
American Heart Month: Yonkers woman grateful for Westchester Medical Center
Doctors say as many as 700,000 Americans die from heart disease each year.
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Tony Aiello serves as a CBS News New York general assignment reporter with a focus on covering news and breaking stories in the Northern Suburbs.
In the course of his long career, he has been nominated for and received many professional honors, including the 2020 NY Emmy Award for General Assignment Reporting.
Aiello has traveled extensively to bring viewers the New York angle on important stories. He broadcast live from St. Peter's Square in Rome after the election of Pope Francis in 2013, and flew to Paris hours after the terror attacks of November 2015 to lead the station's coverage.
Aiello joined WCBS in October 2002, after nearly five years at WNBC-TV. Prior to that, he served as a national correspondent for Dow Jones Television and the top syndicated business show, "The Wall Street Journal Report." He also has worked as an anchor and reporter at stations in Milwaukee, WI., Nashville, TN., and Greenville, SC.
On September 11, 2001, Aiello and his wife were among the "plane people" diverted to Gander, Newfoundland, a story told in the Broadway show "Come From Away." The experience left him with a deep appreciation for Canada and its people.
Aiello is active with community groups and Italian-American charities, including the Italian-American Forum of Westchester County. He is former board secretary of the Westchester Philharmonic, and trustee of ArtsWestchester, which recently presented him with its "Voice of the Arts Award." He is proud to represent WCBS at many community events, helping to raise funds and awareness for groups including the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, the March of Dimes, and the New Rochelle Fund for Educational Excellence. He has served as emcee of the Italian Welfare League's "Autumn in New York" luncheon for almost a decade, helping the IWL to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars to support its mission.
In 2002, Aiello was asked to lead Westchester County's official ceremony marking the first anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks. He has also delivered keynote speeches for groups including the Enrico Fermi Scholarship Foundation, the Sons of Italy, and the National Parks Service. He is a longtime supporter of The Christophers and a presenter at their prestigious awards ceremony honoring media that "uplift the human spirit."
Aiello graduated from Indiana University in 1985. He lives in New Rochelle, N.Y. with his wife Elizabeth and their twin sons.
Doctors say as many as 700,000 Americans die from heart disease each year.
A voter education center in New Rochelle is trying to get Independents and Republicans to re-register as Democrats.
Sgt. John Beauton said he watched Troconis closely in the minutes leading up to the couple's arrest.
Connecticut law requires schools that hold classes on federal holidays to offer "suitable educational programs" that help observe them.
She's charged with helping Fotis Dulos cover up the murder of his estranged wife Jennifer in 2019.
He says 3.7 ounces should remain the amount of metal required in all firearms so they cannot be sneaked past metal detectors.
Presented was clothing the prosecution believes the mother of five was wearing when she was killed.
In May 2019, Fotis Dulos drove to Albany Avenue in Hartford, apparently unaware it was bristling with surveillance cameras.
Yonkers oldest parish, St. Mary's Church of the Immaculate Conception, is in desperate need of repair, with the cost totaling more than $10 million.
Lauren Almeida first met Michelle Troconis in early 2017 at a water ski club in Miami. It was clear the children already knew her.
Lauren Almeida had lived with the Dulos family for six years when Jennifer disappeared in 2019.
The target got a text message reading, "This is your final warning." Shortly after, the device exploded in his driveway.
Michelle Troconis' defense team argued courts have found using chemicals like luminol to test for blood is unreliable.
Michelle Troconis is accused of helping cover up the death of Jennifer Dulos, a Connecticut mother of five who disappeared in 2019.
It happened behind a $3 million mansion, sending tons of dirt and rock onto tracks and impacting service for weeks.