Obituary Notice - James J. Tiano, father of Chief Inspector Tiano

It is with Sadness that we notify you of the death of Jame J. Tiano, father of lodge member Chief Inspector James Tiano.   Mr. Tiano’s obituary from the Inquirer follows:

TIANO
JAMES J., July 26, 2008. Beloved husband of Helen (nee Tucci), devoted father of James (Eileen) and Joseph (Eileen); also survived by 10 grand-children and 19 great grand-children. Relatives and friends are invited to his Viewing and Funeral, Thursday 8 A.M. until his 11 A.M. Funeral Service at Grace Church and the Incarnation, 2645 E. Venango St. Int. Oakland Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, family prefers donations to the Phila. Police Memorial Plaque Fund, c/o FOP Lodge #5, 1336 Spring Garden St., Phila. PA 19123.

Bus Trip to the Feast of San Gennaro in NYC

Join Custodes Pacis Lodge on a bus trip to the Feast of San Gennaro.
 
On September 13, 2008 the lodge is sponsoring a bus trip to the Feast of San Gennaro in New York City.  The cost of the trip is $30 per person and must be paid in full prior to the date of the trip.  We will be departing from and return to the IAD parking lot at 7790 Dungan Road, Philadelphia, PA 19111.  Trip participants will also be allowed to park their vehicles at the IAD lot.  Coffee and various pastries will be served prior to departure for New York City.
 
Details:
 
Date: September 13, 2008
Cost: $30 per person.
Depart Philadelphia: 9:00 AM SHARP - 7790 Dungan Road
Depart NYC: 7:00PM SHARP
Return to Philadelphia at 9:00 PM
 
Contact :
Ray Saggese or Maurizio DeLisi.
 
Your seat will be guaranteed only upon payment.  First paid first served. 
 
 
Details of the festival are listed below:
New York City’s biggest, most famous and longest running religious festival - The 81st Annual Feast of San Gennaro, Inc. - will take place in Little Italy for 11 days, from Thursday, September 11, through Sunday September 21, 2008. The Feast is presented by Figli di San Gennaro (Children of San Gennaro), a not-for-profit community organization which has produced and operated the Feast since 1996.

The beloved Feast of San Gennaro is an annual celebration of the Patron Saint of Naples. The first Feast in New York City took place on September 19, 1926 when newly arrived immigrants from Naples settled along Mulberry Street in the Little Italy section of New York City and decided to continue the tradition they had followed in Italy to celebrate the day in 305 A.D. when Saint Gennaro was martyred for the faith.

Since then, the Feast has grown from a one-day street festival to a gala 11-day event. On September 19 during each Feast, a Religious Procession, including the Statue of San Gennaro, winds along the length of Mulberry and Mott Streets, between Canal and Houston Streets. The procession begins immediately following a Celebratory Mass held at the Most Precious Blood Church on Mulberry Street, the National Shrine of San Gennaro.

“Although there is a party atmosphere that permeates the Feast, this is really a religious celebration that has become a proud tradition handed down from our grandparents,” a Figli di San Gennaro, Inc. board member and longtime neighborhood resident Emily DePalo says. “For 11 days and nights the streets of Little Italy are filled with happy people of all ethnic and racial backgrounds eating fabulous Italian cuisine, listening to great live entertainment and just having a wonderful time. But there is a religious purpose behind it which is never forgotten, and that becomes evident on September 19th, the Saint’s Day.”

The continued growth of the Feast over the past ten years has enabled Figli di San Gennaro, Inc. to donate more than $1.6-million to worthy causes providing valuable services for children and education in the Little Italy community and beyond. At the conclusion of each annual Feast, sizeable donations are distributed to scores of worthy organizations in all five boroughs and the tri-state area to help the needy and the young. No other public festival donates more money to charity than does the Feast of San Gennaro.

One of the most popular events each year in New York City, the Feast of San Gennaro attracts crowds exceeding 1-million people during its 11-day run. Activities for the entire family take place along Mulberry Street, Hester Street and Grand Street, from 11:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. (midnight on Fridays and Saturdays). The streets are decorated with festive banners and arches in green, white and red, the colors of the Italian flag.
More than 35 of Little Italy’s most famous Italian restaurants roll out the red carpet for Feast visitors, and many provide outdoor dining facilities for the event, offering a variety of Italian specialty foods and pastries. Some restaurants even have strolling musicians to entertain their customers.

In addition, there are more than 100 street vendors who set up shop along the Festival Streets selling a wide variety of goods and merchandise, including international foods, official Little Italy souvenir items and boutique merchandise including jewelry and clothing. The Feast also has a number of arcade games as well as many fun activities for the younger members of the family, including carnival rides.

I think we’re back

Ok..looks like I was able to restore all of my previous entries in the blog. I am sure I have more work to do but I’ll look at things over the weekend.  In the meantime if you need anything just send an email.

~moe

Death of Charter Member Joseph Yannone

It is with sadness that we report the death of Charter Member Joseph Yannone.  His obituary from the Daily News appears below.  If you can spare a moment tomorrow please try to attend his viewing.  Thank you.

YANNONE
JOSEPH, July 5, 2008. Beloved husband of Jewel (nee Sponsler). Devoted father of Ted (Dianne), Joseph (Leilani) Yannone and Lana (John) Lynn. Grandfather of Nicole (Christopher) Zappile, Nicholas and Alia Yannone. Brother of Frank (Kitty) Yannone; also survived by his many loving nieces and nephews. Relatives and friends are invited to his Memorial Gathering Thurs. 9 A.M. at The Church of St. Rita of Casia, Broad and Federal Sts. followed by his Funeral Mass at 10 A.M. In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, TN 38105

Joseph Yannone, popular ’selfless’ cop

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By JOHN F. MORRISON
Philadelphia Daily News

morrisj@phillynews.com 215-854-5573

THE SANSOM Street jewelers felt safe when Joe Yannone was around.But he was not always easy to spot. Sometimes he was dressed in a doctor’s lab coat or in a pharmacist’s white jacket or as a rabbi - complete with mustache, beard and black hat - or as a blind man, tapping along with a white cane.

Joe, a police detective who ran the Jewelers’ Row squad, protecting millions of dollars’ worth of silver, gold and gems for almost 20 years, was trying to “blend into the background,” as he once put it.

The disguises, combined with Joe’s gregarious and somewhat quirky sense of humor, made him what the jewelers fondly knew as a “character.”

Joseph Yannone, a native son of South Philadelphia, died Saturday of a cranial hemorrhage. He was 80. He was a 32-year veteran of the force, a crony of Frank Rizzo and a pal of restaurant and bar owners, entertainers and fellow city “characters.”

One of the many people who benefited from Joe’s passion to help people was “Jimmy the Shoeshine Man,” whose real name was Jimmy DiDio.

Joe found a place for Jimmy to live, and helped him set up his shoeshine stand at 8th and Sansom. The corner became a gathering place for city officials, business people and reporters.

Thomas J. Gibbons Jr., retired Inquirer police reporter, recalls that he and the Daily News‘ Joe O’Dowd often headed there on their lunch break.

“In 45 minutes, you could find out what was going on all over the city,” Tom said. “It was fun hanging on the corner with Joe and Jimmy. Mayor [William J.] Green would come down to get his shoes shined by Jimmy.

“Joe was the kind of guy who would give you the shirt off his back,” Tom said. “If you were getting married, he’d let you know where you could get a good deal on a ring. Everybody loved him. He was easy to love.”

After joining the Police Department in 1955, Joe worked in a number of districts, then in Major Crimes for several years. He eventually landed in the old 19th District, 12th and Pine streets, where Frank Rizzo was the captain.

One day, Joe talked a homeless man out of a building in Society Hill and took him to the station. Outside, the man suddenly went berserk and started choking Joe. Rizzo left the station, saw what was happening, and came to Joe’s rescue.

From then on, Joe credited Rizzo with saving his life. He became Rizzo’s driver, and they remained friends after Rizzo became police commissioner and then mayor.

“He idolized Rizzo,” said Joe’s son Ted.

Ted, who designs and makes jewelry for the jewelers on the Row, said that when he was a kid the phone would be ringing at all hours. People whose kids had gotten into trouble needed his father’s help, and Joe would be off and running.

“My mother complained, ‘You run for this one, you run for that one, and you get nothing in return,’ ” Ted said.

But that was Joe’s way. He enjoyed helping people. It was one of the reasons he became a cop.

Ted said that he and his brother, Joseph, were going through their father’s papers, which he kept in Ted’s shop on Sansom Street, when they found a drawer that was “just stuffed with thank-you letters.”

Asked to sum up his father’s character, Ted came up with one word: “Selfless.”

Joseph Yannone was born in South Philadelphia to Theodore and Frances Yannone. He attended South Philadelphia High School and worked for a time as a salesman for a foreign-car dealership on Broad Street.

“He was a good salesman,” his son said, “but it was the Depression, and he thought the police would be more secure.”

He married the former Jewel Sponsler in 1969.

One April evening in 1988, Joe was dining with the singer James Darren at a South Philadelphia restaurant when a woman at a nearby table began choking. Darren and Joe went to the rescue. The singer applied the Heimlich maneuver, and Joe fetched a glass of water, restoring her to life.

Joe used to say that he never pulled his gun or blackjack in his police career. “I don’t like violence,” he once said.

He received many honors over the years, including “Outstanding Detective of the Year 1985″ from the Fraternal Order of Police. He probably got a kick out of the fact that his name was “John Yannone” on the plaque.

Joe and Jewel had a house in Ocean City, N.J., and he enjoyed just chilling out on the beach.

“He’d take the Daily News and Inquirer with him and just sit and read the papers,” Ted said.

After retiring from the Police Department in 1988, Joe became head of security for the Police & Fire Credit Union.

He was a founder of the Custodes Pacis Lodge of the Sons of Italy, and became its chaplain in 1966.

Besides his two sons, he is survived by a daughter, Lana Lynn; a brother, Frank, and three grandchildren.

Services: Funeral Mass 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Rita’s Church, Broad and Ellsworth streets. Friends may call at 9 a.m.

Obituary Notice - Joseph P. Abruzzese, Jr.

We regret to inform you of the untimely passing of Joseph P. Abruzzese, Jr., son of lodge member Joseph P. Abruzzese, Sr.  You thoughts and prayers are requested for the Abruzzese family.  His death notice from the Inquirer follows.
ABRUZZESE
JOSEPH P. JR., on June 1, 2008, age 26. Devoted son of Joseph P. Abruzzese, Sr. and Diane Abruzzese (nee Gallese). His family invites you to Joe’s Life Celebration Fri. after 7 P.M. and Sat. after 8 A.M. from JOHN F. GIVNISH OF ACADEMY RD., 10975 Academy Rd., Phila. and to participate in his Funeral Mass 10:30 A.M. from St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church. Int. Resurrection Cemetery

Jurist’s alleged comments anger the FOP

Police union officials are demanding that a judge renounce comments he made last week at a hearing for two robbery defendants, in which he apparently praised them for not using firearms.”If you are going to commit a robbery, this is the way to do it, without a gun. Let’s give credit where credit is due,” Municipal Court Judge Nazario Jimenez reportedly said, according to Philadelphia’s Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 5.

FOP President John McNesby delivered a letter to Municipal Court President Judge Louis J. Presenza to announce the FOP’s “displeasure” about the alleged comments and “call on Judge Jimenez to repudiate these remarks.”

Jimenez didn’t return telephone calls for comment yesterday, and the notes of testimony from Wednesday’s preliminary hearing for defendants Raymond Ditri and James Pietrafitta weren’t readily available.

Court Spokesman Jeff Jubelirer said Presenza couldn’t comment on the flap because he hadn’t yet gotten the notes of testimony either.

But John McGrody, an FOP vice president, said he’d heard a transcript and gotten calls from officers and a civilian who were in Jimenez’s courtroom when the alleged comments were made.

“We’re severely troubled by the comments - we don’t think judges from the bench should be instructing people on how to commit or not commit crimes,” McGrody said.

Police Spokesman Lt. Frank Vanore agreed: “We don’t want anyone doing any kind of robberies, whether they’re with a gun or without, because they’re going to put people in danger, including the officers responding and the civilians and employees in the store and community. The last three very dangerous people who killed police officers in this city were all people who were out committing robberies.”

Ditri, 29, and Pietrafitta, 30, are repeat offenders who together have been arrested at least 16 times for offenses ranging from robbery and theft to drug possession and disorderly conduct, according to court records.

Pietrafitta’s criminal history includes a March 2005 arrest on offenses including carrying firearms without a license and carrying firearms in a public street or place. A judge dismissed those charges, records show.

Edwin Rivera, Pietrafitta’s attorney, declined yesterday to talk about the case or the controversy over the comments. The Defenders’ Association of Philadelphia, appointed to represent Ditri, didn’t return calls yesterday.

In the case in question, the duo is accused of robbing a Northeast Philadelphia convenience store on March 13, according to court records.

On Wednesday, Jimenez ordered them held for trial but dismissed resisting arrest, assault and reckless endangerment charges.

That further irked police officials.

“We would ask [District Attorney] Lynne Abraham to rearrest them on those charges,” McGrody said, adding that one suspect got free by wriggling out of his shirt as arresting officers tried to restrain him and was recaptured only after a nearly two-block foot chase.

“If that’s not the traditional description of resisting arrest, I don’t know what is,” McGrody said.

Cathie Abookire, Abraham’s spokeswoman, said the District Attorney’s Office is reviewing the case.

Jimenez, the court’s first Latino judge, was appointed to his 10-year post in 2004, according to city records. * 

 
Find this article at:
http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20080517_Jurist_s_alleged_comments_anger_the_FOP.html?adString=ph.news/news_update;!category=news_update;&randomOrd=051708103338

A True Philly Sports Moment

From Philly.com a moving tribute from a son to a respected father.  Rest in Peace Sergeant.

A true Philly sports moment amid the sadness

Slain Police Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski was remembered today as husband, father, dedicated officer and, lest we forget, a huge Flyers fan. LICZBINISKI.jpg
With team scheduled for Game 1 of it playoffs series with Pittsburgh tonight, 24-year-old Matt Liczbinski asked mourners to perform, in honor of his father, what may have been a first-ever Flyers cheer at Sts. Peter and Paul Basilica. Taking a time out from “all the seriousness,” Matt Liczbinski led the congregration in “Let’s Go Fly-ers” chant, complete with da-da-dadada clapping.

Sports, in life and death. That’s Philly, baby.

Meeting Cancelled

Out of respect for the family of Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski and for our extended police family at FOp Lodge 5, our lodge meeting for Monday, May 5, 2008 has been cancelled. Your thoughts and prayers are requested Lizcbinski family at this time.

Shake-up at Phila. Police Department

By Andrew Maykuth and Barbara Boyer

INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey today announced a major shake-up of the department’s command – doubling the number of deputy commissioners to eight - that he says will improve accountability and drive down the crime rate.
Less than four months into the job, Ramsey reconfigured the 6,600-member department into two main operating groups that will be headed by current deputy commissioners. The bifurcated organizational structure is similar to the way he configured the Washington, D.C., department, where he was chief for nine years before stepping down a year ago.

Deputy Commissioner Richard Ross, now head of internal affairs and gun control strategy, will oversee all field operations - police on the street, the muscle of the department. He was elevated from a two-star deputy to a three-star deputy.

Deputy Commissioner John Gaittens, a two-star deputy and veteran administrator, will be in charge of organizational support services - the “backroom” operations such as training, communications, administration and human services.

The four new deputies were promoted internally, much to the relief of the Fraternal Order of Police, which had opposed a ballot measure that voters approved on April 22 allowing the police commissioner to appoint up to 10 deputies. The FOP was concerned, in part, that Ramsey would import a large number of out-of-town commanders.

Appearing at a news conference with Mayor Nutter, Ramsey said the reorganization will make the department more “mission-oriented.” He said the aim is largely to get more officers on patrol, increasing the department’s visibility to send a message to the public, as well as criminals.

“The public wants to see more cops out there on the street,” he said. In the new organization, he said, “everything exists to support the patrol function.”

Ramsey said he has assigned 248 more officers to street patrol. Of that number, 109 are rookies. The rest are former members of two specialized crime-fighting units. Those officers will now report to local commanders.

“We put them in districts where they need to be, that was not the way it was before,” Ramsey said.

The commissioner and the mayor touted positive crime statistics for the administration’s first four months as evidence that their strategy is working. Homicides have decreased 24 percent, violent crime is down 4 percent, and gun seizures are up 3.5 percent.

“These are obviously indications of progress,” Nutter said. But, he said, his administration believes that the numbers are still “far from where they should be.”

The commissioner introduced his new “management team” at a news conference after spending the morning in individual meetings with the more than 40 commanders who were promoted or shifted laterally.

Ramsey noted that he would not have a first deputy. His predecessor, Commissioner Sylvester M. Johnson, appointed Deputy Commissioner Patricia Giorgio-Fox as head of operations, making her his clear second.

“I’m the one that’s accountable for the operations of this department - me and me alone,” said Ramsey. “What I have here is a management team, all of us working together to accomplish a mission, a goal, to make this city safe and secure. And we will accomplish that mission, and we’ll do it together, all of us working together.”

Giorgio-Fox, who now shares her three-star rank with Ross, will remain as a deputy commissioner. She will head a new office of coordination and accountability that Ramsey said will be “responsible for ensuring that efforts of all the department’s units are working together and accomplishing our mission and goals.”

Along with Giorgio-Fox, Deputy Charlotte Council and a civilian Ramsey brought in from Washington will head offices that will be part of what is called the “commissioner’s group,” which Ramsey said “will help guide this department.”

Council, currently deputy for administration and training, will oversee the new office of violence prevention and victim services.

Nola Joyce, a trusted aide who was formerly Ramsey’s assistant in Washington, will oversee the new office of strategic initiatives and innovations. Joyce, a civilian, is the equivalent of a ninth deputy commissioner, though she is technically a deputy in the city managing director’s office who has been detailed to Ramsey.

Ramsey promoted four commanders to new one-star deputies who will oversee operations and report to Ross: Capt. Thomas Wright, Capt. Kevin Bethel, Chief Inspector William Blackburn, and Inspector Stephen Johnson.

Wright, commander of the 25th District in North Philadelphia, and Bethel, commander of the 17th District in Point Breeze, catapulted several ranks up the hierarchy and will now head two regional operations commands. The north region, which includes the East, Northeast and Northwest Divisions, will be headed by Wright. Bethel will head the south region, which includes the areas covered by the South, Southwest and Central Divisions.

Ramsey praised Bethel and Wright. “They’re very effective,” he said. “They ran tough districts, and they ran them well.”

Blackburn, formerly narcotics head, will head major investigations, which includes many of the department’s centralized detective functions - homicide, special victims unit, narcotics and forensics.

Johnson, the former head of South Division’s four police districts, will head an enhanced homeland-security bureau, which will include the SWAT team and the bomb squad.

Ramsey says he has initiated a department-wide review of special units with an aim of increasing the number of “generalists” who can be dispatched to fight a range of crimes and increase the department’s visibility.

“To me, in my way of thinking, everything exists to support the patrol function,” Ramsey said in an interview Tuesday. “Everything. If you don’t support the patrol function, I question why you exist.”

Below the deputy commissioners, Ramsey made five other promotions and more than 30 lateral moves in the ranks of inspectors and captains.

His changes included at least one demotion: Kimberly Byrd, who had been the executive officer to former Commissioner Johnson, returned to her civil-service rank of sergeant and was reassigned to the Eighth District in Northeast Philadelphia.

——————————————————————————–
Contact staff writer Andrew Maykuth at 215-854-2947 or amaykuth@phillynews.com.

Philly seeks kin of cop slain in 1906

Little is known about Police Officer Frank Slaymaker.And unfortunately for Chief Inspector James Tiano and his small but dedicated staff, even less is known about Slaymaker’s family.

The Police Department plans to honor the life and heroism of Slaymaker - who was killed in the line of duty on June 11, 1906 - with a plaque dedication in June. But, so far, no members of his family have been found to attend the dedication.

“We are searching for the family, but it’s been such a long time” since Slaymaker was killed, said Tiano - who, usually with Capt. Dennis Gallagher, visits surviving relatives of fallen officers before a plaque ceremony. “But we did one for an officer killed in 1919, and he had a big family there.”

According to Tiano, Slaymaker was killed when he apprehended a man and a woman who had robbed a Chinese restaurant.

The man shot Slaymaker, but the officer was still able to hold the suspects until assisting officers arrived.

Slaymaker died 10 days later.

“This [effort] is very important, because these are our extended families,” Gallagher said.

“Injured or slain, we always consider them family. But we didn’t have a single piece of record on his family.”

Both the fire and police departments recognize fallen comrades through the plaque program, and it doesn’t matter when the honoree died.

Police officials said that records of Slaymaker’s family may have been lost.

“The goal is, if there are any Slaymaker relatives - and I’m sure there are - to contact us,” said Tiano.

“We really want and need for his family to be there.”

For details on the search for Slaymaker’s family, or to provide information, call Tiano at 215-685-3655

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