Pending on Hillcrest (Cos Cob section)
/98 Hillcrest Park Road, $2.150 million. Nine days between first listing and executed contracts.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more
98 Hillcrest Park Road, $2.150 million. Nine days between first listing and executed contracts.
103 Connecticut Avenue, $3.7 million, was reported as pending on Friday morning, and is marked as “back on the market” today.
Still in Cos Cob, but on the River Road that runs along the east side on the Mianus River, 552 River Road is reported pending. Currently priced at $2.650 million, it started at $2.850 in July.
The Flying Nun’s house at 35 Sterling Road sold for $7.150 million — full price.
As did, kinda, sorta, 17 Will Merry Lane. It started at $4.795 last year and had dropped to $4.495 by July, when it was pulled from the market, “refreshed” and put back on for $4.695 million, and that’s what it sold for.
Further east, 18 Sound Beach Avenue, new construction, sold for $1.849 million on an original asking price of $2.199.
Well …
NY Post, March 1 2026:
A network of hundreds of hospices are under investigation for allegedly ripping tens of millions of dollars from taxpayers in Los Angeles Country and across California.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is now actively cutting off payments to suspicious operations across Los Angeles, which is home to almost half of America’s end-of-life care providers.
A hospice industry insider provided the California Post with data detailing hundreds of suspicious hospices and home agencies across the state, including addresses where multiple agencies are listed at the same location.
A Post investigation found the addresses include empty storefronts, an auto parts shop and other offices that are unoccupied, some for years. Others don’t appear to exist at all.
The investigation comes as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz confirmed that “every single hospice in California is now under investigation.”
“Thirty to 40% of all the hospices in America are in Los Angeles, so there’s just no way they are all legitimate,” Dr. Oz said.
>>>>
One such center is St. Rita’s Home Health, which is registered to a vacant Van Nuys strip mall.
On the California Department of Public Health database, St. Rita’s is listed as active at the Van Nuys location.
Despite being up for rent, the agency is still listed with the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) as active, with data showing it billed Medicare about $4.3 million between 2019 and the first-half of 2025.
The agency has no website, and when The Post called to confirm it was still at 6360 Van Nuys Blvd., we were told the agency moved to Glendale and were provided a Yahoo email address to send questions.
About six miles away in North Hollywood, another building is listed as the operating address for 12 hospice and home health agencies — despite a large ”for rent” sign hanging out front.
But in 2023 and 2024, more than $20 million was billed to taxpayers from the building. The Post contacted eight of the providers at the North Hollywood address.
Pluto Home Health Care hung up when asked to confirm its location, Kaplan Hospice Care Inc, went to voicemail before being answered by ”Alexander from Southern California Auto.”
A representative for Confident Home Health claimed they moved to a different location, despite the North Hollywood address being listed on the CDPH database. When asked if the company has a website, the representative replied: “I don’t know — we have an email.”
Queen of The Valley Home Health, which is still listed as active on CDPH’s website, is located in Sun Valley, but when The Post visited the address, there was an auto store. The agency billed nearly $600,000 between 2023 and 2024, according to CMS data.
The address for Queen of the Valley Home Health is actually the location of an auto parts store. Benjamin Brown for CA Post
The license for Queen of the Valley Home Health is listed as active on CDPH’s website, but the address is the location of an auto parts store.
>>>>
Dr. Ira Byock, one of the leading palliative care physicians in the country, told The Post the level of alleged fraud and the speed in which it had grown has ”completely overwhelmed” state and federal authorities tasked with dealing with it.
“There are roughly 7,000 hospice programs across the US. There are 91 in Florida, 39 in New York — and over 2,800 in California,” Dr. Byock said.
“Many of them have come into existence in California in the last four years,” he said, adding that “clearly some of these programs in Southern California are not legitimate at all and seem like vehicles for fraudulent billing [of] Medicare.”
>>>>
The 2022 California Hospice and Licensure and Oversight report delivered a scathing review of rampant fraud in home health and hospice care, saying “weak controls have created the opportunity for large-scale fraud and abuse.”
This is not a new issue: The fraud was investigated and reported on by the LA Times as far back as December 9, 2020, and met with a deafening silence:
And this year on February 22 2026 the LA Times reported on the issue again, this time emphasizing the political nature of the Trump/Oz attack, but conceding this much:
EDD fraud
The state’s Employment Development Department, known as EDD, reported in 2021 that approximately $20 billion was lost due to fraud, largely in the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program.
The state itself admitted in 2021 that it failed to take precautions that had been implemented in other states, including using software to identify suspicious applications and cross-checking benefit claims against personal data on state prison inmates.
A recent audit also found EDD wasted $4.6 million by paying monthly service fees for more than 6,200 cellphones that went unused for at least four consecutive months between November 2020 and April 2025 — including some devices that were inactive for more than four years.
State audits show vulnerabilities persist. The California State Auditor has repeatedly flagged Medi-Cal eligibility discrepancies that have exposed the state to billions of dollars in questionable payments, while also warning that weaknesses in information security across state agencies remain a high-risk issue.
(For the non-readers on FWIW, ere’s a video that recaps Oz’s charges)
Related:
Oh, nooo!
Iranian Rhapsody 🎹🇺🇸🇮🇱🇮🇷
— Sith Daddy (@sithdaddyvlogs) February 28, 2026
Trump is on fire here. Political satire meets cinematic AI music.
Created with @replicate using their Prune AI, which makes generating audio2video so much easier. pic.twitter.com/JHSeT8S8O1
LMAO 🤣
— Dr. Eli David (@DrEliDavid) February 28, 2026
Volume up 🔊 pic.twitter.com/XSBkxQdyLg
And of course …
TRUMP ANNOUNCES THE DEATH OF IRAN'S "SUPREME LOSER" pic.twitter.com/7A1jTYcUYp
— Shawn Farash (@Shawn_Farash) March 1, 2026
Henry was there
Ten minutes before President Donald Trump even announced that the U.S. and Israel had attacked Iran, a network of U.S. nonprofits aligned with China, Russia and Tehran activated foot soldiers to hit America's streets.
Groups funded by Neville Roy Singham, a Shanghai-based, American-born tech tycoon, which regularly parrot messaging from America's adversaries, swung into action even as the initial bombs were dropping. The nearly instantaneous response was the latest salvo in an information war on the U.S., with foot soldiers called upon to converge in protests and echo anti-U.S. talking points.
At 2:34 a.m. ET, the ANSWER Coalition, a nonprofit project whose leaders self-describe as Marxist and communist, announced: "EMERGENCY NATIONWIDE DAY OF ACTION TODAY, SAT. FEB 28 — STOP THE WAR WITH IRAN!"
It announced its network: groups that have long supported the regime in Iran, including the National Iranian American Council, 50501, American Muslims for Palestine, the People’s Forum, Palestinian Youth Movement, and CodePink.
Ten minutes later, at 2:44 a.m., Trump posted a video, confirming the attack on Iran, telling the world: "A short time ago, the United States military began major combat operations in Iran.
Eight minutes later, at 2:52 a.m., the People’s Forum — a New York-based activist hub funded by Singham as an "incubator" for socialist groups — issued an "emergency" call to action for a protest in Times Square.
The Chinese Communist Party is immediately deploying activists in NYC to oppose strikes on Iran. https://t.co/W7sam8lLep
— Michael Lucci (@Michael7ucci) February 28, 2026
AI Overview
The People's Forum, a New York-based "political education and cultural hub," is primarily funded by Neville Roy Singham, a U.S. technology mogul living in Shanghai with close ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
Between 2017 and 2022, Singham and his wife, Jodie Evans [Code Pink], donated over $20 million, accounting for nearly all the organization's funding.
Key details regarding The People's Forum funding:
Funding Source: The majority of funding originates from Neville Roy Singham.
Method of Funding: Money was funneled through various shell organizations and donor-advised funds (such as Goldman Sachs).
Allegations: A 2025 House investigation revealed the organization is a likely CCP-funded propaganda arm, with funding linked to a larger network ($100 million system) that supports initiatives like the ANSWER Coalition
.
Activity Focus: The group uses this funding for training and coordinating activists, including those involved in 2024 campus pro-Palestinian protests.
House.gov +4
Who is Code Pink funded by?
AI Overview
Code Pink receives significant funding from sources linked to tech millionaire Neville Roy Singham, who married co-founder Jodie Evans in 2017, with reports indicating about a quarter of its funds (over $1.4 million) come from Singham-linked groups, while other donations come from organizations like the Tides Foundation, and Medea Benjamin's Benjamin Fund also provides substantial support, with investigations highlighting potential foreign influence and CCP ties.
Key Funding Sources:
Neville Roy Singham: A major benefactor, providing around 25% of Code Pink's funding through linked organizations, coinciding with a shift in Code Pink's stance on China.
The Tides Foundation: A known philanthropic funder, granting over $54,000 in 2020.
Medea Benjamin's Benjamin Fund: Provides significant support, granting over $355,000 in 2022.
Concerns & Investigations:
Congressional committees have investigated Code Pink's funding, raising concerns about potential influence from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) due to Singham's close ties to Chinese government media and propaganda efforts.
Reports from organizations like NGO Monitor highlight a lack of transparency in Code Pink's donor information.
In summary, while Code Pink accepts donations from various sources, a significant portion of its funding is tied to Neville Roy Singham and his network, prompting scrutiny regarding foreign influence and alignment with CCP narratives, according to New York Times and U.S. congressional reports.
And not to be outdone, the “Indivisible” ladies have weighed in from Belle Haven:
"The significance of the passage of time, right? The significance of the passage of time. When you think about it, there is a great significance, passage of time."
Famous (?) Actress urges Americans to eschew daylight hamburger dining and eat word salads instead.
Actress Kristen Stewart is suggesting that Americans stop buying burgers during the daytime in order to protest the crackdown on illegal immigrants.
After being asked, “What would break your heart if it disappeared from LA?” the Twilightstar replied, “immigrants,” before offering the public a lengthy word-salad that contained a bizarre suggestion for protesting the United States’ crackdown on illegal immigration.
“I, I can’t stand the idea that the dismantling of the culture that did have a hand in, like, making me who I am, which is so meaningless in the face of people’s lives being, like, completely unearthed, uprooted, destroyed, like, just the, this is, this is, like, not who we are,” Stewart continued.
“So, like, where I’m from, I don’t identify with that right now. And so like, I, I, I, I, I definitely am dying every day thinking, so do we make movies about this? Do we throw all of our money at it?” the Snow White and the Huntsman star added.
Stewart went on to suggest that perhaps refraining from buying burgers during the daytime could be a way to protest the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
“Do we stop buying burgers in the daytime? What do we do about this?” the actress asked, adding, “Like it, I can’t, I can’t fathom that it’s happening until it doesn’t happen. It’s like Los Angeles doesn’t exist without all of us.”
Here’s a sobering thought: Meticulous polling conducted by FWIW has revealed that, by a factor of one million to one, more Americans have heard of Kristen Stewart and know who she is than have heard of John Locke.
(To be fair, FWIW’s primary pollee in this survey, Henry the Cat, had heard of both, and prefers Stewart’s vacuousness over Locke’s rejection of the divine right of kings in Two Treatises of Government, but that’s a cat for you.)
And in a nod to some of the comments, this, from Ed Driscoll:
SCHRODINGER’S AYATOLLAH: Fate of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei unclear after US-Israeli strikes flatten compound.
Virginia Democrats, in the midst of pushing a wild gerrymandering scheme and a blizzard of tax increases, vote to ~triple their own pay: https://t.co/InzS00SXVo
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) February 27, 2026
The City of Evanston, Illinois' Reparations Committee issued $25,000 to 44 residents earlier this month in reparations' payments and is currently looking for other ways to keep the program funded.
Committee members have reportedly previously discussed the lack of revenue from their cannabis tax source, due to low sales at the two dispensaries in the city. "When you tax something at a high rate, customers are less likely to purchase that product and are more likely to identify alternatives," Tiffany Ingram, the executive director of the Cannabis Business Association of Illinois, told Fox News Digital on Wednesday.
"And so that's why you see customers going to other places like Michigan or Missouri, if they're close to the border, or purchasing products from the illicit market or purchasing alternatives like unregulated Delta 8," she said.
According to the city’s resolution, Evanston committed the first $10 million of the city’s Municipal Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax — a 3% tax on gross sales of cannabis — to fund the program.
Another way the program is funded is through the city’s Real Estate Transfer Tax Ordinance. According to a city memo, the fund had received $276,588 from Evanston’s real estate transfer tax.
The fund was primarily supported by the cannabis sales tax and real estate tax money, since there were no philanthropic donations this year as of Jan. 31, and it received $1,010 last year. Furthermore, the city reported $55,956.22 in donations to the Reparations Fund as of September 2024.
Evanston was the first city in the nation to pass a reparations plan, pledging $10 million over a decade to Black residents in November 2019. Established in 2019 and approved by the City Council in 2021, the program issues $25,000 direct cash payments to Black residents and descendants of Black residents who lived in Evanston between 1919 and 1969.
So far, 137 Evanston residents have received reparations payments totaling $3.47 million, and more are expected by year’s end, reaching 171 recipients with about $4 million allocated to direct descendants.
Every day is Jubilee Day in San Francisco, although it often rains
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