ASBURY PARK — It wouldn’t be New Year’s Day in Asbury Park without the annual Sons of Ireland Polar Bear Plunge, where those who don’t mind braving the elements take a dip in the ocean for charity. The 13 th annual event this year drew more than 600 plungers whose donations to three Monmouth County charities…
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5 charged after Bloomfield teen fends over hoverboard robbery
BLOOMFIELD – Five Newark residents have been charged with assaulting and attempting to rob a local teenager of his hoverboard Wednesday night, authorities said. According to Bloomfield police, the 15-year-old boy was riding the board on Franklin Street around 10 p.m. when the group surrounded him. One of the suspects punched the teen in the face…
Troopers waved Puerto Rican flag in drug bust photos, got suspended
TRENTON — Five state troopers who celebrated a Camden drug bust by waving a Puerto Rican flag in front of a camera were given 20-day suspensions after the photos became public, documents show. The discipline, disclosed for the first time in a recent State Police report, came five years after the 2009 photos were taken. Meanwhile,…
Obama Considers Bypassing Congress to Increase Gun Control
United States President Barack Obama has indicated he may bypass Congress in his bid to increase gun control in the final year of his presidency. In his weekly radio address on Friday, Obama said he will meet Attorney General Loretta Lynch on Monday to discuss what options he can take, saying his New Year’s resolution was…
Bill Cosby Will Not Take a Plea Deal, Lawyer Says
“My client is not guilty,” attorney Monique Pressley says of Bill Cosby during an interview with the Today show on Thursday morning, rejecting any notions that the longtime comedian may take a plea deal. Cosby, 78, faces charges of aggravated indecent assault in Pennsylvania, a second-degree felony. Andrea Constand, who described Cosby as a mentor, alleges…
Cosby charged with felony sexual assault
Bill Cosby was charged on Wednesday with sexually assaulting a woman after plying her with drugs and alcohol in 2004, the only criminal case against a once-beloved entertainer whose father-figure persona has been marred by dozens of similar misconduct accusations. A frail-looking Cosby, 78, walking with a cane and accompanied by two lawyers, appeared for his…
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/
Reds Fans Erupt; Sox Fans Rejoice Over Frazier Trade
TOMS RIVER-In 2015, the Cincinnati Reds finished the season in Major League Baseball’s baseball as a team in decline and this off-season Reds brass have decided to enter a rebuilding stage. That’s what prompted the club, once worthy of the title, “Big Red Machine”, now just a shadow of their former glory, to trade fan favorite Todd Frazier.
The Reds ended their season 64-98, 36 games out of first place. Just north, in Chicago, the White Sox are a team on the upswing. Although they finished 10 games under .500, the franchise is eyeing a possible playoff opportunity in 2016. That is what brought Todd Frazier to Chicago. He fills a much needed gap at the plate and in the field in Chicago.
Frazier, along with veteran Joey Votto were the franchise faces of the Reds. Today, fans have lost a friendly face and a player many were hope to build future success around.
“This is why there will NEVER be another “BIG RED MACHINE.” The Reds can’t keep a good team together,” said Suzanne Nichols, a Reds fan.
Other fans chimed in on the disappointing news unleashed by the team on Wednesday on their Facebook page.
“This was like trading Santa the week before Christmas. My 13-year old daughter is in tears over this,” said [former] Reds fan Scott Uzzel. “Todd Frazier is the epitome of what being a big leaguer should be, on and off the field. I won’t be be buying any Reds tickets this year. I’ll be spending too much money taking my family on a couple of road trips to Chicago to watch our favorite player.”
“Todd Frazier deserves better than the trainwreck the Reds have become,” said Paul Stelzer. “So I wish him the best in Chicago. But it’s becoming more and more difficult to believe in the Reds.”
” I am done with the Reds. That was s terrible trade,” said Sandy Smith. “One of your best players and a man that made Ohio proud. A great gentlemen and ambassador for Cincinnati.”
3,000 Facebook posts later, it was more of the same from heartbroken Reds fans. Many saying they will follow Frazier to Chicago, while others claiming they will just drop their affection for the Reds all-together. Others meanwhile, many hardcore fans felt if it was what was best for Frazier, they accept it, because, “He deserves better than the treatment the Reds gave him.”
Meanwhile in Chicago, Christmas came early for many fans of the White Sox. While Reds fans were full of doom and gloom, ChiSox fans think Frazier is the player to get the team over the hump in 2016.
“We have an all star 3rd baseman! Whoa!! Haven’t said that in a while,” said Crystal Raygoza.
“Great acquisition and first class guy,” responded Andres Mota.
“He’s going to raise the Sox firework budget this season for sure,” said Wayne Douma, referring to Frazier’s home run production.
Many fans felt the price for Frazier was a bit steep, with three of the club’s top prospects, but those worries could become distant memories the first time Frazier steps in the box and goes long.
Todd had mixed emotions over the trade. He is excited to move to a new organization, but said he will miss the fans in Cincinnati who have been behind him, even at times when the team’s front office and manager were not.

“First off I’d like to thank the Reds fans for their support over the last five years you guys will always have a special place in my heart,” he said. “I can’t wait to start my next chapter with the chi White Sox. Can’t wait to represent the south side. It’s going to be a fun season.”
Locally, in Todd’s hometown in Toms River, his fans generally wished him well, but were shocked that the Reds would have so easily let go a major league baseball player of his caliber both off the field and on the field. Frazier, remains active in our local communities. Just last week, he worked with the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office to participate in an anti-drug campaign. Frazier and his brothers, Jeff and Charlie, operate Frazier Baseball, the area’s top youth baseball training center. It’s not uncommon for Todd to show up randomly at youth baseball games and mingle with the young players.
Regardless of where Frazier plays, here in Ocean County, he will always be a fan favorite, even if he’s not in a Mets or Yankees uniform.
Governor Christie Separates Himself from the Wack Pack at CNN Presidential Debate
LAS VEGAS-New Jersey Governor Chris Christie came off the bench ready to drive in runs for his trailing campaign at Tuesday night’s Republican presidential primary debate showing America that he deserved the spot in the starting lineup amongst media powerhitters Donald Trump, Jeb Bush and Ben Carson.
Christie, a former U.S. attorney, has been making a case for himself in recent weeks on the campaign trail, delivering positive messages and policy plans, generally avoiding the circus atmosphere in the race, led by ringmaster Donald Trump.
To this point, the Republican debates have revolved around the theatrics of Trump as he and the other candidates used the national platforms to poke jabs and bicker amongst each other.
This past weekend, another New Jersey native, former UFC champion Frankie Edgar, traveled to Las Vegas to win a fight and showed his peers he’s a legitimate contender. Edgar knocked out his opponent in the first round.
Christie, another Jersey kid, followed in Edgar’s footsteps on a similar pilgrimage a few days later, to show America and his peers that he is a legitimate contender to be the Republican candidate in the 2016 presidential election. While he didn’t deliver a first round knockout, he went the distance against the heavy hitters.
Christie came out swinging in is opening comments, declaring Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have failed to lead America the way Americans want to be led.
“America has been betrayed. We’ve been betrayed by the leadership that Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton have provided to this country over the last number of years. Think about just what’s happened today,” Christie said. “The second largest school district in America in Los Angeles closed based on a threat. Think about the effect that, that’s going to have on those children when they go back to school tomorrow wondering filled with anxiety to whether they’re really going to be safe.”
After rounds of bickering and bantering between the other candidates, Christie brought the debate back to ground level and reminded the others and the audience why they were all on the stage in the first place.
“Listen, I want to talk to the audience at home for a second. If your eyes are glazing over like mine, this is what it’s like to be on the floor of the United States Senate. I mean, endless debates about how many angels on the head of a pin from people who’ve never had to make a consequential decision in an executive position,” Christie said. “The fact is, for seven years, I had to make these decisions after 9/11, make a decision about how to proceed forward with an investigation or how to pull back, whether you use certain actionable intelligence or whether not to. And yet they continue to debate about this bill and in the subcommittee and what — nobody in America cares about that.”
In his closing arguments, Christie rested his case on his experience as the Governor of New Jersey and as a U.S. attorney. During his tenures, New Jersey had a front row seat in the global war against terror, starting with the attack on the World Trade Center and involving a plot to kill soldiers at New Jersey’s Joint Base MDL.
“What they [Americans] care about is, are we going to have a president who actually knows what they’re doing to make these decisions? And for the seven years afterwards, New Jersey was threatened like no other region in this country and what we did was we took action within the constitution to make sure that law enforcement had all the information they needed,” Christie said. “We prosecuted two of the biggest terrorism cases in the world and stopped Fort Dix from being attacked by six American radicalized Muslims from a Mosque in New Jersey because we worked with the Muslim American community to get intelligence and we used the Patriot Act to get other intelligence to make sure we did those cases. This is the difference between actually been a federal prosecutor, actually doing something, and not just spending your life as one of hundred debating it.”
Christie reaffirmed his commitment to halting the flow of Syrian civil war refugees, which has been infiltrated by ISIS supporters and terrorist cells until the President and congress could assure proper and reliable screening processes can be implemented.
“It’s so dysfunctional under Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. It’s so ineffective. It’s so ineffectual that the American people say, we don’t trust them to do anything anymore. So I’m not going to let Syrian refugees, any Syrian refugees in this country,” he added. “And it was widows and orphans, by the way, and we now know from watching the San Bernardino attack that women can commit heinous, heinous acts against humanity just the same as men can do it.”
While Donald Trump called for a flat-out ban on all muslims, Christie brought the discussion once again back to reality.
“And so I don’t back away from that position for a minute. When the FBI director tells me that he can vet those people, then we’ll consider it and not a moment before because your safety and security is what’s most important to me,” he added.
On the other hand, Christie said his administration’s relationship with the New Jersey muslim community is what has largely spared his state from terrorist attacks and thwarted other attempts.
Christie said he values his relationships with mosques and the muslim community as members of that community have played vital roles in assisting New Jersey law enforcement officials in proactively investigating threats against the public.
Tuesday night’s debate was the final one of 2015, but 7 more are scheduled for 2016. New Jersey’s primary election will take place on June 7, 2016.
Going into the debate, Donald Trump led the polls with 41% while Christie
Anti-Six Flags Solar Coalition Wages Battle Against Grass Seed Mixtures
JACKSON-“What is native grass?”
That was the question that remained largely unanswered during the four hour long Jackson Planning Board hearing Monday night of a controversial application by Six Flags to install a 69 acre solar farm on property adjacent to Great Adventure.
Despite the aggressive campaign being waged against the project online and in the media, few Jackson residents attended the meeting in dissent among an audience of approximately 80, made up mostly of out-of-town environmentalists, professionals and lawyers.
In the past, highly sensitive and controversial township meetings were relocated to the nearby auditorium at Jackson Memorial High School. Plenty of open seats were to be found at Monday’s hearing.
Several residents carried signs which read, “Say No to Six Flags Solar Plan”, an effort by a group calling themselves “Jackson Citizens”.
While a flyer being handed out by the group warned that the solar farm will cause septic failures, pool collapses, catastrophic electrical fires and lower property values, testimony dragged on for hours as environmental experts argued over the definition of “native grass”, never coming to a general consensus despite the wealth of experience and knowledge at the table.
Michele Donato, legal counsel for the environmental coalition opposing the solar farm continued her television lawyer theatrics throughout the hearing, at one point prompting planning board attorney Gregory McGuckin to issue a warning for her outburst.
During the marathon debate over grass seed, Donato lashed out at the planning board when the board asked one of her environmental experts to provide seeding suggestions.
“You know what my suggestion is, the parking lot,” she chirped, after her attempt to shield her expert witness from from cross-examination by the board failed.
McGuckin reminded Donato that discussion was to remain on the existing application as it appears and that it was beyond the board’s authority to discuss an application that doesn’t exist.
With no application before the board for a parking lot based solar farm, the board has a legal obligation to discuss matters before them and not entertain theoretical notions and wishful fantasies. In the end, if a parking lot based solar farm were to be discussed by the board, Six Flags Great Adventure would have to file an application for such a project.
“You know better than that,” Mcguckin said to Donato.
Planning Board Chairman Robert Hudak snapped at Donato’s blatant disregard for the board’s authority and asked Donato to allow her professional to answer the question asked by the board.
The professional was unable to recommend a viable solution to grow grass in Jackson.
At the center of the heated debate was the question, “What is native grass?” One that had no answer as environmentalists spoke circles around the planning board.
In the end, “native” was a term that was entirely in the eye of the beholder.
The planning board maintained that “native” grass was grass that was suited to survival in a particular ecosystem and those who drafted the ordinance sought to ensure that any grass plantings required by law would be able to take root and survive.
One environmentalist claimed native was simply what grows naturally in an ecosystem.
While another environmentalist claimed “native” was a strict definition of species indigenous to a particular ecosystem without any human interference.
Donato, after hours of testimony on grass, rested her case on “parking lot”, being the definition of “native”.
Solar panels remained a tertiary subject at the hearing behind grass seed and iron deposits below the surface.
Environmentalists maintained that disturbing eco-sensitive iron deposits would cause environmental havoc and prevent certain types of grass from growing, but also conceded that there would be no harm to surrounding well water because the iron already exists in the ground.
“No additional toxicity would be introduced to the water supply,” said an environmentalist speaking on behalf of Donato.
The hearing will resume at the January 11th meeting.
Photo: Environmentalist legal counsel Michele R. Donato argues the definition of grass seed at the Jackson Township Planning Board hearing on Monday, November 30th.

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.
New Jersey State Little League Champions Recognized by Township Council, Mayor
JACKSON-At the Jackson Township municipal council meeting, Mayor Michael Reina and the town’s governing body presented a proclamation to Jackson Little League and the 2015 New Jersey state Little League champions.
“At your age, you not only represented Jackson Township, you represented the state of New Jersey, whether you realize it or not” Mayor Michael Reina said. “It’s commendable. It’s why you’re here.”
“The coaches, managers and assistance did a great job,” Reina said. “And to the parents, you are role models for these kids.”
“Understand when you were on tv, the nation watched,” the mayor added.
Each player was awarded a certificate of appreciation.
The team included Joey Arcarese, Tyler Beck, Caden Brooks, Justin Burkert, Tommy Cartnick, Jared Caruso, Matt Feld, Ryan Lasko, Austin Parikh, Matt Potok, Zach Rogacki, Sean Slusak and Jake Wendell. Evan Glaser managed the team and John Brooks and Steve Slusak served as coaches.
Al Goldberg, the President of Jackson Little League thanked the Jackson Township council for their recognition of the league and the success of the boys, their coaches and parents.
At the meeting the township council also recognized the Holbrook Little League 10 year old all-stars for their Mid-Atlantic Region championship and the Holbrook Little League Softball 12 year old all-stars for their two game sweep of Manchester in the District 18 Little League softball tournament championship.
Photo by Neima Caruso.
OCT 30: Trick-or-Treating in Toms River Returns to "Traditional" Date
TOMS RIVER-Since, seemingly the beginning of time, Toms River Township has held trick-or-treat on October 30th, the day before Halloween. This was done to prevent conflicts between trick-or-treating and the nation’s third largest Halloween parade held down town each year.
In the past two years, the dates were reversed, but this year, they are going back to the way it was, allowing children in Toms River and neighboring towns the opportunity to double dip–trick-or-treating both nights.
In light of the fact that the 77th annual Toms River Halloween Parade sponsored by Toms River Volunteer Fire Company #1 will be held on Saturday October 31, 2015, Mayor Thomas F. Kelaher would like to advise residents that Halloween and the traditional ‘trick or treating’ activities will be observed on Friday, October 30th, 2015.
This was a mutual decision made by the Township, Toms River Fire Companies and the Toms River Police Department.
“Although the Township does not sanction or promote trick- or- treating since this is an individual parental decision, for reasons of public safety, specifically in conjunction with our Police Department, we strongly urge all parents to monitor the activities of their children on Friday, October 30th. The main concern the day before Halloween is extra children and families walking around. Drivers are advised to keep a lookout for pedestrians through the evening. With your help, we can make this a safe Halloween for all,” said Mayor Kelaher.
While there is no official start and end time for trick-or-treating, Toms River Police Chief Mitch Little suggests that those who choose to go out do so between the hours of 2pm and 9 pm.
“We moved trick-or-treating back to October 30th so that residents would be free to come downtown and enjoy the parade on Halloween night. We hope to see a large turnout this year,” said Carl Weingroff, Parade Chairman.
Photo by OCICS.com
For parade information, visithttp://www.trfc1.org/halloween.html.