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The city's child welfare agency is "aggressively" probing whether its workers mishandled previous cases involving the families of two children who died hours apart in the Bronx on Sunday. One of the children, 10-month-old Delores Walker, suffered a skull fracture and died as a result of "fatal child abuse syndrome with multiple blunt impact to the head and torso," according to the medical examiner's office. The cause of death of the second infant, a 14-day-old girl, has not been determined. But her mother told authorities that she may have accidentally rolled over the baby. Sources with the Administration for Children's Services said both families had been investigated by the agency. The sources said the family of Delores Walker only recently became known to the agency, but details were unclear last night. The girl was in the care of her mother's boyfriend when she died, police said. The mother and the boyfriend were being questioned last night. Sources said the siblings of the 14-day-old girl were placed in foster care last year because of neglect. "We are aggressively investigating what the agency did in respect to these families," Administration for Children's Services Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta said last night. "These are tragic events." Scoppetta noted that the agency's recent reform planwhich is being slowly phased inwill address numerous longstanding agency problems that include better monitoring of troubled families and improved investigations. Spokeswoman Maggie Lear confirmed the agency's "previous child welfare involvement with both families." Police said the 14-day-old girl, whose name was not released, was discovered unconscious on a bed by her mother, Shawn Ingraham, about 9:40 a.m. Sunday in their 13th-floor apartment on Tinton Ave., Mott Haven. Ingraham, 29, called 911, and the infant was pronounced dead on arrival at Lincoln Hospital. The autopsy has been completed, but the medical examiner said that further tests are needed to determine the cause of death. Administration for Children's Services sources said Ingraham's five other children were removed from her last year. A private foster care agency was monitoring the care of the other kids. At 5:30 p.m. Sunday, police were called to a third-floor apartment at Hoe Ave. in East Tremont for a "sick infant." Neighbors watched in horror as Delores was carried out in a diaper by Emergency Medical Service workers. She had a black eye and other bruises, neighbors said. She was also pronounced dead at Lincoln Hospital. Police said the baby's mother, Tinisha Tucker, was not home at the time and that Delores and two older siblings, ages 3 and 5, were being cared for by Tucker's boyfriend, Alex Moore, who was being questioned last night. Neighbors described Tucker as a good mother. Child welfare agency sources said Tucker was recently probed after an abuse allegation was phoned into the state hotline.
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His criminal record boasts five DWI convictions, and his driver's license has been suspended more than 100 times. But menacing motorist Roger Zydor got an easy pass from a Long Island judge yesterday. Though prosecutors wanted him jailed, Zydor, 61, of West Babylon, L.I., was ordered to enter an alcohol and drug treatment program for his most recent offense, committed in January. Suffolk County Court Judge Gary Weber ordered Zydor to attend an outpatient facility for an undetermined amount of time. The slap on the wrist from Weber put the judge on a collision course with the Suffolk County district attorney's office. "We wanted him to go to prison," said Drew Biondo, spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney James Catterson. "He clearly has shown disregard for court orders in the past. Why would that change this time?" Biondo said Assistant District Attorney Colin Astarita had asked the judge to sentence Zydor to a minimum of 1 1/3 to four years in prison. Police arrested Zydor on Jan. 24 after the unlicensed driver led them on a high-speed chase through several communities along Route 109. During the chase, Zydor, who suffers from emphysema, was hooked up to a portable oxygen tank, police said. Zydor gave police a false birth date and registered above .10 on a blood-alcohol test. Later, he was convicted of false impersonation, driving while intoxicated and speeding. Zydor did not return several calls made to his home. Counselors at his treatment program, run by Suffolk County, will determine how long Zydor stays in the program after he is evaluated, Biondo said. Zydor's poor driving record dates back to 1992, when he spent five days in jail after his first known drunken driving conviction, said Ken Brown, spokesman for the state Department of Motor Vehicles. Available records at the DMV date back only as far as 1992. Brown said it has been at least that long since Zydor carried a valid driver's license in New York. "This individual has ignored all of the rules of the Vehicle and Traffic Law," Brown said. "I have no record of him having a license." He said Zydor also was convicted of driving while intoxicated in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Most of the 106 suspensions on his license stem from his failure to pay fines and answer summonses for his arrests. "There should be accountability for such an egregious flouting of the law," Biondo said. "God forbid he hits someone."
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MONTGOMERY, Ala.Flags in Alabama flew at half-staff yesterday in honor of former Gov. George Wallace, a once-fiery segregationist and four-time presidential candidate, who died Sunday night. Wallace will be honored with a viewing of his body tomorrow in the rotunda of the state capitol before a funeral at Montgomery's First United Methodist Church. The Rev. Franklin Graham, son of the Rev. Billy Graham, is scheduled to deliver the eulogy. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), who as a young black activist in 1965 led civil rights marchers against Wallace's club-wielding troopers, said his former foe had earned a measure of forgiveness. "He repented from his ways and asked black Alabamians for forgiveness," Lewis said. "For the most part, he was forgiven because he saw his mistakes. He saw that he was on the wrong side of history." Wallace, who had used a wheelchair after he was paralyzed from the waist down in an assassination attempt in 1972, died of a heart attack at Jackson Hospital in Montgomery. He was 79. He had been taken to the hospital Thursday in critical condition, suffering septic shock brought on by a bacterial inflammation of his kidneys. His condition was upgraded to serious over the weekend, and the hospital said it soon would move him from the critical care unit. But late Sunday, he went into cardiac arrest and died. Wallace suffered from Parkinson's disease and arthritis and was nearly deaf. A spokesman for Alabama Gov. Fob James said the Wallace family was making funeral arrangements. Wallace gained worldwide notoriety as a passionate opponent of federally ordered racial desegregation. "I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever," he vowed in his 1963 inaugural address as governor.Wallace later repented his segregationist views. In March, he welcomed Lewis and other congressmen into his home during a reenactment of the Selma civil rights march.
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