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Re: Off Topic: "Red Tails in Love" Hawks to Return to NYC Home

From:

"J. Steven Huy"

Reply-To:

Maryland Birds & Birding

Date:

Wed, 15 Dec 2004 10:13:53 -0500

The press sure is clueless!  Seems like the NYC bird nuts are about as uninformed as the press. Were these hawks actually nesting this time of year?  

--
J. Steven Huy
Middletown, MD, USA


 
---- Philip Webre <> wrote: 
 
=============
AP
Celebrated Hawks to Return to NYC Home

25 minutes ago

By LARRY McSHANE, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - Two celebrated red-tailed hawks whose eviction from their nest high atop a chic Manhattan building sparked protests from bird watchers will be allowed to rebuild their home in the same spot.

E.J. McAdams, executive director of the New York City Audubon Society, said architects hired by the building's co-op board have developed new nesting area designs that could get the birds back by the end of the week.

But despite the agreement Tuesday, all was not calm outside 927 Fifth Avenue.

An advocate for the two famous hawks was arrested and charged with harassing the CNN anchor Paula Zahn, who lives in the building, and her husband and two young sons, law enforcement sources said.

Lincoln Karim, 43, was arrested by plainclothes detectives as he prepared to lead a demonstration outside the building on behalf of Pale Male and his mate, Lola.

Karim, a video engineer for Associated Press Television News who has devoted most of his spare time and thousands of dollars worth of equipment to recording the hawks, was expected to be arraigned Wednesday.

Police described four separate incidents in which they alleged he angrily approached either Zahn; her husband, Richard Cohen; or their two sons, ages 7 and 11, outside the building.

Cohen is president of the co-op building's board. Like many apartment buildings in New York City, the building is run by a cooperative and a board of directors.

Karim was charged with multiple counts of aggravated harassment and one count of endangering the welfare of a child, said Paul Browne, a police spokesman. Three law enforcement sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, identified the complainant as Zahn.

Karim was being represented by a lawyer arranged for him by another famous resident of 927 Fifth * actress Mary Tyler Moore, also an ardent advocate for the hawks.

CNN did not return a call for comment Tuesday. Laurie Morris, deputy director of corporate communications for The Associated Press, said: "We take this matter seriously, and we're trying to learn more."

The incident came shortly before the building's co-op board and The Audubon Society announced an agreement to restore the pigeon spikes that had held the nest in place until a week ago.

"All parties were pleased by the outcome," Cohen said in a statement given to reporters Tuesday.

The two red-tailed hawks, who have been the subject of a book and at least two television documentaries, have remained nearby in Central Park since their nest was removed.

Besides the spikes, the new design will feature a guardrail around the 12th-floor window cornice to address safety concerns. While there was no guarantee what Pale Male and Lola would do, McAdams predicted that they would rebuild their nest on the same spot.

But Moore expressed skepticism about the deal. "I don't believe anything until I see it," she said.

___

Associated Press writer Tom Hays contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

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