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BALTIMORE, MD — Detectives have arrested a 29-year-old man in connection with the death of a man found in a vehicle along I-83 North last week.

Investigators say Tyler Liggins was taken into custody on July 23 in the killing of 43-year-old Travon Booth. Booth was discovered dead in a vehicle near the Ruxton Road exit on July 19 after a single-vehicle crash.

Authorities believe the incident began in the 1100 block of West Northern Parkway before the vehicle was found on the highway.

Liggins was arrested without incident and taken to the Central Booking Intake Facility, where he was charged with first- and second-degree assault as well as second-degree murder.

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RIDGE, NY — A lucky Take 5 player scored big in Thursday’s evening drawing, taking home more than $31,000.

The New York Lottery announced that one top-prize ticket worth $31,373.50 was sold for the July 24 drawing at the 7-Eleven located at 1670 Route 25 in Ridge.

Take 5 numbers are drawn from a field of one through 39, with drawings held twice daily at 2:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Winning tickets may be claimed up to one year from the date of the drawing.

The New York Lottery contributed $3.8 billion to public schools across the state in fiscal year 2023-2024, continuing its position as North America’s most profitable lottery.

Help for gambling addiction is available at NYProblemGamblingHelp.org, by calling 1-877-8-HOPENY (1-877-846-7369), or texting HOPENY (467369).

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MILLVILLE, DE — Delaware State Police are investigating a commercial burglary at Marley’s Smoke Shop after four masked suspects broke into the business early Thursday morning.

The break-in occurred around 1 a.m. on July 24 at the store on 35831 Atlantic Avenue. Responding officers from the Ocean View Police Department and state troopers arrived to find the front door had been forcibly entered.

Investigators say the suspects, all wearing gloves and concealing their faces, ransacked the shop and stole an undisclosed amount of cash and merchandise before fleeing in two unidentified vehicles.

The Troop 4 Criminal Investigations Unit is leading the case.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Detective M. Aberman at 302-752-3807, send a private message to the Delaware State Police Facebook page, or call Delaware Crime Stoppers at 1-800-847-3333.

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QUEENS, NY — A 54-year-old man has been indicted on multiple murder charges in the stabbing deaths of his wife and 2-year-old daughter inside their Ridgewood apartment, prosecutors announced.

Ernesto Cruz, of Forest Avenue, was arraigned on charges of first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder, and fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon. He is accused of fatally stabbing his wife, 41-year-old Ana Alexandra Pilatagsi Moposita, and their daughter, Analiz Cruz Pilatagsi, on July 19 at around 7:15 p.m.

Both victims were found bleeding and unresponsive inside their home on Forest Avenue and were pronounced dead at local hospitals.

According to the investigation, Cruz also stabbed himself in the chest and cut his wrist in an apparent suicide attempt before being taken to the hospital for surgery.

Queens Criminal Supreme Court Justice Kenneth Holder remanded Cruz, who is due back in court on October 16. If convicted, he faces life in prison without parole.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Ryan Nicolosi of the Homicide Bureau, with support from other senior prosecutors in the Queens District Attorney’s office.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Human remains discovered inside a Southeast, D.C. residence have been identified as a 65-year-old man, and authorities have ruled his death a homicide.

On Sunday, July 20, at around 3:20 p.m., officers responding to a welfare check found the body inside a home on the 4600 block of B Street Southeast. The remains were transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, which determined the death to be a homicide.

The victim has been identified as Charles Granger of Southeast.

The case remains under investigation as authorities work to determine what led to the killing.

Anyone with information is urged to call police at 202-727-9099 or text tips to 50411. A reward of up to $25,000 is being offered for information leading to an arrest and conviction in the case.

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TRENTON, NJ — A Union County deli has once again sold a winning ticket, this time for Thursday’s $422,167 Jersey Cash 5 jackpot.

The New Jersey Lottery announced that three tickets matched all five numbers — 01, 04, 05, 23 and 31 — in the July 24 drawing. The XTRA number was 03 and the Bullseye was 23.

The winning tickets were purchased at Quick Stop Deli and Grill in Union Township, which will receive a $2,000 bonus for selling the jackpot.

This marks the second major win at the store in recent months. On May 14, it sold the Cash 4 Life ticket that brought a $7 million prize to one player.

In addition to the jackpot, 16 players matched four of five numbers with the Bullseye and XTRA, winning $1,000 each. Another 38 players matched four numbers and the Bullseye, while four players matched four numbers and the XTRA, each claiming $500.

The Jersey Cash 5 jackpot now stands at an estimated $150,000 for tonight’s drawing.

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JACKSON, N.J. — A brand-new playground is now open at Patriots Park on Bowman Road, part of a county-led upgrade that comes after renewed coordination between Jackson Township officials and the county government.

The new equipment replaces an aging structure and marks a visible result of Jackson’s inclusion in Ocean County’s wider recreational improvement efforts. For years, Jackson had seen fewer direct investments, in part due to limited communication between local and county officials.

Council Vice President Burnstein played a key role in reversing that trend by maintaining direct communication with county leaders to prioritize local needs. Township officials said the new playground is one example of how the township is benefiting from closer collaboration with the Ocean County Board of Commissioners.

“Our council’s new relationship with the County Commissioners is helping Jackson get its fair share of our county tax dollars re-invested into our community,” Burnstein said.

Additional investments in parks, road work, and traffic improvements are expected under the expanded coordination between Jackson and county agencies.

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TRENTON — New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and his administration are pushing forward with their latest clean energy proposal: A massive solar farm floating in the water of a North Jersey reservoir that provides drinking water.

What could go wrong?

The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities on Wednesday approved a long-sought waiver allowing the North Jersey District Water Supply Commission and Nexamp Solar, LLC to move forward with a 10-megawatt floating solar installation on the Wanaque Reservoir in Passaic County under the state’s Competitive Solar Incentive (CSI) Program.

The approval, issued under Docket No. QW25040187, grants an exemption to the state’s prohibition on solar development in the Highlands Preservation Area, following updated documentation, agency consultations, and conditional support from both the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) and the Highlands Council.

One outspoken government watchdog account on X warned of potentional problems with the plan.

“Stop trying to build solar panels everywhere NJ! State officials have granted waiver for a floating solar project on the Wanaque Reservoir that will roughly 20 acres of the reservoir’s surface This sounds like a terrible idea, what happens when the panels are damaged and contaminate the reservoir,” said Wake Up New Jersey on X.

The proposed project will include two floating solar arrays totaling approximately 20 acres, anchored on the surface of the 2,310-acre Wanaque Reservoir. One array will support onsite energy for the NJDWSC, while the second will serve up to 1,000 community solar subscribers — including 51% low- and moderate-income households — under a net-metered system.

The BPU originally denied a waiver for the project in January due to incomplete information, but the applicants submitted a renewed petition in April after addressing regulatory and environmental concerns.

“The NJDEP recommends that the North Jersey District Water Supply Commission and Nexamp be granted a waiver to participate in the CSI program solicitation,” NJDEP Director David Pepe wrote in a May 15 letter to the Board.

The Highlands Council also affirmed its conditional approval, originally issued in 2021, provided that the applicants submit final replanting, restoration, and monitoring plans and meet specific permit conditions related to endangered species, forest disturbance, and reservoir infrastructure.

According to the NJDEP, the project must still obtain multiple permits, including a Flood Hazard Area Permit with Hardship Exemption, a Freshwater Wetlands Individual Permit, and others related to construction-related dewatering and historic district review.

The BPU emphasized that the waiver does not constitute final project approval and directed that all requirements from NJDEP and the Highlands Council must be satisfied before post-construction certification is issued.

The decision allows the applicants to participate in the third CSI solicitation, which closed to bids on July 23.

New Jersey regulators greenlighted a floating solar project on protected reservoir lands after environmental agencies reversed earlier objections.

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HADDONFIELD, N.J. — A New Jersey Little Leaguer was cleared to play in his state championship game Thursday — not by an umpire or a league official, but by a judge.

Twelve-year-old Marco Rocco of Haddonfield was suspended from the first game of the state tournament after he was ejected for flipping his bat following a dramatic two-run homer in the final inning of a sectional title game on July 16.

The ejection was for “unsportsmanlike” conduct and “horseplay,” according to Marco’s family — a ruling they challenged in court just hours before the state tournament began.

Judge Robert Malestein issued an emergency temporary restraining order Thursday, allowing Marco to return to the lineup for the championship opener.

“Just happy my son got to play baseball,” said Joe Rocco, Marco’s father, after a legal battle that he described as “stressful.”

The bat flip — which came after a sixth-inning home run — sparked debate online, especially given that the league itself has previously highlighted bat flips in promotional reels. Critics of the suspension argued that the punishment was excessive for a 12-year-old participating in a youth baseball celebration.

Marco was cheered on by chants of “Marco! Marco!” from teammates as he stepped into the batter’s box Thursday night, hours after the judge’s decision.

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BALTIMORE — A heat advisory remains in effect across the Baltimore metro area Friday, with temperatures soaring near 99 degrees and heat index values reaching as high as 109, as forecasters warn of potentially dangerous conditions and increased risk of heat-related illness.

The National Weather Service issued the advisory from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., covering Baltimore City, surrounding counties, and much of the I-95 corridor across Maryland, northern Virginia, and Washington, D.C.

“Heat index values up to 109 expected,” the alert states.

Skies will remain sunny and conditions dry through most of Friday, with only a slight chance of isolated thunderstorms between 7 and 9 p.m. Overnight lows will remain warm, around 82 degrees.

Saturday brings continued heat, with a high near 96 and partly sunny skies. A 40% chance of thunderstorms develops in the afternoon, increasing to 60% overnight as scattered storms push into the region. Lows Saturday night will dip only slightly to around 79.

The threat of rain grows Sunday, with a 70% chance of showers and thunderstorms, especially in the afternoon and evening. Temperatures will top out around 94 degrees, continuing the region’s prolonged stretch of hot and humid conditions. Rain chances remain elevated into Sunday night.

Forecasters are calling for persistent heat into next week, with heat index values again expected to climb into the 105 to 109 range Monday through Wednesday.

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PHILADELPHIA — An extreme heat warning remains in effect across the Philadelphia region Friday as heat index values soar above 105 degrees, with scattered thunderstorms possible later in the day and into the weekend.

The National Weather Service issued the warning from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., covering Philadelphia, surrounding suburbs, and parts of South Jersey and northern Delaware. Forecasters expect a high of 97 degrees Friday, with heat index values peaking at 106 to 107, driven by hot temperatures and high humidity.

“Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 107 degrees expected,” the advisory reads.

In addition to the oppressive heat, the forecast includes a 30% chance of thunderstorms after 4 p.m. today, increasing to 40% this evening. Rainfall totals are expected to remain light, although higher amounts are possible in isolated thunderstorms.

Overnight, skies will be mostly cloudy with a low around 76.

Saturday brings modest relief with a high near 89 and partly sunny skies. Winds will shift from the northeast to southeast, and overnight temperatures will drop to around 72. Another round of storms is possible late Saturday night, with a 40% chance of showers and thunderstorms after 2 a.m.

Rain becomes more likely on Sunday, with a 60% chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly in the afternoon and evening. Highs will dip to the mid-80s, with calm winds turning southerly. The unsettled pattern continues Sunday night, with a chance of lingering storms and a low around 73.5

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TOMS RIVER, NJ — Help might be coming from the White House to tackle New Jersey’s gorwing homeless and mental health crisis. This week, an exective order was signed that will bolster resources and shift the way America deals with the homeless crisis.

In New Jersey, the homeless epidemic under Governor Phil Murphy was put on display in Toms River, as dozens of homeless people were drawn to the Ocean County seat after the Ocean County Board of Commissioners opened a soup kitchen operated by Jon Bon Jovi.

That battle ended when Toms River Mayor Dan Rodrick, along with other relief agencies placed those individuals into programs and housing, but is starting again as new homeless individuals began appearing again downtown last weekend.

President Donald J. Trump on Thursday signed an executive order directing sweeping changes to federal homelessness policy, prioritizing civil commitment, institutional treatment, and increased law enforcement involvement in addressing public disorder on city streets.

The order, titled “Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets,” cites rising homelessness and links it to mental illness, drug addiction, and public safety concerns. It directs the Attorney General, the Department of Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, and Transportation to take immediate steps that encourage states to institutionalize individuals deemed unable to care for themselves due to mental illness or substance use.

“Shifting homeless individuals into long-term institutional settings for humane treatment through the appropriate use of civil commitment will restore public order,” the order states.

According to the administration, 274,224 people were living on the streets on a single night during the final year of the previous administration, the highest number ever recorded. The order asserts that most of them suffer from addiction or mental illness.

Key provisions of the directive include:

  • Encouraging federal legal challenges to judicial precedents and consent decrees that restrict involuntary commitment policies
  • Directing grant preferences to states and cities that enforce laws against urban camping, loitering, drug use, and squatting
  • Requiring federal housing programs to disqualify recipients operating “safe consumption sites” or distributing drug paraphernalia
  • Expanding efforts to assess arrested homeless individuals for sexual dangerousness under federal civil commitment statutes
  • Instructing federal agencies to support the expansion of drug and mental health courts, rather than housing-first initiatives
  • Allowing federal housing programs to segregate housing by sex and exclude sex offenders from facilities housing children

The order also mandates the collection and possible sharing of health data from individuals receiving federal homelessness assistance with law enforcement, subject to legal limitations.

Federal funds will be directed away from harm-reduction programs and toward treatment-focused models. The order calls for increased regulation of federal grantees, including the possibility of freezing assistance to programs found in violation of federal drug laws.

Trump’s executive order marks a significant federal shift away from “housing first” approaches, emphasizing coercive treatment and law enforcement as central tools in combating homelessness.

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NEW YORK — A combination of high heat, poor air quality, and the threat of severe thunderstorms is bearing down on New York City this weekend, prompting multiple advisories from state and federal agencies.

A heat advisory issued by the National Weather Service remains in effect for all five boroughs Friday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., with heat index values expected to reach up to 104 degrees. The alert covers Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island, where hot temperatures and high humidity could increase the risk of heat-related illnesses.

Alongside the heat, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has issued an air quality alert for New York City and surrounding counties from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday. The Air Quality Index is forecast to exceed 100 for ground-level ozone, signaling a potential health risk for sensitive individuals, including young children, the elderly, and those with asthma or heart disease.

“Air quality levels in outdoor air are predicted to be greater than an Air Quality Index value of 100 for the pollutant of ground level ozone,” the advisory states.

Friday’s forecast includes a 60% chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 5 p.m., as a front pushes through the region. Highs will reach near 93 degrees, with heat index values climbing past 100. Gusty southwest winds up to 20 mph may accompany the storms, with localized downpours and the possibility of flash flooding.

The rain threat continues into the evening, tapering off after 8 p.m., with overnight lows near 77.

Saturday brings relief from the extreme heat, with steady temperatures around 79 degrees under partly sunny skies. Northeast winds will shift southeast in the afternoon, with mostly cloudy conditions continuing into Saturday night.

Sunday’s outlook includes another round of possible thunderstorms, with a 50% chance of rain after 2 p.m. Temperatures will hover near 79 during the day and remain in the upper 70s overnight. Another stretch of hot and humid conditions is forecast to return early next week, with heat index values likely exceeding 95, and possibly topping 105 by Tuesday.

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TRENTON, N.J. — A code orange air quality alert and a heat advisory are in effect across portions of New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania Friday as high temperatures and elevated pollution levels raise health concerns for sensitive groups.

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection issued the air quality alert for Ocean County and southeastern Burlington County. The alert signals that ozone levels may reach unhealthy concentrations for vulnerable populations, including children, the elderly, and individuals with respiratory or heart conditions.

“A code orange air quality alert means that air pollution concentrations within the region may become unhealthy for sensitive groups,” the agency stated.

In addition to the air quality warning, the National Weather Service has maintained a heat advisory for a broad region spanning central and southern New Jersey and parts of eastern Pennsylvania, including areas such as Allentown, Bethlehem, Reading, and Morristown.

The advisory runs from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and warns of heat index values climbing as high as 105 degrees due to a combination of temperatures near 96 and high humidity. Forecasters caution that the intense heat may cause heat-related illnesses if precautions are not taken.

Scattered showers and thunderstorms are possible in the late afternoon and evening, with a 30% chance of precipitation during the day and up to 40% tonight. Conditions are expected to ease slightly over the weekend, with highs in the low to mid-80s and intermittent rain chances through Sunday.

The New Jersey DEP is advising residents to limit strenuous outdoor activity and seek air-conditioned spaces during peak pollution hours.

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MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NJ — Four individuals have been charged in connection with a June 29 crash on the Garden State Parkway that left one man dead and another seriously injured, authorities announced Thursday.

According to Middlesex County Prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone and New Jersey State Police Colonel Patrick J. Callahan, the crash occurred around 7:04 p.m. at mile marker 130 southbound. Investigators determined the crash resulted from two vehicles racing at high speeds.

Alvi Limani, 20, of Staten Island, was operating a BMW X3 when it struck two vehicles and overturned multiple times, ejecting two passengers — Albion Hysenaj, 20, who later died at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, and a 21-year-old male who sustained serious injuries. A third passenger, Emily Harrington, 19, remained in the vehicle.

Authorities say Limani and Harrington fled the scene on foot. Limani later attempted to leave the country with his mother, Vilma Vneshta, 42. Both were apprehended near Miami on July 17 and are pending extradition to New Jersey.

Limani faces multiple charges, including first-degree aggravated manslaughter, vehicular homicide, and knowingly leaving the scene of a fatal crash. Harrington is charged with hindering, obstruction, and conspiracy to endanger another. Vneshta is charged with hindering. Jeter Ogando, 23, of Perth Amboy, the driver of the second vehicle involved in the alleged street race — a BMW M5 — has also been charged with vehicular homicide, endangering another, and assault by auto.

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MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NJ — Authorities have charged ten individuals in connection with a widespread Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) card skimming operation that targeted victims across five New Jersey counties as well as locations in New York and Pennsylvania, officials announced.

Middlesex County Prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone and Highland Park Police Chief Richard Abrams said the group began installing skimming devices at business points of sale in February 2025 to steal personal account information from EBT cardholders. The stolen data was then used to clone debit cards, which the suspects used to make large purchases of baby formula and energy drinks.

The suspects — identified as Maru Dumitru, Stefan Lautaru, Boby-Stefan Degeratu, Gabriela Ilie, Claudiu Padeanu, Demetria Costache, Mensi Dumitru, Albert Enciu, Florin Badea, and Gheorghe Miclescu — face second- and third-degree charges including trafficking in personal identifying information, theft, and financial facilitation of criminal activity.

Search warrants executed by the Highland Park Police Department and the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office uncovered more than 100 cloned EBT cards labeled with PINs and balances, along with skimming and encoding devices and stolen merchandise. Prosecutors estimate the financial loss in New Jersey alone exceeds $25,000.

Following a pretrial hearing on July 10, four defendants — Dumitru, Lautaru, Miclescu, and Degeratu — were ordered held at the County Correctional Center pending trial.

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WALL TOWNSHIP, NJ — A Wall Township man has pleaded guilty in federal court to one count of armed bank robbery for a heist that occurred in October 2024, authorities announced.

Jeffrey L. Kniffin, 51, admitted on July 22 to entering a local bank on October 23, 2024, with a loaded handgun and stealing more than $27,000 in cash. He was apprehended minutes later in the driveway of his residence, still in possession of the weapon and a substantial amount of the stolen money.

Wall Township Police responded to the robbery call and detained Kniffin based on descriptions provided by witnesses. A subsequent investigation by Wall Township detectives, the FBI Jersey Shore Safe Streets Task Force, and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office led to additional charges, including first-degree robbery, second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, and fourth-degree possession of prohibited ammunition.

The investigation included search warrants, interviews, and review of surveillance footage, police said.

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BRONX, NY — Police are searching for two individuals who broke into a commercial establishment on Jerome Avenue and stole cash and merchandise in the early hours of July 10.

According to the NYPD, the suspects entered the business at 3000 Jerome Avenue at approximately 4:06 a.m. through an unlocked front door. Once inside, they took store merchandise, and one suspect used scissors to force open the cash register, removing approximately $142.

The individuals fled on foot, heading northbound on Bedford Park Boulevard. No injuries were reported.

One of the suspects is described as a male with a medium complexion, last seen wearing a black hat, white t-shirt, red pants, and white sneakers.

Two indn foot.

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PHILADELPHIA, PA — A man and woman were shot Thursday evening in the 25th District near the 4700 block of North 5th Street, prompting an active investigation by the Philadelphia Police Department’s Shooting Investigation Group.

The double shooting occurred around 8:06 p.m. on the highway. Officers transported both victims to Albert Einstein Medical Center. The male victim is listed in critical condition, while the female victim is in stable condition.

No arrests have been made and no motive has been identified at this time. Authorities say the investigation is ongoing.

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QUEENS, NY — Police are searching for a man who exposed himself to an 18-year-old woman aboard a northbound F train at the Kew Gardens–Union Turnpike station on Thursday morning.

The incident occurred around 11:45 a.m. on July 24. According to the NYPD, the unidentified man approached the victim, made a verbal statement, and then exposed himself. The woman exited the train, and the suspect remained onboard, continuing northbound to an unknown destination.

No injuries were reported.

The suspect is described as a male with a dark complexion and medium build, approximately 5’7″ tall and weighing between 170 and 180 pounds. He was last seen wearing a red baseball cap, a white Ed Hardy multicolored shirt, dark green pants, and white and yellow sneakers.

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TRENTON, NJ — A Vineland gun retailer has been ordered to immediately comply with New Jersey’s Firearms Industry Public Safety Law after a state judge ruled the store made unlawful sales of AR-15 ammunition and other gun-related products without verifying buyers’ legal eligibility.

Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin announced Thursday that the Superior Court of New Jersey granted summary judgment against Butch’s Gun World following a civil lawsuit filed by the Statewide Affirmative Firearms Enforcement Office (SAFE). The court found the store sold over 1,000 rounds of AR-15 ammunition to undercover investigators for cash, without conducting any verification of the buyers’ legal ability to possess firearms.

The Firearms Industry Public Safety Law, enacted in July 2022, requires gun sellers to have safeguards in place to prevent sales to individuals prohibited under state or federal law from possessing firearms. According to the court’s ruling, Butch’s Gun World had not “established ANY controls” over such transactions.

Under the injunction, the store must now verify that all individual buyers hold a valid New Jersey firearms card or permit before completing any sale of gun-related products. The order also mandates staff training, sale record-keeping, and policy postings.

Attorney General Platkin stated, “This gun store was selling the same kind of ammunition used in mass shootings without taking any steps to determine if the buyers were even lawfully permitted to possess a firearm.”

SAFE Director Ravi Ramanathan added that the case highlights the necessity of enforcing accountability within the firearms industry.

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TRENTON, NJ — Senate Republican Budget Officer Declan O’Scanlon criticized Trenton Democrats on Thursday for allocating over $1 billion to what he described as pork spending over the past two years while the State Health Benefits Program (SHBP) faces escalating financial instability.

“For years, we’ve warned that the SHBP was heading for collapse,” O’Scanlon said, citing unsustainable premium hikes, declining enrollment, and a lack of reform. He accused Democrats of prioritizing projects such as “tiki bars, skating rinks, lacrosse clubs, dominoes clubs, sports stadiums, and artificial turf rugby and cricket fields” instead of addressing the mounting crisis.

O’Scanlon also faulted the Treasury Department and Democratic leadership for rejecting Republican proposals aimed at cost savings and reform, stating that GOP members of the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee had repeatedly requested hearings and transparency but were ignored.

“The very same people who neglected the problem are scrambling to cover their tracks,” O’Scanlon said.

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KIRKWOOD, NY — New York State Police in Binghamton are asking for the public’s assistance in identifying two individuals connected to a burglary that occurred on May 27, 2025, on Colesville Road in the town of Kirkwood.

The suspects were last seen operating a 2010 Honda Civic with Pennsylvania license plate MNM7338. Authorities advise not to approach the individuals, as they may be in possession of long guns.

Anyone with information is asked to contact State Police at (607) 561-7400 and reference case number NY2500454238.

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NEW CASTLE, DE — Delaware State Police are investigating a robbery that occurred Tuesday afternoon near William Penn High School involving a 15-year-old victim and two unidentified teenage suspects.

The incident took place around 3:00 p.m. on July 22 near East Basin Road. According to investigators, the victim met with the two suspects to trade sneakers. During the exchange, one suspect asked to inspect the shoes, then assaulted the victim, knocked him to the ground, and took the bag containing the sneakers.

Both suspects fled the scene on foot toward the high school. The victim was not injured. No surveillance footage is currently available.

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NEWARK, NJ — Newark authorities are asking for the public’s assistance in identifying a suspect who robbed a car wash attendant at gunpoint earlier this month.

According to Public Safety Director Emanuel Miranda, Sr., the incident occurred around 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 6, at the Zap Lube Car Wash located in the 400 block of McCarter Highway. The suspect approached an employee, displayed a firearm, and stole $500 in cash belonging to the business before fleeing the scene.

Anyone with information is urged to contact the Newark Police Division’s 24-hour Crime Stopper tip line at 1-877-NWK-TIPS. Tips may remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward.

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