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SUBJECT: POLITICS (90%); EDITORIALS & OPINIONS (90%); ECONOMIC NEWS (89%); RECESSION (89%); ECONOMIC RECOVERY (89%); US PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES 2008 (89%); US REPUBLICAN PARTY (78%); WEALTHY PEOPLE (74%); POOR POPULATION (74%); CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS (72%); ENTREPRENEURSHIP (72%); INTERVIEWS (68%); PRODUCTIVITY (65%); ECONOMIC POLICY (64%); POVERTY RATES (50%)
PERSON: RONALD REAGAN (94%); BARACK OBAMA (94%); BILL CLINTON (71%)
GEOGRAPHIC: UNITED STATES (98%)
LOAD-DATE: January 21, 2008
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
DOCUMENT-TYPE: Op-Ed
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



1159 of 1231 DOCUMENTS

The New York Times
January 21, 2008 Monday

Late Edition - Final


News Summary
SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Metropolitan Desk; Pg. 2
LENGTH: 801 words
INTERNATIONAL A3-9

Top U.S. General in Iraq Considered as NATO Chief

The Pentagon is considering making Gen. David H. Petraeus the chief of the NATO command later this year, according to a senior official. That move would give the top American commander in Iraq a high-level post during the next administration. A1

A teenager holding a box of candy strode into a gathering of American-backed Sunni Arab tribal members near Falluja and detonated an explosive belt, killing four people and wounding nine, members of the Issawi tribe said. A6

Kenya Killings Show Planning

A closer look at the violence that unfolded in the past three weeks, since a deeply flawed election plunged Kenya into chaos, shows that some of the bloodletting that left more than 600 people dead may have been premeditated. A1

At least seven people were killed in Kenya over the weekend in reverberations from last week's nationwide protests. A8

Unlikely Recovery by Suharto

Doctors in Jakarta said that former President Suharto had begun to move his hands and speak and that they were preparing to begin physical therapy. A3

Spain Sifts Plot Evidence

Intelligence agents were sifting through evidence collected during a crackdown on a group of suspected Islamic militants who the police say were plotting an attack on Barcelona. A3

Israel Meets the Electric Car

The Israeli government, bereft of oil, will announce its support for a broad effort to promote the use of electric cars, embracing a joint venture between an American-Israeli entrepreneur and Renault and its partner, Nissan Motor Company. A7

NATIONALA10-15

G.O.P. Field Prepares For a Florida Showdown

The Republican presidential contest entered a new phase as the campaigns descended on Florida for the first primary in which all the candidates are participating full-force, using as their stage a state famous for divisive election battles. A1

Clinton Talks Economy

Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton said the federal government would take a more active role in the economy if she became president, in an effort to address what she said were the excesses of the market and the Bush administration. A1

Edwards Keeps Marching

Following a loss in Nevada, John Edwards is facing the South Carolina primary, where he is trailing far behind in the polls. Even his closest advisers are acknowledging that he no longer expects to come in higher than third place. A12

Pregnancy-Caffeine Warning

Too much caffeine during pregnancy may increase the risk of miscarriage, a new study says, and that pregnant women may want to reduce their intake or cut it out entirely.A10

Programs Abroad Questioned

An investigation of college study abroad programs by the New York attorney general's office has expanded to include 15 colleges and universities, among them Harvard, Brown and Columbia, according to a senior lawyer in the office. A10 L.A. Times Editor Ousted

The top editor of The Los Angeles Times has been forced out for resisting budget cuts, executives said, the fourth time in less than three years that the highest-ranking editor or the publisher has left for that reason.A15

NEW YORK/REGIONB1-6

Positive Numbers Aside, City Braces for Trouble

The federal and state Departments of Labor contend that New York City continued to add jobs in 2007. But few are reassured, as some of the city's biggest private-sector employers posted their largest quarterly losses.B1

New Reason to Celebrate

As observance of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday neared, many New Yorkers mentioned a name that they said had brought fresh meaning to the holiday: that of Senator Barack Obama, the first black candidate widely seen as having a chance at the presidency.B1

BUSINESS DAYC1-6

Media Company for Sale

Getty Images, a big supplier of pictures and movies to media and advertising companies, has put itself on the auction block and could fetch more than $1.5 billion, according to people briefed on the situation. C1

MySpace Is Branching Out

MySpace is introducing new musicians and hosting filmmakers, signing artists to its own record label and developing online video series. C1

Business DigestC2

SPORTSMONDAYD1-8

Giants Win Trip to Super Bowl

With one kick from the right foot of Lawrence Tynes, the Giants scored a 23-20 victory, sending them to Super Bowl XLII, where they will face the undefeated New England Patriots on Feb. 3.A1

OBITUARIESA17

Suzanne Pleshette

An actress who redefined the television sitcom wife in the 1970s by playing the smart, sardonic Emily Hartley on ''The Bob Newhart Show,'' she was 70. A17

EDITORIALA18-19

Editorials: Until all the fish are gone; the truth about ethics reform; tough but smart on drugs; Verlyn Klinkenborg on driving.

Columns: William Kristol and Paul Krugman.
URL: http://www.nytimes.com
SUBJECT: MUSLIMS & ISLAM (90%); US FEDERAL GOVERNMENT (89%); US PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES 2008 (88%); INVESTIGATIONS (87%); CAFFEINE & HEALTH (83%); STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS (79%); US REPUBLICAN PARTY (78%); JUSTICE DEPARTMENTS (77%); ENTREPRENEURSHIP (75%); CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS (74%); LEGISLATIVE BODIES (74%); PROTESTS & DEMONSTRATIONS (72%); RELIGION (71%); MOTOR VEHICLES (70%); AUTOMAKERS (70%); PHYSICAL THERAPY (67%); ELECTRIC VEHICLES (65%); AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY (65%); JOINT VENTURES (64%); PREGNANCY & CHILDBIRTH (63%); POLLS & SURVEYS (63%); ATTORNEYS GENERAL (60%); COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES (60%); INTELLIGENCE SERVICES (51%)
COMPANY: NISSAN MOTOR CO LTD (66%)
ORGANIZATION: NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION (93%)
TICKER: NSANY (NASDAQ) (66%); NJQ (LSE) (66%); 7201 (TSE) (66%)
INDUSTRY: NAICS336111 AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURING (66%); SIC3711 MOTOR VEHICLES & PASSENGER CAR BODIES (66%)
PERSON: HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON (52%); JOHN EDWARDS (52%)
GEOGRAPHIC: JAKARTA, INDONESIA (70%); COLUMBIA, SC, USA (79%) NEW YORK, USA (79%); NEVADA, USA (79%); SOUTH CAROLINA, USA (79%); CATALONIA, SPAIN (75%) UNITED STATES (95%); IRAQ (94%); ISRAEL (93%); KENYA (93%); INDONESIA (79%); SPAIN (79%)
LOAD-DATE: January 21, 2008
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



1160 of 1231 DOCUMENTS

The New York Times
January 21, 2008 Monday

Late Edition - Final


Oil-Free Israel Is Set to Embrace Broad Project to Promote the Use of Electric Cars
BYLINE: By STEVEN ERLANGER
SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Foreign Desk; Pg. 7
LENGTH: 1202 words
DATELINE: JERUSALEM
Israel, tiny and bereft of oil, has decided to embrace the electric car.

On Monday, the Israeli government will announce its support for a broad effort to promote the use of electric cars, embracing a joint venture between an American-Israeli entrepreneur and Renault and its partner, Nissan Motor Company.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, with the active support of President Shimon Peres, intends to make Israel a laboratory to test the practicality of an environmentally clean electric car. The state will offer tax incentives to purchasers, and the new company, with a $200 million investment to start, will begin construction of facilities to recharge the cars and replace empty batteries quickly.

The idea, said Shai Agassi, 39, the software entrepreneur behind the new company, is to sell electric car transportation on the model of the cellphone. Purchasers get subsidized hardware -- the car -- and pay a monthly fee for expected mileage, like minutes on a cellphone plan, eliminating concerns about the fluctuating price of gasoline.

Mr. Agassi and his investors are convinced that the cost of running such a car will be significantly cheaper than a model using gasoline (currently $6.28 a gallon here.)

''With $100 a barrel oil, we've crossed a historic threshold where electricity and batteries provide a cheaper alternative for consumers,'' Mr. Agassi said. ''You buy a car to go an infinite distance, and we need to create the same feeling for an electric car -- that you can fill it up when you stop or sleep and go an infinite distance.''

Mr. Agassi's company, Project Better Place of Palo Alto, Calif., will provide the lithium-ion batteries, which will be able to go 124 miles per charge, and the infrastructure necessary to keep the cars going -- whether parking meter-like plugs on city streets or service stations along highways, where, in a structure like a car wash, exhausted batteries will be removed and fresh ones inserted.

Renault and Nissan will provide the cars. The chairman of both companies, Carlos Ghosn, is scheduled to attend the announcements on Monday. Other companies are developing electric cars, like the Tesla and Chevrolet Volt, but the project here is a major step for Renault, which clearly believes that there is a commercial future in electric cars.

Israel, where the round-trip commute between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem is only 75 miles, is considered a good place to test the idea, which Mr. Agassi, Renault and Nissan hope to copy in small countries like Denmark and crowded cities like London, Paris, Singapore and New York. London, which has a congestion area tax for cars, lets electric cars enter downtown and park free.

Project Better Place's major investor, Idan Ofer, 52, has put up $100 million for the project and is its board chairman. He will remain chairman of Israel Corporation Ltd., a major owner and operator of shipping companies and refineries. ''What's driving me is a much wider outlook than Israel,'' Mr. Ofer said. ''If it were just Israel, I'd be cannibalizing my refinery business. I'm not so concerned about the refineries, but building a world-class company. If Israel will ever produce a Nokia, it will be this.''

Mr. Ofer has his eye on China, with its increasing car penetration, oil consumption and environmental pollution, where he has interest from a Chinese car company, Chery, for a similar joint venture.

Renault will offer a small number of electric models of existing vehicles, like the Megane sedan, at prices roughly comparable to gasoline models. The batteries will come from Mr. Agassi. The tax breaks for ''clean'' electric vehicles, which Israel promises to keep until at least 2015, will make the cars cheaper to consumers than gasoline-engine cars. ''You'll be able to get a nice, high-end car at a price roughly half that of the gasoline model today,'' Mr. Agassi said.

He contends that operating expenses will be half of those for gasoline-driven vehicles, especially in Europe and Israel, where gasoline taxes are high. The company, and the consumers who use it, will normally recharge their batteries at night, when the electricity is cheapest, and they expect the batteries to have a life of 7,000 charges, though Mr. Agassi says he is counting on only 1,500 charges, which is roughly 150,000 miles, the life of the average car.

''Because the price of gasoline fluctuates so much during the life of a car, it's hard to predict the cost basis for driving,'' Mr. Agassi said. ''But electricity fluctuates less, and you can buy it in advance, so I can give you a guaranteed price per mile, cheaper than the price of gas today.''

Mr. Agassi predicts that a few thousand electric cars will be on Israeli roads in 2009 and 100,000 by the end of 2010; Israel has two million cars on the road, and about 10 percent are replaced each year.

Mr. Agassi suggested this model for the electric car -- concentrating on infrastructure rather than on car production -- at a 2006 meeting of the Saban Forum of the Brookings Institution, which Mr. Peres attended. He was enthralled by the idea.

Mr. Peres, who is sometimes dismissed as a dreamer by more cynical Israelis, has in the past embraced and helped to develop some successful notions -- like Israel's nuclear weapons program. He is a strong believer in Israel's mission to better the world, he says, and not simply sell arms to it. Israel is the 11th-largest arms exporter, as measured by dollar sales, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Mr. Peres, who knew Mr. Agassi's father, said in an interview that after hearing Shai Agassi speak: ''I called him in and said, 'Shai, now what?' I said that now is the time for him to implement his idea, and I spoke to our prime minister and other officials and convinced them that this is a great opportunity.''

''Oil is becoming the greatest problem of our time,'' Mr. Peres said in an interview in his office. Not only does it pollute, but ''it also supports terror and violence from Venezuela to Iran.''

''Israel can't become a major industrial country, but it can become a daring world laboratory and a pilot plant for new ideas, like the electric car,'' he said.

Mr. Peres sees this project as part of his ''green vision'' for Israel, arguing that what the nation may lose in tax revenue it will save in oil. He also supports a larger investment in solar power, saying that ''the Saudis don't control the sun.''

Mr. Ofer wants profits, but also thinks the project will help the environment, especially in developing countries. ''China is on a very dangerous march from bicycles to cars without any notion of what they're doing to this planet in terms of air,'' he said.

And in Mumbai, he said, ''you can't even see the sky.''

James D. Wolfensohn, the former World Bank president, is a modest investor in the project.

''Israel is a perfect test tube'' for the electric car, he said. ''The beauty of this is that you have a real place where you can get real human reactions. In Israel they can control the externalities and give it a chance to flourish or fail. It needs to be tested, and Agassi is to be commended for testing it and the Israeli government for trying it.''
URL: http://www.nytimes.com
SUBJECT: ELECTRIC VEHICLES (94%); AUTOMOTIVE TECHNOLOGY (93%); MOTOR VEHICLES (91%); ENTREPRENEURSHIP (90%); JOINT VENTURES (90%); OIL & GAS PRICES (78%); GAS STATIONS (78%); HEADS OF STATE & GOVERNMENT (78%); AUTOMAKERS (78%); GASOLINE PRICES (72%); TAXES & TAXATION (71%); TAX INCENTIVES (70%); TAX LAW (70%); ALLIANCES & PARTNERSHIPS (90%); PRIME MINISTERS (73%)
COMPANY: RENAULT SA (85%); ISRAEL CORP LTD (60%); NISSAN MOTOR CO LTD (84%); REGIE NATIONALE DES USINES RENAULT SA (85%)
TICKER: RNO (PAR) (85%); NSANY (NASDAQ) (84%); NJQ (LSE) (84%); 7201 (TSE) (84%)
INDUSTRY: NAICS336111 AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURING (85%); SIC3711 MOTOR VEHICLES & PASSENGER CAR BODIES (85%); NAICS522220 SALES FINANCING (85%); NAICS336112 LIGHT TRUCK & UTILITY VEHICLE MANUFACTURING (85%); SIC6141 PERSONAL CREDIT INSTITUTIONS (85%)
PERSON: EHUD OLMERT (58%); TZIPORA LIVNI (58%); SHIMON PERES (57%); CARLOS GHOSN (52%)
GEOGRAPHIC: LONDON, ENGLAND (90%); TEL AVIV, ISRAEL (79%); NEW YORK, NY, USA (79%); PARIS, FRANCE (78%); JERUSALEM, ISRAEL (74%); SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA, CA, USA (79%) CALIFORNIA, USA (79%); NEW YORK, USA (79%) ISRAEL (96%); ENGLAND (90%); UNITED KINGDOM (90%); UNITED STATES (79%); FRANCE (78%)
LOAD-DATE: January 21, 2008
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



1161 of 1231 DOCUMENTS

The New York Times
January 20, 2008 Sunday

Late Edition - Final


The Names Stay Linked: 'Bagel King' And Tankleff
BYLINE: By BRUCE LAMBERT, PAUL VITELLO and NATE SCHWEBER
SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Metropolitan Desk; Pg. 33
LENGTH: 2287 words
This article is by Bruce Lambert, Paul Vitello and Nate Schweber.

He called himself the Bagel King of Long Island, and with dozens of stores and franchise contracts, Jerard Steuerman could reasonably claim the title.

His flamboyant, self-promoting persona -- complete with a gold bagel pendant necklace and a '60s-style Afro -- lent itself to fancy cars, flashy rings and a gambling habit.

He charmed some and he frightened others, and in 1983, he entered the lives of Seymour Tankleff, an insurance broker turned investor, and his wife, Arlene, who lived in Belle Terre, on the North Shore of Long Island.

The two men became business partners. Mr. Steuerman, heavily in debt, borrowed $500,000 at a high interest rate from Mr. Tankleff. And on the eve of Sept. 7, 1988, Mr. Steuerman attended a poker game at the Tankleffs' home, leaving before the couple were found assaulted: Mrs. Tankleff dead and her husband mortally wounded. Shortly afterward, he left for California under an assumed name.

Mr. Steuerman, now 68 and living in a condominium in Boca Raton, Fla., has been a figure in the case from the start, ever since the Tankleffs' killings and the arrest of their son, Martin H. Tankleff, then 17, two decades ago.

To some -- notably Mr. Tankleff and those who supported his claim of innocence -- he has always seemed a likely suspect in the crimes.

To others -- including the Suffolk County police and prosecutors -- he was simply a bystander, a businessman who might have made mistakes but who did not commit murder.

With the events of recent weeks, however, have come renewed questions.

Martin Tankleff is free after 17 years in prison, his conviction overturned by a state appellate court. But the charges against him are still in place. Gov. Eliot Spitzer has appointed a special prosecutor, Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo, whom a court has given 30 days to decide how to proceed.

Mr. Steuerman is now a wild card in a 20-year-old mystery, his past and his relationship with the Tankleffs once again the object of scrutiny.

He has denied under oath any involvement in the murders. For years, he has refused to comment publicly on the case. Repeated attempts to contact him by telephone for this article, including a message left with his son, were unsuccessful. An employee at one of his stores said that Mr. Steuerman was unavailable and had no comment. A security officer and a sheriff's deputy barred a reporter from entering Willowwood Gardens, the gated condominium community where Mr. Steuerman lives and serves on the board of directors.

But interviews with neighbors, business associates and others who knew him in the 1980s -- as well as the accounts of witnesses whose testimony helped overturn Mr. Tankleff's conviction -- reveal him as a man of many contradictions. He was a shrewd businessman, with an eye for a deal, a skillful hand with a poker deck and a desire to impress. He was also a lavish spender who by his own account lived beyond his means, a high-stakes gambler whose losses outpaced his gains, and a father whose son was convicted of dealing cocaine in one of his stores.

A Bond in Business

When Jerard Steuerman and Seymour Tankleff crossed paths in 1983, it was through the bagel business, the Steuerman family's occupation for four generations.

In the early 1900s Jerard Steuerman's grandfather, Jakob Frutchman, emigrated from Austria and opened a bagel bakery in a Manhattan basement, according to a Web site for Strathmore Bagels, the chain founded by Mr. Steuerman.

As a young man, Mr. Steuerman toiled in a factory so hot and steamy from the big kettles boiling bagels and the coal-fired ovens baking them that workers stripped to their underwear, according to an article in Newsday in 1986.

But Mr. Steuerman had bigger plans. He branched out to Long Island, opening a bagel shop in Merrick in the 1960s, then expanding into Suffolk County in the 1980s.

Nicholas Argyros, a co-owner of the Bagel Chalet in Commack, who was Mr. Steuerman's business partner for several years in the 1980s, remembers him as ''a stand-up guy.''

His opinion of Mr. Steuerman, he said, is ''all positives.''

Some workers in Mr. Steuerman's bagel stores sensed another side.

''I still get goose bumps when I hear his name,'' said Rebecca Keeler, who as a teenager worked for three years at bagel stores owned by Mr. Steuerman in Stony Brook and East Setauket.

''He wore his Capezios and gold rings, pinkie rings,'' she said. ''He tried to be funny, to be everybody's friend,'' but people often shied away from him.

One customer at Mr. Steuerman's bagel stores was Seymour Tankleff, an insurance broker who had sold his business and was seeking companies to invest in, said Ron Falbee, a nephew of the Tankleffs and executor of their estate. Like Mr. Steuerman, Mr. Tankleff was the descendant of recent immigrants: his father, after arriving in New York from Russia, started a chain of poultry stores in Brooklyn.

Mr. Tankleff and Mr. Steuerman became business partners, but their financial relationship soon grew more complicated. Mr. Tankleff lent money on the side, often at very high interest rates. At some point, he began making loans to Mr. Steuerman, Mr. Falbee said, initially to finish building a spacious two-story home in Belle Terre, where the Tankleffs also had a large house.

The clifftop bluffs on the North Shore of Long Island have long been a coveted spot for the rich. The Astors and Morgans built summer cottages there at the turn of the last century. Mr. Tankleff and Mr. Steuerman were part of a new entrepreneurial elite that had settled there by the 1980s: car dealers, real estate lawyers, small-business owners and investors like Mr. Tankleff, many looking for big returns in a time then known as the go-go decade.

Mr. Steuerman's house in Belle Terre house was one of 10 addresses in Suffolk and Nassau Counties listed in his name from 1983 to 2006. One of those was a gray beach house overlooking the bay in Mount Sinai that Mr. Steuerman rented in the early 1980s.

Charles and Nancy West, who lived next door, described him as an ostentatious man who drove a Jaguar and took frequent trips to Florida.

He was a difficult neighbor, they said. People came and went at all hours of the day and night. On the Fourth of July, there were noisy fireworks displays. Once the barrage was so intense that the Wests, fearing their home would burn down, called the Fire Department.

More than once, Mrs. West recalled, people drove up to the house ''in the middle of the night,'' and there were angry exchanges about drug use.

''It happened a few times,'' said Mrs. West, who is 68 and a retired schoolteacher.

Mr. West said that he complained about Mr. Steuerman to the police but was told that nothing could be done.

''It was so bad that we said, 'If he buys that house, we're selling,'<0>'' Mr. West recalled.

It was a complicated time for Mr. Steuerman and his family. In 1983, his son Todd was arrested for selling cocaine at a bagel store where he worked; his lawyer in the case was Gerard Sullivan, a law partner of Thomas J. Spota, now the Suffolk County district attorney. According to the police report, Todd Steuerman, who was convicted and placed on probation, told an undercover officer: ''Just call here any time you want more blow. My father owns the place, so it's cool.''

Mr. Steuerman himself was facing increasing debt.

Lou Bove, 50, the son of Vincent Bove, the village's former mayor, who played poker with Mr. Tankleff and Mr. Steuerman, said he had always liked Mr. Steuerman but was aware of his faults.

''Jerry was a nice guy,'' Mr. Bove said, but ''he had a very bad gambling problem.''

In the years before Seymour and Arlene Tankleff were murdered, Mr. Steuerman piled up gambling debts at casinos including Harrah's Marina and Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino, according to court records.

By 1988, Mr. Tankleff had lent Mr. Steuerman more than $500,000, at an interest rate of about 35 percent, secured by shares in his bagel stores and several racehorses. But ''the partnership was deteriorating,'' Mr. Falbee said, because Mr. Steuerman had stopped repaying the loans and he and Mr. Tankleff were fighting for control of the bagel stores.

In the months before his death, Mr. Tankleff had demanded an immediate cash payment of $50,000, and Mr. Steuerman resisted, according to members of the Tankleff family. Two weeks before the attacks, Arlene Tankleff told her sister, Marcella Alt Falbee, that she was afraid of Mr. Steuerman, according to court records. Ms. Falbee quoted her sister as saying that when Seymour Tankleff had tried to collect money, Mr. Steuerman angrily grabbed him, pulled him across a counter and said, ''I'll cut your throat.''

The Son Is Blamed

Seymour and Arlene Tankleff were found stabbed and bludgeoned in their home about 6 a.m. on Sept. 7, 1988. A Tuesday night poker game known as ''the After Dinner Club'' had ended about three hours earlier.

Mr. Steuerman was among a group who often attended, along with Mayor Bove and other prominent residents of Belle Terre. He was the last to leave the Tankleff house that night, sometime after 3 a.m., he said.

Dr. Frank Oliveto, an orthopedic surgeon who also attended the poker game, said that nothing unusual happened during the seven-hour game, though Seymour Tankleff and Mr. Steuerman ''were cool to each other,'' as they had been for months.

From the outset, Suffolk County police and prosecutors cast the Tankleff murders as an allegory about the dangers of growing up rich in a place like Belle Terre. They quickly pursued charges against the Tankleffs' 17-year-old son, who, they said, murdered his parents in a fit of anger about privileges denied, and with a cold eye on $3 million he would inherit when he was 25.

Martin Tankleff, his lawyers and a cadre of aunts and uncles familiar with the Tankleffs' business affairs insisted that Mr. Steuerman should be considered a suspect.

But within six hours after the bodies were found, the Suffolk County police, led by Detective K. James McCready, extracted a confession from Martin Tankleff, albeit one he never signed and quickly retracted.

A witness tracked down by investigators working for Martin Tankleff would later say that Mr. McCready, a building contractor on the side, had a business relationship with Jerard Steuerman before the murders, though Mr. McCready denied knowing him.

Hours after the crimes, according to Mr. Falbee, the Tankleff estate executor, Mr. Steuerman withdrew $15,000 from a bank account that Mr. Falbee said was financed by Mr. Tankleff. A week later, Mr. Steuerman disappeared, leaving notes behind to fake his death and instructing his children and a girlfriend on how to collect his life insurance policy.

Suffolk County authorities did not consider Mr. Steuerman a suspect, but they wanted him to testify at Martin Tankleff's trial in 1990. Police tracked him down in California, where, beard shaved and hairpiece changed, he had spent some time at the famed Esalen Institute in Big Sur, relaxing and receiving psychotherapy. He was traveling under the name Jay Winston, one of many names he used in his business and personal lives.

Mr. Steuerman told the police he had run away to escape personal problems.

''The only mistake I made in my life is that I lived lavishly,'' Mr. Steuerman testified at the trial. ''I was a poor man living like a millionaire.''

Referring to his flight after the murders, Mr. Steuerman told the jury: ''I did a foolish thing. But I am no murderer and I should not be here.''

In the years after Mr. Tankleff's conviction in 1990, Mr. Steuerman's business flourished. He secured franchise deals to open bagel shops at major airports, including Kennedy International, and at rest stops along the New York State Thruway and the New Jersey and Florida Turnpikes. After a few years, he and his second wife, Sharon, moved to Florida.

A New Theory

In 2003, Jay Salpeter, a private investigator who began looking into the case on behalf of Martin Tankleff and his family, began to piece together a startling alternate version of the crimes, one that centered on Mr. Steuerman. Several witnesses unearthed by Mr. Salpeter, including two ex-convicts, implicated Mr. Steuerman in recruiting two hit men, Joseph Creedon and Peter Kent, to kill the Tankleffs, and in signaling them to enter the Tankleff house before he left the poker game. (One witness later retracted his story; another once said he had concocted his story but later swore an affidavit affirming it and has maintained it ever since.)

In 2006, a Suffolk County Criminal Court judge, Stephen L. Braslow, dismissed the testimony as given by ''a cavalcade of nefarious scoundrels.''

But last month, the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court overturned Mr. Tankleff's conviction in the murders, noting that whatever the witnesses' character flaws, many did not know one another and gave their testimony independently.

What happens next will depend on the path of Mr. Cuomo's investigation, an undertaking that he has acknowledged will be difficult, given that the trail is 20 years cold. Yet at some point, it will almost certainly make a stop at a condominium on Willowwood Drive in Boca Raton.

Ralph Tamburro, who lived next door to Mr. Steuerman on Empress Pines Drive in Nesconset in the years immediately after the Tankleff murders, remembers a man very different from the flashy, disruptive neighbor the Wests knew in Mount Sinai a decade before.

Mr. Steuerman, Mr. Tamburro said, was a quiet man, who ''kind of kept to himself.''

''He was pleasant; there were never any problems,'' Mr. Tamburro said.



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