Talk:Eric Schneiderman

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Source[edit]

czar 21:16, 3 February 2017 (UTC)[reply]

External links modified[edit]

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Suggested Category addition[edit]

There seems to oversight in that the category 'Category:Jewish American attorneys' is conspicuously missing — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2600:1700:3970:EDA0:AD02:9518:4703:5016 (talk) 02:38, 8 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

We already have Category:Jewish American politicians and Category:Lawyers from New York City, so I'm not quite sure why Category:Jewish American attorneys is necessary. power~enwiki (π, ν) 03:31, 8 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Why do categories exist? To catalogue and make searchable through a review of the category. Categories are discrete, searchable databases and ought to be independent of each other, not a Cliff Notes version of the article, or nah? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2600:1700:3970:EDA0:B96B:31F4:D988:B3A0 (talk) 03:59, 10 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

"despite having no evidence[edit]

So this ought to be taken out, right? Makes the whole thing seem terribly slanted. 192.160.131.22 (talk) 21:38, 8 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Yes. I see it was already removed by User:Sandstein. – Muboshgu (talk) 23:25, 8 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

"Brown Slave"[edit]

When will the article take note of this "Ex: Schneiderman called me ‘brown slave,’ slapped me until I called him ‘Master’" https://nypost.com/2018/05/07/ex-schneiderman-called-me-his-brown-slave-would-slap-me-until-i-called-him-master/ --105.8.1.208 (talk) 22:11, 10 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Content deleted by Chris troutman about Schneiderman's 2010 hit and run being questioned by the media in 2018[edit]

Chris troutman deleted these eleven words in the section about the 2010 election:

He denied being involved in a hit and run in July.[1][2][3]

This got deleted even though it showed up in the The New York Times.[4] Oh well, showing up in the «newspaper of record» as well as all other major Big Apple newspapers[5][6] and magazines[7] about a New York State Senator who represented Manhattan and the Bronx is apparently now WP:UNDUE?

Obviously, this has become now relevant again insofar as Crain's New York Business (cited above), NY1,[8] City Journal[9] have again raised the issue now, in 2018, eight years later. But hey, maybe we ought to save 11 words of server space! XavierItzm (talk) 22:33, 15 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ "NY AG Candidate Involved in What Witnesses Call Hit-and-Run". NBC New York WNBC. 14 July 2010. Retrieved 15 May 2018. An eyewitness saw the incident and recorded Schneiderman's license plate number, which the car owned traced and called police.
  2. ^ GLENN BLAIN; KENNETH LOVETT (14 July 2010). "Attorney General candidate Eric Schneiderman involved in 'hit-&-run' with Elena Kagan's niece". New York Daily News. Retrieved 15 May 2018. "He has spoken with the owner of the other vehicle, expressed his sincere apology and offered to pay for all repairs," Freedland said.
  3. ^ Erik Engquist (14 May 2018). "Unanswered questions in the Schneiderman scandal". Crain's New York Business - Crain Communications. Retrieved 15 May 2018. Some years ago he was involved in a hit-and-run, for which he blamed a staff member—a claim that seems dubious now
  4. ^ ANAHAD O’CONNOR (13 July 2010). "Senator Riding in Car During What Witnesses Call Hit-Run". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 May 2018. A state senator running for New York attorney general was a passenger in a car involved Monday night in what witnesses called a hit-and-run accident. The senator, Eric T. Schneiderman, who represents parts of Manhattan and the Bronx, was leaving the NY1 studio in Chelsea after taping an interview when his driver hit a parked minivan and left the scene.
  5. ^ David Seifman (14 July 2018). "Furor at top pol's 'hit run'". New York Post. Retrieved 15 May 2018. State Sen. Eric Schneiderman — a candidate for attorney general, the highest law-enforcement post in New York — was involved in a minor car accident outside the New York 1 studios in Chelsea and then fled the scene
  6. ^ Reid Pillifant (14 July 2010). "A.G. Candidates Tread Lightly on Schneiderman Accident". New York Observer. Retrieved 15 May 2018. attorney general candidates reacted to the news that one of their rivals in the race, State Senator Eric Schneiderman, had been accused of a hit-and-run
  7. ^ Dan Amira (13 July 2010). "Attorney General Candidate Eric Schneiderman Gets Attention for the Wrong Reasons". New York (magazine). Retrieved 15 May 2018. Last night, a car carrying Democratic attorney general hopeful Eric Schneiderman in the passenger seat rear-ended a parked car while it was pulling away. Schneiderman's car left the scene while a bicyclist jotted down his license-plate number and waited for the owner of the parked car
  8. ^ Grace Rauh (9 May 2018). "Eric Schneiderman's rise through NY law and politics before his fall from grace". NY1. Retrieved 15 May 2018. During the campaign, he got in trouble over a hit-and-run accident involving a parked car that belonged to a NY1 employee. Schneiderman said an aide was behind the wheel.
  9. ^ Seth Barron (8 May 2018). "Eric Schneiderman's Inevitable Fall". City Journal (New York City). Retrieved 15 May 2018. In 2010, when Schneiderman first ran for statewide office, he was involved in a hit-and-run accident. Then a state senator, he claimed to have been a passenger in his own car when his 22-year-old staffer Rachel Kagan—niece of Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan—smashed into a parked car and drove away, after causing $3,000 worth of damage. A passerby witnessed the crash and wrote down Schneiderman's license plate. Schneiderman later told the owner of the parked car that he "disciplined the staffer," and offered to pay for the damage, though his office insisted that it was "outrageous" to call the incident a hit-and-run.
@XavierItzm: The issue is not if the incident were true or it was in a reliable source. The issue is that you're giving it undue coverage. I'm not tying to protect the subject but the subject has been a target of vandalism. Suffice to say that I have no respect for your edit history. Chasing "news" is always a bad idea. Chris Troutman (talk) 23:41, 15 May 2018 (UTC)[reply]