It all seemed so easy. Show people the money and they can’t see past that. Show them a little money, spread it around as if it didn’t matter, and they’re sure, they just know, there’s so much more to come. It was just so easy. Every move, into a new job or relationship or city, is a small reinvention of yourself. Anna Sorokin decided it would be epic. She went from a poor upbringing in a small, working-class satellite town in Russia, moving to another small town in Germany where she had difficulty with the language, to London and a brief period at Central St Martins art school. Somewhere on that journey to adulthood she reimagined herself so that when she landed in New York in 2013, she was now Anna Delvey with a $60 million trust fund she couldn’t unlock for three years, until she turned 25.
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arrow NYPD sections off the scene of a shooting where shots were fired from a car that was driving on the Lower East Side on February 16th. A 57 year old woman who was an innocent bystander was struck in the buttocks. Steve Sanchez/Pacific Press/Shutterstock
Lawmakers in the state s Democratically-controlled chambers have introduced a bill that would allow non-profit violence interruption groups to access a federally-funded resource to help expand its programming.
The bill sponsored by Brooklyn state Senator Zellnor Myrie would allow these programs, including the Cure Violence program where reformed gang members are hired to defuse tensions between gangs before violence erupts to access a portion of the federally-allocated funds through the state Office of Victims Services. The office administers the fund that was created following the passage of the 1984 Victims of Crime Act by Congress. The funding sources made available those who ve been the victims of a crime,