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Long Island man charged with rape, unlawful imprisonment and more after naked 14-year-old girl flees home

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Long Island man accused of committing sex crimes against 14-year-old girl


Long Island man accused of committing sex crimes against 14-year-old girl

02:17

WOODBURY, N.Y. – We’ve learned more about the Woodbury, Long Island man who police said barricaded himself in his house after allegedly committing sex crimes against a 14-year-old girl

He was arraigned Wednesday in a hospital bed as prosecutors detailed alleged crimes going back months. 

“There was cops in this neighborhood all the time,” neighbor Elyse Galvan said. 

“Because of activity at that house?” CBS New York’s Carolyn Gusoff asked. 

“Yes,” Galvan said. 

Neighbors of 26 Roseanne Drive in Woodbury cited years of complaints, suspected squatters living there, and the home and fence in disrepair. 

Tuesday morning, when town inspectors came with a violation notice, a 14-year-old girl ran out of the house naked and crying. 

“It’s obviously a horrible situation, but it’s not all that surprising knowing what was going on in that house,” one neighbor said. 

“How does a mother not know where her daughter is at 14 years old? What is she doing here,” Galvan said. 

Nassau Police were on the block responding to an unrelated burglar alarm and say they stumbled upon the fleeing teen. 

“She pointed out a subject then was chasing her. We then gave chase to him, he ran inside the residence,” Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said. 

Adrees Omar, 25, then barricaded himself inside his house for more than eight hours. Police went in later with a warrant. 

At a hospital arraignment, cuffed to a gurney with his eyes closed, Omar was charged with rape, obstructing breathing and unlawful imprisonment. 

Prosecutors said he had an ongoing sexual relationship with the then-13-year-old. Tuesday, after she arrived at his house, he allegedly choked, restrained and cut her. 

Omar was already accused of assaulting his father. 

One neighbor who didn’t want to be identified said that at least three women in recent years have run terrified down the block, and shared troubling doorbell video of a sobbing woman pleading for help. 

“In the middle of the night, went to various neighbors, knocked on their doors. Nobody let her in because it was the middle of the night,” a neighbor said. 

Omar’s attorney entered a not guilty plea, adding he’ll speak to Omar when he’s not sedated. 

Nassau Police said the investigation is ongoing, asking other possible victims to contact them. 

The judge ordered Omar to stay away from the teen victim and his own father. Omar is also charged with injuring police officers in Tuesday’s standoff. 

Late Wednesday, the Town of Oyster Bay shuttered the house so no one can re-occupy it, finding alleged building violations.  



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Mick Fleetwood plays to the future in Maui

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The island of Maui is a mere dot in the enormity of the vast Pacific Ocean, but it’s not hard to see why millions visit every year, and why there are some who never want to leave. Fleetwood Mac founder Mick Fleetwood fell in love with Maui decades ago, and put down deep roots. “Long story, a long love affair,” he said.

“But it really is your heart and your home?” I asked.

“Uh-huh. People often think, ‘Oh yeah, how often are you on Maui?'” Fleetwood said. “This is my home. No other place.”

As a young man he’d dreamed of a place, a club, where he could get his friends together, and 12 years ago he made it happen in the west Maui city of Lahaina:  Fleetwood’s on Front Street. The menu was eclectic – they served everything from Biddie’s Chicken (just like Fleetwood’s mom, Biddie, made it) to cookie dough desserts dreamed up by his children. It was also a place where Mick and friends could play. “We created, I created, a band of people under a roof,” he said. “Instead of a traveling circus, it was a resident circus at Fleetwood’s on Front Street.”

And then, in August of 2023, the music stopped.

A wind-driven fire tore through western Maui, killing more than a hundred people, and consuming more than 2,000 buildings. Fleetwood was in Los Angeles when the fire started, and he hurried back to a scene of utter devastation. 

And his beloved restaurant? A charred sign was about all that was left.  

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The burned sign of Fleetwood’s on Front Street. 

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I said, “I understand your not wanting to be, ‘Me, me, me,’ especially in light of the lives that were lost, the homes that were lost; you don’t want to make too big of a deal out of a restaurant.”

“No.”

“But at the same time, this was your family. This was your home. That must’ve been a huge loss.”

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Mick Fleetwood.

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“It was a huge loss,” Fleetwood said. “And in the reminding of it, that wave comes back. Today knowing we’re doing this, I go, like, Okay, this is gonna be … a day.

We took a walk with Fleetwood down the street where his place once stood: the last time he was here, the place was still smoldering. “Literally, parts of it were still hot,” he said.

More than a year later, the Lahaina waterfront is still very much a disaster zone.

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Correspondent Tracy Smith with Mick Fleetwood on Front Street in Lahaina. 

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The decision about what to do with the land is still up in the air; the priority is housing for the displaced residents. But Fleetwood says he’s determined to rebuild, just maybe not in the same place.

Asked what he pictures in a new place, he said, “For me, it has to encompass being able to handle playing music. There has to be music. We had it every day. That’s a selfish request!”

But before anything is rebuilt, there’s still a massive cleanup that needs to be completed here.

“We will see,” he said. “You have a blank [canvas] to paint on, and there’s a lot of painting to do.

“You have to be careful, even in this conversation, of going like, ‘How sad that was,’ when really it’s about, ‘Yes, but now we need this.’ In the end you go like, it happened. And what’s really important is absorbing maybe how all these things happened, and can they be circumnavigated to be more safe in the future, and be more aware? Of course that’s part of it. But the real, real essence is the future.”

Fleetwood’s ukelele is one of the few things that survived the fire, and he’s hoping his dream survives as well.

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Mick Fleetwood near the site of his former club, Fleetwood’s on Front Street, which was destroyed by fire. He’s determined to build a new place – and it must have music. 

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For details about helping those impacted by the August 2023 fires, and for the latest on recovery and rebuilding efforts, including housing, environmental protection and cultural restoration, visit the official county website Maui Recovers.


For more info:

      
Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Steven Tyler. 


“Sunday Morning” 2024 “Food Issue” recipe index
Delicious menu suggestions from top chefs, cookbook authors, food writers, restaurateurs, and the editors of Food & Wine magazine.  



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Dishing up space food – CBS News

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Dishing up space food – CBS News


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At the Johnson Space Food Systems Laboratory in Houston, NASA scientists develop dishes – freeze-dried, heat-stabilized, or irradiated – to serve on the International Space Station. Correspondent David Pogue checks out what’s on the menu in Earth orbit.

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In praise of Seattle-style teriyaki

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In praise of Seattle-style teriyaki – CBS News


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Seattle has more teriyaki shops per capita than any other metropolis in America. Correspondent Luke Burbank talks with the man whose 1976 restaurant, Toshi’s Teriyaki Grill, began it all.

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