Saturday, November 15, 2025

Alvin Bragg making here become there...I guess the victim didn't have two men vouch for her!


Woman flees NYC after cabbie allegedly gropes her and is let off hook by DA Bragg: ‘I was so scared’


He’s hell on wheels.

An Algerian immigrant NYC cabbie driving without a partition or a camera allegedly assaulted two women in the back of his yellow taxi in separate incidents — and is still on the road, thanks to soft-on-crime Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, according to sources and court documents.

Mohammed Bellebia, 34, was allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges in at least one of the incidents, records showed.

Maile Bartow left the city just weeks after the November 2024 assault and said she won’t take cabs any longer unless she knows she can request a female driver. Courtesy of Maile Bartow

One victim, Maile Bartow, 23, climbed into Bellebia’s yellow cab minivan around 2 a.m. on Nov. 10, 2024 to head home after a night on the town with friends, and said the hack touched her leg twice, ignoring her pleas for him to stop before groping her genitals, according to a lawsuit.

Bartow, who had always dreamed of living in Gotham and moved to the city in August after a stint in Nashville, left the Big Apple for good because of her NYC nightmare.

About a month later, on Dec. 12, 2024, Bellebia picked up a 2 a.m. fare, allegedly touching that woman’s leg throughout the ride and trying to remove the 33-year-old victim’s underwear, a law enforcement source told The Post. 

He was arrested Dec. 19, 2024 and charged in both cases

“Oh my God,” Bartow gasped when she learned of the other alleged victim from The Post.

In Bartow’s case, Bellebia was facing misdemeanor charges of forcible touching and sexual abuse and could have faced a sentence from probation to a year in jail.

Instead, he pleaded guilty in March to disorderly conduct, a mere violation, and was set free on a conditional discharge — meaning he was get no jail time as long as he stayed out of trouble, records showed.

Bartow said Bragg’s office left her in the dark about the slap on the wrist.

The prosecutor “never told me that he pled guilty to a lesser charge,” Bartow said. “The only reason I was even informed was because I reached out three times — two of those were not returned.

“He’s back on the road driving the exact same taxi cab,” a disgusted Bartow said. “I wasn’t looped in at all. They didn’t ask me what I was OK with.”

Bartow encountered Bellebia around 2 am outside The Spaniard bar on West 4th Street, where he was parked in his yellow minivan cab waiting for a fare.

Cabbie Mohammed Bellebia was unaware of the lawsuit, and said only that his criminal case was “finished.” Helayne Seidman

The California native had been living on the Lower East Side and working as a social media marketing specialist. She was only a 10-minute drive from her apartment, so she said goodbye to her pals and hopped in the cab.

“There was a line out the door …and it was really really cold. I just remember being tired,” she recalled. “I saw this taxi cab parked and I said ya know what, this was my sign to leave.”

Bellebia handed her his phone and told her to put in the address of her destination.

“The first thing I noticed was there was no partition blocking me from the driver,” she said. “He was so far back, was so close to me, I was almost sitting in the middle.”

As they drove off, Bellebia began speaking in a language Bartow didn’t understand — apparently speaking to the person he was video calling, a TLC violation — and something changed, she claimed.  

“He starts talking to me, asking me all these questions. Where are you going, what’s your name, what do you do for work. I was trying to be courteous.

The victim claims prosecutors didn’t communicate with her about the case or inform her the driver would be allowed to plea down to a charge of disorderly conduct. Steven Hirsch

“At some point he reaches behind and puts his hand on my leg. I moved it off and said please stop.”

But Bellebia didn’t, she said. 

“He does it again and starts putting his hand in my vaginal area,” she alleged, recalling how she froze before trying to take a photo with her phone so she would have proof of what was happening.

The driver, alerted by the camera’s flash, snatched the device, according to court papers. Bartow said he began trying to delete her photos.

“It escalated really quickly.”

He eventually returned her phone, and Bartow tried texting and calling friends for help. 

The yellow cab had no partition or in-vehicle camera, the victim said in court papers. Christopher Sadowski

“I decided to leave a voicemail so this will record it,” she said. “I left a voicemail, it’s basically me asking repeatedly, [saying] ‘I don’t have a picture of you please just take me home.’ I was starting to get more and more scared. 

“I started to beg him, ‘Let me out!'” she recalled. “I didn’t want to make him any more mad than he was. I was so scared he was gonna kidnap or kill me.”

He pulled over on Division Street, a few minutes from her home, and let her out. She offered to pay for the ride, but when she didn’t have cash, Bartow said the driver sped off.

“That’s when I knew he did something wrong. My best friend was on the phone with me, I had to order a Lyft to get home. At that point I was super distraught,” she said. “I texted my friend the next day because I wanted to leave New York, because I was traumatized.”

The next morning, she went to police, Bartow said. 

Bellebia was unaware of the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit Bartow filed against him and Tranquil Taxi. The company could not be reached for comment.

“I finished the problem from a woman,” the Arabic-speaking hack from Bay Ridge told The Post, sharing paperwork from the criminal case showing it had been sealed. He then called a friend to translate, who quickly declined further comment on his behalf.

The charges in the alleged Dec. 12, 2024 incident are unclear. The case has since been sealed.

“Why is this a problem for you … my case is finished talk to my lawyer,” Bellebia said when reached for comment a second time, hanging up when asked if he was in the country illegally.

The charges in Bartow’s case were not bail eligible, a Manhattan DA spokeswoman said, adding the driver had no prior convictions.

“Survivors deserve clear communication through the course of a prosecution, and we have reached out to the survivor to apologize for falling short of that in this case,” the spokeswoman added. 

The DA’s office is legally barred from sharing information about the sealed December 2024 arrest, they noted.

Bartow said she’s been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder since the incident. Courtesy of Maile Bartow

The cabbie’s license was suspended and he was off the road from December 2024 until March, when it was reinstated, according to a source. 

Cabs are required to have either a partition or a camera system, but could be exempt if they have an in-vehicle camera, trouble lights or a cell phone with emergency dialing, the city Taxi and Limousine Commission said.

“TLC takes reports of driver misconduct seriously, and all instances should be reported to NYPD and 311 immediately to ensure bad actors can be taken off the road – and ensure it is permanent,” the spokesman said, noting the agency cannot take action on its own unless the public files complaints via 311. 

The agency had no record of a 311 complaint from Bartow, and said a second person complaining about Bellebia did not respond when TLC tried to contact them.

”The ordeal suffered by Ms. Bartow is every woman’s nightmare,” said Bartow’s lawyer John Buza. “We are proud of her bravery in speaking up and we will do everything within our power to get justice for her.”

Bartow moved to Nashville about six weeks after the incident, but said she called the DA’s office repeatedly for updates. 

“In January they had me sign a deposition. … I asked multiple times if there was an update. They never told me anything. Then they gave me the wrong spelling of his last name. I found out in September he was conditionally discharged,” she claimed.

Bartow, who said she’s been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder and suffers from flashbacks and night terrors, is seeking unspecified damages under the state’s Gender Motivated Violence Act. 

“This is already such a horrible process for a victim,” she said of the lack of communication from Bragg’s office. “The fact someone did this … and he’s still driving a taxi is ridiculous.”


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Ecuadorians prefer US troops to cartels

Will Ecuador allow US troops on its soil?


7 hours ago

If successful, Sunday's referendum will change Ecuador's constitution, enabling the return of US forces in a move intended to bolster ties between President Daniel Noboa's government and the Trump Administration.


Ecuador's president wants to change his country's constitution, and Ecuadorians will get to say whether they agree in a referendum this weekend.

To be held on November 16, the vote will decide whether a nearly 20-year constitutional clause banning foreign militaries from having a presence in the country is repealed.

Surveys by the Cedatos polling firm suggest nearly two-thirds of the country is supportive of the change. If passed, it would allow the US to occupy bases on Ecuador's Pacific coastline.

For Ecuador, it would strengthen ties to the US and potentially improve efforts to fight local violence. For the Trump Administration, it would be a boon for its campaign against drug trafficking networks across the region, which has seen nearly two-dozen military strikes on purported drug vessels in South and Central American waters.

Ecuador's president, Daniel Noboa, has already hosted US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem ahead of the vote, with the pair touring former US military sites in the coastal towns of Manta and Salinas now used by Ecuador's military. A third site in the Galapagos Islands has been ruled out by Noboa. 

Manta was the operational hub for US interception activities until 2008. US forces departed that year following the recasting of the constitution by former leader Rafael Correa, which barred foreign military presence.

"The reason for the base in Manta was to allow, basically, US surveillance planes to patrol those waters," said Evan Ellis, a Latin America Research Professor at the US Army War College Strategic Studies Institute. "So you could do a more effective job on interdiction of the drug boats that were going in the eastern Pacific.

"Without that, the US was forced to shift to other locations [outside of Ecuador]."

US return could affect Ecuador's domestic security

Ecuador was once considered one of South America's more peaceful countries, even though it had long been an important transit point for cocaineand cocaine derivatives from Colombia and Peru.

During his presidency from 2007 to 2017 and particularly after 2012, Correa took stronger action against drug gangs, as well as corruption within Ecuador's security forces, according to investigative portal InsightCrime

Critics, however, accuse Correa of having made deals with the drugs mafia. What is certain is that the country’s annual murder rate dropped to historic lows in subsequent years according to Ecuador's statistical office.

However, towards the end of the decade, violence increased dramatically. In 2023, more than 8,000 people were murdered in Ecuador - seven times as many as in 2019.

Ellis says that Correa's constitutional restrictions deprived the security forces of the ability to combat cross-border crime: "The security forces were dramatically underfinanced, and they lacked capabilities because Ecuador had always been a relatively peaceful, low-violence country," Ellis said. 

After Correa, Ecuador's heads of state did re-engage the US in security partnerships. Yet only since Noboa taking office in late 2023 and Donald Trump's inauguration in early 2025, the two nations have moved closer again.

Indeed, the growing drug and crime issue and a "wartime" campaign platform against gangs and local violence spurred Noboa's reelection earlier this year against a popular left-wing rival, Luisa Gonzalez.

Now, it appears likely Ecuadorians will reverse the constitutional course. 

"The toll of organized crime is changing public opinion," said Benjamin Gedan, Director of the Latin American Program at the Stimson Center, US.

"Recent surveys show surprising support for US strikes against alleged drug runners in the Caribbean and the Pacific.

"Ecuadorians are largely pro-American, use the US dollar, and recognize that their security services are inexperienced and outgunned."

Noboa's government has indicated that local police and security forces would be upskilled by US expertise if the vote passes. 

Ecuador's president Daniel Noboa, wearing a suit and purple tie, is pictured ahead of military personnel in ceremonial dress
Daniel Noboa won reelection in 2025 after a "wartime" campaign against violent crime and drug gangs. He has pursued closer ties with the USImage: Karen Toro/REUTERS

Ecuador could be a vital partner in Trump's drugs crusade

Since September, about 20 US strikes on boats in international waters have led to more than 76 deaths.

The Trump Administration alleges these boats, mostly Venezuelan, are involved in illegal drug shipments. But it hasn't offered proof despite calls from Latin American governments, the UN and human rights observers.

The US strikes have shaken the region and show little sign of abating. This week, its largest aircraft carrier, USS Gerald R. Ford arrived in regional waters.

Trump's primary target has been the Maduro regime in Venezuela, widely seen by governments across the Americas as illegitimate following two disputed elections, including one last year.

But while Venezuela is unpopular with its neighbors, not everyone is happy with the US.

Trump has grown publicly frustrated with Colombia, and said that President Gustavo Petro's recent efforts to rein in illegal drug production had not gone far enough. 

The relationship further deteriorated this week when Petro, in response to the drug strikes, which he said have claimed innocent lives, suspended intelligence sharing with the US.

A group of people walk along the outside of an airforce base.
Kristi Noem tours the Eloy Alfaro Air Base in Manta with Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa.Image: Getty Images

But while the drug operation of the US military is unpopular with Colombia's government, Ecuador appears open to the prospect of change, even if only as a response to address domestic crime issues. 

"Would a reopened US base solve the problem? No," said Gedan. "Above all, Ecuador needs to rid its police and judicial system of corruption and find ways to stop money laundering and dismantle sophisticated criminal groups.

"But given the terrible cost of violent crime, it is no surprise that Ecuadorians, for now, would settle for US fighter jets and drones blowing up bad guys at sea."

Edited by: Andreas Illmer


Cartels in Ecuador — democracy under pressure

28:33