New Jersey News
Man Charged for Murder of Sicklerville Woman Whose Body Left on Road, Found in Clearwater, Florida
Florence Township Man Who Nearly Beat Girlfriend to Death Gets 12 Years in Prison
Hainesport Youth Pastor Black Mailed Children into Performing Sexual Acts on Snap Chat
HAINESPORT, NJ – Burlington County Prosecutor Scott Coffina announced that the youth pastor and music leader of a Hainesport church has been charged with coaxing underage boys on social media to send him nude pictures and videos, then using that material to blackmail his victims into performing sexual acts on themselves for his enjoyment.
Sean Higgins, 30, of the 300 block of Temple Boulevard in Palmyra, has been charged with a total of 28 crimes. He holds the position of youth pastor at Harbor Baptist Church, and also serves as a teacher at the Harbor Baptist Academy, a private K-12 school with an enrollment of approximately 75 students that is housed in the same facility.
Higgins is charged with six counts of Manufacturing Child Sexual Abuse Material (First Degree), one count of Aggravated Sexual Assault (First Degree), five counts of Distribution of Child Sex Abuse Material (Second Degree), one count of Sexual Assault (Second Degree), six counts of Possession of Child Sex Abuse Material (Third Degree), six counts of Endangering the Welfare of a Child (Third Degree), and one count each of Criminal Sexual Contact (Fourth Degree), Obstruction (Fourth Degree) and Contempt (Fourth Degree).
His six identified victims thus far range in age from 12 to 15, and reside in Alabama, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and South Dakota. The crimes for which he is presently charged do not involve physical contact with the victims, and do not involve any members of the church congregation or students at the school.
He was taken into custody yesterday at his residence. Investigators forced their way inside after Higgins refused to open the door. Search warrants were executed at his home as well as the church, which is located in the 2100 block of Marne Highway. Multiple electronic devices were seized.
Higgins was lodged in the Burlington County Jail in Mount Holly pending a detention hearing in Superior Court. The investigation is continuing and additional charges are anticipated.
“These charges underscore the importance of parents monitoring their children’s internet activity, and also having those frank and uncomfortable conversations about the dangers of sharing naked photos or other embarrassing images of themselves,” Prosecutor Coffina said. “Cyberspace can be scary, but vigilance and simple common sense are effective defenses against online predators.”
The investigation revealed that Higgins would adopt the persona of a teenage girl and utilize Snapchat and Instagram to begin a conversation with a juvenile male, introducing himself as Julie Miller. After establishing a rapport, he would suggest that they trade photos. Higgins would then send pictures of an unidentified female teenager. If he liked the pictures he received, he would suggest that nude photos be exchanged.
After sending nude photos of an unknown female, Higgins would often receive nude photos that the victims took of themselves in return. Immediately upon receiving those images, Higgins would take a screenshot of the victim’s friends list that was visible on the forward-facing social media account. Higgins would send that screenshot back to the victim and threaten to send the nude photos he had just received to the list of the victim’s friends unless the victim did exactly what Higgins demanded.
“When a boy would send a nude photo of himself, Higgins would instantly transform and warn the child, ‘I’ve got you,’ and threaten to circulate that photo if the child did not engage in additional sexual acts on camera for Higgins’s sick gratification,” Prosecutor Coffina said. “The desperation of these young boys who were put in this position by this predator is truly heartbreaking.”
In most of the cases that were investigated, Higgins then demanded that his victims go into the bathroom at their residence and place the phone on the floor, or at an angle looking up, and would instruct the victims to masturbate or perform other sexual acts on themselves. Higgins would record what was transpiring.
According to the videos made by Higgins that were obtained during the investigation, victims would often beg Higgins to be allowed to stop engaging in sexual conduct, but Higgins would demand that they complete his instructions, or face the consequences of having the recordings he was making of the abuse be sent to their list of friends.
The investigation began after a youth in Berks County, Pa., contacted Snapchat and reported that he sent nude photos of himself to an unknown female, who then had threatened to expose his nude photographs after they exchanged pictures. An underage male in Alabama also reported his communications with Higgins to law enforcement authorities.
The investigation is being conducted by the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office High-Tech Crimes Unit, with assistance from the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, Berks County (Pa.) District Attorney’s Office, Delaware County (Pa.) District Attorney’s Office, Cinnaminson Township Police Department, Minnehaha County (S.D.) Sheriff’s Office, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, New Jersey State Police Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, Palmyra Borough Police Department, Shelby County (Ala.) Sheriff’s Department, and U.S. Homeland Security Investigations – Cherry Hill.
Higgins is being prosecuted by Assistant Prosecutors Joseph Remy and Jennifer Weiler.
Pemberton Drug Dealer Gets 8 Years in Prison for Death of “Customer”
Evesham Police Searching for Man Who Attempted to Rape Woman Walking In Marlton Village
MAYS LANDING, NJ – A 39 year-old Philadelphia man has been arrested on murder and weapons charges in the May 1, 2020 fatal shooting of a Pleasantville man, Atlantic County Prosecutor Damon G. Tyner announced.
Teddy Smith was arrested at a parole office in Philadelphia on Friday afternoon. This was a cooperative investigation between the ACPO Major Crimes Unit, Pleasantville Police Department, with assistance from Philadelphia Parole and Philadelphia Police Fugitive Homicide Unit.
“Getting the information necessary to file charges for homicide in this matter involved every aspect of cooperation from the community and interstate law enforcement agencies. I am happy that people cared enough to stand up and trust law enforcement with getting justice for this family and sending a message that they would not tolerate random violence in their community. This case demonstrates that when all partners invested in having a safe community work together, justice will prevail,” Atlantic County Prosecutor Damon G. Tyner said.
Smith is charged with the following in connection to the May 1, 2020, fatal shooting of 25 year-old Nathan Adcock:
Murder
Possession of a Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose
Unlawful Possession of a Weapon
On May 1, 2020, at 6:21 p.m., Pleasantville Police received a 911 call, reporting a shooting in the area of 129 N. First Street. Shotspotter was also alerted. Adcock was located in the area with multiple gunshot wounds. Adcock was transported to the Atlanticare Medical Center City Division where he was pronounced deceased. An autopsy was completed and Adcock’s death was ruled a homicide.
Freehold Man Admits to Causing Death of 4 Stolen Puppies, Burning Two in Firepit in Howell
FREEHOLD, NJ – A man pleaded guilty today to charges of animal cruelty admitting his neglect caused the deaths of four German Shepard puppies in his care, announced Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni.
Daniel McDonald, 26, of Freehold, pleaded guilty to four counts of third degree Animal Cruelty before Monmouth County Superior Court Judge Vincent N. Falcetano, Jr. The charges are related to the deaths of four German Shepherd puppies found deceased on a property in Howell where he was temporarily residing.
McDonald also pleaded guilty to third degree Receiving Stolen Property after admitting he was in possession of a John Deere front end loader reported stolen out of Monroe.
McDonald is scheduled to return for sentencing on January 8, 2021. Per the plea agreement, the sentencing recommendation is five years in a New Jersey state prison to run concurrent to McDonald’s pending charges in Middlesex and Bergen counties. As part of the plea, McDonald will be required to perform community service, and agreed to an order to never to own or reside with animals.
The remains of two deceased German Shepherd puppies were found in a fire pit on a property in Howell where McDonald was temporarily residing on Monday, May 18, 2020. The Howell Township Police Department and Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Law Enforcement Division, conducted an investigation leading to the discovery of the remains of two more deceased puppies which had been buried on the property.
The joint investigation ultimately revealed that the puppies were stolen from a farm in Somerset County on or about May 12, when the puppies were only three weeks old. Investigators learned McDonald was staying at the Somerset County farm prior to the time the puppies went missing. Investigators also learned the puppies were ill, in distress, and were struggling to breathe prior to their deaths. A necropsy performed on the two buried puppies revealed the puppies suffered from parasites and also were severely emaciated and malnourished with “no indications of recent nutritional ingestion.” During his plea, McDonald took full responsibility for not getting the puppies the proper care resulting in their deaths.
This case is assigned to Monmouth County Assistant Prosecutor Melanie Falco, Director of the Office’s Professional Responsibility and Bias Crimes Unit, and liaison to the Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Law Enforcement Division.
JACKSON TOWNSHIP, NJ – The Jackson Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance in identifying suspects involved in recent thefts.
JACKSON TOWNSHIP, NJ – On November 4th, officers responded to a residence located on Laurel Avenue on the report of an intoxicated male leaving the residence in a vehicle. The male was gone upon their arrival and as they waited in the area, the vehicle returned.
As officers attempted to conduct a motor vehicle stop with the suspect vehicle, the driver refused to stop and fled the area onto North County Line Road. The pursuit was then terminated. Officers responded to the residence a short time later after the male suspect returned home and called police dispatch claiming that he was now in possession of a handgun.
As officers approached the residence, the male suspect, who was identified as Travis Van Pelt, age 25, then entered his vehicle and fled at a high rate of speed, driving recklessly through the neighborhood before crashing into another vehicle on North Lakeside Avenue.
He then parked his vehicle and exited and began walking toward officers who were giving him commands at gunpoint. As he failed to comply with officers, a struggle ensued to place the male under arrest during which time, he struck one of the involved officers in the head. He was ultimately placed under arrest and searched and no weapon was found on him. He was processed and charged with: DWI, reckless driving, open alcoholic container in a motor vehicle and multiple other traffic offenses and also: eluding, resisting arrest and aggravated assault on a police officer. He was then lodged in the Ocean County Jail.
Drunk Man Cursing, Yelling at Jackson Cops Charged with Obstruction, Resisting Arrest
JACKSON TOWNSHIP, NJ – On Wednesday, November 4th, Jackson police officers responded to Toms River Road on the report of a vehicle which was stopped in the roadway and a disturbance. Upon arrival, officers encountered a female outside of the vehicle and a male restraining another male in the rear seat of the vehicle who he claimed was intoxicated and attempting to drive. Officers ordered the male in the rear seat to exit the vehicle and he refused as he remained inside the vehicle, cursing and yelling at the officers.
After repeated attempts to have him exit the car so it could be safely moved from the roadway and away from passing traffic, the male was removed from the vehicle and placed under arrest after a struggle. It was later determined that the intoxicated male was being given a ride back to Trenton when he began a disturbance with the female driver, who had to quickly stop the vehicle to avoid other traffic.
The male, who was identified as Bashaun Miller, age 36 of Trenton, was processed and charged on a summons with obstruction and resisting arrest and Trenton released him on his recognizance on an outstanding warrant out of their jurisdiction. He was then transported to an area hospital for treatment due to his high level of intoxication.
Man Wanted for Murder Found Hiding in Jackson’s Prospect Pointe Apartments
LACEY TOWNSHIP, NJ – On Sunday, November 1, 2020, at 6:01 p.m., Officer Bruce Carver conducted a motor vehicle stop on Lacey Road. During the stop it was determined that the driver, Francis Magliola, was under the influence. Magliola, 52, was arrested and charged with DWI, Reckless Driving, Failure to Maintain Lane, and Failure to Signal. He was released pending a Court appearance.
It Turns Out, COVID-19 in One New Jersey Bar Led to Complete Statewide Shutdown This Week
TRENTON, NJ – COVID-19 breakouts are bound to happen. Flareups are bound to happen, but how the government reacts to those breakouts has a long-lasting impact on the entire economy of the entire estate. Until this week, Governor Murphy and his health experts have told us each day that COVID-19 outbreaks have not been reported in bars or restaurants due to indoor dining. This was determined through months of COVID-19 contact tracing, conducted by Governor Phil Murphy’s army of 2,000 plus COVID-19 contact tracers.
So what changed in the past 24 hours?
It turns out Murphy’s decision was based on a single outbreak in a single town in a single bar at the Jersey Shore, Leggetts SandBar in Manasquan. It happened back in October and while Murphy says his approach would be a scalpel approach, he instead used a sledgehammer to enforce a statewide shutdown because one bar, over the course of the nine-month-long pandemic had one “flare up” of COVID-19.
Now, the entire industry is once again going to be shut down. The actions of Murphy are a frightful one indeed. What happens when somebody finally gets COVID-19 and it traces back to a restaurant? Will that one restaurant be shut down or will the entire state be shut down?
Murphy knee-jerked on this decision.
“You know, we get reports every day and we’ll have a report of, you know, an outbreak amongst restaurant workers at a particular restaurant. Maybe it’ll be two or three cases. But actually, we had at least nine bartenders and servers got COVID in this setting, and we had to put out an alert,” said New Jersey Health Commissioner Judith Persichili. “And I’ll just read it to you. The New Jersey Department of Health would like to notify the public of a potential COVID-19 exposure at a Monmouth County Bar and Grill due to multiple cases linked to the establishment. And then we went on to identify anyone who visited Leggett Sandbar located at, and the address, between the dates of October 17th and October 22nd may have been exposed to COVID-19. The Monmouth County Health Department is actively investigating these cases and exposures. They conducted a site visit on October 23rd and the restaurant is cooperating.”
Persichili said that was just one example, but didn’t cite others at COVID-19 facts and data are closely guarded by the Murphy administration. Virus data has become a state secret in New Jersey and the information is not shared with the public, the media and not even with state legislators who have also been requesting access to the raw data collected by the state.
10 U.S. State Attorney Generals Tell Supreme Court, “All Legal Votes Must Be Counted, Illegal Votes Rejected”
CHARLESTON, SC – Today, South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson joined a coalition of 10 state attorneys general, led by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, in filing an amicus brief in Republican Party of Pennsylvania v. Boockvar. The brief, which can be found here, urges the Supreme Court of the United States to grant writs of certiorari and reverse a decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court allowing mail-in ballots to be received three days after Election Day, even without postmarks.
“Regardless of your political beliefs, I think we can all agree that states need to follow their election laws,” Attorney General Wilson said. “We’re just asking that all legal votes be counted and illegal votes not be counted.”
The brief begins with, “The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision overstepped its constitutional responsibility, encroached on the authority of the Pennsylvania legislature, and violated the plain language of the Election Clauses.”
The brief makes three main arguments. First, that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overstepped its authority and encroached on the authority of the legislature in ruling that ballots received three days after election can be accepted, including ballots with an illegible postmark or no postmark at all. Second, that voting by mail can create risks of voter fraud, including in Pennsylvania. And lastly, that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision exacerbated these risks of absentee ballot fraud.
For the first argument, the brief states that the decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, “(1) admitted that the Legislature’s Election Day deadline was unambiguous, (2) conceded that the Election Day deadline was constitutional on its face, (3) relied on the slimmest of evidentiary rationales for its decision, (4) departed its own prior holding on the exact same question just a few months earlier, and (5) disregarded an admirably clear severability clause that was enacted by the Pennsylvania legislature for the very purpose of preventing Pennsylvania courts from making such post-hoc changes to Pennsylvania’s mail-in voting system.”
To illustrate the risks of voter fraud in mail-in voting and absentee ballot voting, the brief cites several sources that all express the same concerns about mail in voting and absentee ballot voting, including the U.S. Supreme Court case Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, the Carter-Baker Commission on Federal Election Reform, the U.S. Department of Justice’s manual on Federal Prosecution of Election Offenses, the U.S. Government Accountability Office, and more.
Additionally, the brief cites several previous examples of voter fraud by mail-in or absentee voting, including:
- In November 2019, the Berkeley, Missouri Mayor Ted Hoskins was indicted on five felony counts of absentee ballot fraud. Mayor Hoskins allegedly went to the homes of elderly residents to harvest absentee ballots and altered absentee ballots after he had procured them from voters;
- A 2016 State House race in Missouri was overturned and a special election was ordered after allegations of absentee ballot fraud surfaced;
- A 2018 federal Congressional race in North Carolina was overturned after political operatives were indicted and arrested for absentee ballot fraud. The charges alleged that the operatives improperly collected and potentially tampered with ballots to swing the close election in their favor;
- In 2016, Hector Ramirez, a candidate for Assembly in the Bronx, was indicted on 242 counts related to voter fraud. Prosecutors alleged that Ramirez wrote his name in on forged absentee ballots;
- In May 2020, the leader of the New Jersey NAACP called for a new election for a city council position in Paterson, New Jersey citing allegations of vote-by-mail fraud.
The brief also cites previous examples of vote-by-mail or absentee ballot fraud, specifically in Pennsylvania, including:
- In 2018, a Delaware County man was charged with voter fraud after admitting to signing the absentee ballot for a deceased voter;
- In 2014, the ex-Harmar Police Chief pled guilty to voter fraud after he admitted to soliciting absentee ballots for his wife in a 2009 Democratic primary for township supervisor;
- And more.
The brief then argues that the decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court exacerbated the risks of ballot fraud, stating, “First, it created a post-election window of time during which nefarious actors could wait and see whether the Presidential election would be close, and whether perpetrating fraud in Pennsylvania would be worthwhile. Second, it enhanced the opportunities for fraud by mandating, in a cursory footnote, that late ballots must be counted even when they are not postmarked or have no legible postmark, and thus there is no evidence they were mailed by Election Day. This decision created needless vulnerability to actual fraud and undermined public confidence in a Presidential election.”
Lastly, the brief notes recently decided Missouri election cases that dealt with potential election fraud, including Mo. State Conference of the NAACP v. State. In that case, the court concluded that, “fraud in voting by mail is a recurrent problem, that it is hard to detect and prosecute, that there are strong incentives and weak penalties for doing so, and that it has the capacity to affect the outcome of close elections.”
The brief finishes by urging the Supreme Court of the United States to grant the petitions for writ of certiorari, grant expedited review, and reverse the decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
“Free and fair elections are a cornerstone of our republic and make the United States the envy of nations across the globe. To keep those elections free and fair, we must ensure that every legal vote is counted and every illegal vote is not. To not do so would disenfranchise millions of Americans. That’s why my office led a coalition of 10 state attorneys general in filing this amicus brief to urge the Supreme Court of the United States to grant a writ of certiorari in Republican Party of Pennsylvania vs. Boockvar,” said Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt.
Along with South Carolina, attorneys general from Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Kentucky, Missouri, South Dakota, Texas, and Florida also joined the brief.
TRENTON, NJ – Governor Phil Murphy on Monday attributed his shutdown of interstate youth sports to the spread of the virus during travel youth hockey tournaments that included out-of-state teams and players.
“Now while we have also seen coronavirus spread associated specifically, with indoor youth hockey, we know that all indoor sports create a greater risk of team-wide transmission, and that risk is even greater when teams from multiple states come together for tournaments or other youth league functions,” Murphy said. “Therefore, again starting on Thursday, all interstate games and tournaments for indoor youth sports, up to and including high school, are prohibited for the time being. It simply is not safe for teams to be crossing state lines to participate in indoor competitions where there is a serious risk of spreading the virus.”
The measure does not apply to outdoor sports or indoor sports not involving New Jersey based players and teams.
“These are the measures we are taking now, and they do not preclude us from taking further action in other areas, or placing further restrictions on these in the near future. But if we do, we anticipate they will be actions, again, that are surgical in their approach,” Murphy said. “The essential thing is that we have to change our mindset. We remain in the midst of a global pandemic and in case you missed it, our country is now recording more than 100,000 cases per day, Judy, every day, and New Jersey is back at levels we thought we left behind months ago. We have to snap back into reality. This virus has not gone away and it is posing its greatest threat to us in many months.”
Phil Murphy Says Shutting Down Bars, Restaurant Curfew in NJ, a “Surgical Step”, Not Lockdown
TRENTON, NJ – On Monday, Governor Phil Murphy announced that he will be shutting down bar service in New Jersey’s bars and restaurants and implementing a 10 p.m. curfew on indoor restaurant dining. He said that his decision is not the start of a new wave of impending lockdown rules, but a “surgical step” in his fight against COVID-19.
“To be clear, the last thing I want to do, or any of us want to do is to shut our economy back down, and thankfully, we are not at that point. Looking at the data, we are taking surgical steps that we hope will help mitigate the current increasing rate of spread. No one up here wants to take the type of broad and all-encompassing actions like those we had to take in March; we are acting with more precision-based actions based on what we’re seeing on the ground. However, with these actions, we need to change our mindsets. We have to shake off the pandemic fatigue that I know we all feel. I feel it, by the way, as well. And we have to get back into the mindset that saw us crushed the curve in the spring,” Murphy said. “So with that, effective this Thursday, November 12th, all restaurants, bars, clubs and lounges that serve food and drink must close their indoor premises for business by 10:00 p.m. each day and cannot open again until 5:00 a.m. the following day. Outdoor dining may continue past 10:00 p.m. as can takeout or delivery services. This time restriction for indoor dining also includes our casinos. However, their gaming operations may continue around the clock. But after 10:00 p.m., no food or drink will be available to anyone inside the casino.”
Murphy said there is now evidence that patrons sitting at bars and bartenders are spreading COVID-19, but gave no actual figures or examples.
“Additionally, as we have found evidence suggesting an increase of spread to patrons seated at bars and among bartenders, effective Thursday, all bar-side seating will be prohibited at all hours for the immediate future,” He said. “Now because we know some restaurants have relied upon bar seating to allow themselves to reach the 25% capacity limit, we will allow restaurants to now meet that limit by placing tables closer than six feet, but only if they are separated by barriers. The Department of Health, under Judy’s leadership, will issue amended indoor guidance that addresses the requirements for those dividers. And, we are also going to allow individual, fully enclosed dining bubbles to be set up for outside use. These tents, which may be heated, must be limited to only one group of diners each and must be thoroughly cleaned and sanitized between uses. These measures are being taken to help provide our restaurants with greater flexibility as the weather trends colder.”
Ballot Counting Halted in Ocean County As Staff Member Tests Positive for COVID-19
TOMS RIVER, NJ – With thousands of ballots left to still be counted in Ocean County, counting has stopped after at least one county election worker has tested positive for COVID-19. County officials are hoping to resume counting in Downtown Toms River, but not until the election offices have been thoroughly sanitized. At this point, it is unknown who the worker is or whether or not other workers have been exposed or quarantined. Neither the Ocean County Board of Freeholders or Ocean County Board of Elections has made this outbreak public. Sources within the election board say it is uncertain when ballot counting will resume. It is not known at this time whether or not Ocean County Board of Elections Chairman Frank Holman, who has been in the county offices numerous times since the election, according to election board officials has contracted the virus or whether the virus has spread to other workers and volunteers.
Girl Struck by Hit and Run Driver on Halloween in Columbia, Died, $5,000 Reward for Driver Offered
Governor Murphy Explains Why COVID-19 More Dangerous After 10 P.M. in Restaurants
TRENTON, NJ – During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Governor Phil Murphy instituted a COVID-19 curfew. Under that curfew, all businesses that were allowed to open during the shutdown had to close by 9 p.m. The logic behind the curfew didn’t make sense to New Jerseyans then and now that Phil Murphy is bringing back a COVID-19 curfew for bars and restaurants, it makes just as less sense now than it did then.
Murphy was called to task to answer for his curfew and he said people are more reckless after 10 p.m., not the virus.
“People let their hair down at night,” Murphy said. “We’ve seen this in Newark, folks are just not distancing as they should and there’s not the same level of compliance and care. You still got the sense that if you’re seated at the table, you’re compliant.”
Murphy and his top health officials have repeatedly told residents of New Jersey COVID-19 isn’t being spread in restaurants, but today said he fears the spread of the virus could manifest in bars, so he shut down all bar services in the state.
Murphy said a bartender can act as a superspreader while making drinks, delivering drinks and taking payment for those drinks, shuffling up and down the bar, filling orders.
On the bright side, the distance between tables is being reduced, provided the restaurants have state approved dividers.
“We are allowing closer distancing between tables as long as there are Department of Health certified barriers between tables,” Murphy said.
Governor Murphy To Announce New Round of COVID-19 Lockdowns Today, Indoor Dining, Sports and Bars
TRENTON, NJ – Governor Murphy and his administration stated numerous times over the past several weeks that there is no evidence of COVID-19 being transmitted in the state’s restaurants and bars that are adhering to his draconian COVID-19 restrictions. He’s also said sports is not a contributor to the spread of the disease, but today, the Governor and U.S. Senator Cory Booker are going to announce sweeping new lockdown restrictions for businesses across New Jersey once again.
Murphy’s sweeping new chokehold on small businesses will include a 10 pm indoor dining curfew at all New Jersey bars and restaurants. Murphy will have to explain his reasoning for a 10 pm curfew at his 1 pm press conference because we have been unable to find any research to confirm the COVID-19 virus is more transmittable or more deadly after 10 pm in the evening.
One of the measures of the ‘second wave’ lockdown includes banning indoor bar seating.
Murphy will also shut down indoor sports and indoor interstate sports competitions, once again, after telling New Jersey for months that no evidence suggests COVID-19 is being transmitted by sports activity.
What Murphy has said is that COVID-19 spread happens more inside the home during large family gatherings. By closing restaurants early and prohibiting children across New Jersey from participating in sports, they will likely move their activities indoors…within their own homes.
“We’ll take some steps later today, but they won’t come close to what we were doing in the spring,” Murphy said in a CNBC interview this morning. “This is not a lockdown, but this is tweaking our parameters at the edges.”
Pfizer Says COVID-19 Vaccine Has 90% Success Rate and Will Be Ready in 2020
President Donald J. Trump’s “Operation Warp Speed” has produced its first viable COVID-19 vaccine candidate. Today, Pfizer announced its version of the COVID-19 vaccine has shown to be 90% effective during its phase 3 clinical study. The announcement comes 24 hours after President-Elect Joe Biden announced his answer to the COVID-19 crisis would be a national lockdown and mask wearing mandate.
Pfizer today announced their mRNA-based vaccine candidate, BNT162b2, against SARS-CoV-2 has demonstrated evidence of efficacy against COVID-19 in participants without prior evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection, based on the first interim efficacy analysis conducted on November 8, 2020 by an external, independent Data Monitoring Committee (DMC) from the Phase 3 clinical study.
“Today is a great day for science and humanity. The first set of results from our Phase 3 COVID-19 vaccine trial provides the initial evidence of our vaccine’s ability to prevent COVID-19,” said Dr. Albert Bourla, Pfizer Chairman and CEO. “We are reaching this critical milestone in our vaccine development program at a time when the world needs it most with infection rates setting new records, hospitals nearing over-capacity and economies struggling to reopen. With today’s news, we are a significant step closer to providing people around the world with a much-needed breakthrough to help bring an end to this global health crisis. We look forward to sharing additional efficacy and safety data generated from thousands of participants in the coming weeks.”After discussion with the FDA, the companies recently elected to drop the 32-case interim analysis and conduct the first interim analysis at a minimum of 62 cases. Upon the conclusion of those discussions, the evaluable case count reached 94 and the DMC performed its first analysis on all cases. The case split between vaccinated individuals and those who received the placebo indicates a vaccine efficacy rate above 90%, at 7 days after the second dose. This means that protection is achieved 28 days after the initiation of the vaccination, which consists of a 2-dose schedule. As the study continues, the final vaccine efficacy percentage may vary. The DMC has not reported any serious safety concerns and recommends that the study continue to collect additional safety and efficacy data as planned. The data will be discussed with regulatory authorities worldwide.
“I want to thank the thousands of people who volunteered to participate in the clinical trial, our academic collaborators and investigators at the study sites, and our colleagues and collaborators around the world who are dedicating their time to this crucial endeavor,” added Bourla. “We could not have come this far without the tremendous commitment of everyone involved.”
- Vaccine candidate was found to be more than 90% effective in preventing COVID-19 in participants without evidence of prior SARS-CoV-2 infection in the first interim efficacy analysis
- Analysis evaluated 94 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in trial participants
- Study enrolled 43,538 participants, with 42% having diverse backgrounds, and no serious safety concerns have been observed; Safety and additional efficacy data continue to be collected
- Submission for Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) planned for soon after the required safety milestone is achieved, which is currently expected to occur in the third week of November
- Clinical trial to continue through to final analysis at 164 confirmed cases in order to collect further data and characterize the vaccine candidate’s performance against other study endpoints
“The first interim analysis of our global Phase 3 study provides evidence that a vaccine may effectively prevent COVID-19. This is a victory for innovation, science and a global collaborative effort,” said Prof. Ugur Sahin, BioNTech co-founder and CEO. “When we embarked on this journey 10 months ago this is what we aspired to achieve. Especially today, while we are all in the midst of a second wave and many of us in lockdown, we appreciate even more how important this milestone is on our path towards ending this pandemic and for all of us to regain a sense of normality. We will continue to collect further data as the trial continues to enroll for a final analysis planned when a total of 164 confirmed COVID-19 cases have accrued. I would like to thank everyone who has contributed to make this important achievement possible.”
The Phase 3 clinical trial of BNT162b2 began on July 27 and has enrolled 43,538 participants to date, 38,955 of whom have received a second dose of the vaccine candidate as of November 8, 2020. Approximately 42% of global participants and 30% of U.S. participants have racially and ethnically diverse backgrounds. The trial is continuing to enroll and is expected to continue through the final analysis when a total of 164 confirmed COVID-19 cases have accrued. The study also will evaluate the potential for the vaccine candidate to provide protection against COVID-19 in those who have had prior exposure to SARS-CoV-2, as well as vaccine prevention against severe COVID-19 disease. In addition to the primary efficacy endpoints evaluating confirmed COVID-19 cases accruing from 7 days after the second dose, the final analysis now will include, with the approval of the FDA, new secondary endpoints evaluating efficacy based on cases accruing 14 days after the second dose as well. The companies believe that the addition of these secondary endpoints will help align data across all COVID-19 vaccine studies and allow for cross-trial learnings and comparisons between these novel vaccine platforms. The companies have posted an updated version of the study protocol at https://www.pfizer.com/science/coronavirus.
Pfizer and BioNTech are continuing to accumulate safety data and currently estimate that a median of two months of safety data following the second (and final) dose of the vaccine candidate – the amount of safety data specified by the FDA in its guidance for potential Emergency Use Authorization – will be available by the third week of November. Additionally, participants will continue to be monitored for long-term protection and safety for an additional two years after their second dose.
Along with the efficacy data generated from the clinical trial, Pfizer and BioNTech are working to prepare the necessary safety and manufacturing data to submit to the FDA to demonstrate the safety and quality of the vaccine product produced.
Based on current projections we expect to produce globally up to 50 million vaccine doses in 2020 and up to 1.3 billion doses in 2021.
Pfizer and BioNTech plan to submit data from the full Phase 3 trial for scientific peer-review publication.
Joe Biden Announces Plan to Force Every American to Wear a Facemask When Leaving Their Home
Joe Biden, who remains tied up in a contentious election legal battle with President Donald J. Trump today announced his plans for the future of America and one of the items on his list is a face mask mandate for all Americans. On his website, buildbackbetter.com, Biden says that experts agree that tens of thousands of lives can be saved if Americans wear masks.
Biden says all Americans will be required to wear facemasks from the second the step outside the front door of their home.
“Every American to wear a mask when they are around people outside their household…Every Governor to make that mandatory in their state. Local authorities to also make it mandatory to buttress their state orders,” Biden said.
The last part is just a fancy way of saying, imposing, penalties, fines and perhaps jail time against mask violators.
“Once we succeed in getting beyond this pandemic, we must ensure that the millions of Americans who suffer long-term side effects from COVID don’t face higher premiums or denial of health insurance because of this new pre-existing condition,” Biden says in his plan. “The Biden-Harris Administration will work to ensure that the protections for those with pre-existing conditions that were won with Obamacare are protected. And, they will work to lower health care costs and expand access to quality, affordable health care through a Medicare-like public option.”
You can read Biden’s full statement on COVID-19 here:
The American people deserve an urgent, robust, and professional response to the growing public health and economic crisis caused by the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. President-elect Biden believes that the federal government must act swiftly and aggressively to help protect and support our families, small businesses, first responders, and caregivers essential to help us face this challenge, those who are most vulnerable to health and economic impacts, and our broader communities – not to blame others or bail out corporations.
The Biden-Harris administration will always:
- Listen to science
- Ensure public health decisions are informed by public health professionals
- Promote trust, transparency, common purpose, and accountability in our government
President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris have a seven-point plan to beat COVID-19.
Ensure all Americans have access to regular, reliable, and free testing.
- Double the number of drive-through testing sites.
- Invest in next-generation testing, including at home tests and instant tests, so we can scale up our testing capacity by orders of magnitude.
- Stand up a Pandemic Testing Board like Roosevelt’s War Production Board. It’s how we produced tanks, planes, uniforms, and supplies in record time, and it’s how we will produce and distribute tens of millions of tests.
- Establish a U.S. Public Health Jobs Corps to mobilize at least 100,000 Americans across the country with support from trusted local organizations in communities most at risk to perform culturally competent approaches to contact tracing and protecting at-risk populations.
Fix personal protective equipment (PPE) problems for good.
President-elect Joe Biden is taking responsibility and giving states, cities, tribes, and territories the critical supplies they need.
- Fully use the Defense Production Act to ramp up production of masks, face shields, and other PPE so that the national supply of personal protective equipment exceeds demand and our stores and stockpiles — especially in hard-hit areas that serve disproportionately vulnerable populations — are fully replenished.
- Build immediately toward a future, flexible American-sourced and manufactured capability to ensure we are not dependent on other countries in a crisis.
Provide clear, consistent, evidence-based guidance for how communities should navigate the pandemic – and the resources for schools, small businesses, and families to make it through.
- Social distancing is not a light switch. It is a dial. President-elect Biden will direct the CDC to provide specific evidence-based guidance for how to turn the dial up or down relative to the level of risk and degree of viral spread in a community, including when to open or close certain businesses, bars, restaurants, and other spaces; when to open or close schools, and what steps they need to take to make classrooms and facilities safe; appropriate restrictions on size of gatherings; when to issue stay-at-home restrictions.
- Establish a renewable fund for state and local governments to help prevent budget shortfalls, which may cause states to face steep cuts to teachers and first responders.
- Call on Congress to pass an emergency package to ensure schools have the additional resources they need to adapt effectively to COVID-19.
- Provide a “restart package” that helps small businesses cover the costs of operating safely, including things like plexiglass and PPE.
“THIS ISN’T ABOUT POLITICS. IT’S ABOUT SAVING LIVES.”
Plan for the effective, equitable distribution of treatments and vaccines — because development isn’t enough if they aren’t effectively distributed.
- Invest $25 billion in a vaccine manufacturing and distribution plan that will guarantee it gets to every American, cost-free.
- Ensure that politics plays no role in determining the safety and efficacy of any vaccine. The following 3 principles will guide the Biden-Harris administration: Put scientists in charge of all decisions on safety and efficacy; publicly release clinical data for any vaccine the FDA approves; and authorize career staff to write a written report for public review and permit them to appear before Congress and speak publicly uncensored.
- Ensure everyone — not just the wealthy and well-connected — in America receives the protection and care they deserve, and consumers are not price gouged as new drugs and therapies come to market.
Protect older Americans and others at high risk.
President-elect Biden understands that older Americans and others at high-risk are most vulnerable to COVID-19.
- Establish a COVID-19 Racial and Ethnic Disparities Task Force, as proposed by Vice President-elect Harris, to provide recommendations and oversight on disparities in the public health and economic response. At the end of this health crisis, it will transition to a permanent Infectious Disease Racial Disparities Task Force.
- Create the Nationwide Pandemic Dashboard that Americans can check in real-time to help them gauge whether local transmission is actively occurring in their zip codes. This information is critical to helping all individuals, but especially older Americans and others at high risk, understand what level of precaution to take.
Rebuild and expand defenses to predict, prevent, and mitigate pandemic threats, including those coming from China.
- Immediately restore the White House National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense, originally established by the Obama-Biden administration.
- Immediately restore our relationship with the World Health Organization, which — while not perfect — is essential to coordinating a global response during a pandemic.
- Re-launch and strengthen U.S. Agency for International Development’s pathogen-tracking program called PREDICT.
- Expand the number of CDC’s deployed disease detectives so we have eyes and ears on the ground, including rebuilding the office in Beijing.
Implement mask mandates nationwide by working with governors and mayors and by asking the American people to do what they do best: step up in a time of crisis.
Experts agree that tens of thousands of lives can be saved if Americans wear masks. President-elect Biden will continue to call on:
- Every American to wear a mask when they are around people outside their household.
- Every Governor to make that mandatory in their state.
- Local authorities to also make it mandatory to buttress their state orders.
Once we succeed in getting beyond this pandemic, we must ensure that the millions of Americans who suffer long-term side effects from COVID don’t face higher premiums or denial of health insurance because of this new pre-existing condition. The Biden-Harris Administration will work to ensure that the protections for those with pre-existing conditions that were won with Obamacare are protected. And, they will work to lower health care costs and expand access to quality, affordable health care through a Medicare-like public option.
Murphy Reports 5,000 New COVID-19 Cases This Weekend, Will He Shut It Down?
TRENTON, NJ – New Jerseyans are on edge this week. Many because of the uncertainty of the 2020 presidential election and many more because of the uncertainty in the future decisions of New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy.
Governor Murphy this weekend announced 5,250 new COVID-19 cases were reported statewide. On Saturday, Murphy reported 3,207 new cases and on Sunday, he reported 2,043 more, signaling a return to April 2020 infection rates. According to Murphy, 15 New Jerseyans died of COVID-19 this weekend, bringing the state total to 14,629 deaths, nearly half of which came during the height of the pandemic across New Jersey’s senior citizen and long term care facilities.
“This pandemic is real, and these numbers are going in the wrong direction. Wear a mask. Social distance. Stay safe,” Murphy said. “We’re still in the middle of a pandemic and need everyone to take this seriously. Wear a mask. Social distance. Wash your hands. Use common sense.”
Murphy said the virus has been spreading rapidly at indoor functions across New Jersey such as weddings, house parties and family gatherings. Murphy’s administration concluded that restaurants, gyms, bars and other businesses have not been the source of any major flareups, verified by over 2,000 paid contact tracers working statewide.
Still, many feel Murphy’s past irrational lockdown will make an ugly return any day. Stores are already beginning to sell out once again of toilet paper and paper towels as many New Jerseyans are once again stocking up on long-term essentials.
If faced with another indoor dining closure, thousands of restaurants will go out of business statewide. Many retail businesses already on their death bed will also not survive, leaving strip malls across New Jersey vacant and putting owners and workers of those businesses back on the unemployment line.
Murphy has said all measures are on the table and although he has mentioned a ‘scalpel’ approach, the governor’s comments in recent weeks regarding the ‘second wave’ of the pandemic are not reassuring for small business owners on the brink of bankruptcy and failure.
The question on many minds in New Jersey isn’t, “Will I catch COVID-19”, but “Will he shut us down?”
Geoghegan’s Howell Job Still on the Line As GOP Closes In on DeGarmeaux
HOWELL TOWNSHIP, NJ – As election day ballots and provisional ballots are counted in Monmouth County Republican Councilwoman Evelyn O’Donnell is closing in on small business owner Andre DeGarmeaux’s lead. It is projected now that O’Donnell will win the election as the remaining ballots will likely lean Republican. DeGarmeaux’s running mate, Mayor Theresa Berger however has pulled ahead of her Republican challenger Susan Brennan.
Currently, Berger, who staunchly opposes the Republican plan to build a massive recycling facility on Randolph Road leads Brennan by nearly 10 points.
A win for O’Donnell might save embattled Business Manager Brian Geoghegan’s job. It might not. Geoghegan has been under fire for a series of questionable unilateral moves he has made in recent months that have upset the residents of Howell. First, Geoghegan wields more power than the mayor and council combined. Many residents say, Geoghegan, who is not a resident of Howell doesn’t exactly have the township’s best interest at heart.
A Monmouth County Republican who is close to Geoghegan told Shore News Network, “Both sides really want him out, but it will be hard for the Howell Republicans to get rid of him because of his connections to the party.”
If DeGarmeaux and Berger both win, it’s definitely the end of the line for Geoghegan, but let’s face it. Numbers don’t lie and those numbers aren’t looking good right now for DeGarmeaux as the final batches of late mail-in and provisional ballots will likely eat away at his current 157 vote lead he maintains over O’Donnell in the next couple of days.
Geoghegan can breathe a sigh of relief but has to continue explaining his actions to the people of Howell. Geoghegan is involved in three scandals. First, a whistleblower lawsuit by a former employee who claims workplace harassment has been filed against him. Secondly, when Geoghegan unilaterally made the decision to shut down the township parks and effectively shut down youth sports, residents from all walks of life were shocked at the power one out-of-towner wielded in their community. Lastly, Geoghegan recently was involved in a cover-up that saw a former executive employee get a huge payday after not showing up for work for months. Once again, residents are still waiting for answers on that decision, but Geoghegan has thus far refused to speak about the incident.
Geoghegan right now is the most powerful public official in Howell. He doesn’t need the council or mayor’s consent to run the township and he knows it. Arrogance has always been the Achilles heel for the business manager and that arrogance is what might drive Republicans in the township to make the move necessary to appease voters ahead of the next big election after the tight 2020 election has shown, party lines can…and will be crossed across Howell if it’s in the best interest of the community.