8 THE QUEENS COURIER • APRIL 11, 2019 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Queens Courier wins big for spot news coverage 
 BY THE QUEENS COURIER STAFF 
 editorial@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 When it comes to breaking news in  
 Queens, no one is more “on the spot”  
 than  Th  e Queens Courier, according to  
 the New York Press Association (NYPA).  
 Th  e Courier won fi rst place in the Spot  
 News  Coverage  category  (Division  3)  
 in the 2018 Better Newspaper Contest.  
 NYPA handed out the contest awards  
 during its annual Spring Conference in  
 Albany on April 5-6.  
 Th  e winning entries were Th e Courier’s  
 coverage of two key events that occurred  
 in December: a stabbing and subsequent  
 lockdown  at  Benjamin  Cardozo  High  
 School in Bayside, and a fi ve-alarm  fi re  
 that ripped through several businesses in  
 Sunnyside. Both stories were team eff orts,  
 put together by editors Robert Pozarycki  
 and Zachary Gewelb and reporters Jenna  
 Bagcal and Mark Hallum. 
 “Outstanding  reporting  of  unfortunate  
 events,” the judges remarked of Th e  
 Courier’s  coverage.  “Plenty  of  details  
 answering reader questions. Each story  
 had a strong lede that immediately told  
 the reader the general happenings before  
 diving into specifi cs. Th  e pictures were a  
 perfect companion.” 
 Th  e Courier’s Pozarycki also won second  
 place for Best Editorials (Division  
 2), of which the judges said, “Nice diversity  
 on the topics, all of which were covered  
 well.” 
 Th  e paper also earned two third-place  
 16 THE QUEENS COURIER • DECEMBER 13, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Photo: Mark Hallum/THE COURIER 
 Heavily-armored police offi  cers exit Benjamin Cardozo High School in Bayside during a lockdown on Dec. 11 
 CARDOZO LOCKDOWN 
 Teen turns self in for stabbing student & causing alarm 
 Photo: Mark Hallum/THE COURIER 
 Students and police offi  cers outside Cardozo High School 
 awards for Best Coverage of Business,  
 Financial and Economic News for its stories  
 about Astoria businesses, and Best  
 New Story (Division 5) for a report about  
 food insecurity among local college students. 
 In all, Schneps Media — Th e Courier’s  
 parent  company  —  earned  27  awards  
 in the 2018 Better Newspaper contest.  
 BY JENNA BAGCAL,  
 ZACHARY GEWELB, MARK HALLUM  
 AND ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 editorial@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 A 15-year-old boy turned himself into  
 police on Tuesday aft ernoon hours aft er  
 he allegedly slashed a Benjamin Cardozo  
 High School student in the head and  
 caused a lengthy lockdown of the Bayside  
 institution. 
 Police withheld the boy’s identity due  
 to his age. According to sources familiar  
 with the investigation, the teenager was  
 charged with assault and criminal possession  
 of a weapon. 
 Th  e suspect turned himself in to the  
 111th Precinct at the command’s Bayside  
 headquarters on the aft ernoon of Dec. 11  
 amid reports and public alarm over the  
 incident. 
 Law enforcement sources said that the  
 slashing occurred at about 8:48 a.m. on  
 Tuesday  morning,  when  the  15-yearold  
 suspect confronted the 14-year-old  
 16 THE QUEENS COURIER • DECEMBER 20, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Photo: Mark Hallum/THE COURIER 
 Firefi ghters dousing hot spots at one of several Sunnyside stores that burned in a fi ve-alarm inferno on Dec. 13. 
 BURNED TO A CRISP 
 Cause still unknown in massive Sunnyside inferno 
 The backdraft emanating from stores along Queens Boulevard in Sunnyside on Dec. 13. 
 Schneps Media includes more than 70  
 publications across New York City, Long  
 Island and Westchester County.  
 “I am honored and delighted to see  
 the recognition our media team received.  
 Well done!” said Victoria Schneps, president  
 of  Schneps  Media.  “We  are  so  
 proud to cover the communities with  
 award-winning journalists.” 
 BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 rpozarycki@qns.com 
 @robbpoz 
 As  Th  e  Courier  went  to  press  on  
 Wednesday  aft ernoon,  FDNY  marshals  
 were  still  looking  into  the  cause  of  the  
 fi ve-alarm inferno that destroyed a row of  
 Sunnyside on Dec. 13. 
 Twelve  people,  including  seven  fi refi  
 ghters, were injured aft er fl ames ripped  
 through  a  row  of  stores  on  Queens  
 Boulevard near 45th Street at about 2:14  
 a.m. last Th  ursday.  
 Fire Department sources said the fl ames  
 ignited inside of the New York Style Eats  
 restaurant located at 45-02 Queens Blvd.,  
 near 45th  Street.  Th  e  fi re  then  rapidly  
 spread to several adjacent businesses. 
 Firefi ghters arrived on the scene within  
 four minutes of a 911 call about the fi re,  
 according  to  Assistant  Chief  Anthony  
 DeVita. Th  e  FDNY  determined  that  six  
 businesses along Queens Boulevard were  
 aff ected by  the  blaze; fi refi ghters worked  
 to  prevent  the  fl ames  from  spreading  
 to  adjoining  residential  and  commercial  
 Screenshot via YouTube 
 “We have the best team in the business,”  
 added Joshua Schneps, chief executive  
 offi  cer of Schneps Media. “Our reporters  
 and editors are connecting with the community  
 in the most grass roots way possible  
 -- by being out in the neighborhoods  
 they cover. No story is too small or big,  
 and no one covers New York City with  
 more breadth or depth!”   
 Deadly Jack. Hts. shooting may be drug-related: cops 
 Photo via Shutterstock 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 edavenport@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 Police arrested a Jackson  
 Heights man in connection to a  
 drug-related shooting that left   
 a man dead on Monday. 
 Nestor Londono, 49, was  
 charged with manslaughter,  
 criminal possession of a weapon  
 and criminal possession of a  
 controlled substance. 
 According to police, at 11:57  
 a.m. on April 8, police responded  
 to a 911 call regarding a  
 man shot in the vicinity of 88th  
 Street and 37th Avenue. Upon  
 their arrival, offi  cers  from  the  
 115th Precinct found 31-yearold  
 Jeff rey Arroyo with a gunshot  
 wound to his chest. 
 EMS rushed to the scene and  
 took Arroyo to NYC Health  
 and Hospitals/Elmhurst, where  
 he was pronounced dead. 
 Shortly  afterward,  police  
 took Londono, who was inside  
 of 37-14 88th St., in for questioning. 
  Police believe that the  
 shooting may have been narcotics 
 related, however they are  
 still investigating the motive. 
 Londono  was  ultimately  
 arrested on April 9 and is  
 awaiting arraignment. 
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