Former Jackson Township Business Administrator, Paterson Mayor Torres Charged for Contempt

Phil Stilton

JACKSON TOWNSHIP, NJ – Since leaving Jackson Township after being hired by Mayor Michael Reina, former township Business Administrator and mayor of the City of Paterson is back in the sights of law enforcement.

 Way back in 2010, nobody in Jackson wanted to hire former Paterson Mayor Jose “Joey” Torres to a $121,000 job as the Jackson Township business administrator. That is, except for Mayor Michael Reina and his puppet council members at the time, under the suggestion of former GOP Chairman George Gilmore.

  In fact, there was an hours-long debate that raged (see videos below) from former Mayor Michael Kafton and the public as to why Reina should not hire his latest political hack to the position.  The deal was facilitated by Reina and the Republican party to give Torres, a lifelong Democrat safe haven in Jackson with a large salary so he can get his three-year pension bump before returning to Paterson to run for mayor again.


Related: Jackson Business Administrator Says “Some People” in Town Not Following the Rules

Torres eventually left Jackson and went back to Paterson where he became mayor…then got himself put in jail for political corruption.  It was the same sort of political corruption that he got away with for several years in Jackson while he was bumping his pension and riding high on the hog in Jackson, courtesy of Mayor Michael Reina.

Now, New Jersey’s Acting Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin announced that Joey Torres was charged today with criminal contempt for launching a new mayoral campaign in violation of a court order stemming from his 2017 conviction for conspiracy to commit official misconduct.

“Jose “Joey” Torres, 63, of Paterson, N.J., was charged today by complaint-summons with fourth-degree criminal contempt by the Attorney General’s Office of Public Integrity and Accountability (OPIA). The charge is the result of an investigation by the OPIA Corruption Bureau and the New Jersey State Police Official Corruption Bureau,” Platkin said. “Torres pleaded guilty in 2017 to a charge of second-degree conspiracy to commit official misconduct for directing, while serving as mayor, that city employees perform work at a private warehouse leased by his daughter and nephew while the employees were being paid by the city. Torres was sentenced to five years in state prison in the case filed by the Attorney General’s Office.”

Related: FBI Investigating Jackson Township Mayor Michael Reina

As a result of Torres’ guilty plea, Superior Court Judge Sheila A. Venable entered a forfeiture order on Sept. 25, 2017—signed and consented to by Torres—that forever disqualifies Torres, pursuant to state law, from holding any public office or employment. The order specifically provides that if Torres makes any application for public employment in violation of the order, he is subject to a fourth-degree charge of criminal contempt.

“The complaint against Torres states that on or about Feb. 12, 2022, Torres made a public speech stating that he is running for mayor of the City of Paterson in the 2022 election and requesting that the people in the audience vote to return him to City Hall,” the Attorney General’s Office said in a statement. “On March 4, Torres went to the Paterson City Clerk’s Office and presented a stack of purported nominating petitions in support of his candidacy. Upon those petitions being rejected by the clerk, Torres filed a civil action seeking to compel the clerk’s office to accept the petitions. In that civil action, Torres certified that he submitted the petitions to run for mayor and if the city clerk continued to refuse to accept his petitions, he would be irreparably harmed by being denied his right to run for office.”

It is alleged that by holding himself out as a candidate for mayor, soliciting signatures on nominating petitions, and attempting to submit the petitions at the clerk’s office, Torres purposely and knowingly disobeyed the 2017 forfeiture order that he signed and consented to following his guilty plea, Platkin added.

“State law provides that any person convicted of a crime involving their public office will be forever barred from holding another public position in New Jersey,” said Acting Attorney General Platkin. “To promote public trust and integrity in government, we must ensure that this law and the court orders issued to implement it are rigorously enforced.”

“Mr. Torres knew that by pleading guilty in 2017 and signing the consent order, he would be forever disqualified from seeking the office of mayor,” said OPIA Executive Director Thomas Eicher. “We charge that he has committed a crime by flouting that order.”

You appear to be using an ad blocker

Shore News Network is a free website that does not use paywalls or charge for access to original, breaking news content. In order to provide this free service, we rely on advertisements. Please support our journalism by disabling your ad blocker for this website.