FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM   AUGUST 16, 2018 • THE QUEENS COURIER 3 
  Oswald Stoddart, father of  
 Resorts World NYC exec, dies 
  Beloved  husband,  father,  and  grandfather  Oswald  
 Stoddart passed away at the age of 82-years-old.  
  He is survived by his wife of nearly 50 years, Joyce,  
 his children, Michelle and Gail, and his grandchildren,  
 Jonathan and Savanna. Michelle serves as director of public  
 relations and community development for Resorts World  
 Casino New York City, and previously served at the Queens  
 Economic Development Corporation. 
 Born in Jamaica, West Indies, Oswald Stoddart grew up  
 on a sugar cane plantation that he worked on from a young  
 age. A man of service, Stoddart would later go on to work  
 for the National Housing Trust and served as the head of his  
 local chapter of the Rotary Club in Westmoreland, Jamaica. 
 As an adult, Stoddart moved to the United States and  
 began to work for Circuit City. Aft er an accident led him to  
 early retirement, Stoddart devoted his time to assisting in  
 raising his grandchildren. A true family man, there wasn’t  
 anything that Stoddart wouldn’t do for his family. 
 A lifelong fan of jazz and racecar driving, Stoddart was  
 always the life of the party. Members of the community  
 would oft en approach him to debate topics. He interacted  
 with the community and he will be missed by many. 
 Funeral services for Stoddart will take place on Saturday,  
 Aug. 18 at Grace Baptist Church, located at 52 South 6th  
 Ave., Mt. Vernon, NY 10550. Th  e viewing will begin at 10  
 a.m. with the funeral service to follow at 11 a.m. 
 Queens Courier staff  
 Robber gets 10 years for  
 Fresh Meadows heist, other  
 robberies 
 A Far Rockaway man who is connected to a series armed  
 robberies on Long Island and a heist at a Fresh Meadows  
 bank will spend over 10 years in jail. 
 Pedro Benitez, 21, pleaded guilty to armed bank robbery  
 and brandishing a fi rearm in furtherance of a crime  
 of violence on March 20. He was sentenced on Aug. 9 to  
 130 months in prison followed by three years of supervised  
 release and $71,395 in restitution. 
 According to charges, on Sept. 20, 2017, Benitez entered a  
 Queens County Savings Bank in Fresh Meadows, pulled out  
 a gun and ordered customers and employees of the bank to  
 the fl oor. He then gained access to the area behind the tellers’ 
  counter and stole over $50,000 in cash that had been  
 delivered to the bank earlier in the day and was laid out on  
 a table in a room adjacent to the teller’s area. 
 Benitez also admitted to participating in three bank robberies  
 in Nassau County last year. In each robbery, Benitez  
 entered the bank armed with a gun and robbed the employees  
 of the banks’ cash. In total, Benitez and the crew stole  
 over $70,000 from four banks between July and September  
 of 2017. 
 Two other members of the bank robbery crew previously  
 pleaded guilty and are awaiting sentencing. Two additional  
 members of the robbery crew are currently awaiting trial. 
 Emily Davenport 
 Photo by Jenna Bagcal/THE COURIER  
 New ‘Fort Totten Conservancy’  
 is a mystery to Bayside folks 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL  
 jbagcal@qns.com/ @jenna_bagcal 
 Elected offi  cials  and  community  
 members in Bayside expressed  
 concern over the Fort Totten Park  
 Conservancy, which they said was  
 established  without  community  
 input. 
 On  Aug.  13,  state  Senator  
 Tony Avella held a press conference  
 in  his  Bayside  offi  ce  with  
 Assemblyman Edward Braunstein  
 and members from Community  
 Board 7, Friends of Fort Totten  
 Park and the Bayside Historical  
 Society. According to the group,  
 they were individually approached  
 by a woman named Ann Sklar,  
 who said she started the park conservancy  
 as a 501(c)3 nonprofi t  
 organization. 
 “In  April  I  had  a  woman  
 come  into  my  offi  ce  and  say  
 she  represents  the  Fort  Totten  
 Conservancy and my fi rst reaction  
 was, I didn’t know there was one.  
 I knew there was a Friends of Fort  
 Totten but I never heard of this,”  
 Avella said. 
 Th  e senator said that he questioned  
 Sklar about the motives of  
 the organization and its members.  
 He quickly found out that she did  
 not live in the district and formed  
 the organization without community  
 input. 
 Warren Schreiber, a co-founder  
 of Friends of Fort Totten said  
 that  Sklar  told  him  she  lived  
 in  Riverdale  in  the  Bronx  but  
 planned to move out of New York  
 City to the village of Larchmont in  
 Westchester County. 
 Upon  setting  up  a  broader  
 meeting  with  Bayside  community  
 groups and the NYC Parks  
 Department,  all  of  whom  Sklar  
 had spoken to in some capacity,  
 they discovered that the woman  
 was attempting to create a job for  
 herself and requesting a $100,000  
 a year salary. According to them,  
 the  Parks  Department  seemed  
 to  be  giving  the  Fort  Totten  
 Conservancy “tacit support.” 
 “Th  at lady did outreach to us  
 and  my  answer  was  I  was  not  
 going to speak to her because as  
 soon as I knew that she had no  
 bearing with the Friends of Fort  
 Totten, I didn’t understand why  
 an outside agency would be moving  
 forward as well as the Parks  
 Department giving her any credibility  
 at all,” said Eugene T. Kelty,  
 chair of Community Board 7. 
 According to Joe Branzetti, the  
 co-president  of  Friends  of  Fort  
 Totten, Sklar told him that she  
 owns  an  antique  business  on  
 125th  Street  and  First  Avenue  
 in Harlem and a similar shop in  
 Maspeth. Th  e group’s shared suspicion  
 was that she wanted to form  
 the Conservancy in order to take  
 down the old buildings in the area,  
 salvage parts from them and sell  
 what she could at her stores. 
 Concerned  Council  members,  
 Assembly  members  and  community  
 organizations  addressed  
 a letter to Parks Commissioner  
 Mitchell J. Silver and Mayor Bill  
 de Blasio in June asking them to  
 reach out to the community before  
 “forming an organization to repair  
 the buildings at Fort Totten.” 
 “As you may be aware, the Fort  
 Totten Park Conservancy is an independent  
 entity and does not have  
 any formal relationship with NYC  
 Parks. We understand your concern  
 for how the organization was  
 formed, yet their mission is in line  
 with our common interests for the  
 park. We hope there may be a way  
 forward for such likeminded people  
 to work together, in close collaboration  
 with elected offi  cials and the  
 local community, for the betterment  
 of Fort Totten Park,” said Queens  
 Parks Commissioner Dorothy  
 Lewandowski in a July letter. 
 President  of  the  Bayside  
 Historical  Society  Paul  
 DiBenedetto said that the existing  
 organizations and NFPs (notfor 
 profi ts) should have been considered  
 when creating the conservancy. 
 “I hate the fact that the buildings  
 are  not  being  used,  but  a  
 lot of them are being used and  
 being used properly by city agencies  
 and in our case, a nonprofit,” 
  DiBenedetto said. “You need  
 to work with the people; you don’t  
 just go and do something and step  
 on us.” 
 From l-r: Joe Branzetti, Paul DiBenedetto, Warren Schreiber, Eugene Kelty 
 
				
/