1
U(D54G1D)y+&!,!%!=!_ Thomas L. Friedman PAGE A25 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25 The frustrations of a British snack maker forced to scramble for fruit could speak for an uncertain nation. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-8 Brexit With a Few Blemishes Three professors whose research in- cludes sexual desire were put on paid leave as accusations of sexual miscon- duct are investigated. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A9-17 Inquiry at Dartmouth As companies prize talent, more work- ers are apt to think they can get away with misdeeds, researchers say. PAGE B1 When the Harasser Is a Star The fight for the huge Brooklyn housing complex pits a tycoon’s widow against her stepchildren. PAGE A19 NEW YORK A19-23 Messy Battle for Starrett City The state had gone months without a budget as lawmakers wrestled with a $3.5 billion deficit. PAGE A19 Budget, Finally, for Connecticut For Americans wishing to celebrate the Hindu festival of lights — a food lover’s delight — Dallas may be the place to be. PAGE D1 FOOD D1-8 A Texas-Flavored Diwali The president’s lofty vision of ending poverty clashes with reality and gaps in education and health care. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 China’s Rural Poor The deposed leader of Catalonia ap- peared in Brussels to declare that he wanted “Europe to react.” PAGE A6 Plea for Europe on Catalonia A driver plowed a pickup truck down a crowded bike path along the Hudson River in Manhattan on Tuesday, killing eight people and injuring 11 before being shot by a police officer in what officials are calling the deadliest terrorist attack on New York City since Sept. 11, 2001. The rampage ended when the motorist — whom the police iden- tified as Sayfullo Saipov, 29 — smashed into a school bus, jumped out of his truck and ran up and down the high- way waving a pellet gun and paintball gun and shouting “Allahu akbar,” Arabic for “God is great,” before he was shot in the abdomen by the officer. He re- mained in critical condition on Tuesday evening. Mayor Bill de Blasio declared the rampage a terrorist attack, and federal law enforcement au- thorities were leading the investi- gation. Investigators discovered handwritten notes in Arabic near the truck that indicated allegiance to the Islamic State, two law en- forcement officials said. But in- vestigators had not uncovered ev- idence of any direct or enabling ties between Mr. Saipov and ISIS and were treating the episode as a case of an “inspired” attacker, two counterterrorism officials said. Mr. de Blasio said at a news con- ference, “Based on information we have at this moment, this was an act of terror, and a particularly cowardly act of terror aimed at in- nocent civilians.” Five of the people killed were Argentine tourists who traveled to New York for a 30-year high school reunion celebration, said a senior official in Santa Fe Prov- ince, where they were from. The Argentine authorities said they were Hernán Mendoza, Diego An- gelini, Alejandro Pagnucco, Ariel Erlij and Hernán Ferruchi. Martín Ludovico Marro, a sixth member of the group, was wounded. Bel- gian officials said one of those killed and three of the injured were from Belgium. Mr. Saipov came to the United States from Uzbekistan in 2010, and had a green card that allowed permanent legal residence. He MILE-LONG MANHATTAN TRUCK ATTACK KILLS 8 This article is by Benjamin Muel- ler, William K. Rashbaum and Al Baker. ‘Cowardly Act of Terror,’ Mayor Declares A smashed bicycle and a body marked a portion of the path of destruction along the Hudson River on Tuesday. A suspect was shot in the abdomen by a police officer. BEBETO MATTHEWS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued on Page A22 Sayfullo Saipov The screams seemed too vivid from the start, too visceral to be- long to crowds celebrating a crisp and sunny Halloween in Lower Manhattan. The tragedy had un- folded in just minutes, and for hours and hours it remained too senseless to believe. Sirens and police tape sur- rounded the white pickup truck that a 29-year-old assailant trans- formed into an instrument of ter- ror when he began hitting cyclists and joggers along the West Side Highway bike path. A mangled school bus sat next to it. Bodies lay strewn along the way. For those who encountered the scene on Tuesday, the after- math was as confusing as it was gruesome. Tom Kendrick, 36, a lawyer from the West Village, said he was jogging uptown just north of Chambers Street when he began noticing the mayhem on the bike path. He saw a battered body and bicycle in the bushes alongside the path. Farther along he found three bodies close together, also battered cyclists. “I approached to see if I could help and they did not need help — they appeared to be dead,” Mr. Kendrick said. “They were bloody and unconscious, with some limbs hanging,” he added. “It was grue- some. It was grisly. It was surre- al.” “These people were gone,” he A Mangled Bus, and Bodies: ‘It Was Grisly. It Was Surreal.’ By JOSE A. DelREAL and COREY KILGANNON CANAL ST. Stuyvesant High School Truck enters bike path WEST ST. Hudson River W. HOUSTON ST. SPRING ST. N. MOORE ST. 0.1 mile THE NEW YORK TIMES The truck entered the bicycle path around 3 p.m. Tuesday. Continued on Page A23 During high-pressure meetings to plan the expansion of prekindergarten during his first months in City Hall, Mayor Bill de Blasio would invoke the D-Day in- vasion of Normandy: There it is on the horizon, he would say, we are approaching the beach, we need a full-on assault. He spoke of it so often that a staff member gave him a picture of the landing, which he kept on the mantelpiece in his office. Making free, full-day prekinder- garten available to all 4-year-olds was the most visible and ambi- tious promise that Mr. de Blasio made when he campaigned for mayor, so making good on that pledge when he came into office in 2014 was crucial. And he deliv- ered. Full-day prekindergarten enrollment grew to 53,000 in Sep- tember 2014, from 19,000 a year earlier. It reached 68,000 the next year. Parents were generally pleased, and even his critics were impressed. Now as Mr. de Blasio seeks a second term in an election on Nov. 7, the success of universal prekindergarten stands out as the most salient achievement of his mayoralty. It showed that Mr. de Blasio could meet an ambitious goal intended to address the in- equality between rich and poor New Yorkers, but one that also helped the middle class. And it showed that a liberal mayor — the first Democrat to occupy City Hall Mayor Expanded Pre-K, but It Cost Him Albany By WILLIAM NEUMAN Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday at a rally in Manhattan. The prekindergarten expansion was his first major success in office. DINA LITOVSKY FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A20 WASHINGTON — Executives from Facebook, Google and Twit- ter appeared on Capitol Hill for the first time on Tuesday to pub- licly acknowledge their role in Russia’s influence on the presi- dential campaign, but offered little more than promises to do better. Their reluctance frustrated law- makers who sought stronger evi- dence that American elections will be protected from foreign powers. The hearing, the first of three in two days for company executives, served as an initial public reckon- ing for the internet giants. They had emphasized their role as pub- lic squares for political discourse but are being forced to confront how they were used as tools for a broad Russian misinformation campaign. Both Democrats and some Re- publicans on a Senate Judiciary subcommittee complained that the companies had waited nearly a year to publicly admit how many Americans were exposed to the Russian effort to spread propa- ganda during the 2016 campaign. Senators pushed for harsher rem- edies, including regulations on their advertising practices akin to rules for political advertising on television. “Why has it taken Facebook 11 months to come forward and help us understand the scope of this problem, see it clearly for the problem it is and begin to work in a responsible legislative way to address it?” asked Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware. The most pointed exchanges were aimed at Facebook, which acknowledged on Monday before the hearings that more than 126 million users potentially saw in- flammatory political ads bought by a Kremlin-linked company, the Internet Research Agency. Face- book has drawn particular ire from lawmakers for its early brushoff of fake news and foreign interference on its site, which its chief executive, Mark Zucker- berg, dismissed as a “crazy idea” just after the election. Since then, the company has scrambled to appease lawmakers by promising to hire more than 1,000 people to manually review political ad purchases and to make public the funding behind those ads. “The foreign interference we Internet Giants Pique Senators With Restraint This article is by Cecilia Kang, Nicholas Fandos and Mike Isaac. Continued on Page A17 WASHINGTON — One lasted only 24 days as President Trump’s national security adviser, done in by his lack of candor about con- versations he had with the Rus- sian ambassador. Another has been hauled in front of a federal grand jury investigating Russia’s interference in the election. A third has pleaded guilty to ly- ing to federal agents about his own contacts with Russians. Such is the fate of some of the earliest foreign policy advisers that Donald J. Trump announced with great fanfare in early 2016, a time when he was closing in on the Republican presidential nomina- tion. It was a team born out of a political problem: Mr. Trump’s surprise march to the nomination had left the party’s establishment openly questioning whether he had the foreign policy experience and was too much of a loose can- non to be entrusted with the presi- dency. Mr. Trump’s solution was to cob- ble together a list of men who were almost immediately written off as a collection of fringe thinkers and has-beens and un- knowns in Washington foreign policy circles. Some from that Continued on Page A15 Foreign Policy Advisers, Added To Solve a Problem, Pose One This article is by Matthew Rosen- berg, Sharon LaFraniere and Matt Apuzzo. court case in 1997. “When there’s a large organization to run, you can- not erase yourself from the minds, and more important the tongues, of your conspirators.” Two decades later, Mr. Weiss- mann has turned his attention to a more prominent set of prospec- tive conspirators: He is a top lieu- tenant to Robert S. Mueller III on the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible links to the Trump campaign. Signifi- cantly, Mr. Weissmann is an ex- pert in converting defendants into collaborators — with either tacti- WASHINGTON — The target was a New York City titan — plain- spoken but Teflon, irresistible to the tabloids and insistent upon loyalty from his associates. The defendant, Vincent “the Chin” Gigante, had accumulated power as the head of the Geno- vese crime family, feigning insan- ity to conceal his guilt. A prosecu- tor in Brooklyn was at last pre- pared to cut him down, using wit- nesses the government had flipped. “He couldn’t stop people from talking about him,” the prosecutor, Andrew Weissmann, said of Mr. Gigante, addressing jurors at the end of a career-making federal Andrew Weissmann, right, with Greg Andres. An ex-colleague said of Mr. Weissmann, “If there’s something to find, he’ll find it.” AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A15 Legal Pit Bull Who Fought Mob Is Unleashed in Mueller Inquiry By MATT FLEGENHEIMER A timely homer by Joc Pederson and a return to form by the Dodgers’ bullpen gave Los Angeles a 3-1 victory over the Astros in the World Series. PAGE B9 SPORTSWEDNESDAY B9-13 Dodgers Win to Force Game 7 Late Edition VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,768 + © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2017 June Robles Birt was abducted at age 6 in 1934 and found 19 days later. Then she vanished again, this time deliberately, into an inconspicuous life. PAGE B14 OBITUARIES B14-15 After Headlines, Obscurity Today, sunshine then clouds, high 55. Tonight, mostly cloudy, showers late, low 53. Tomorrow, morning showers, some sunshine, warmer, high 69. Weather map, Page C8. $2.50

MILE-LONG MANHATTAN TRUCK ATTACK KILLS 8 · PDF file · 2001-09-112001-09-11 · with misdeeds, researchers say. PAGE B1 ... Allahu akbar, Arabic for God is great, before he was shot

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C M Y K Nxxx,2017-11-01,A,001,Bs-4C,E2_+

U(D54G1D)y+&!,!%!=!_

Thomas L. Friedman PAGE A25

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25

The frustrations of a British snackmaker forced to scramble for fruit couldspeak for an uncertain nation. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-8

Brexit With a Few Blemishes

Three professors whose research in-cludes sexual desire were put on paidleave as accusations of sexual miscon-duct are investigated. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A9-17

Inquiry at Dartmouth

As companies prize talent, more work-ers are apt to think they can get awaywith misdeeds, researchers say. PAGE B1

When the Harasser Is a Star

The fight for the huge Brooklyn housingcomplex pits a tycoon’s widow againsther stepchildren. PAGE A19

NEW YORK A19-23

Messy Battle for Starrett City

The state had gone months without abudget as lawmakers wrestled with a$3.5 billion deficit. PAGE A19

Budget, Finally, for Connecticut

For Americans wishing to celebrate the Hindu festival of lights — a foodlover’s delight — Dallas may be theplace to be. PAGE D1

FOOD D1-8

A Texas-Flavored Diwali

The president’s lofty vision of endingpoverty clashes with reality and gaps ineducation and health care. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

China’s Rural Poor

The deposed leader of Catalonia ap-peared in Brussels to declare that hewanted “Europe to react.” PAGE A6

Plea for Europe on Catalonia

A driver plowed a pickup truckdown a crowded bike path alongthe Hudson River in Manhattanon Tuesday, killing eight peopleand injuring 11 before being shotby a police officer in what officialsare calling the deadliest terroristattack on New York City sinceSept. 11, 2001.

The rampage ended when themotorist — whom the police iden-tified as Sayfullo Saipov, 29 —smashed into aschool bus,jumped out ofhis truck andran up anddown the high-way waving apellet gun andpaintball gunand shouting“Allahu akbar,”Arabic for “Godis great,” beforehe was shot inthe abdomen by the officer. He re-mained in critical condition onTuesday evening.

Mayor Bill de Blasio declaredthe rampage a terrorist attack,and federal law enforcement au-thorities were leading the investi-gation. Investigators discoveredhandwritten notes in Arabic nearthe truck that indicated allegianceto the Islamic State, two law en-forcement officials said. But in-vestigators had not uncovered ev-idence of any direct or enablingties between Mr. Saipov and ISISand were treating the episode as acase of an “inspired” attacker, twocounterterrorism officials said.

Mr. de Blasio said at a news con-ference, “Based on informationwe have at this moment, this wasan act of terror, and a particularlycowardly act of terror aimed at in-nocent civilians.”

Five of the people killed wereArgentine tourists who traveled toNew York for a 30-year highschool reunion celebration, said asenior official in Santa Fe Prov-ince, where they were from. TheArgentine authorities said theywere Hernán Mendoza, Diego An-gelini, Alejandro Pagnucco, ArielErlij and Hernán Ferruchi. MartínLudovico Marro, a sixth memberof the group, was wounded. Bel-gian officials said one of thosekilled and three of the injuredwere from Belgium.

Mr. Saipov came to the UnitedStates from Uzbekistan in 2010,and had a green card that allowedpermanent legal residence. He

MILE-LONG MANHATTAN TRUCK ATTACK KILLS 8

This article is by Benjamin Muel-ler, William K. Rashbaum and AlBaker.

‘Cowardly Act ofTerror,’ Mayor

Declares

A smashed bicycle and a body marked a portion of the path of destruction along the Hudson River on Tuesday. A suspect was shot in the abdomen by a police officer.BEBETO MATTHEWS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Continued on Page A22

SayfulloSaipov

The screams seemed too vividfrom the start, too visceral to be-long to crowds celebrating a crispand sunny Halloween in LowerManhattan. The tragedy had un-folded in just minutes, and forhours and hours it remained toosenseless to believe.

Sirens and police tape sur-rounded the white pickup truckthat a 29-year-old assailant trans-formed into an instrument of ter-ror when he began hitting cyclistsand joggers along the West SideHighway bike path. A mangledschool bus sat next to it.

Bodies lay strewn along theway. For those who encounteredthe scene on Tuesday, the after-math was as confusing as it wasgruesome.

Tom Kendrick, 36, a lawyerfrom the West Village, said he wasjogging uptown just north ofChambers Street when he begannoticing the mayhem on the bikepath. He saw a battered body andbicycle in the bushes alongsidethe path. Farther along he foundthree bodies close together, alsobattered cyclists.

“I approached to see if I couldhelp and they did not need help —

they appeared to be dead,” Mr.Kendrick said. “They were bloodyand unconscious, with some limbshanging,” he added. “It was grue-some. It was grisly. It was surre-al.”

“These people were gone,” he

A Mangled Bus, and Bodies:‘It Was Grisly. It Was Surreal.’

By JOSE A. DelREALand COREY KILGANNON

CANAL ST.

Stuyvesant

High School

Truck enters

bike path

WE

ST

ST.

Hudson River

W. HOUSTON ST.

SPRING ST.

N. MOORE ST.

0.1 mile

THE NEW YORK TIMES

The truck entered the bicyclepath around 3 p.m. Tuesday.

Continued on Page A23

During high-pressure meetingsto plan the expansion ofprekindergarten during his firstmonths in City Hall, Mayor Bill deBlasio would invoke the D-Day in-vasion of Normandy: There it ison the horizon, he would say, weare approaching the beach, weneed a full-on assault. He spoke ofit so often that a staff membergave him a picture of the landing,which he kept on the mantelpiecein his office.

Making free, full-day prekinder-garten available to all 4-year-oldswas the most visible and ambi-tious promise that Mr. de Blasiomade when he campaigned formayor, so making good on thatpledge when he came into office in2014 was crucial. And he deliv-ered. Full-day prekindergartenenrollment grew to 53,000 in Sep-tember 2014, from 19,000 a yearearlier. It reached 68,000 the nextyear. Parents were generallypleased, and even his critics wereimpressed.

Now as Mr. de Blasio seeks asecond term in an election on Nov.7, the success of universalprekindergarten stands out as themost salient achievement of hismayoralty. It showed that Mr. deBlasio could meet an ambitious

goal intended to address the in-equality between rich and poorNew Yorkers, but one that alsohelped the middle class. And itshowed that a liberal mayor — thefirst Democrat to occupy City Hall

Mayor Expanded Pre-K, but It Cost Him AlbanyBy WILLIAM NEUMAN

Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday at a rally in Manhattan. Theprekindergarten expansion was his first major success in office.

DINA LITOVSKY FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A20

WASHINGTON — Executivesfrom Facebook, Google and Twit-ter appeared on Capitol Hill forthe first time on Tuesday to pub-licly acknowledge their role inRussia’s influence on the presi-dential campaign, but offered littlemore than promises to do better.Their reluctance frustrated law-makers who sought stronger evi-dence that American electionswill be protected from foreignpowers.

The hearing, the first of three intwo days for company executives,served as an initial public reckon-ing for the internet giants. Theyhad emphasized their role as pub-lic squares for political discoursebut are being forced to confronthow they were used as tools for abroad Russian misinformationcampaign.

Both Democrats and some Re-publicans on a Senate Judiciarysubcommittee complained thatthe companies had waited nearlya year to publicly admit how manyAmericans were exposed to theRussian effort to spread propa-ganda during the 2016 campaign.Senators pushed for harsher rem-edies, including regulations ontheir advertising practices akin torules for political advertising ontelevision.

“Why has it taken Facebook 11months to come forward and helpus understand the scope of thisproblem, see it clearly for theproblem it is and begin to work ina responsible legislative way toaddress it?” asked Senator ChrisCoons, Democrat of Delaware.

The most pointed exchangeswere aimed at Facebook, whichacknowledged on Monday beforethe hearings that more than 126million users potentially saw in-flammatory political ads boughtby a Kremlin-linked company, theInternet Research Agency. Face-book has drawn particular irefrom lawmakers for its earlybrushoff of fake news and foreigninterference on its site, which itschief executive, Mark Zucker-berg, dismissed as a “crazy idea”just after the election.

Since then, the company hasscrambled to appease lawmakersby promising to hire more than1,000 people to manually reviewpolitical ad purchases and tomake public the funding behindthose ads.

“The foreign interference we

Internet GiantsPique SenatorsWith Restraint

This article is by Cecilia Kang,Nicholas Fandos and Mike Isaac.

Continued on Page A17

WASHINGTON — One lastedonly 24 days as President Trump’snational security adviser, done inby his lack of candor about con-versations he had with the Rus-sian ambassador. Another hasbeen hauled in front of a federalgrand jury investigating Russia’sinterference in the election.

A third has pleaded guilty to ly-ing to federal agents about hisown contacts with Russians.

Such is the fate of some of theearliest foreign policy advisersthat Donald J. Trump announcedwith great fanfare in early 2016, a

time when he was closing in on theRepublican presidential nomina-tion. It was a team born out of apolitical problem: Mr. Trump’ssurprise march to the nominationhad left the party’s establishmentopenly questioning whether hehad the foreign policy experienceand was too much of a loose can-non to be entrusted with the presi-dency.

Mr. Trump’s solution was to cob-ble together a list of men whowere almost immediately writtenoff as a collection of fringethinkers and has-beens and un-knowns in Washington foreignpolicy circles. Some from that

Continued on Page A15

Foreign Policy Advisers, Added To Solve a Problem, Pose One

This article is by Matthew Rosen-berg, Sharon LaFraniere and MattApuzzo.

court case in 1997. “When there’s alarge organization to run, you can-not erase yourself from the minds,and more important the tongues,of your conspirators.”

Two decades later, Mr. Weiss-mann has turned his attention to amore prominent set of prospec-tive conspirators: He is a top lieu-tenant to Robert S. Mueller III onthe special counsel investigationinto Russian interference in the2016 election and possible links tothe Trump campaign. Signifi-cantly, Mr. Weissmann is an ex-pert in converting defendants intocollaborators — with either tacti-

WASHINGTON — The targetwas a New York City titan — plain-spoken but Teflon, irresistible tothe tabloids and insistent uponloyalty from his associates.

The defendant, Vincent “theChin” Gigante, had accumulatedpower as the head of the Geno-vese crime family, feigning insan-ity to conceal his guilt. A prosecu-tor in Brooklyn was at last pre-pared to cut him down, using wit-nesses the government hadflipped.

“He couldn’t stop people fromtalking about him,” the prosecutor,Andrew Weissmann, said of Mr.Gigante, addressing jurors at theend of a career-making federal

Andrew Weissmann, right, with Greg Andres. An ex-colleaguesaid of Mr. Weissmann, “If there’s something to find, he’ll find it.”

AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A15

Legal Pit Bull Who Fought MobIs Unleashed in Mueller Inquiry

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER

A timely homer by Joc Pederson and areturn to form by the Dodgers’ bullpengave Los Angeles a 3-1 victory over theAstros in the World Series. PAGE B9

SPORTSWEDNESDAY B9-13

Dodgers Win to Force Game 7

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,768 + © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2017

June Robles Birt was abducted at age 6in 1934 and found 19 days later. Then shevanished again, this time deliberately,into an inconspicuous life. PAGE B14

OBITUARIES B14-15

After Headlines, Obscurity

Today, sunshine then clouds, high55. Tonight, mostly cloudy, showerslate, low 53. Tomorrow, morningshowers, some sunshine, warmer,high 69. Weather map, Page C8.

$2.50