Whoopi Goldberg under fire again, this time for claiming bakery 'refused' to fill her order 'perhaps' due to her 'politics'



Whoopi Goldberg, an outspoken — and well compensated — co-host of left-wing talk show "The View," was called woefully out of touch with the struggles of everyday Americans after saying on air last week that "I appreciate that people are having a hard time. Me too. I work for a living."

Goldberg — whose 2016 contract extension with "The View" reportedly was in the $5 to $6 million range — added that "if I had all the money in the world, I would not be here, OK? So I'm a working person, you know? ... I know it's hard out there."

'Not everybody wakes up every day thinking about politics. A good businessperson doesn’t care about anyone’s politics.'

As it turns out, that controversy seems minor compared to what Goldberg also whipped up on the show last week.

Goldberg celebrated her 69th birthday Wednesday on "The View" by sharing a tray of Charlotte Russe sponge cakes — and added that "the place that made these refused to make them for me," the Associated Press reported. “They said that their ovens had gone down ... but folks went and got them anyway, which is why I’m not telling you who made them.”

She also said, “It’s not because I’m a woman, but perhaps they did not like my politics," the AP noted.

Goldberg is a well-known, unabashed leftist. During the first episode of "The View" after President-elect Donald Trump's victory over Democrat Kamala Harris earlier this month, Goldberg — sitting at the show's table with her co-hosts, some of whom were dressed in black as if for a funeral — acknowledged that Trump is "now the president" but then declared: "I'm still not gonna say his name."

Jill Holtermann — owner of Holtermann’s Bakery, a 145-year-old dessert institution on Staten Island, New York — confirmed that Goldberg was talking about her establishment on "The View," the AP reported. But Holtermann said Goldberg's order wasn't filled due to equipment issues, not because of politics, the outlet noted.

Goldberg in a follow-up Instagram video doubled down, saying that “it does seem a little odd that when we called a few weeks before my birthday, and we were told they couldn’t process the order for my birthday because of an equipment failure, but somehow they were able to accept an order of a different 48 of the same dessert when somebody else called without using my name.”

The New York Times, citing an individual familiar with both pastry orders, reported that the bakery accepted the same order "a few days later" when it was placed without saying it was for Goldberg.

However, Republican Staten Island Borough President Vito Fossella — without mentioning Goldberg's name — said during a Friday news conference that she “besmirched and defamed” the bakery by “making stuff up to suit their needs," the AP reported.

“Not everybody wakes up every day thinking about politics,” he added, according to the outlet. “A good businessperson doesn’t care about anyone’s politics.”

Fossella said the bakery’s decades-old boiler had malfunctioned and had to be replaced, so the store didn’t want to commit to making a large order it couldn’t fill, the AP reported, adding that he suggested, “Just say you’re sorry so we can put this behind us."

'Goldberg and ABC would be wise to apologize on the air to the bakery on Monday.'

Holtermann during the same news conference said her bakery has been flooded with orders since the dust-up went public — and that she's thankful for the support, the outlet noted.

“I know how hard my family has worked to keep this business alive,” she said, according to the AP. “I wish my father was here today to see this.”

You can check out a short video report here about the controversy.

Representatives for Goldberg didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment Saturday, the outlet noted.

Jonathan Turley — the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University — wrote a Sunday op-ed for Fox News saying a defamation suit against Goldberg could be a "piece of cake."

"Some have said that the fact that Goldberg did not name Holtermann’s Bakery means she cannot be sued. That is wrong," Turley noted before later adding that "the failure to name a party in an otherwise defamatory context is not a defense to defamation."

Turley also said Goldberg using the word "perhaps" before noting "they did not like my politics" doesn't reduce her statement to "a mere opinion. This is a common misunderstanding. Often, people will say 'in my opinion' and then follow with a defamatory statement. It is not treated as an opinion if it is stated as a fact."

"Goldberg and ABC would be wise to apologize on the air to the bakery on Monday," Turley also wrote.

There was no reported indication that an apology occurred on Monday's episode.

Here's video of the Staten Island news conference defending the bakery:

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Males — just 13 and 14 years old — arrested after brutal, broad-daylight beating of 62-year-man whose tooth was knocked out



New York City police arrested two males — just 13 and 14 years old — in connection with a brutal, broad-daylight beating last month of a 62-year-man whose tooth was knocked out.

The NYPD announced the arrests Thursday, the Staten Island Advance reported, adding that the two juveniles both were charged with assault with intent to cause physical injury.

'The point is that it could have been anybody’s grandfather or grandmother just walking down the street minding their own business, and they’re assaulted, and that is just intolerable.'

The attack took place around 6:20 p.m. July 15 in Staten Island, the Advance said.

Surveillance video shows the moments prior to the attack. In the clip, nine individuals — all of whom appear to be males — are seen following the lone victim on a sidewalk. At one point, one of them appears to make physical contact with the victim, who quickly turns around.

The group continues following the victim, who soon takes off running across the street — and another attacker takes a swing at the victim. The group continues to chase after the victim, who is shoved from behind — and at that point, the victim and the group are out of the video frame. An ambulance soon is seen arriving.

Police said the assailants punched the victim and shoved him to the ground, the Advance reported, and the victim lost a tooth, suffered minor cuts, and was taken a hospital.

The Advance in a previous story said Good Samaritans stepped in to break up the attack.

“His mouth is all messed up. He was blindsided and kicked all over his body,” a relative of the victim who requested anonymity told the paper. “He fell flat on his face, not expecting anybody to hit him.”

A third Advance story noted that the attack cost the victim about $5,000 in medical expenses, according to the victim's family members.

Borough President Vito Fossella spoke to the paper about the attack.

“The most important thing that the government can do, the most important thing that we share on Staten Island, is that innocent people shouldn’t be abused [or] assaulted," Fossella told the Advance, adding that “I saw a video of a pack of what appeared to be young people, who have gotten off a bus, walking up and down Clove Road for a few minutes. They antagonized and ultimately assaulted an individual who ended up in the hospital.”

Fossella also told the paper that the victim "was just minding his business on a beautiful summer night, walking down the street, [and] he ended up surrounded by a pack of individuals" and that the victim in the process of running across the street away from the group "could have gotten killed, hit by a car.”

Fossella also told the Advance that "the point is that it could have been anybody’s grandfather or grandmother just walking down the street minding their own business, and they’re assaulted, and that is just intolerable.”

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Staten Island officials protest plan to shelter illegal aliens at church: ‘We have to stand and fight back’



A plan to house illegal aliens at a Staten Island church is facing bipartisan pushback from local elected officials, SILive.com recently reported.

On Monday, a group of Staten Island officials held a press conference outside the Faith United Methodist Church on Heberton Avenue in Port Richmond to protest a proposal to place 15 cots inside the house of worship to provide shelter accommodations to single adult men illegally residing in the United States.

'We should be talking about closing shelters, not opening up new ones.'

According to Staten Island Borough President Vito Fossella, they were not told about the plan until last week. The church aims to open its doors to the illegal aliens on Tuesday.

Councilwoman Kamillah Hanks (D-North Shore) claimed she first became aware of the proposal on Saturday when she received a text message from Mayor Eric Adams’ (D) administration. Hanks reported that the makeshift shelter will be managed by the New York Disaster Interfaith Services. The illegal aliens will receive meals, a bed, and access to a shower from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. every day.

“We stand here today as elected officials on behalf of our constituency to vehemently oppose the opening of this migrant shelter,” Hanks stated during the press conference. “Residents of this district are tired. They’re tired of constantly waking up one day to find an institution they trusted has made the decision that they feel will have a negative impact on their community and their safety.”

According to Hanks, six churches on Staten Island will be used to provide shelter to illegal immigrants.

“This approach the administration is taking is changing the fabric of our communities, undermining the trust and stability that these houses of worship have historically provided,” Hanks remarked. “And while the people of Staten Island — including myself and the people that stand behind me — have boundless compassion and charity, our resources are not.”

Fossella warned that the plan would “hurt ... this community and the people.”

“Some people in this community wake up every day trying to figure out, ‘How do we make Portland Richmond better? How do we make the North Shore better?'” Fossella continued. “And then along comes the agencies, [which] say, ‘Guess what? Here’s a way we can make it better: We’re gonna’ dump a migrant shelter right in the middle of your neighborhood.'”

“How is that any degree of common sense? It’s not ... we have to stand and fight back,” he added.

Fossella noted that the decision to open the shelter space came “out of the blue” and in “the dark of night.”

Councilman David Carr (R-Mid-Island) also joined the press conference.

“I’m not just against migrant shelters in my backyard. I’m against migrant shelters in every one,” Carr said. “We should be talking about closing shelters, not opening up new ones like the one they intend to put behind us. These churches are thoroughly unsuitable for these kinds of facilities.”

New York City is currently providing services to approximately 65,000 illegal immigrants.

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Armed home intruders pistol-whip 5-year-old girl in face — take off with a cell phone



Armed home intruders on Staten Island pistol-whipped a 5-year-old girl in the face early Monday morning — and took off from the premises with a cell phone.

What are the details?

Four suspects, three armed with guns, kicked in the front door of the home near Livingston Avenue and Queen Street around 12:45 a.m., WPIX-TV reported, citing New York City Police.

A 5-year-old girl, a 4-year-old boy, a 33-year-old woman, and a 54-year-old resident were inside the home at the time of the break-in, the station said, citing police.

The NYPD released a video from surveillance cameras showing the robbers — wearing hoodies and masks — entering the home and searching the residence with a flashlight, the New York Daily News reported.

— (@)

The robbers demanded money and jewelry, police said, according to the Daily News, and they pistol-whipped the girl and the woman. The victims suffered facial cuts and bleeding, WPIX said, and were taken to a hospital for treatment. The boy and the 54-year-old resident were not hurt, the paper added.

The suspects stole a cell phone before fleeing the home, police told the station, and there have been no arrests.

Police are asking the public for help identifying the suspects and tracking them down, the Daily News said, adding that anyone with information can confidentially call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS.

How have folks been reacting?

Commenters under the New York Post's story about the incident are not happy:

  • "Wonder how many times these winners/grad students have been caught and released with no bail," one commenter said. "The child in the home did not deserve this. ..."
  • "Where was the social service worker to talk them out of this now that nothing is a crime and responsibility is a past tense?" another commenter asked.
  • "Liberal states would rather have dead innocents than armed informed citizens, only one of them is a threat to their tyranny," another commenter said.
  • "Isn't gun control great!!" another commenter exclaimed. "You take the guns away from the law abiding citizens and give them to the criminals."

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Mugger on parole for attempted robbery dies after two men he tried to rob with fake gun turned the tables on him with martial arts



A mugger who was on parole for attempted robbery died after two men he tried to rob with a fake gun Sunday on Staten Island turned the tables on him and fought back, the New York Daily News reported.

The pair of men Robert Compton tried to rob used martial arts to defend themselves, WABC-TV reported.

What are the details?

Compton, 33, allegedly approached the men around 1:55 a.m. near Pacific Avenue and St. Albans Place in the Eltingville neighborhood as they walked home from a bar, police and sources told the Daily News.

Compton allegedly told them to “give me all your s**t,” sources added to the paper.

But one of the men grabbed the fake gun, and the pair fought back, wrestling with Compton and restraining him as one of them got behind Compton, grabbed him around the neck, and pulled him to the ground while the other called 911, sources told the Daily News.

Compton fell unconscious during the struggle, the paper noted.

“He robbed us at gunpoint,” one of the men told responding officers, according to the Daily News.

Police performed CPR on Compton before he was rushed to Staten Island University Hospital North where he died, the paper reported, adding that the two men were taken to the same hospital for treatment of minor injuries.

What else do we know about Compton?

Compton had a long criminal history, sources told the Daily News, which also included grand larceny. WABC said he also assaulted a police officer.

He spent over four years in prison for an attempted robbery charge and was paroled in December 2019, the paper said.

The city Medical Examiner performed an autopsy on Compton’s body but said more tests are needed to determine his exact cause of death, the Daily News noted.

Compton's family has questions

New York City police and the Richmond County District Attorney's Office are looking into why Compton died during what police said was an attempted robbery, WABC said.

Compton's family has questions, too.

"It sounds like it should be investigated a lot more," cousin George Pirola noted to WABC.

"So, two guys, why didn't they just hold him down, call 911. That's that," Pirola added to the station, noting that "I'm experienced in martial arts; my wife is too, and you know when you have somebody passed out, and you let it go at that point."

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Pirola also told WABC that "it didn't sound right to me. You know, two martial arts guys from what I read knocked the gun out of his hand and then choked him out. But they choked him to death. Basically they killed the kid after they had him choked out."

Despite Compton's criminal history, Pirola added to the station that "he's got some scrapes, but nothing like that. I couldn't imagine him trying to do something like that."

The other side of the story

“I’ve known him since he was a little boy,” Richard Vitale said of one of the men who turned the tables on Compton, according to the Daily News. “He’s a stand-up guy. I heard a rumor that he took karate. He’s outgoing, he has a lot of friends. He gets along with everybody. He’d be the last person I would think would be connected to this.”

Vitale added to the paper that he believes his neighbor was in the “wrong place" at the "wrong time.”

The attorney representing the two men told the Daily News they were “clearly acting in self defense.”

“Our clients, two hard working young men, were the victims of a terrifying armed robbery by a career criminal,” Louis Gelormino noted to the paper. “We are grateful that the District Attorney’s Office and the NYPD conducted a complete and thorough investigation of this matter. Our prayers go out to the family of the deceased.”

The men who fought Compton are both 29 years old, according to WABC. But the Daily News reported that they are both 33.

Family left with questions after attempted robber found dead in NYCyoutu.be

NYC sheriff admits deputy did not break legs in Jeep dust-up with COVID-19 'autonomous zone' bar owner as initially claimed



New York City's sheriff initially told the media that a deputy of his suffered broken legs last month after being hit by a Jeep driven by outspoken "autonomous zone" Staten Island bar co-owner Daniel Presti, the New York Post reported.

Image source: WNBC-TV video screenshot

But Presti's attorney Mark Fonte told the paper that prosecutors lined up against his client acknowledged that Sgt. Kenneth Matos never suffered broken legs in the Dec. 6 incident outside Mac's Public House, after which Presti was charged with felony assault.

Now Fonte wants Sheriff Joseph Fucito to resign, the Post reported.

"I cannot explain the sheriff's motivation for telling this falsehood," Fonte told the paper Sunday. "These false statements could have tainted a potential jury pool and did in fact taint public opinion."

What did the sheriff have to say?

Fucito told the Post his incorrect conclusion about Matos' condition was due to a "doctor that evening" who "misdiagnosed" the deputy's injury.

The sheriff added to the paper that he "cannot discuss Sgt. Matos' medical condition or why the doctor misdiagnosed it. But I can tell you he is still out on medical leave for the injuries he suffered from the assault from Mr. Presti."

Fucito also noted to the Post that "our statement was that he had broken tibias. That diagnosis was incorrect."

It isn't clear when the sheriff knew about the incorrect diagnosis. A WABC-TV reporter noted during the station's broadcast about the incident that the deputy broke bones in his leg, but that Presti denied the claim, insisting the deputy only twisted his ankle — and that there was video to prove it.

What's the background?

Mac's Public House gained national attention in late 2020 for defying COVID-19 lockdown orders.

Image source: WNBC-TV video screenshot

Less than a week before the Jeep incident, sheriff's deputies raided the popular watering hole and led Presti away in handcuffs.

Just after midnight Dec. 6, two deputies followed Presti to his vehicle after he left the bar, WABC said.

The deputies identified themselves, approached Presti, and tried to arrest him for multiple offenses, WABC said, adding that Presti began to flee on foot toward his vehicle. The pursuing officers ordered him to stop, the station said, but Presti entered his car.

Officials said Presti allegedly drove into one of the deputies, who was thrown upon the hood of the vehicle, WABC said, adding that Presti drove about 100 yards with the injured officer clinging to the hood until deputies eventually brought the vehicle to a stop.

"I have nothing but respect for the NYPD and other law enforcement," Presti later said in a statement, the station reported, adding that by the end of the investigation, "you will find that I did nothing wrong."

More from the Post about the incident:

Presti told The Post Sunday that he was leaving the bar and walking to his Jeep Cherokee when someone called out his name — and saw two people charging at him.

"Nobody identified themselves and two people were charging at me," he said. "It's fight or flight at that point and I decided I'm not dying on South Rail Road."

He said that's when he saw the people who were chasing him in front of the car, and "gave him a chance to move."
Presti said "it was a guy in dark's clothing. Everything black, everything covered."

He maintains he did not know the man was part of a large contingent of sheriff's deputies — and only figured it out when he was pulled out of his vehicle and saw officers rushing towards him.

No criminal charges against Presti

After Presti's arrest over the Jeep incident, prosecutors presented the case to a grand jury for a possible indictment, the Post said. Presti told the paper he testified before a grand jury for about an hour and a half, and said the jury saw police footage of the incident.

"They were shown the cops' video, from the police cameras," he told the paper. "That was the prosecutor's evidence, but it seemed odd to me that they would show that because it proved what I had been saying from the start."

The Post said Matos held on to the hood of Presti's Jeep before being thrown to the ground and was taken to Staten Island University Hospital.

Presti was cleared of assault charges, the paper said, but the grand jury indicted Presti on charges that he operated the bar and served alcohol without a license.

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