The controversial McGuinness Boulevard street safety redesign has made a return to the news lately as an indictment against Ingrid Lewis-Martin, formerly a senior adviser to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and Tony and Gina Argento, owners of Brooklyn film studio Broadway Stages, was unsealed Aug. 21, along with three others implicating Lewis-Martin. The indictment alleges that the Argentos gave Lewis-Martin $2,500, catering services with 10,000 and an appearance on the Hulu show “Godfather of Harlem” in exchange for her help shutting down the major Greenpoint, Brooklyn, project. (Lewis-Martin and the Argentos have all pleaded not guilty.) The indictment has reinvigorated efforts to make the project a reality. Assembly Member Emily Gallagher has advocated for safety improvements to McGuinn

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