Charleston, South Carolina — United States Attorney Peter M. McCoy, Jr., announced today that Frank Smail, Jr., 49, of Round O, and Mike Pellegrini, 58, of North Charleston, were charged in a multi-count federal indictment alleging conspiracy to steal personal protective equipment (PPE) from the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) in Charleston. Smail was also charged with PPE theft, obstruction of justice, and lying to federal agents. According to the indictment, both Smail and Pellegrini worked for FLETC. The case was brought as part of the District of South Carolina’s Hoarding and Price Gouging (HPG) Task Force, and led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

“It is tragic that, at a time when PPE is most needed and in short supply, someone would steal this vital equipment from those who train our front-line federal law enforcement officers,” said U.S. Attorney McCoy. “This office will always stand up and protect our law enforcement partners. I appreciate the hard work of the FBI and our HPG Task Force, which worked tirelessly to investigate this case.”

“These charges reflect an alleged betrayal of colleagues and fellow citizens for selfish gain,” said Jody Norris, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in Columbia.  “The FBI and our partners within the HPG Task Force will not rest in our efforts to identify and hold accountable all those who seek to use this global pandemic to commit criminal acts.”

“I thank U.S. Attorney McCoy for his diligence in bringing the charges forward.  I am extremely disappointed in the allegations that individuals who are part of the FLETC community may have been involved in the theft of any item,” said FLETC Director Thomas J. Walters.  “I am grateful that we discovered the items missing and that the FBI’s Task Force worked with FLETC’s Office of Professional Responsibility in the investigation.”

According to the indictment, FLETC – which provides career-long training to law enforcement professionals in more than 90 Federal agencies – had a student and instructor test positive for COVID-19 on March 20, 2020. Just three weeks later, the indictment alleges that Smail stole a large amount of FLETC’s PPE supply after he and Pellegrini developed a plan to do so. According to the indictment, the large number of boxes stolen would have required a vehicle to transport and numerous trips to load the boxes. The indictment further alleges that Smail lied to Federal investigators and obstructed the Federal investigation into the PPE theft.

Pellegrini and Smail face up to five years for the conspiracy charge, and Smail faces up to 10 years for the PPE theft charge, up to 20 years for the obstruction charge, and up to five years for the charge of lying to Federal investigators.

This case is being investigated by the FBI and FLETC’s Office of Professional Responsibility as part of the District of South Carolina’s HPG Task Force. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Johanna Valenzuela and Derek A. Shoemake.

U.S. Attorney General William P. Barr created the COVID-19 Hoarding and Price Gouging Task Force to investigate and prosecute illegal activity involving protective personal equipment.  The Secretary of Health and Human Services issued a notice designating categories of health and medical supplies that must not be hoarded or sold for exorbitant prices.

Anyone wishing to report COVID-19 fraud, hoarding, or price-gouging can do so by contacting the National Center for Disaster Fraud’s National Hotline via phone: (866) 720-5721, or e-mail: [email protected].

U.S. Attorney McCoy stated that all charges in this case are merely allegations at this stage and that the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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Tampa, Florida – Wilmer Rosales, a/k/a “DoubleU,” (22, Plant City) has  pleaded guilty to conspiring to traffic in controlled substances; conspiring to commit robbery; committing robbery; using a firearm and causing the first degree murder of Grant Urquhart in furtherance of the drug conspiracy; and possessing a firearm and ammunition as a convicted felon. Rosales faces up to life in federal prison. A sentencing date has not yet been set. Rosales’s co-defendant, Joel Sierra, a/k/a “Jojo,” (25, Plant City) is scheduled to plead guilty on November 12, 2020.

According to court documents, Rosales and Sierra lured Urquhart to Springhead Park, adjacent to an elementary school, in Plant City. Rosales and Sierra claimed they wanted to purchase marijuana from Urquhart, but they in fact planned to rob him. Rosales and other co-conspirators waited in nearby vehicles, armed—Rosales with a 7.62 mm rifle—while Sierra got into Urquhart’s vehicle for the robbery. Sierra robbed Urquhart of marijuana and money and then fled. When Urquhart chased Sierra, Rosales drove by and repeatedly fired the weapon at Urquhart, hitting him multiple times. Rosales and the other co-conspirators then left the scene. Rosales returned to the scene shortly after the shooting and again fired at Urquhart, who was lying on the ground while others were attempting to help him. Urquhart died from his gunshot wounds.

Prior to the murder, Rosales was previously convicted of possessing methamphetamine and possessing 20 grams or more of marijuana. As a convicted felon, he is prohibited from possessing a firearm or ammunition under federal law.

This case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Natalie Hirt Adams.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program that has been successful in bringing together all levels of law enforcement to reduce violent crime and make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. In the Middle District of Florida, U.S. Attorney Maria Chapa Lopez coordinates PSN efforts in cooperation with various federal, state, and local law enforcement officials.

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BISMARCK, ND – United States Attorney Drew Wrigley announced that a federal grand jury has indicted Paige Howling Wolf, age 26, Parshall, ND, for Involuntary Manslaughter in Indian Country; Child Neglect in Indian Country; and three counts of Child Abuse in Indian Country. The Indictment was unsealed today, alleging that Paige Howling Wolf had custody of five young children and lived at a residence in Parshall, North Dakota, located on the Fort Berthold Reservation. On June 24, 2020, law enforcement and medical personnel responded to an emergency call of an unresponsive infant at the Parshall residence. One of the children, a nine-month-old infant, was found deceased. An autopsy of the deceased infant concluded that the child had died from chronic starvation. The remaining children were removed from Paige Howling Wolf’s custody and medical examinations of three of the children in the residence revealed they had methamphetamine in their system.

Grand jury Indictments are allegations and are not evidence of guilt. The defendant is presumed innocent unless and until he is proven guilt beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.

This case is being investigated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), and the case is being prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s office, with Assistant United States Attorney Eric Lundberg assigned to the case.

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Saddlebrook, N.J. – An IRS supervisory revenue agent was arrested today on charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced.

Michael Shelli, 41, of Albany, New York, was arrested at his home by agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). He is charged by complaint with one count of conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine and appeared by videoconference today before U.S. Magistrate Judge James B. Clark III and was released on $100,000 unsecured bond.

According to the complaint:

Since March 2020, officials of the DEA have been investigating a drug trafficking organization (DTO) operating in New Jersey and elsewhere. In April 2020, law enforcement identified a residence in Saddle Brook, New Jersey, as a location from which members of the DTO were dealing cocaine.  The investigation revealed that Shelli had a courier pick up cocaine from the residence and deliver it to his residence in Albany. Shelli would then repackage the cocaine for sale in the area.

The conspiracy to distribute cocaine charge is punishable by a maximum penalty of life in prison and a fine of up to $10 million.

U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents of the DEA-New York Division and DEA-Albany District Office, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Raymond Donovan; the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York, under the direction of Acting U.S. Attorney Antoinette T. Bacon; the office of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, under the direction of William Kalb; the New York State Police, under the direction of Superintendent Keith M. Corlett; officers of Troop K, Danbury, Connecticut, Police Department, under the direction of Chief Patrick Ridenhour; officers of the Hasbrouck Heights Police Department, under the direction of Chief Michael J. Colaneri; and officers of the Saddle Brook Police Department, under the direction of Chief Robert Kugler, with the investigation leading to the charges.

The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Naazneen Khan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Organized Crimes and Gangs Unit in Newark.

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Baltimore, Maryland – A federal criminal complaint has been filed today charging James Dale Reed, age 42, of Frederick, Maryland, on the federal charge of threats against a major candidate for President or Vice President—specifically, former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris.  Reed is currently in state custody and a federal warrant has been lodged as a detainer to ensure his appearance in U.S. District Court at a future date.

The federal charge was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur and Special Agent in Charge Bo Keane of the United States Secret Service – Baltimore Field Office.

United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur stated, “We take these types of threats extremely seriously.  Such threats to commit violence are illegal and have no place in our democracy, and we will hold accountable those who make them.  We are grateful for the assistance of the City of Frederick Police Department and to citizens who provided tips that ultimately led to Mr. Reed’s arrest and these federal charges.”

According to the affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint, on October 4, 2020, a letter threatening candidates for President and Vice President—specifically, former Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris—was left on the doorstep of a resident in Frederick in the early hours of the morning.  The likeness of the subject delivering the letter was captured by a door camera.  The resident did not know the subject but had several signs in the yard supporting the candidates threatened in the letter.  The letter, which is included in full in the attached Complaint, contains the following passage:

“This is a warning to anyone reading this letter if you are a Biden/Harris supporter you will be targeted.  We have a list of homes and addresses by your election signs.  We are the ones with those scary guns, We are the ones your children have nightmares about…When We capture Grandpa Biden We will all severely beat him to the point of death as for Mrs. Harris she will be bent over and Anally raped by my rifle barrel. Then for the Grand end the [sic] both will be executed on National Television.”

“The right to vote and peacefully support the candidate of your choice are bedrocks of our democracy,” said U.S. Attorney Hur.  “Conduct like this that threatens major candidates and fellow citizens only undermines our democracy and the principles upon which America was founded.  We will not tolerate threatening conduct that seeks to intimidate, harass or dissuade Americans from exercising their right to vote.”

Investigators worked to identify the subject in the door camera video and after receiving a citizen tip, focused on Reed.  An individual familiar with Reed viewed the door camera likeness and confirmed that person was Reed.  On October 13, 2020, Reed was interviewed at his residence and denied leaving a threatening letter or being the individual in the door camera video that was shown to him.  Two days later, Reed admitted writing and delivering the letter and was arrested.

If convicted, Reed faces a maximum sentence of five years in federal prison.

A criminal complaint is not a finding of guilt.  An individual charged by criminal complaint is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty at some later criminal proceedings.

United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the U.S. Secret Service for its work in the investigation and thanked the Frederick Police Department for its assistance.  Mr. Hur thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys James G. Warwick and Cassie Mathias, who are prosecuting the case.

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MAHWAH, NJ — U.S. Congressman Josh Gottheimer (NJ-5) stood with the Building & Construction Trades of Bergen County and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 164 to sound the alarm on how a new financial transaction tax being considered by the New Jersey State Legislature will force the New York Stock Exchange back-end facility and other financial data processing centers throughout New Jersey to move out of the state, cost the Fifth District hundreds of jobs, and cause a multi-million dollar loss in local tax revenue.

“I’m here today for one simple reason: this proposed financial transaction tax will cost the Fifth District at least two hundred good paying jobs, including the hardworking men and women of labor, it will force a key sector out of our state, and it will cost our local community significant revenue, two million dollars a year in property taxes, at a time when we certainly can’t afford it,” said Congressman Josh Gottheimer (NJ-5). “As soon as the state imposes this new tax, the back-end of the stock exchange here in Mahwah, and all the banks that have a presence here, will move, in unison, to a new location out-of-state. This isn’t a guess. It’s not conjecture. The New York Stock Exchange has told us, in no uncertain terms, that if we are the only state that decides to tax financial transactions, they’ll have no choice but — for competitive reasons — to pack up this data center behind us, and all the jobs, and move to their existing center in Chicago. That is something none of us can stand for.”

New Jersey is considering a financial transaction tax, which would impose a tax on firms that process large quantities of stock trades and financial transactions through all the electronic infrastructure located throughout New Jersey.

According to the IBEW, 25% of their North Jersey locals work just on data centers alone. The New Jersey State Association of Pipe Trades said recently that this proposed tax would cost many union members their livelihoods.

More than a billion financial trades and transactions occur every day through the New York Stock Exchange’s electronic trading systems in their Mahwah data center. The New York Stock Exchange told New Jersey state lawmakers earlier this week that they are prepared to move operations out-of-state should a new tax be imposed on electronic trades via data servers.

Because of improvements in technology and connectivity, financial firms no longer need to be in close proximity to New York City, as they can place data centers nearly anywhere.

In late September, the New York Stock Exchange tested a transition out of New Jersey, moving their transactions to a secondary data center located in Chicago — meaning that all the jobs and revenue that these centers bring in can easily leave if this proposed tax is imposed.

If the New York Stock Exchange data center in Mahwah closed its doors, the Township of Mahwah would lose $2 million in annual property tax revenue, and local utility company Orange & Rockland would lose millions of dollars in revenue.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, every dollar spent on financial securities services in New Jersey contributes $1.22 to New Jersey’s economy. The securities sector employs more than 38,000 workers throughout New Jersey. In total, there are nearly 200,000 New Jersey workers employed by the financial services and insurance sectors.

This industry also indirectly supports 55,000 New Jersey workers in other industries, including teachers, restaurant workers, and workers in shopping centers, who all contribute nearly $1.4 billion in New Jersey state and local taxes every year.

In 2012, France imposed a new tax on French stock trading for large French companies and a new tax on high frequency trading. After this was all implemented, one-third of the trading for French public companies moved to London and other European markets, and France did not raise even half the revenue they had projected in 2012 or 2013.

Gottheimer was joined today by Bergen County Commissioner and IBEW 164 President Tom Sullivan, IBEW 164 Business Manager/Financial Manager Dan Gumble, and Building & Construction Trades of Bergen County President Rick Sabato.

Watch today’s announcement HERE.

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TRENTON, NJ – Governor Phil Murphy has announced today that he is going into quarantine after coming into close proximity of another individual who had tested positive for COVID-19. Murphy made the revelation during an event held in Camden.  He has been holding his daily press briefings this week and did not say when or where he came into contact with the individual or who the individual is.  “I will now, unfortunately, have to take myself off the field…I can’t ask President Trump not to come to Bedminster and do a fundraiser and have me sit here,” the Governor said.  He said he was last tested on Monday and the result of that test was negative.

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Toms River, NJ – Crime is a daily occurrence in any society, even in the relative safety and remoteness of the Jersey Shore.  Each day police blotters are filled with minor crimes, the rapidly increasing violent crime, and the also growing rate of gun violence and murder.   There are some crimes that we’ll never forget, either because of their deviousness, heinousness, or public impact.  Here are 5 crimes committed at the Jersey Shore that we’ll probably never forget.

Robert Marshall

Robert Marshall, a Toms River resident, and his wife Maria were heading home from a night in Atlantic City at Harrah’s casino when Marshall decided to make a pit stop to check what he claimed to police officers was a vibration in one of his car tires.  The couple pulled into the Oyster Creek service area in Lacey Township.  What happened next turned Ocean County upside down.  Marshall claimed he was knocked unconscious and woke not only to find his $15,000 winnings from Atlantic City gone, but his wife was shot dead in the front seat of his car with two gunshot wounds.  It turned out Marshall hired two gunmen to kill his wife so he could collect a $1.5 million insurance policy.  Marshall hired two Louisana men to execute his wife.  Marshall and his wife were on the outs.  He thought she was getting ready to file for divorce because he was dating Saraan Kraushaar, the vice principal at Pinelands Regional High School.  The event was eventually turned into a book and 1990 miniseries called Blind Faith.  Marshall was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and sentenced to death by lethal injection.  New Jersey Governor Corzine abolished the death penalty in 2007 and Marshall’s sentence became a life sentence.  He died in South Woods State Prison on February 21, 2015.

Jackson’s Mafia Burial Ground

If you drive down Cook Road in Jackson, you’ll see an unassuming faded yellow farmhouse surrounded by newer homes and a large new residential development.  While today, it’s a quiet neighborhood street, residents in the neighborhood still wonder what lies beneath the ground.  That’s because, in 1967, the FBI led then by J. Edgar Hoover descended upon the Cook farm and uncovered a mafia burial ground.  The body of mafioso Angelo Sonnessa was found buried beneath a chicken coup on the farm.  Another body was found in an oil drum filled with hydrochloric acid.  Realizing the farm is where New York and North Jersey mobsters sent their bodies, the FBI and local officials began excavating the farm but never found any other bodies.   In 1964, the body of a man who was set to testify against the mafia, Anthony Scanella was found in the woods in Jackson.  The house was recently on the real estate market after the passing of Joseph Celso who owned the farm from that time until he died in 2013.

Michael Ritacco

Michael Ritacco’s name will always be synonymous with political corruption in Toms River.  Ritacco was a well-liked and powerful superintendent of the Toms River Regional Schoool District.  Ritacco, in perception, had brought the Toms River School District into a Golden Age by turning the district into a profitable business.  The district built an arena that carried his name and held large concerts with top entertainment acts, a restaurant in the district administrative offices, and the purchase of a three-story office building which it leases out to private commercial tenants.   It turns out Ritacco was also taking bribes.  The FBI raided Ritacco’s home and was convicted later of taking $2,000,000 in bribes and made to pay $4.3 million in restitution to the district. Ritacco has since been released from federal prison.

Liam McAtasney, Sarah Stern murderer

In December of 2016, teenager Sarah Stern went missing.  Her car was found abandoned on a bridge and at the time, many had thought she jumped off and committed suicide in the Shark River. It turned out, she didn’t commit suicide but was brutally murdered by her former classmate Liam McAtasney. McAtasney told police he and Sarah were friends and that she was troubled and wanted to “get away”.  It turned out, it was he who strangled the teenager and stole a safe from her home.  He later dumped her body into the river off of the bridge.  For murdering his childhood friend, McAtasney was convicted and received a sentence of life in prison without parole.

Shawn Milne, Barbara Renee Harrison

It was November of 1985 and I was in Mr. Jaeger’s art class at Toms River Intermediate East when we realized Barbara Renee Harrison was never coming back to class.  Harrison sat across the large art table from me that year and we were all in shock to learn she had been murdered and her body dumped in Goose Creek along Fischer Boulevard. Her murdered, Shawn Milne received a 30-year prison sentence for the murder.  During the trial, Milne said he was the victim, attacked by a “worldly young girl”.  The jury decided Milne sexually assaulted Harrison and killed her to cover up his crime. Milne was released from prison in 2015 after serving his full 30-year sentence.   In July of 2016, Milne was arrested and charged by the Toms River Police Department for failing to register as a sex offender, required by law in New Jersey. According to the New Jersey Sex Offender registry, Milne now lives in an apartment building in North Arlington.

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TOMS RIVER, NJ – Ocean County Freeholder Virginia E. Haines received a $1,739.28 travel expense reimbursement by the Ocean County Republican Finance Committee on September 8, 2020, according to a report filed with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission.  The report filed and signed by Treasurer Jerry W. Conaty was the first time the organization has reimbursed an elected political party official not running for office in the current year.

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For the first time in over 50 years, America will be without Charlie Brown’s holiday specials on broadcast television this holiday season.  A Charlie Brown Christmas, It’s the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown, Charlie Brown and A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving all will not be aired this year.

Instead, the four American tradition shows will be streamed on the AppleTV+ streaming media platform.

Apple released the following press release:

Toronto, ON; New York, NY – October 19, 2020 – Apple TV+ has teamed with WildBrain, along with Peanuts Worldwide and Lee Mendelson Film Productions, to become the home for all things Peanuts, bringing together new original series and specials, along with iconic, beloved specials to fans around the world, all in one place.

New animated Peanuts originals coming to Apple TV+ include a second season of the Daytime Emmy-nominated Snoopy in Space, and a slate of brand-new specials that will find the Peanuts gang marking Mother’s Day, Earth Day, New Year’s Eve and Back to School – all to be produced by WildBrain’s animation studio. The new series and specials join the previously announced The Snoopy Show, premiering February 5, 2021; a brand-new Peanuts 70th anniversary documentary film from Imagine Documentaries and WildBrain, set to premiere next year; and the Daytime Emmy Award-winning Peanuts in Space: Secrets of Apollo 10.

The original programs and new specials will also soon stream globally alongside iconic Peanuts specials, including A Charlie Brown ChristmasCharlie Brown Thanksgiving and It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. The Halloween special will begin streaming globally on Apple TV+ on October 19, and will be available for free from October 30 until November 1 as a special treat on Apple TV+.

Just in time for US Thanksgiving, Apple TV+ will launch A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving on November 18, and the special will be available for free from November 25 until November 27.

The Peanuts gang will also deck the halls with the premiere of A Charlie Brown Christmas, streaming exclusively on Apple TV+ on December 4. The holiday special will be available to customers for free from December 11 until December 13.

Offering multi-generational viewing for children 4-11 and their caregivers, Apple TV+ is home to original series from some of today’s most trusted franchises in kids and family programming, including the Daytime Emmy Award-winning Ghostwriter and Helpsters from Sesame Workshop; the soon to premiere reboot of the beloved, classic series Fraggle Rock from The Jim Henson Company; newly imagined original series based on the stories and illustrations of Maurice Sendak; and the upcoming series Doug Unplugs from DreamWorks Animation, and Stillwater from Gaumont and Scholastic.

For more information about Apple TV+, visit apple.com/tvpr and offers.appletvapp.apple/ and see the full list of supported devices.

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NASA’s Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) spacecraft unfurled its robotic arm Tuesday, and in a first for the agency, briefly touched an asteroid to collect dust and pebbles from the surface for delivery to Earth in 2023.

by NASA

This well-preserved, ancient asteroid, known as Bennu, is currently more than 200 million miles (321 million kilometers) from Earth. Bennu offers scientists a window into the early solar system as it was first taking shape billions of years ago and flinging ingredients that could have helped seed life on Earth. If Tuesday’s sample collection event, known as “Touch-And-Go” (TAG), provided enough of a sample, mission teams will command the spacecraft to begin stowing the precious primordial cargo to begin its journey back to Earth in March 2021. Otherwise, they will prepare for another attempt in January.

“This amazing first for NASA demonstrates how an incredible team from across the country came together and persevered through incredible challenges to expand the boundaries of knowledge,” said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. “Our industry, academic, and international partners have made it possible to hold a piece of the most ancient solar system in our hands.”

At 1:50 p.m. EDT, OSIRIS-REx fired its thrusters to nudge itself out of orbit around Bennu. It extended the shoulder, then elbow, then wrist of its 11-foot (3.35-meter) sampling arm, known as the Touch-And-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM), and transited across Bennu while descending about a half-mile (805 meters) toward the surface. After a four-hour descent, at an altitude of approximately 410 feet (125 meters), the spacecraft executed the “Checkpoint” burn, the first of two maneuvers to allow it to precisely target the sample collection site, known as “Nightingale.”

Ten minutes later, the spacecraft fired its thrusters for the second “Matchpoint” burn to slow its descent and match the asteroid’s rotation at the time of contact. It then continued a treacherous, 11-minute coast past a boulder the size of a two-story building, nicknamed “Mount Doom,” to touch down in a clear spot in a crater on Bennu’s northern hemisphere. The size of a small parking lot, the site Nightingale site is one of the few relatively clear spots on this unexpectedly boulder-covered space rock.

“This was an incredible feat – and today we’ve advanced both science and engineering and our prospects for future missions to study these mysterious ancient storytellers of the solar system,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Washington. “A piece of primordial rock that has witnessed our solar system’s entire history may now be ready to come home for generations of scientific discovery, and we can’t wait to see what comes next.”

“After over a decade of planning, the team is overjoyed at the success of today’s sampling attempt,” said Dante Lauretta, OSIRIS-REx principal investigator at the University of Arizona in Tucson. “Even though we have some work ahead of us to determine the outcome of the event – the successful contact, the TAGSAM gas firing, and back-away from Bennu are major accomplishments for the team. I look forward to analyzing the data to determine the mass of sample collected.”

All spacecraft telemetry data indicates the TAG event executed as expected. However, it will take about a week for the OSIRIS-REx team to confirm how much sample the spacecraft collected.

Real-time data indicates the TAGSAM successfully contacted the surface and fired a burst of nitrogen gas. The gas should have stirred up dust and pebbles on Bennu’s surface, some of which should have been captured in the TAGSAM sample collection head. OSIRIS-REx engineers also confirmed that shortly after the spacecraft made contact with the surface, it fired its thrusters and safely backed away from Bennu.

“Today’s TAG maneuver was historic,” said Lori Glaze, Planetary Science Division director at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “The fact that we safely and successfully touched the surface of Bennu, in addition to all the other milestones this mission has already achieved, is a testament to the living spirit of exploration that continues to uncover the secrets of the solar system.”

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NEWARK, NJ –  The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office have been working overtime in 2020 to go after corrupt politicians across New Jersey. While an investigation of corruption in Ocean County continues by the agency’s Red Bank field office, the FBI charged a Newark public official with bribery today.

A member of the Newark Municipal Council and Board of Directors of the Newark Community Economic Development Corporation (NCEDC) was charged today with scheming to obtain bribes and kickbacks, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced.

Joseph A. McCallum Jr., 65, of Newark, is charged by complaint with one count of wire fraud for allegedly devising a scheme, using interstate wire communications, to defraud Newark and the NCEDC of the right to McCallum’s honest services. McCallum is scheduled to appear on a date that will be determined by the court.

Malik Frederick, 60, of Newark, a participant in the scheme, pleaded guilty today by videoconference before U.S. District Judge William J. Martini to Count 1 of a four-count information, charging conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud, and Count 3, charging him with subscribing to a false personal federal tax return for 2017 for intentionally not reporting over $100,000 in income.

According to documents filed in these cases and statements made in court:

As a member of the Newark city council, representing the West Ward, and of the NCEDC (now known as Invest Newark!), from 2017 through February 2020, McCallum schemed to receive concealed bribes and kickbacks from Frederick, funded by developers, contracting companies, and other businesses seeking contracts and approvals principally related to development, construction, and real estate projects and deals in Newark. These developers and others were solicited by Frederick to hire his consulting company for “access,” and were introduced to McCallum as the councilman behind the particular project or deal of interest to them. McCallum then received and planned to receive concealed bribes and kickbacks derived from the fees that Frederick obtained from those who retained his company.

In exchange, McCallum used his official positions to provide assistance to those who retained Frederick’s company. For those who refused or hesitated to pay, McCallum and Frederick intended to prevent them from obtaining contracts and work from the NCEDC and the City of Newark. McCallum and Frederick used interstate emails and phone calls to further this scheme and took significant steps to conceal these bribes and kickbacks.

The bribes and kickbacks received and sought by McCallum through Frederick included the following:

  • A $16,000 bribe funded by a payment from a contracting company;
  • a $25,000 bribe and kickback funded by a payment from a developer’s  company;
  • $500 in cash to cover travel expenses for an out-of-country trip and an attempt to receive part of a $50,000 payment from a second developer;
  • and an attempt to obtain payments from a seller of property in the West Ward and a developer who was seeking to buy and develop the property.

 

Frederick also sought to have a modular home company that was in negotiations with the NCEDC on a development project in Newark retain Frederick’s company and obtain a $40,000 payment from the company. Frederick intended to share the $40,000 payment with an NCEDC official (Co-Conspirator 2) who referred Frederick to the modular home company and expected a portion of whatever Frederick would be paid. After the modular home company refused to retain Frederick’s company, it did not receive a contract from the NCEDC.

The honest services wire fraud charge alleged in the criminal complaint against McCallum and the wire fraud conspiracy charged in Count 1 of the information to which Frederick pleaded guilty carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000, or twice the pecuniary gain to the defendant or loss to the victims, whichever is greater. The false tax return charge to which Frederick pleaded guilty carries a maximum potential penalty of three years in prison and a maximum $250,000 fine, or twice the pecuniary gain to the defendant or loss to the victim, whichever is greater. Sentencing for Frederick is scheduled for March 2, 2021.

U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents of the FBI’s Newark Field Office, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge in Newark George M. Crouch Jr. in Newark; special agents of IRS-Criminal Investigation, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Michael Montanez, and special agents of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Christina Scaringi, with the investigation leading to today’s charges against McCallum and guilty plea by Frederick.

The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jihee G. Suh, Jeffrey Manis, and Elaine K. Lou of the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s Special Prosecutions Division.

The charge and allegations contained in the complaint against McCallum are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty

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HOWELL TOWNSHIP, NJ – Just weeks before the upcoming election in Howell Township where a controversial plan to convert a tree stump recycling facility into a larger facility to accommodate construction waste, steel, concrete, and other building materials, township councilwoman Pamela Richmond said it’s not a big deal.  She also said those who oppose the dump are spreading “bullcrap and rumors”.

“It’s already here,” Richmond said in a video she published to YouTube.  “This is what the Democrats are trying to get you fooled about.”

Driving down Randolph Road passed the site of the proposed transfer station by powerful Republican party officials said, “Most people don’t know this, but all of this debris in this recycling center is already here. Most of you probably pass it and don’t know about it.”

“All of these mountains and mountains of dirt and mulch…is already here in Howell,” Richmond said.

Richmond said the Democrats are trying to mislead voters, but according to documents on file with the county, the new facility will expand materials taken into the dumpsite to include concrete, home improvement debris, commercial construction debris, expanding the business and therefore increasing the volume of traffic.

There’s no doubt about it, a political fix is in play in Howell, stopped only by Mayor Theresa Berger and residents who complained two years ago before the project was to be rubber-stamped by the Monmouth County Freeholders, the former township council and the Solid Waste Advisor Committee.

Now, Mayor Berger is calling for an investigation by the Attorney General’s office.

“We have serious concerns that the proposal will be approved without our consent and over our objection, in violation of the clear procedures required by state law. As the chief law enforcement officer in our State, we respectfully request that you take immediate action to stop any action or prospective approvals by the Freeholders,” the request to the Attorney General reads.

“I’m concerned that once the election is over if the Republicans win, the waste transfer station project will be put on the fast track,” Berger said. “We must do everything in our power to protect Howell and stop the dump.”

“They’re going to take this material and expand it to a different kind of debris,” Richmond admitted at the end of the video.  Richmond was the target of a mailer by Democrats earlier this month that rehashed her 2016 drunk driving incident.

 

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NEW YORK – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Enforcement Removal Operations (ERO) officers completed an immigration enforcement activity, which resulted in the arrest of 54 immigration violators throughout the New York City Metropolitan Area, and the neighboring counties of Nassau, Suffolk, Dutchess, Ulster and Westchester.

The nationwide, weeklong immigration enforcement activity, which concluded Oct. 9, focused on targeting and arresting individuals in sanctuary cities.

“ICE continues to protect communities by taking criminal aliens off the streets regardless of any locality’s cooperation policies – which is part of our congressionally mandated mission,” said ICE Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Director Tony H. Pham. “Officers and agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement are sworn federal law enforcement officers who enforce U.S. immigration laws created by Congress to keep this country safe.”

Individuals arrested in New York were citizens and nationals from the following countries: China, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Grenada, Guyana, Honduras, Ireland, Jamaica, Mexico, Moldova, Mozambique, Pakistan, Panama, Peru and St. Lucia.

The New York arrests included charges filed for assault, sexual assault against a child, lewd and lascivious acts upon a child, rape and criminal possession of a loaded firearm. Other charges include criminal possession of stolen property, driving while intoxicated, robbery and grand larceny.

“Let us not gloss over the fact that the vast majority of the individuals arrested during this operation have criminal histories. It’s frightening that New York City politicians created laws that force local law enforcement agencies to release dangerous criminals back into the community despite the seriousness of their crimes,” said Thomas R. Decker, ICE ERO New York field office director.

Of the more than 50 individuals ERO officers arrested, more than 30 were released from local law enforcement custody with active ICE detainers; eight had outstanding removal orders; eight were previously removed or deported; five were criminally prosecuted; two were active gang members, and one was a foreign fugitive. All but two of the individuals arrested had criminal histories in the U.S.

All individuals arrested during the immigration enforcement activity will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of their removal proceedings before an immigration judge.

ICE officially announced the results of the enforcement activity on Oct. 16, but one Manhattan resident’s arrest garnered considerable media coverage in New York prior to the announcement.

On Oct. 8, during an at-large arrest in Manhattan, ICE took custody of 48-year-old Fernando Santos-Martinez, an unlawfully present Mexican national who was removed from the U.S. on three separate occasions in 2003.

Despite a detainer lodged by ICE, the New York Police Department released Santos-Martinez from custody following his Sept. 11 arrest for assault, attempted assault, attempted gang assault, criminal possession of a weapon and harassment. His local charges are currently pending.

Following Santos-Martinez’s arrest, news organizations falsely reported claims of ICE officers misidentifying themselves as NYPD – an accusation that ICE leadership vehemently deny.

“NYPD should have been empowered to turn Santos-Martinez over to ICE officers in a controlled environment back in September,” said Decker. “His arrest was inevitable, but had local politicians and media organizations abstained from promoting false accusations, the confusion could have been avoided. ERO officers are brave and honest professionals. They work tirelessly to gather information and conduct investigations to remove dangerous criminals from our communities. Before denigrating ICE officers, I encourage city officials to consider the repercussions of their sanctuary city policies.”

In an Oct. 13 statement, Pham wrote that ERO officers use the term “police” to quickly identify themselves as law enforcement officers because it is a universally recognized symbol of law enforcement in most cultures. The statement goes on to explain that the use of the term is important because ICE officers often interact with individuals who are often not native English speakers.

Pham encouraged local officials to reconsider the policies which prohibit local law enforcement agencies from cooperating with ICE, suggesting that non-compliance with ICE detainers will likely lead to increased ICE enforcement activity.

“ICE has no choice but to conduct more at-large, targeted enforcement actions [to] achieve its congressionally mandated mission,” Pham wrote. “This means that the agency is likely to encounter other unlawfully present foreign nationals that wouldn’t have been encountered had we been allowed to take custody of a criminal target within the confines of a local jail.”
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ORANGE COUNTY, FL – A Florida deputy is out of a job and now facing child abuse charges after performing an exorcism on his child and arming another with a gun and a kevlar helmet, instructing the child to shoot anyone that came into his home.

Christopher Dougherty, 37, of the Orange County Sheriff’s Department was at home when a 911 call was made about a residential alarm going off at a home.  According to arrest records, Dougherty had performed an exorcism on one of his kids and responding officers found a second child in their bedroom ready to shoot anyone who entered. Doughtery was taken to a hospital under Florida’s Baker Act and was arrested upon his release.  Earlier that day, Dougherty lost his job at the department where he worked since 2006.

“While this deputy was terminated for a pattern of unsatisfactory performance, these are very serious criminal allegations,” Sheriff John Mina said, “As law enforcement officers, we are held to the highest standards of conduct whether on duty or off duty. But we are also concerned about the deputy’s mental health.”

 

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TRENTON, NJ – The New Jersey crazy train is continuing off the rails this week as Democrat Senator Richard “Dick” Cody’s absurd bill is gaining traction in the New Jersey Senate.  New Jersey Senate Bill S814 will make a failure to wear a face mask upon entry into a store with posted signage trespass offense during a period of public emergency declared by Governor in Executive Order 103 of 2020 a crime, punishable by jail.

Under Dick’s Law, during the public health emergency and state of emergency declared by the Governor in Executive Order 103 of 2020, a person commits a petty disorderly persons offense if, knowing that he is not licensed or privileged to do so, he enters or remains in a store or mercantile retail establishment as to which notice against trespass is given by signage posted that is visible and unobstructed which requires that any person entering the premises of a store or retail mercantile establishment must be wearing a mask and a person does not wear a mask.

This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire upon the expiration of the state of emergency declared by the Governor in Executive Order 103 of 2020.

“This bill provides that during the public health emergency and state of emergency declared by the Governor in Executive Order 103 of 2020, a person commits a petty disorderly person offense,” Codey said about “Dick’s Law” “If, knowing that he is not licensed or privileged to do so, he enters or remains in a store or mercantile retail establishment as to which notice against trespass is given by signage that is visible and unobstructed which requires that any person entering the premises of a store or retail mercantile establishment must be wearing a mask is posted and a person does not wear a mask.”

A petty disorderly persons offense is punishable by up to 30 days imprisonment, a fine of up to $500, or both.

A hearing on Dick’s Law is scheduled for October 22nd at 11 am in Trenton. In September, the bill made its way out of the Assembly committee on a second reading as it draws closer to the desk of Governor Phil Murphy to enact into law.

Photo by Matthew Ansley on Unsplash

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BATON ROUGE, LA – Attorney General Jeff Landry voiced his serious concerns to top education officials in Louisiana over the lack of due process for Ka’Mauri Harrison, a 9-year old fourth-grader who was suspended earlier this month after safely and responsibly handling a BB gun during a virtual learning session, and other students who have been denied appeals.

In a letter to the Louisiana Department of Education and the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, AG Landry notes that the law clearly grants parents and their child a right to appeal to the School Board and to seek judicial review of a decision by the Superintendent when the child has been recommended for expulsion. By systemically violating students’ constitutional rights, AG Landry declares, school systems’ eligibility for state and federal funds are jeopardized.

“Legal action can often be a lengthy process, but I am committed to seeing this through no matter how long it takes,” said AG Landry. “Today’s letter is just the next of many steps my office and I are taking to seek justice for Ka’Mauri and his family.”

“Ka’Mauri is a bright young man with a great family; and the fact that he was recommended for expulsion, received a suspension, and not given his right to appeal is appalling,” added AG Landry. “Ka’Mauri was not only deprived of educational instruction, he was also denied opportunity.”

“This Harrison family has basically been sent into a bureaucratic abyss for no reason and told there is no way out,” concluded AG Landry. “The ‘adults in the room’ failed Ka’Mauri when they unfairly punished him; I will not let them fail him again.”

Photo: WWLTV/YouTube

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BATON ROUGE, LA – A Lousiana judge who crossed the line many times with his young daughter’s friends has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.   According to court records Jeff Perilloux, had several creepy encounters with the young girls aged 14 through 17.

“The road was not easy to travel, but today we finally arrived to justice for the young victims. I am proud of the hard work by AAG Matt Derbes, AAG Brooke Harris, and AAG Barry Milligan to ensure Mr. Perilloux was brought to justice. Sex offenses against children are the most serious of crimes which cause permanent psychological harm. This trauma has been exacerbated by Mr. Perilloux’s continued refusal to admit and/or take responsibility for what he did to these young women, who were children when these crimes were committed. But I hope the sentence issued today will bring some comfort to the survivors and their families,” said Attorney General Jeff Landry.

The sentencing comes after, on September 12, a jury found Mr. Perilloux guilty as charged of three felony counts of indecent behavior with juveniles and Judge Dennis Waldron found Mr. Perilloux guilty of one count of misdemeanor sexual battery following a lengthy five day trail.

Unwilling to admit to the crimes he committed, the young girls were forced to take the witness stand in September to recount their encounters.

The judge admitted to applying vapor rub to the chest of one of the young girls, but denied her accusations of him touching her breasts in a sexual manner.  In another case, Perilloux said he was “just applying lotion” to a girl’s back.

“I pulled her t-shirt a little to put it on the top of her chest,” he told the jury, admitting he was wearing only underwear at the time of the incident. “I didn’t touch her breasts. Period.”

He was also accused of giving a 15-year-old girl an inappropriate massage but claimed he was just rubbing her neck.

Prosecutors wanted to send Perilloux to jail for 20 years, but he was only given 14.

“The defendant used his position as someone who the victims and the families viewed as loving and trustworthy in order to both facilitate and conceal these crimes. He violated this trust multiple times in order to arouse or gratify his own sexual desires,” the prosecution wrote in a memo to the judge. “The defendant continues to deny committing these crimes and has shown no remorse whatsoever for the crimes he committed and the trauma he subjected his young victims to.”

 

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Karma.  It’s a term used in politics a lot these days, but today, liberal Democrat Governor Gretchen Whitmer is upset after the state’s absurd catch and release policy contributed to the man who plotted her kidnapping to be freed on a $10,000 cash bail bond.

“We are definitely disappointed in the decision regarding Brian Higgins,” said Whitmer spokeswoman Kelly Rossman-McKinney. “We strongly support the decisions here in our own state which, to date, have kept all the Michigan defendants in jail since they were originally arrested.”

If Whitmer thinks things are bad now in her state as she complains about the $10,000 bail for suspect Brian Higgins, one of nine people charged in the plot, just wait until she sees what happens when her bail reform program is launched.

On April 17, 2019, Whitmer signed an executive order to improve the state’s jail and pretrial system.

“The fact is that we need to take a comprehensive look at the state of our criminal justice system because the status quo is not working for victims, the accused, and those convicted of crimes,” Whitmer said. “That’s why it’s so important to launch this bipartisan task force and ensure that the right people have a seat at the table to find real solutions to real problems in the criminal justice system.”

National sources show Michigan jail populations have nearly tripled in the last 35 years, growing regardless of whether crime was going up or down. With crime now at a 50-year low, hundreds of thousands are still admitted to Michigan jails every year, and people are staying in jail longer on average than before. Half of the people in Michigan’s local jails are awaiting trial and presumed innocent. Many individuals are in jail because they are too poor to afford bail, not because they are a flight risk or threat to public safety.

“I am excited to co-chair this process and build real reforms to make our communities safer and improve outcomes of the people going through our criminal justice system,” Lt. Governor Garlin Gilchrist said, who will serve as co-chair. “We need to take a new approach to the criminal justice system to reduce a person’s contact with the system, treat people with humanity throughout the process, and prepare people for life after the system.”

 

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TRENTON, NJ – Struggling and impacted small businesses across the state aren’t getting any lifelines by the administration of Governor Phil Murphy, but after granting early release to 2,800 state prison inmates, the state’s prison population is getting a second round of COVID-19 stimulus.   Governor Murphy today announced a new system of public health emergency credits that will shorten the prison terms of many of the state’s incarcerated prison inmates.

“Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, our administration has worked tirelessly to save as many lives as possible and to stem the spread of COVID-19,” said Governor Murphy. “Since March, the population in State correctional facilities has decreased by nearly 3,000 people (16%), including more than 1,200 people who were released under Executive Order 124. This dramatic reduction has allowed for critical social distancing as part of the fight against COVID-19.”

Murphy said the release of prisoners in the state’s penitentiary system has allowed jail wardens and prison guards to better social distance the inmate population.  With more convicted criminals now released from prison, maintaining six feet while in prison has been a much easier task, according to the Governor.  Murphy did not specify whether or not the volume of prison shankings has been affected as a result of the improved social distancing abilities in the state’s prison system.

“The State Parole Board recognizes Governor Murphy and the New Jersey State Legislature for their commitment in creating a safe, healthy, and sustainable parolee release program,” said New Jersey State Parole Board Chairman Samuel J. Plumeri, Jr. “This law takes into consideration those serving their sentences in our state prisons as well as those within the communities that they will return to.”

Democrat Senator Nellie Pou said, “People in the state’s custody have the same fundamental right to health and safety as everyone else in our society. Given that certain inmates are reasonably able to be released early, particularly those nearing the end of their sentences, this legislation not only gives them security but it will thin the population inside the prisons, more easily provide for social distancing, and keep everyone, including corrections officers, safer.”

“Our prison system has been severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Inmates have been afflicted at a particularly alarming rate due to the inability to quarantine or practice social distancing, creating a higher risk for individuals and the community at large upon their release,” said Assemblymembers Mukherji, Sumter, and Reynolds-Jackson in a joint statement. “Public health emergency credits will help expedite the release of certain inmates who are approaching the end of their sentences to reduce transmission to inmates and correctional facility staff. If we can enhance public health and safety by releasing eligible prisoners who are getting out anyway, we can effectively help reduce the spread of the virus in these facilities and reduce risk to the community upon their release.”

Under the bill, public health emergency credits would be awarded to any adult inmate or juvenile who is within 365 days of their scheduled release. Credits would accrue at the rate of 122 days (four months) for each month, or portion of each month, served during the declared emergency with a maximum of 244 days (eight months) of remission to be awarded for any declared emergency period.  Credits would not to be awarded to anyone who is serving a sentence for murder or aggravated sexual assault or who has been deemed a repetitive, compulsive sex offender.

 

 

 

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TRENTON –  Today, Governor Phil Murphy announced pretty much every state in America save a small handful are now on his 14-day mandatory travel quarantine list.  Today, Murphy added Pennsylvania, Delaware and Connecticut to the list virtually nobody is really paying much attention to anymore because New Jersey itself would be on that list if it was a different state.

Murphy advised individuals traveling to New Jersey from states or territories with significant community spread of COVID-19 to quarantine for a 14-day period from the time of last contact within the identified state or territory. The updated advisory includes the addition of Arizona and Maryland, bringing the total to 39 states and territories. The travel advisory applies to any person arriving from a state or territory with a positive test rate higher than 10 per 100,000 residents or a state with a 10 percent or higher positivity rate over a 7-day rolling average.

As of Tuesday, October 20, there are currently 39 states and territories that meet the criteria stated above: Alabama; Alaska; Arizona; Arkansas; Colorado; Florida; Georgia; Guam; Iowa; Idaho; Indiana; Illinois; Kansas; Kentucky; Louisiana; Maryland; Michigan; Minnesota; Missouri; Mississippi; Montana; North Carolina; North Dakota; Nebraska; New Mexico; Nevada; Ohio; Oklahoma; Puerto Rico; Rhode Island; South Carolina; South Dakota; Tennessee; Texas; Utah; Virginia; Wisconsin; West Virginia; and Wyoming.

Neighboring states Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and Delaware now meet the criteria for New Jersey’s travel advisory. Due to the interconnected nature of the region and mode of transport between New Jersey and the three states, a 14-day quarantine is not reasonable in all instances. Non-essential travel to and from these states, however, is highly discouraged at this time. New York and Connecticut are also discouraging non-essential travel to and from New Jersey, but are not mandating that travelers quarantine due to the interconnected nature of the region and economy.

“As cases continue to rise in our state, we must stay vigilant and take all the necessary precautions to mitigate the spread of COVID-19,” said Governor Murphy. “It remains our top priority to ensure the safety of New Jersey residents, and we ask individuals arriving from these 39 states to get tested for COVID-19 and self-quarantine for 14 days.”

Travelers and those residents who are returning from impacted states should self-quarantine at their home, hotel, or other temporary lodging. Individuals should leave the place of self-quarantine only to seek medical care/treatment or to obtain food and other essential items.

It is expected that individuals will follow the public health advisory to self-quarantine. The list of states will be updated on a rolling basis and is accessible here.

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TRENTON, NJ – The reality is, Governor Phil Murphy still doesn’t have a solid plan on how to provide relief for tens of thousands of small businesses still feeling the COVID-19 crunch from Trenton.  Indoor capacity limits on restaurants, gyms, salons and other businesses are still having negative financial impacts on small businesses that need more volume to survive the winter.   On Monday, Murphy said he’s going to just shake the trees and try solutions and he’s doing everything he can to make it happen, except for increasing cap limits.

“On the indoor dining and indoor gyms, we’re trying to do everything we can whether it’s literally cash on the barrel from coronavirus relief funds distributed through the EDA, extending the ABCs for another six months to allow them to serve liquor not on their premises. Whether it’s indoor or outdoor dining, we are trying to do everything we can,” Murphy said. “But I have to say the reason I said, so there’s a lot of things we’re trying to figure out whether it’s indoors or outdoors right now, and try to really shake the trees on what else we could be doing for the industry, particularly as the weather gets colder.”

The Governor added, the future looks sobering right now for those industries.

“The numbers of late are sobering. One concern I think that we are coming to, all of us who are trying to get this as right as we can is we also don’t want to send mixed messages in terms of what we need folks to do right now. I have to say I’m even more sobered today than I was on Thursday or at any point last week,” Murphy added.

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TRENTON, NJ – New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy on Monday said the increase of COVID-19 in New Jersey to levels which would put it on its own quarantine list if it was another state was sobering. Murphy said he and his staff are now mulling “what-if” scenarios as winter rolls into New Jersey and cases continue to climb. Options on the table include rolling back indoor capacity limits just days after he sent a mixed message that appeared he could be on the verge of raising capacity limits statewide.

“The limiting of capacity is on the list. I mean, we’ve said that before. We already have, on the indoor side, among the lowest limits around. Is that something that’s on the table? Yes. But again, the capacities that we believe right now are contributing to the bulk of the cases are those gatherings that are beyond our ability to regulate and/or properly enforce,” Murphy said. “I would be lying to you if I didn’t say, and I think the folks to my right who are the health experts and the guy to my left who helps enforce compliance, these numbers are sobering, I have to say. So we are wargaming a whole lot of potential steps that we can take, whether it’s indoor or outdoor or both dining to try to relieve some of this burden without adding to our already rising numbers.”

Murphy added he and his administration are trying to figure it all out as they go, but despite turning down a bill that could help restaurants and reversing course on increasing capacity limits, the devastated restaurant industry will, at some point get some state relief, which has been non-existent since the pandemic began eight months ago.

“Listen, we’re working, we’re wargaming, I was part of a pretty intense discussion today about steps we could take to help our restaurant industry, particularly as the weather gets colder,” he said, once again admitting that indoor dining is not contributing to the ‘new wave’ of the pandemic at all, according to data held closely by the state. “I have to say, we don’t have any evidence that indoor dining per se is contributing to this. But we also have to be pretty — and your question gets to this — we not only have to help our restaurants, but we’ve got to, I think, be consistent in the plea for responsibility among the citizenry. We don’t want to cross purposes on those.”

The Governor has used the term scalpel, instead of brute force for future handling of business and restaurant regulations. Since the pandemic began, Murphy has governed the crisis from a bully pulpit, leaving the state’s legislature and senate out of most pandemic planning operations.  Instead, Murphy’s tight inner circle has been the driving force behind the state’s response to COVID-19 since the outbreak began in March.  Murphy mentioned Ocean County and Lakewood couple be the first areas to undergo his impending “scalpel” plan if numbers don’t improve.

“On the scalpel steps, everything remains on the table. I would just say we talk to communities literally all the time,” he said. “Right now, I mean, the biggest concern we had over the past sort of two to three weeks, Judy, was Lakewood and some communities around Lakewood, but Ocean is still over 100 today. We take all of those cases seriously but there are almost 1,200 cases in the state today. Things are on the table but again, we’re looking at community spread right now in a lot of different places in the state. I will say it again, that’s going to be up to all of us individually to do the right things, particularly when you’re in a private setting that we can’t regulate and that we can’t reasonably enforce.”

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TRENTON, NJ – State Epidemiologist Dr. Christina Tan said on Monday that New Jersey is entering a “new wave” of the COVID-19 virus pandemic when pressed by reporters at Governor Phil Murphy’s daily state COVID-19 briefing.

“To the question about the first wave, second wave, I would be with the Governor and with the commissioner that whether or not we characterize this as part of a continuum of the first wave that we saw back in March and April versus this being the beginning of a new wave, so to speak, the fact is that we’ve got a lot of activity going on right now,” Dr. Tan said. “What’s most important is taking some actionable steps in terms of making sure that we maintain vigilance with the measures that we know that we need to take to keep these numbers down, as well as to continuously monitor what’s going on in the community if we can identify any other steps that we can take to prevent illness.”

Governor Phil Murphy said he doesn’t spend much time trying to put a name on what is happening or where New Jersey is in the virus timeline, but acknowledged, whatever it is that is happening now, isn’t a good direction for the state.

“I haven’t spent a lot of time wondering about whether this is the end of the first or the beginning of the second. I just know that the numbers, you know, just again, positive cases from today back over the past five days, 1,192, 1,282, 958, 823, 973, that’s five days and my eyeballs tell me it’s about 5,000 cases,” Governor Murphy said. “Yeah, I do think spot positivity is up. It’s at 3.36%. That looks, eyeballing over the past week, to be a hair above what the average has been, but it does tell you we’re testing a lot of people, which is to your third point. The RT has been literally stuck in a band of 1.15 to 1.8 for the past week. I guess today it went down a hair to 1.14, but my data tells me it’s a little fresher than the spot positivity. The spot positivity is as of tests taken on the 15th, the RT was as of October 17th.”

Dr. Judith Persichili, who needs absolutely no introduction whatsoever, after signing an order in March to force long term care facilities to begin taking in recovering COVID-19 patients that lead to the deaths of thousands saw things differently.  Persichili said she didn’t see this as a new wave, but a continuation of constant planning and vigilance for a second wave.

“‘I’ve never stopped working with the hospitals. We never considered the wave to be over and every day at 10:00 a.m. we review again their stockpiling, particularly for PPE. We review their bed utilization,” Persichili said. “We know every day, how many available beds we have and how many available Intensive Care Unit beds we have. Additionally, we have maintained all of our waivers to allow them to expand their bed complement, particularly their critical care bed complement, at a moment’s notice. We additionally are working with them on staffing plans to build up to contingency or crisis staffing, if they need it. It’s an everyday event we’re working with the hospitals and preparing with them every step of the way. They report every night at 10:00 p.m. so we know every morning at 10:00 a.m. exactly where they are.”

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SEASIDE HEIGHTS, NJ – As summer heated up at the Jersey Shore and across all over New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy announced that he would reopen indoor dining in time for the Fourth of July weekend, but then backed out of it.  The news for New Jersey restaurateurs came a day late and tens of thousands of dollars short as thousands of businesses stocked their inventory with fresh food and liquor to get through what could have been their busiest weekend of the year.  It became known as the “False Start”.

A bill in Trenton, passed by a bi-partisan legislature would have helped businesses recoup as much as $30,000,000 in losses for the weekend.  Businesses ended up with too much food, much of it going unused.  Murphy canceled indoor dining 3 days before the Fourth of July weekend.

When the bill showed up on Murphy’s desk to be signed into law, the Governor decided to veto the bill.   The bi-partisan bill was sponsored by Democrats Steve Sweeney and Vin Gopal, and Republican Anthony Bucco.

The same day as the veto, Murphy announced that there’s no plan to increase the indoor dining cap from 25% to 50%, despite suggesting it several times in the past few COVID-19 briefings he has held.

“Listen, we’re working, we’re wargaming, I was part of a pretty intense discussion today about steps we could take to help our restaurant industry, particularly as the weather gets colder,” Murphy said on Monday. “I would be lying to you if I didn’t say, and I think the folks to my right who are the health experts and the guy to my left who helps enforce compliance, these numbers are sobering, I have to say. So we are wargaming a whole lot of potential steps that we can take, whether it’s indoor or outdoor or both dining to try to relieve some of this burden without adding to our already rising numbers.”

Murphy admitted that indoor dining has not contributed at all to the increase in COVID-19 cases.

“I have to say, we don’t have any evidence that indoor dining per se is contributing to this. But we also have to be pretty — and your question gets to this — we not only have to help our restaurants, but we’ve got to, I think, be consistent in the plea for responsibility among the citizenry,” he added. “We don’t want to cross purposes on those.”

Bringing diners indoors during winter is critical to the success of many businesses as the weather gets colder and the raw New Jersey winter sets in.  In many cases, outdoor dining will not be an option for many restaurants and a 50% capacity increase is still not enough to save the hard-hit industry.

Ann Gauthier, the owner of the Toms River based Shut Up and Eat! lashed out at the governor for his decisions to continue to cripple the food industry in the state.

Gauthier said whether she’s at 25% or 50%, she has to have the same amount of workers and is working hard to keep her employees on the job…and isn’t about to let the Governor put her out of business.

“I will not fail because I was growing up never to give up I don’t give two shits with that piece of crap governor says or does he does nothing to help small business because he is very wealthy so he doesn’t care about anybody but himself he’s a typical politician,” she said.

A GoFundMe account has been set up to raise money for the restaurant, and has raised almost $9,000.

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