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I said it on the air and I meant it, it’s one of the best episodes in Mic’d In New Haven history. Nita Rosato is truly one of the best guests I can say I’ve ever had. With 15 years of her career spent in rescue work between the rescue squads of the NYC Transit
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TUESDAY, 7PM She is one tough cookie I’ll tell ya. Having met her in person, it’s not hard to tell. Working as a police officer in late 80’s/early 90’s NYC, you needed to be. What’s more is for just under a decade she was underground working with the New York City Transit Police. After honing
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So much fun doing this episode. Elizabeth Hashagen brought the energy! Always with a positive perspective on life, her upbeat outlook has remained unaltered, even when a diagnosis of cancer threatened to derail everything. But with the help of friends, she made it through, winning her battle, and continuing her terrific Emmy Award winning career,
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TUESDAY, 7PM Well it all comes full circle doesn’t it. A couple years ago, I interviewed the father, a retired FDNY Firefighter out of Manhattan’s famed Rescue 1, and now two years later, I’ll be interviewing his daughter! Since 2000, she’s been a mainstay on News 12 Long Island as an anchor and field reporter.
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(PRE-RECORDED INTERVIEW) The daughter of a Latin music legend in the late great Tito Puente, she’s carved her own impressive reputation across a near quarter century’s run reporting on all things weather in New York City. A veteran with previous stops at NBC New York, CBS New York, WOR, & currently Fox 5 New York,
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Car thieves. A myriad of different criminals with a myriad of different motivations. All with the same outcome: stolen property and a disrupted life. That’s what the detectives assigned to the NYPD Auto Crime Unit are up against, and with dedicated sleuths like Vic Ferrari on the case, they weren’t able to disrupt for long.
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FRIDAY, 7PM With a last name like Ferrari, it’d have been a shame if he didn’t work in Auto Crime. He had a varied career in the NYPD as you most certainly can in the world’s largest police department. Joining the force in 1988, he’d climb the ranks from The Bronx’s DUI Task Force to
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A calling card in policing is honesty. Never is that honesty more imperative than in leadership for without, how can a department succeed? As a Chief, honesty in leadership isn’t an option, it’s the only way and those who demonstrate it embody their rank and embody the good of their profession. This perspective offered by
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On a day with both the NYPD and FDNY on the 22nd anniversary of the 9/11 attacks The anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks is without question always a solemn one. No matter how much time has passed since that tragic late summer’s morning, for the first responders who ran down there to help,
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Certain guys have lived movie like lives. The stories they have, the things they’ve done, the moments that are truly incredible, they have to write a book if not have a book written about them. Kenneth Strange is one of those guys. How do you put 21 years worth of federal law enforcement stories into