
"At 1:20 am, a male in a white hoodie strolled up to Nicholas' address, pulled out a handgun and fired six rapid shots at the house, security-camera video obtained by The Post shows. He then turned around and bolted. Two gunshots pierced the front door, went through the living room and into an adjoining bathroom, leaving bullet holes in three walls, another video showed. Nicholas and his fiancée were asleep in a bedroom on another floor. Their dog's barking in the living room woke them up. "Everyone in the neighborhood heard the shots," he said."
"The NYPD classified the shooting as "reckless endangerment of property" - a misdemeanor, records show. "That's insane," Sinodinos objected: "This was attempted murder, and should be treated as such." In connection with the investigation, the Staten Island District Attorney's Office sought a subpoena for Jacqueline Sinodinos' cell-phone records, but a judge denied the request. DA spokesman James Clinton declined to comment"
At 1:20 a.m., a man in a white hoodie fired six rapid shots at Nicholas Sinodinos's Great Kills home, captured on security-camera video, then fled. Two bullets pierced the front door, passed through the living room into an adjoining bathroom, and left holes in three walls. Sinodinos and his fiancée were asleep on another floor and were awakened by their dog and neighborhood noise. Detectives examined a possible link to Sinodinos' ex-wife, Jacqueline, whose romantic relationship with Principal Anthony Cosentino was deemed improper by the Special Commissioner of Investigation for city schools. The NYPD classified the incident as reckless endangerment of property; Sinodinos called it attempted murder. The Staten Island DA sought Jacqueline's cell-phone records but a judge denied the subpoena request.
Read at New York Post
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