

"I have great personal respect for EPA Administrator [Lisa] Jackson, but we disagree fundamentally on EPA's policies and the economic and financial harm they pose," Inhofe said in a statement upon release of his committee's report. "The irony of EPA's agenda is that, along with higher costs, it will fail to provide the American people with meaningful environmental benefits."

"With few exceptions," the Senate report asserts even more strongly, "EPA's regulations are unrivaled in the harm they pose to America's economy."

The EPA's new regulations, which began earlier this year, are part of a "tailoring" plan that begins with requiring some of the largest emitters of carbon dioxide – such as power plants, refineries and large industrial plants – to obtain operating permits based on their greenhouse gas emissions.

Later this year, and continuing through 2016, the emissions standards will be scaled down, requiring more and more emissions sources to obtain operating permits.

"After extensive study, debate and hundreds of thousands of public comments, EPA has set common-sense thresholds for greenhouse gases that will spark clean technology innovation and protect small businesses and farms," EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said in a statement. "There is no denying our responsibility to protect the planet for our children and grandchildren. It's long past time we unleashed our American ingenuity and started building the efficient, prosperous clean energy economy of the future."

The Senate Republicans, however, fear small businesses and farms ultimately won't be protected from the regulations.

"The [Clean Air Act] was not intended to regulate [greenhouse gasses]. Attempting to do so leads to, as EPA itself has conceded, 'absurd results,'" the report states. "A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce gives a glimpse of what EPA's 'absurd results' would [look] like. EPA could be forced to regulate:

  • 260,000 office buildings;
  • 150,000 warehouses;
  • 92,000 health care facilities;
  • 71,000 hotels and motels;
  • 51,000 food service facilities;
  • 37,000 churches and other places of worship;
  • 17,000 farms."

"So EPA will make energy less affordable, less secure, destroy thousands of jobs, restrict and slow down construction of schools, hospitals, commercial buildings and much else, with rules that achieve environmental benefits that are barely discernible," the report concludes. "EPA should rescind the endangerment finding and dismantle its greenhouse gas regulatory regime."

 

Read more: 'Green' price tag: $700 trillion to drop Earth's temp 1 degree</i> http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=275109#ixzz1Gjn0922J

Entry #4,139

White House Tells Supreme Court to Stay Away from Obamacare

 

White House Tells Supreme Court to Stay Away from Obamacare

Doug Powers  •  March 15, 2011 09:38 AM

 

Senator Schumer is pretty sure that the Supreme Court is not one of the equal but separate branches of government, so as such it’s possible that Chuck’s advised the White House that they have the power to tell the Supreme Court what to do:

The Obama administration told the Supreme Court on Monday night it should stay away from a high-profile challenge to the 2010 health care law until after a lower court has had a chance to review the case.

Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal wrote, “there is no basis for short-circuiting the normal course of appellate review.” Katyal also says Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s case is problematic because he may lack sufficient standing to challenge the health care law.
[...]
In his filing last month, Cuccinelli said there’s a “palpable consensus” that the high court will ultimately have to pass judgment on the merits of President Obama’s health care law and should do so without delay. Furthermore, Cuccinelli argues that his case involves “pure issues of constitutional law” that appellate judges on the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals will be unable to definitively resolve.

Team Obama has said they’re absolutely convinced of the health care law’s constitutionality, so with that in mind wouldn’t you think they’d welcome a fast-track opinion on the law and ultimate thumbs-up from the Supreme Court?

Entry #4,138

Pastor Offers To Be Sex Coach For Minor Girls

Lake Orion pastor to plead guilty to seeking to be sex coach for minors

 

 

11:42 AM, Mar. 11, 2011  | 

 

  William Bendert

William Bendert / U.S. Marshals Service

TRESA BALDAS
DETROIT FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

 

A Lutheran pastor who allegedly offered to be a sex coach for minor girls over the Internet is scheduled to plead guilty March 24 to his role in an online sex scheme, according to a filing today in U.S. District Court.

William Bendert, 51, the head pastor of King of Kings Lutheran Church in Lake Orion, is charged with using the Internet to entice an 11-year-old girl for sex. If convicted, he faces 10 years in prison.

According to court documents, Bendert used the screen name “Billthebear99” to contact who he thought were mothers of young daughters online, and asked them if they were interested in having him sexually train the girls. The mothers were really undercover FBI agents, records show.

In one chat room, Bendert typed: "I have taught girls before … always together with their moms … you would have to be present with us, " according to an FBI affidavit.

Federal agents arrested Bendert in September as he walked to a room at a Red Roof Inn near I-75 and Rochester Road, where he had arranged to meet who he thought was an 11-year-old girl, according to court records.

Federal agents seized two condoms and sex toys from the trunk of his car, including handcuffs and a rope, and sex-related books, including the Kama Sutra, from his church, court records show. After his arrest, records show, Bendert admitted to being Billthebear; to paying for the hotel room and that “what he was doing was wrong.”

“He had thoughts in (his) head that he did not want someone to do this to his daughter, and denied that he had ever trained any other girls,” U.S. Magistrate Virginia Morgan wrote in her order requiring that Bendert be detained. “ … given nature of the offense, there is concern about safety of children with whom he may have contact.”

According to court documents, Bendert is on administrative leave from the church as a result of the criminal complaint. He has no prior criminal record. His wife is supporting him, records show.

At his detention hearing in September, Bendert's lawyer, David Burgess, stressed that Bendert has no prior criminal record, no history of drug abuse, and that he is a college-educated family man whose wife is standing by him. He also noted that, so far, no evidence of child pornography has been found on any of Bendert's computers.

"He's never been in any trouble, and he's never shown any kind of this behavior before, " Burgess said at a court hearing in September.

 

Entry #4,136

Man On Breathing Machine Sets House On Fire While Smoking

Man On Breathing Machine Sets House On Fire While Smoking

 

Melissa Moon 1:28 p.m. CDT, March 14, 2011 

FAST FACTS:
  • A man apparently smoking in bed set his house on fire
  • The man, who was also using a breathing machine, had oxygen tanks in the next room
  • Neighbors saw the fire and alerted firefighters

(Memphis 3/14/2011) The sign on the front door of an East Memphis home says "oxygen in use no smoking."

Still, neighbors in the 1600 block of Watson say that didn't stop the man who lives there and uses a breathing machine from lighting up and catching his bed on fire.

"I noticed the smoke coming out of the door when I went out to get the paper," said Chuck Stewart.

Chuck Stewart, who lives just across the street and has been caring for his 67-year-old neighbor, ran over to help while his wife and another neighbor called 911.

"He had a hospital bed, it was blazing good when I went over there this morning," said Stewart.

He says his neighbor was already in his doorway when got he there, but in a daze and he had to be carried out by firefighters.

Firefighters later removed the charred mattress and other items destroyed by the fire.

Stewart says his neighbor is fortunate he made it out alive.

"Even all the electrical cords to everything are all burnt he's lucky that oxygen didn't blow up," said Stewart.

Neighbors who watched firefighters put out the fire say the man is also lucky he had some good neighbors looking out for him.

"I mean to be on a breathing machine and smoke and catch his bed on fire. He's not able to move around very much from what I understand and he's very lucky," said Scott Williams.

Fire officials say the man didn't have a working smoke detector.

He was transported to the hospital and treated for smoke inhalation. He didn't suffer any burns.

The Memphis fire department encourages everyone to have a working smoke detector.
LINK TO VIDEO:
Entry #4,135

Snake bites model during photo shoot snake dies of silicone poisoning

Snake bites model Orit Fox's breast during photo shoot, reportedly dies of silicone poisoning

Jaime Uribarri
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Monday, March 14th 2011, 1:26 PM

Orit Fox screams in pain as a snake bites her left breast during a photo shoot.

Orit Fox screams in pain as a snake bites her left breast during a photo shoot.

A busty model and an angry snake together for a photo shoot – what could possibly go wrong?

Orit Fox's attempt at seductive posing with a massive boa took a bizarre turn when the snake bit one of the Israeli B-Lister's surgically enhanced breasts in the middle of a shoot for a Tel Aviv radio station, ABC of Spain reported.

All was going well for the silicone-addicted Fox until she tried to ramp up the sex factor by licking the snake. The move proved costly as she loosened her grip on the reptile, which went straight for the model's left breast implant and latched onto it for several seconds before being pulled off by an assistant.

Fox was rushed to a local hospital, where she was given a tetanus shot.

According to several media sources, the snake wasn't so lucky and died of silicone poisoning.

With News Wire Services

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2011/03/14/2011-03-14_snake_bites_model_orit_fox_in_the_breast_during_photo_shoot_reportedly_dies_of_s.html

Entry #4,134

Company allows you to drink as much beer as you like at work

Bar's open 24/7 as startup culture revives

 

Ryan Flinn

Bloomberg News

March 13, 2011 04:00 AM

 

At Yelp Inc.'s San Francisco headquarters, a keg refrigerator provides a never-ending supply of beer to employees, letting them drink as much as they like.

They just have to be comfortable with full disclosure: Workers badge in to an iPad application attached to the keg that records every ounce they drink.

"If you're at the top of the leaderboard consistently, I don't know if that's a place that you'd want to be," said Eric Singley, director of Yelp consumer and mobile products. "Luckily, that hasn't really even been an issue."

Call it the 2011 version of "Mad Men." As a rebound in technology funding revives startup culture, many dot-coms are embracing the idea of drinking at work. That means keeping bars stocked at all hours, installing kegerators and letting programmers tip back a few while they code. It also raises questions about the effect of alcohol on productivity and the safety of employees.

"Alcohol is sort of a slippery slope, because obviously you'd think it might impair their performance," said Dalton Conley, social sciences dean and professor at New York University. "Many people can work after one beer, but I doubt many people can do serious knowledge work very productively after four or five."

While office parties and Friday night beer busts are nothing new, the all-hours nature of startups means more employees blend their nightlife with work time. Drinking is an extension of that, said Joe Beninato, chief executive officer of Tello Inc., an app developer in Palo Alto.

"When you're working at a startup, you're working 24/7 and it takes over your life," he said. "It's not like it's a wild fraternity party or something like that - we're all adults."

A morning toast

When Tello's iPhone app for rating customer service made it into Apple Inc.'s online store in February, the five-person company decided to celebrate. No matter that it was before noon.

"We got out the whiskey, and everybody had a shot," Beninato said.

Workers have a similar outlook at CrowdFlower, said Lukas Biewald, CEO of the San Francisco-based employment company.

"We do have a fridge full of beer; people do work late and drink out of it," Biewald said. "When we first started, our office was like our home - we had leftovers in the fridge - and I think it's an extension of that."

It's typical to see employees with a beer on a Friday afternoon, when the company lets workers demonstrate new projects, he said. CrowdFlower also occasionally gets kegs for gatherings it hosts for its community of developers and users.

"We had a customer from a bank come, around 11 a.m., and I was really embarrassed by the fact that we had a keg up," Biewald said. "But he actually poured himself a drink."

Twitter Inc., also based in San Francisco, has wine and beer in its fridge, along with nonalcoholic drinks.

"We treat employees as adults, and they act accordingly," said Jodi Olson, a spokeswoman for the company.

Potential problems

Even so, the age-old problems of workplace drinking haven't disappeared, said Robert Sutton, a professor in Stanford University's management science and engineering department. Some employees can't drink in moderation or control themselves after imbibing, he said.

"I've been involved in workplaces that can be pretty dysfunctional, where people will start drinking a little too much at lunch," Sutton said. "There's like a bazillion studies that show when people drink, their performance is impaired, and there's problems with absenteeism."

Another danger: Women are at greater risk of sexual harassment at offices where heavy drinking is the norm, according to a 2004 Cornell University study. The report, sponsored by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, found harassment incidents increased more than twofold for each additional alcoholic beverage consumed by male co-workers.

The long hours may be what sets technology workers apart from the boozing executives on "Mad Men," a show set in the 1960s, said New York University's Conley.

"The folks drank a lot more alcohol back then and had three-martini lunches, but they weren't staying until midnight finishing projects," he said.

At Yelp, an online reviews site, the keg is meant as an after-hours activity, said Singley, who has worked for the startup more than three years.

"That's when it gets the most use," he said. Still, the definition of a workday can depend on the employee.

"Engineers in particular are night owls," he said. "A little ramen noodles at 9 p.m., and then after that, winding down your day, you might stop by the keg. People work here really late."



Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/03/12/BUP11I8SF3.DTL#ixzz1GcB3A2D7

Entry #4,131

Mom sues $19K/yr. preschool for damaging 4-year-old daughter's Ivy League chances

Manhattan mom sues $19K/yr. preschool for damaging 4-year-old daughter's Ivy League chances

Jose Martinez
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Monday, March 14th 2011, 1:13 PM

 Did a Manhattan preschool fail to adequately prepare a four-year-old girl for Harvard? The girl's mom charges that the York Avenue Preschool hurt her child's chances in a lawsuit filed Monday.

Getty

Did a Manhattan preschool fail to adequately prepare a four-year-old girl for Harvard? The girl's mom charges that the York Avenue Preschool hurt her child's chances in a lawsuit filed Monday.

A Manhattan mom is suing a $19,000-a-year preschool, claiming it jeopardized her daughter's chances of getting into an elite private school because she had to slum with younger kids.

Court papers filed by Nicole Imprescia suggest the York Avenue Preschool may have doomed 4-year-old Lucia's chances of getting into an Ivy League college.

"At age four, [York Avenue Preschool] was still teaching [Imprescia's] daughter about shapes and colors - a two year old's learning environment," the suit says.

"Like many parents living in Manhattan, [Imprescia] places a priority on her child's preschool education," the papers add.

The suit quotes from an article that identifies elite preschools as the first step for getting children into the best schools "and on to the Ivy League."

An impressive sales pitch from the York Ave. school in the fall of 2009 convinced Imprescia to enroll Lucia - and pay $19,000 up front.

The goal, the suit says, was to prepare Lucia for the ERB standardized test - which the top private elementary schools use in making admission decisions.

"[York Avenue Preschool] boasted to [Imprescia] that it had a high success rate in getting its students into high caliber schools, both public and private," the suit says.

Those claims are "a complete fraud," the mom charges, going on to blast the York Avenue's educational environment and lack of age-specific classrooms.

"Indeed, the school proved not to be a school at all, but just one big playroom," the suit says.

The school's owner, Michael Branciforte, did not return a call seeking comment.

On its website, York Avenue Preschool touts its music and physical education programs, weekly library trips and French classes for four-year-olds.

"Our goal is to reach each child and work with them towards their 'next steps,'" the site says.

Imprescia is seeking a $19,000 tuition refund and wants to launch a class-action case on behalf of similarly wronged toddlers.

Imprescia and her lawyer declined comment.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/03/14/2011-03-14_manhattan_mom_sues_19kyr_preschool_for_damaging_4yearold_daughters_ivy_league_ch.html#ixzz1Gb7voemq

Entry #4,130