Shaina Taub on 'SUFFS'
[REBROADCAST FROM May 9, 2022] Composer and performer Shaina Taub is the creator of the musical, "SUFFS," which was a hit off-Broadway show in 2022. Taub starred as Alice Paul, one of the leaders of the suffragist movement and the campaign for the 19th Amendment. The musical is now opening on Broadway, with previews beginning at Music Box Theatre on March 26. We revisit our conversation with Taub from when the show first premiered off-Broadway.
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NYC Council, Vickie Paladino reach settlement in lawsuit over disciplinary charges
Councilmember Vickie Paladino and the City Council have agreed to end their fight over the member’s social media posts, with the lawmaker agreeing to remove three posts decried as Islamophobic and the Council dropping disciplinary charges filed against her, according to terms of the settlement.
The Council's ethics committee will drop disciplinary charges against the Queens Republican for “disorderly behavior” and violating the Council’s anti-harassment and discrimination policy, according to the settlement, which still must go before a judge.
Paladino will also remove all mention of her councilmember role on her social media account on X and delete three tweets specifically cited in the disciplinary charges leveled by her colleagues on the Council.
Spokespeople for the Council and Paladino declined to comment, citing a stipulation of the settlement.
In a statement on social media, Sandra Ung, chair of the Council's ethics committee, said that she appreciated that Paladino took down her tweets, which Ung disapproved of.
“I believe the resolution strikes the right balance between protection of Council staff and the First Amendment liberties of Council Members,” Ung said in a post on X.
Ung's statement was outlined as a stipulation of the settlement, which also mentioned a statement forthcoming from Paladino.
Paladino's required statement, according to the settlement, will clarify that her social media posts "were not directed at any Council Member of staff," she is responsible for the content, and that she "never intended to make Council Members or staff feel unwelcomed or unsafe in their work environment."
She must post the statement within 48 hours after a judge approves the settlement, according to the agreement.
The settlement comes after fellow councilmembers decried several social media posts by Paladino as being Islamophobic.
In a February tweet, Paladino criticized Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s appointment of Faiza Ali, a Muslim American woman and former Council staffer born and raised in Brooklyn, as the city’s chief immigration officer.
“New York is under foreign occupation. There's really no other way to put it,” Paladino posted. “Does this administration have one single actual American in it?”
Menin condemned the remarks in a social media post of her own, stating, “This Islamophobic rhetoric is deeply offensive.” Menin added, “I condemn it in the strongest terms.”
Councilmember Shekar Krishnan, a Democrat who sits on the ethics committee, said in a post that “Racism and Islamophobia have no place in City Hall.”
More recently, Paladino criticized Mamdani for praying with sanitation workers before a winter blizzard.
“This is part of Islamic conquest,” Paladino wrote in a Feb. 23 tweet. “The message is very clear — we are being replaced.”
Conditions at NJ ICE facility are meant to ‘break people,’ U.S. rep says after visit
Difficult conditions and inadequate staffing in a privately owned ICE detention center in Newark are degrading the health of detainees inside, a pair of New Jersey U.S. representatives said after a tour Monday.
Rep. Rob Menendez and Rep. Nellie Pou, both Democrats representing districts in urban North Jersey, conducted an oversight visit to Delaney Hall on Doremus Avenue.
They told reporters that dozens of detainees inside complained of inadequate medical care, difficulty visiting with family and friends, dirty air, and low-quality food.
“What they are doing inside of there is trying to create conditions where people are so demoralized that they will sign voluntary departure papers to not have to be in there anymore,” said Menendez, who noted he’s seen similar conditions during prior visits. “They're trying to break people so people give up.”
Reporters were not allowed to join the oversight visit. The congressmembers and their staff were not able to bring in their phones or take photos inside the facility.
An ICE spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did Florida-based The GEO Group, which operates the ICE detention center.
It sits between the Essex County jail and an NJ Transit bus garage on Doremus Avenue, a major truck route. Smells from a nearby sewage treatment plant and a fat rendering facility hang in the air.
Delaney Hall can hold up to about 1,200 detainees, though the actual population fluctuates. Pou said roughly 680 detainees are currently at Delaney Hall. She and Menendez said they met with detainees from around the globe, that none of them had criminal records, and that many of them had long-established lives in America.
Pou was making her first oversight visit to Delaney Hall. She called it an “eye-opening” experience. She said there was just one doctor and a handful of nurse practitioners in the facility’s medical clinic. Pou said she was concerned the medical staffing was not enough to handle emergencies.
Menendez said ICE and The GEO Group have repeatedly said that detainees who request medical care are seen within 24 hours. But he questions that. In one instance, Menendez said, a man described waiting over two months to see a dentist about mouth pain. Menendez said the man still has not gotten dental care, and instead is being given pain medication.
“ All the individuals that we spoke to, when you mention the idea that they've been seen within 24 hours, they like, they sigh in disbelief,” Menendez said. “Because that's not the reality.”
Visitation limits remain a complaint among detainees and their families, Pou said. Visitors are only allowed on the weekend and on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. Visitors often wait hours outside the facility before being let in.
There is limited parking available, and visitors risk being denied entry if they don’t comply with the facility’s dress code. Once inside, visitors have a limited time to meet with a detainee, and the clock starts before the check-in process is done.
The visit comes roughly a year after federal agents arrested Newark Mayor Ras Baraka while he was protesting the facility’s opening; the charges against Baraka were later dropped.
Menendez, Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman and Rep. LaMonica McIver were also there that day, trying to make an unannounced oversight visit. The three representatives were caught up in the scuffle around Baraka’s arrest. McIver was later indicted on charges that she impeded federal officers; that case is ongoing, with a hearing scheduled for June.
Menendez said the Department of Homeland Security has maintained a professional relationship with Congressional offices since last year’s incident. But he said GEO Group staff at Delaney Hall “hates when we’re here.”
Menendez said he doubts the facility can be reformed.
“ From Day One, we've said this place should not be open,” Menendez said. “We continue to believe that it shouldn't be open and I don’t think that there’s a way to improve it.”
The visit comes as Congress debates a Republican proposal to give ICE another $70 billion for immigration enforcement.
Menendez said he hopes New Jersey’s three Republican representatives visit Delaney Hall before they decide to vote on the measure.
Black, gay dancer was ‘living his best life’ before brutal Brooklyn murder, prosecutor says
Twenty-eight-year-old O'Shae Sibley was “living his best life” before a Brooklyn teen fatally stabbed him, a prosecutor alleged on Monday in opening statements at the trial of the accused killer in Brooklyn Supreme Criminal Court.
Sibley, a Black, gay, professional dancer from Philadelphia, had rented a car with four of his friends on July 29, 2023, and spent the day celebrating one of their birthdays at an LGBTQ-friendly beach in New Jersey, Senior Assistant District Attorney Sarah Jafari said. They stopped at a gas station on Coney Island Avenue in Midwood on their way home to Brooklyn.
As they refueled and danced to Beyoncé outside the car, the friends encountered a “hateful” verbal assault of racist and homophobic slurs from a group that included then-17-year-old Dmitriy Popov, who had been working in a smoke shop nearby, Jafari said.
The verbal altercation turned deadly when Popov pulled a knife from his pocket and stabbed Sibley in the torso.
Popov, 20, faces charges of second-degree murder as a hate crime, criminal possession of a weapon and several other crimes. He could spend up to 25 years to life in prison if convicted of the most serious charge. The Brooklyn district attorney’s office is trying him as an adult.
Popov’s defense attorney, Mark Pollard, argued Monday that his client was acting in self-defense. He described Popov as a “frail, skinny, puny” teen facing a group of “strong, in-shape” men. The attorney also said Sibley hit Popov.
“This is about a few terrifying seconds in the life of a 17-year-old boy — not man,” Pollard said, adding: “He was afraid for his life in a chaotic situation.”
But Jafari said Sibley was targeted because he was an “out and proud” Black, gay man, dancing in a bathing suit.
“You cannot kill someone because you are offended,” she told jurors. “You cannot kill someone because how they live their life is not in line with what you think is right.”
Sibley’s loved ones filled several benches in the 20th-floor courtroom — many of them dressed in black. His mother occasionally dabbed her eyes with a tissue during opening statements. One man hunched over in his seat and gasped for breath.
A handful of Popov’s relatives sat behind the defendant on the other side of the courtroom. Popov sat quietly next to his attorney, wearing a white, button-down shirt and navy blue pants. At one point, he jotted down notes on a yellow legal pad.
Jafari described two alternate worlds playing out half a block apart just before Sibley’s death. At the gas station, she said, Sibley and his friends were in their bathing suits, enjoying a beautiful summer night. It was the summer of Beyoncé’s “Renaissance” tour, and the group was dancing to her music.
“They were expressing themselves,” she said.
Popov and his friends were working at a smoke shop down the block, huddling around a screen to watch “half-naked men” wrestle in an Ultimate Fighting Championship match, the prosecutor said.
When the group noticed Sibley and his friends dancing, they decided that this type of behavior in their neighborhood was not OK and walked over to the gas station to confront them, Jafari said.
When the two groups collided, the tension quickly escalated, according to the prosecutor. The group from the smoke shop called Sibley and his friends racial slurs and told them to “get the f—k out of here,” Jafari said.
“We don’t do that s—t. We’re Muslims,” someone said, according to the prosecutor.
One of Sibley’s friends, who was only wearing a jock strap, ran back to the car to put on shorts, Jafari said. Sibley approached Popov, and his friends apologized for making them uncomfortable, the prosecutor said. But the group from the smoke shop kept cursing and telling Sibley and his friends to leave. Popov recorded on his phone.
A clerk at the gas station came outside to defuse the situation, and for a moment it seemed like the argument was over, Jafari said. Both sides walked away, except for Popov, who continued to call out insults and slurs, she said. Then, the prosecutor said, Popov reached into his pocket, hunched over and pulled out a knife.
“Come on, get stabbed,” he said, according to Jafari.
Sibley stepped toward Popov with his palms open, positioning himself between the knife and his friend, the prosecutor said. The teen stabbed Sibley in the torso, slicing five-and-a-half inches into his body and puncturing his heart, Jafari said.
Popov went back to the smoke shop with the bloody knife, rang up a customer and then fled in a car, she said. Meanwhile, Sibley lay on the ground, his pink bathing suit turning red. He was pronounced dead at Maimonides Hospital shortly after.
Popov’s defense attorney said video of the incident would make clear that Sibley and his friends were pursuing his client, not the other way around.
“His perception at the time was fear,” Pollard said.
But Jafari said Popov “had so many opportunities to leave, to walk away.”
“He chose not to,” she said. “He used deadly physical force against O’Shae for no justifiable reason.”
The trial comes nearly three years after Sibley’s killing rattled New York City’s Black and queer communities. Following Sibley’s death, fellow dancers gathered at the gas station on Coney Island Avenue to vogue in his honor and call for justice.
In the year Sibley was killed, New York City recorded the most hate crimes against gay men and Black people in New York City since at least 2019, with 116 and 56 reported incidents, respectively, according to NYPD data.
At least 11 hate crimes against LGBT people and 10 against Black people were reported in the first three months of this year, according to the most recent police data.


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