Pharma is a B-tch; Man Who Inflated Life-Saving Prescription Pills to $750 Each Arrested in Manhattan

Price gouging pharmaceutical man-boy Martin Shkreli has been arrested on securities fraud charges, according to a Bloomberg report today.   The 32 year old is suspected of plundering the life-saving drug Retrophin to pay debts.

Shkreli made headlines nationally when he raised the price of Retrophin from $13.50 per pill to $750 each.    He was arrested by federal agents in Manhattan on Thursday.

“Martin Shkreli, 32, ignited a firestorm over drug prices in September and became a symbol of defiant greed. The federal case against him has nothing to do with pharmaceutical costs, however. Prosecutors in Brooklyn charged him with illegally taking stock from Retrophin Inc., a biotechnology firm he started in 2011, and using it to pay off debts from unrelated business dealings. He was later ousted from the company, where he’d been chief executive officer, and sued by its board,” Bloomberg reported. “In the case that closely tracks that suit, federal prosecutors accused Shkreli of engaging in a complicated shell game after his defunct hedge fund, MSMB Capital Management, lost millions. He is alleged to have made secret payoffs and set up sham consulting arrangements. A New York lawyer, Evan Greebel, was also arrested early Thursday. He’s accused of conspiring with Shkreli in part of the scheme.”

Read the full story here: http://www.bloomberg.com/features/2015-martin-shkreli-securities-fraud/

 

 

 

How a Grisly Murder Shaped Toms River's No-Knock Ordinance

TOMS RIVER-It was a sunny and warm June morning in 2004 when criminal investigators were canvassing the Dover Township neighborhoods around Chestnut Street that would eventually lead to Toms River’s  enacting of a no-knock ordinance.

Police were investigating the murder of 77-year-old Shirley Reuter, a 40 plus year resident and  founding member of Holy Cross Lutheran Church at her home on Chestnut Street.

Neighbors led police to identify Reuter’s murderer, 17-year-old Azriel Rashad Bridge, a Chicago door-to-door magazine salesman.

Reuter’s home was not the first Bridge went to. Earlier in the day, he was knocking on many doors in the neighborhood, meeting with rejection and refusal from many. Bridge was an aggressive salesman.

I have first-hand experience. He knocked on our door on Citta Court as he made his way up Citta Street towards Reuter’s home.

“Hi, I am selling magazines, I would like to know if you were interested…” he asked me when I opened the door a crack for him.

I told Bridge no thank you and attempted to close the door.  “How do you know you don’t want them if you haven’t seen them?” he asked.

8 years removed from the United States Marine Corps, unintimidated by his aggressiveness, I bid Mr. Bridge farewell and closed the door.  I later learned my immediate neighbors all did the same.

The next day, Reuter was found dead.   Bridge was their suspect.  Within twenty-four hours he was arrested, leading then Ocean County Prosecutor Tom Kelaher (current Toms River mayor) to issue a warning to Ocean County residents and begin his prosecution against Bridge.

“Under no circumstances should people let strangers into their homes,” Kelaher said.

That is what Reuter did.  She let the young man into her home after he asked to use her bathroom and for a glass of water.  Her kindness led to her death and to a series of no-knock ordinances in Ocean County municipalities.

In a thirty-two-page written statement to the police on June 11, 2004, Bridge stated he was selling magazines in Toms River on June 9, 2004, when Shirley Reuter allowed him to enter her home to use the bathroom.

While he was in the house, he saw a checkbook on a table and decided to put it in his pocket. However, the victim noticed defendant put something in his pocket and she confronted him about it.

As Ms. Reuter reached for the checkbook, Bridge stated he pushed her hard enough that “her feet actually came out from underneath her,” and as she fell, she hit her head on the corner of a table.

As the victim lay on the floor, Bridge admitted he struck her three times on the side of her face with a fireplace bellow to wake her up.

After the paddle broke, defendant used a poker from the fireplace “to poke her to see if she would wake up.” When the victim did not wake up, defendant put the bloody poker “back where it was,” and he got a knife from the kitchen, which he used to “poke” the victim in the neck. Defendant stated the victim’s body quivered “when the knife went through her throat.”

Bridge was later arrested on a warrant out of Illinois in Elizabeth.

During the police investigation in Elizabeth, Bridge  initially denied having any contact with the victim, however, about an hour into the interview, Investigator Joseph Mitchell learned from another officer that on June 9, 2004, he had given his supervisor a check for magazine subscriptions written on the account of David Reuter, Reuter’s son. When confronted with this information, Bridge confessed to the murder, and he gave a detailed audio-taped statement to the police.

On the way back to Toms River, Bridge agreed to show officers the route he took that day to get to Reuter’s home and his actions inside the home.

Police had a full confession.

The problem was Bridge told the police he was 18 years old.  It turned out he was just 17.  Kelaher, who was seeking charges that could have led to the execution of Bridge, was forced to drop all charges and charge Bridge as a juvenile.

Then Chief of Police, Michael Mastronardy (now Sheriff)  said police were alerted to Bridge knocking on doors in the Chestnut Street neighborhoods prior to the murder.   Bridge’s actions were of cause for alarm to those he came in contact with.

He was later sentenced to 55 years in prison in January of 2006.

In 2007, Bridge’s lawyers claimed his confession was not legal because he was a minor and appealed the decision, but it was rejected.  Defense attorney Philip Pagano also criticized police for interrogating a minor without attempting to contact the boy’s parents.

Superior Court Judge Edward J. Turnbach upheld the conviction.

“Considering the totality of circumstances, I find that the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was apprised of his constitutional rights, that he understood those rights, and that he intelligently and voluntarily waived his rights and gave a voluntary statement,” the judge said. “The motion to suppress the statement is denied, and it will be admitted into evidence at the trial of Azriel Bridge.”

“At the time of this incident he was a juvenile, one week short of being an adult. He was born to a woman who was 15 years old at the time she gave birth. And since age nine to 16-and-a-half[,] he has been hospitalized at least nine times. All the hospitalizations were in various psychiatric units in Illinois, Hard Grove, River Edge[,] and Nolan Treatment Center.

“Under the law there is no willingness present here to cooperate with law enforcement authorities. So there is absolutely nothing present here by way of mitigation. The murder of Ms. Reuter, a 77-year-old grandmother, was particularly heinous, cruel, depraved[,] and senseless,” the judge added.  “She was a stranger to the defendant. There was no reason, real or imagined, for the defendant to do what he did. Indeed, while a stranger, she allowed this young man into her house to give him a drink of water at his request. She was a good Samaritan. And you, Mr. Bridge, seeing a check[book] lying on the table, decided to [take it] and did murder her in the cruelest of manners.”

The murder motivated then mayor Paul Brush and councilman Gregory P. McGuckin to look into an ordinance solution that could protect the community against future attacks.  At the time, the township did require commercial door-to-door solicitors to register with the town prior to canvassing, but there was no mechanism in place for homeowners to opt-out of the soliciting.

By August of 2004, the township had enacted a “do not knock” provision in the township code.

The township now maintains a no-knock registry which is updated each January and July.  Residents who register are provided with green no-knock stickers to be placed on their dwelling to identify themselves to would-be solicitors.

Violations of the ordinance can result in fines up for to $1,250.00 and a one year revocation of the solicitor’s privilege to solicit in the town.

In recent weeks, residents have rallied to use the no-knock ordinance for a different reason, leading to a surge in applications.

In light of Lakewood based realtors’ aggressive door-to-door soliciting in North Dover and the township’s issuance this month of four more soliciting permits to those agencies, residents are feverishly lining up to be added to the registry.

At a North Dover neighborhood watch meeting this week, the township advised residents to contact the township to report those who violate the ordinance.

Today, Bridge is serving out his 55 year prison term at the Menard Correctional Center in Menard, Illinois.  He will be eligible for parole on July 12, 2052 and would be discharged in 2057.

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEPT 26: Charity Softball FF vs PD Game for Jason Marles Memorial Statue

BERKELEY-A benefit softball game will be held at Veterans Park on September 26th at 4pm between the Ocean Gate Police Department and Ocean Gate Fire Department.  A $7 gate price ($5 in advance) will go towards a fund to build a memorial Statue for the Jason Marles  Memorial Park.

Ocean Gate Police Officer Jason Marles was killed by a drunk driver on Thanksgiving morning, November 25, 2010 after working the night shift on a special DUI detail.
This summer, the Where Angels Play Foundation dedicated a playground in his memory.

Advanced tickets are available at the Ocean Gate Police Department.

 

Fire Burns Hundreds of Acres In Pine Barrens

Firefighters are battling a forest fire that has consumed hundreds of acres in southern New Jersey’s Pine Barrens. The fire broke out on Monday. Officials say no homes are in danger, according to an AP report.

The fire can be smelled in the as far north as northern Ocean County due to atmospheric conditions. The fire is located near the Brendan T. Byrne Forest.

Photo provided by Beachwood Police Department.

Beachwood Firefighter Laid to Rest in Arlington National Cemetery

ARLINGTON,VA-On September 1, 2015 members of the Beachwood Fire Department escorted the Miserendino family to Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, for the interment of Chief Thomas Miserendino.

“Chief Miserendino was a member of the Fire Department for over 40 years and has the distinction of being our longest serving Chief. Chief Miserendino had a long record of public service to the community of Beachwood,” the department said in a statement.

He served with the United States Navy and is a decorated Vietnam Veteran. Chief Miserendino can now rest in peace in the place he earned on our nation’s most hallowed ground.

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Photos by Beachwood Volunteer Fire Department.

Beachwood Fire Department Trains for Natural Gas Emergencies

TOMS RIVER-It happened during and after Hurricane Sandy throughout the county, but how prepared are Ocean County’s fire fighters for the next natural gas fire or emergency?   Beachwood’s Volunteer Fire Department is more prepared after training last week at the Ocean County Fire Academy for just such scenarios.

On the evening of August 28, 2015, members of the Beachwood Fire Department attended advanced training on natural gas emergencies hosted by New Jersey Natural Gas at the Ocean County Fire Academy.

“We would like to thank Roger Grey and his staff from the gas company for allowing us to train with them, as well as Ocean County Fire Academy Director Ray Van Marter for facilitating this outstanding training,” the fire department said in a statement.

Photos by Beachwood Volunteer Fire Department.

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One Sent to Hospital After Vehicle Flips on Route 37

MANCHESTER – On Saturday, September 5, 2015 at approximately 11:04 pm, members of the Manchester Township Police responded to the area of Route 37 and Colonial Drive for the report of an overturned vehicle. Upon arrival, officers located a, silver, 2012 Chevrolet Impala on its roof in the eastbound lanes of Route 37 just past the intersection of Colonial Drive. Initial investigation revealed that the Impala was traveling westbound on Route 37 when it failed to maintain its lane of travel and collided head-on with the concrete center divider in the area of Colonial Drive. The vehicle then went airborne, crossed over the concrete divider and travelled approximately 70 feet, before it flipped over onto its passenger side and rolled onto its roof in the eastbound lanes of Route 37.  After landing in the eastbound lanes, the vehicle proceeded to slide on its roof in a westbound direction on Route 37 before coming to final rest approximately 320 feet from initial impact with the median.  The driver, 21 year old Eric Larson of Jackson, was properly restrained at the time of collision and refused any medical treatment at the scene.  The passenger, 22 year old Taylor Bromberg, was also properly restrained; however, he sustained significant abdominal injuries.  Bromberg was transported to Community Medical Center in Toms River by the Manchester Township Volunteer First Aid Squad where is condition is not immediately known.  Also assisting at the scene were paramedics from MONOC as well as members of the Manchester Township Volunteer Fire Department, and the New Jersey State Department of Transportation.  The crash remains under investigation by Patrolman Ian Bole from the Manchester Township Police Department’s Traffic Safety Section.

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MS Dhoni Visit Highlights Diverse Community Outreach by Ocean County Sheriff's Department

TOMS RIVER-When international cricket superstar MS Dhoni made a visit to a Toms River temple last week, it highlighted Ocean County Sheriff Michael Mastronardy’s neverending community outreach effort with the county’s diverse cultural sub-communities.      Since his days as chief of the Toms River Police Department, Mastronardy was always on the front lines with his officers, leading from the front.

It was no different when Dhoni came to town and the Siddhi Vinayak temple asked for added security for the V.I.P.

“We have very good relationships with all of Ocean County’s diverse communities,” Mastronardy said. “They asked us to come and we were there.”

Mastronardy joined Dhoni on stage and welcomed him to Toms River, one of his first and only U.S. appearances.

Dhoni is an internationally recognized sports superstar and one of the top paid professional athletes in the world.  Mastronardy said he knew Dhoni was a V.I.P., but didn’t realize how popular he is worldwide.

Dhoni has more Facebook followers than Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Tom Brady and Donald Trump…combined.

“Really?” Mastronardy said. “I had no idea.”

Over the past few decades, Ocean County has transformed into an extremely diverse community with many different cultures.  Toms River has Muslim mosques, hindu temples and a large population of Orthodox Jews.

Mastronardy said it’s important for he and his officers to familiarize themselves with rules and traditions of each culture in order for his officers to do their job properly and effectively when engaging with members of each community.

Photo by Gunjesh Desai, masaljunction.com, used with permission.

For more photos of the event, check out Masal Junction’s photo gallery.

Manchester Mayor Warns ASARCO Tresspasers Will be Prosecuted

 

by Phil Stilton, 
Toms River Magazine

MANCHESTER-Growing up in Ocean County,  we fondly called the abandoned ASARCO mineral mining operation, the Sarco Pit.  It was where we hung out on weekends to have fun. It was never legal, nor was it ever safe.   The crystal blue and clear spring fed lake was too much of a lure on us to stay away.     We’d ride just about anything through the woods and then cool off along the sandy beaches of the pit.  It was like our own private Caribbean Beach, right here in Ocean County.

We were kids.  We were dumb.

In years passed, Manchester started cracking down on the trespassing at the site.   Things got very serious this year when a 17 year old girl drowned in the lake this past July.

That tragedy  led to Manchester Mayor Kenneth Palmer to get tougher on would-be trespassers.

“In an effort to prevent future tragedies, the Township will be implementing the following strategy, our police department will step up random patrols. We will reexamine our township ordinances to enhance trespass violations with fines up to $1,000; and we will implement a strict ‘no warning’ enforcement policy,” Palmer said.  “Our goal is to keep people out of the Heritage Minerals Tract for their own safety.”

In the first week of the new enforcement, multiple trespass citations were issued.

The site consists of 7,000 acres that fronts on Route 70 between Lakehurst and Whiting.

The land was mined so deeply that the bodies of water often referred to as ‘lakes’ are actually groundwater aquifers.

After a few steps in the soft, unstable sand, the “shelf” drops off to 60 feet deep or more.

The mineral water is cold and clear because it is not fed by any stream, but instead by an underground water source.

“The banks are unpredictable and dangerously unstable. In years past, it was a common occurrence for vehicles to get ‘stuck’ in the soft sand on the site,” Palmer added.  “There have been serious ATV accidents, drownings, and sunken vehicles pulled from the site. Coupled with those conditions, there is also a 45 acre site containing lowlevel radioactive tailings left from the original mining operations in the 1970s.”

Palmer noted that Hovsons is in the process of bringing in heavy equipment to conduct clean-up operations on that 45-acre site. It is not a place for youngsters or adults to trespass. It can be dangerous.

“Please spread the word: Trespassers will be fined to the full extent allowed by law,” he said.

Plane Lands on Median of Jersey Shore Highway

MANAHAWKIN,NJ-Beachbound traffic heading to Long Beach Island was slowed for 90 minutes on Sunday as crews worked to remove a small plane from the median which made an emergency landing here.

At 10:13 am, Stafford Township Police responded to the area of Route 72 and Route 9 for a report of a small plane down.

“The initial investigation suggests that the small single engine plane, carrying students from the Skydive East Coast Sky Diving School, lost power forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing on the grass median between the east and west bound lanes of Route 72,” the police department said in a statement. “Officers at the scene closed the left lanes on Route 72 in both directions for approximately 90 minutes while the scene remained under investigation.”

One sky dive instructor was treated for a small cut on his arm, however, no other injuries were reported and no vehicles were involved.

The investigation will be turned over to Federal Aviation Administration, the department said.

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ABC NEWS: Head of Influential New Jersey Political Lobbying Firm Assaulted Blind U.S. Army Veteran

by Phil Stilton

EAST ORANGE-ABC News this morning has reported that powerful North Jersey Democrat Party Chairman LeRoy Jones is being charged for assaulting a partially blind U.S. army war veteran after a political exchange between the two men.   The assault was caught on video.   In the video, Jones can be seen sucker punching the disabled veteran.

Jones, who also heads the influential New Jersey political lobbying firm 1868 Public Affairs is being charged with a misdemeanor, but 75 year old victim, Bill Graves, a retired water veteran who is legally blind in one eye and partially blind in the other said it’s not enough.  Graves is pushing for more severe charges.

ABC reported that Graves’ attacker was identified by the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office as Jones.  Graves contends the confrontation between himself and Jones stemmed from Graves backing a political candidate Jones was not in favor of.

1868Graves said in an interview that his vision problems are getting worse and now he has to run back and forth between doctors, because of Jones.

Due to conflict of interest concerns the case will not be heard in Essex County.

The Tangled Web of Ocean County Politics

Jones has close ties to Ocean County Republicans and it’s unsure how the assault will play out in local politics.

According to 1868’s Public Affairs website, Jones is partners with George Gilmore, the chairman of the Ocean County Republican Club and Idida Rodriguez.    Rodriguez was a senior campaign staffer for former Jackson Township Business Administrator Jose Torres during his bid for re-election in Paterson earlier this year.

Torres was pushed into the Jackson Township spotlight by Gilmore and Jackson Mayor Mike Reina when both lobbied the township council to appoint the former Paterson Mayor to a $120,000 job as the town’s new business administrator.  Although his appointment was hotly contested in Jackson, the Republican majority council of Scott Martin, Ken Bressi and Anne Updegrave approved the appointment.   Torres, who was legally unqualified for the job was told by the council the requirements would be changed to meet his insufficient educational background.  The position required a bachelor’s degree which Torres did not possess.

Shortly after Torres won his election, Gilmore was awarded a $100,000 contract by the city.

Gilmore and Jones’ 1868 Public Affairs came under fire in Ocean County in 2014 when it was reported by the Daily Beast that Wal-Mart was paying 1868 to assist in the approvals process to build a Walmart Super Store in a remote section of Toms River.

Founded in 2005, 1868 Public Affairs’ clients include several dozen New Jersey based firms and boasts, “Our relationships on both sides of the political spectrum at the state and local level in New Jersey are without equal.”

 

 

New Jersey School Bus Ignites, Fully Engulfed in Flames

TOMS RIVER-On January 14, 2015 at 6:48 am the Toms River Police Department Officer Michael Cassady responded to the area of Old Freehold Road and Dugan Lane for a reported vehicle fire.

Police spokesman Ralph Stocco is reporting that Toms River School Bus 279 was traveling on Old Freehold Road when the driver smelled something burning. They pulled over and, along with the aid, exited the bus.

The bus then became fully engulfed with flames. There were no students on board at the time of the incident. The fire was extinguished by Pleasant plains Volunteer Fire Company.

bus fire still shot

New Jersey Reporter Arrested for Not Allowing Police to Seize Video Equipment

by Phil Stilton

LACEY TOWNSHIP-It was at the scene of an accident in Lacey Township when Lacey Reporter freelance journalist Andrew Flinchbaugh was approached by officers from the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office who demanded the seizure of the reporter’s video equipment.

Officers told Flinchbaugh they were seizing his camera as evidence, but Flinchbaugh denied, instead offering the officers to watch the video and offered to provide a copy of the video to the officers.

Flinchbaugh’s recording of the video started after the arrival of police officers and the medevac helicopter which transported the patient, but not of the actual crash itself.

The officers interrogated Flinchbaugh who was permitted access to the scene by local firefighters blocking off the road.

“This is not a negotiation, I’m not negotiating with you,” the unidentified officer told Flinchbaugh.”

Flinchbaugh identified himself as a member of the media and the outlet he was working for, the Lacey Reporter, but officers insisted that he turn over the camera for evidence.

“What are you going to do with the video?” the officer asked.

“It’s for publication,” he responded.

After explaining to the officer that he could not give the officer his camera, the officer said, “I’m going to explain to you that I’m a law enforcement officer…there might be evidence on it.”

The matter was escalated to an unnamed higher ranking officer, claiming to be a lieutenant with the Prosecutor’s Office.   Flinchbaugh explained to the officer that he is a freelance journalists for the Lacey Reporter.

Flinchbaugh told the higher ranking officer he would be happy to share the footage with the prosecutor’s office and said he would fully comply, but he would not allow the officers to seize the camera.

The situation appeared to be diffused, but officers returned shortly after,  and presentede the journalist with an ultimatum.

“You can leave now….but not with the camera,” the officer told Flinchbaugh.

The officer then placed Flinchbaugh under arrest after his refusal to allow the officer to seize the camera and seized the camera.  He was charged with obstruction after being handcuffed and booked at the local police station.

Ocean County Prosecutor Joseph Coronato  said, “We’ll probably be dismissing the charge against him.”

“I refused because I believe it’s our first amendment right,” Flinchbaugh said. “I don’t think they would treat other members of the corporate media this way.”

Coronato said the incident will be used in future training to Ocean County area law enforcement on how to hand situations involving video cameras at the scene of an investigation.

The Prosecutor’s Office offered no further comment on the incident.