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News

Lawsuit: Gloucester Township allegedly used threat of arrest to coerce employee to resign

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Open Government Advocacy Project
Created: September 03, 2014
No comments on “Lawsuit: Gloucester Township allegedly used threat of arrest to coerce employee to resign”

On August 5, 2014, West Berlin attorney Donald M. Doherty, Jr. filed an Open Public Records Act (OPRA) lawsuit on my behalf against Gloucester Township (Camden County).  The lawsuit, John Paff v. Township and Gloucester and Rosemary DiJosie, Township Clerk, Docket No. CAM-L-3147-14 is on-line here.

The lawsuit's basis is a tip from an informant that those in power in Gloucester Township government sought to remove a high-ranking employee from his position so that they could give the job to another person who was politically connected and favored.  In order to prod the employee into leaving his position, those holding political sway allegedly arranged for the employee to be caught doing something illegal and then used a threat of arrest and prosecution to coerce him into resigning.

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Shopping bag tax a waste of Mercer County freeholder time

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Written by: Steven Uccio
Category: Letters to Editor
Created: September 02, 2014
No comments on “Shopping bag tax a waste of Mercer County freeholder time”

Steven Uccio of East Windsor is a Libertarian candidate for Mercer County Freeholder. This letter to the editor appeared in The Times of Trenton.

While our property taxes and debt climb, the Mercer County freeholders are focused on other things. What could be more important than making living here more affordable? Plastic shopping bags and new taxes.

Our freeholders want to levy a 5-cent per bag tax on each plastic shopping bag used here in Mercer County. First, I consider it a waste of time, when there are more important things to be done. Second, let the actual stores worry about their shopping bags. The freeholders should mind their own business; the stores can charge a fee if they deem it necessary. Most grocery stores already sell reusable shopping bags and some offer a discount to those who use them. I've never seen any reason that the county government had to step in.

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Thirteen recent ethics cases against Perth Amboy school board members

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Open Government Advocacy Project
Created: August 29, 2014
No comments on “Thirteen recent ethics cases against Perth Amboy school board members”

I have tracked down the following thirteen ethics matters that are pending or have recently closed against members of the Perth Amboy Board of Education. The New Jersey Libertarian Party's Open Government Advocacy Project, as a public service, has provided links to the source documents regarding each of these complaints.

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Eminent Domain Abuse In Atlantic City

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Written by: Jay Edgar
Category: Latest News
Created: August 29, 2014
No comments on “Eminent Domain Abuse In Atlantic City”

The NJ state Casino Reinvestment Development Authority is attempting to seize private property once again. They are attempting to use eminent domain to seize the home of Charles Birnbaum in Atlantic City. Mr. Birnbaum’s parents purchased this home in 1969. Mr. Birnbaum uses the home as a base for his piano-tuning business and rents the apartment in the house. The Declaration of Taking filed in February by the CRDA presents Mr. Birnbaum with a sum of $238,500 for the taking of his property. Zillow estimates the house worth to be $381,161.

The filing indicates that the property is being condemned, yet the property is in excellent condition.

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Ballot placement discriminates against third-party candidates

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Written by: Patrick McKnight
Category: Candidates and Elections
Created: August 27, 2014

New Jersey is slowly rejecting the two-party system. Voter participation and congressional approval ratings are both at record lows. Yet the courts have issued interpretations of election law that discriminate in favor of the two establishment political parties.

The establishment political parties are guaranteed the first two columns on every ballot. Meanwhile, the Libertarian Party (the third-largest and fastest-growing party) is “lucky” to receive the third column and is often relegated to the fifth or sixth column. This is unfair. All political parties should be treated equally under the law during the construction of the ballot.

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Gloucester Township pays $167,765.38 to settle police false arrest/excessive force suit

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Police Accountability Project
Created: August 23, 2014
No comments on “Gloucester Township pays $167,765.38 to settle police false arrest/excessive force suit”

On July 12, 2013, the Township of Gloucester (Camden County) agreed to pay $167,765.38 to two roommates who sued members of the Gloucester Township Police Department for allegedly entering their home without a warrant, falsely charging and beating them.

In their suit, Marc Pizzo and Jamie Slimm said that on October 17, 2010, Slimm had called the Gloucester Township Police Department's non-emergency number to make an inquiry "regarding Pizzo including but not limited to the status of a past citation." This call allegedly caused Sergeant Mark Benton and Police Officers Dwayne Pietzsch and Paul Bertini to respond.

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Waterford secretly pays $260,000 to settle police false arrest/excessive force suit

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Police Accountability Project
Created: August 21, 2014
No comments on “Waterford secretly pays $260,000 to settle police false arrest/excessive force suit”

On July 21, 2014, the insurer for two Waterford (Camden County) police officers agreed to pay $260,000 to a father and his parents who sued them for alleged harassment, unlawful arrest and use of excessive force.

In their separate suits, Tracey Miller and his parents Ronald and Lavina Miller said that Waterford Police Sergeant Joseph McNally is a "very close friend" of Thomas Watson, who is the father of Tracey's ex-wife Jennifer Miller. According to the complaints, the divorce between Tracey and Jennifer was "highly contested" and involved a domestic violence complaint and custody of the couple's child. 

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Winslow pays $42,500 to settle police excessive force suit

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Police Accountability Project
Created: August 20, 2014
No comments on “Winslow pays $42,500 to settle police excessive force suit”

On February 23, 2013, the Township of Winslow (Camden County) agreed to pay $42,500 to a local man who sued members of the Winslow Police Department for allegedly applying excessive force upon him.

In his suit, Ronald Brown said that on September 18, 2008 he was sitting in parked car when Officer Sean Richards approached on a bicycle and ordered him to exit the vehicle and place his hands on the car.  He claimed that after he complied, Officer Richards handcuffed him and threw him on the ground.  Brown claimed that his injuries were serious enough to warrant a one-week stay in a jail infirmary.

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Level the Playing Field

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Written by: Jim Tosone
Category: Letters to Editor
Created: August 20, 2014
No comments on “Level the Playing Field”

Among the many advantages the Republicans and Democrats have conferred upon themselves is their privileged position on the voting ballot. The establishment political parties are guaranteed the first two columns on every ballot. The other political parties, such as the Libertarian Party, are then put in lottery drawing for columns three and above.

According to state election law, the Republicans and Democrats lose their special columns on the left of the ballot if neither can "poll" at least 10 percent of the votes cast in the previous Assembly election. In 2014 only 8 percent of eligible New Jersey voters participated in one of the two taxpayer-funded primaries. Some 10 percent of 3.7 million votes is 370,000. The law is clear. Neither party even came close.

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Don't Blame the Business People

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Written by: Mark Richards
Category: Letters to Editor
Created: August 18, 2014
No comments on “Don't Blame the Business People”

A recent letter to the Suburban Trends expressed outrage that some business groups take their holdings offshore to avoid U.S. taxes.

The writer shows a complete ignorance of economics and a hostility to private business.

Business and industry flee America because of the anti-free market environment they have to deal with thanks to the politicians and unelected bureaucrats. No business leader in their right mind would want to set up shop where they will be penalized for being productive.

Read more …

New OPRA lawsuit: Chatham Township keeps police officer's claim and two settlement agreements secret

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Written by: John Paff
Category: Open Government Advocacy Project
Created: August 14, 2014
No comments on “New OPRA lawsuit: Chatham Township keeps police officer's claim and two settlement agreements secret”

I am accustomed to public bodies claiming that their executive session minutes are confidential.  It is not so typical, however, for the public body's reasons for wanting to keep its executive minutes secret to also be kept secret.  Not knowing a public body's reason for keeping a document secret makes it very difficult to challenge its claim of confidentiality.

On May 13, 2014, Passaic County Superior Court Judge Ralph L. DeLuccia told the Clifton Board of Education to provide him with some additional information so that he could decide whether or not certain portions of the Board's June 19, 2013 executive session meeting minutes should or should not be disclosed to the public.  So, the attorney for the school board, Donald K. Okner, wrote up a certification dated May 20, 2014 and sent it to the court without sending a copy to my lawyer.  Judge DeLuccia, based on the lawyer's secret certification, decided that the executive session minutes need to be kept secret.

On August 22, 2014 at 9 a.m., Judge Thomas F. Brogan will hear my motion, filed by Clinton lawyer Walter M. Luers, seeking to unseal the May 20, 2014 certification that convinced Judge DeLuccia to keep portions of the June 19, 2013 executive session minutes confidential.

Gloucester Township pays $30,000 to settle police excessive force suit

Details
Written by: John Paff
Category: Police Accountability Project
Created: August 12, 2014
No comments on “Gloucester Township pays $30,000 to settle police excessive force suit”

On March 4, 2014, the Township of Gloucester (Camden County) agreed to pay $30,000 to a Gloucester City man who sued members of the Gloucester Police Department for allegedly purposefully dropping him, while handcuffed, causing his head to strike the pavement.

In his suit, Scott V. Dove said that on July 23, 2011, he and his wife were confronted by Officers Thomas J. Ritz and Timothy Ryan Kohlmyer while they were walking home from his brother's house.  Ritz allegedly ordered Dove to "drop what [he] was holding in his hand" and then handcuffed him.  It was at this point that Officers Benjamin Lewitt and Frank Pace, along with Ritz and Kohlmyer, allegedly threw Dove "against one of the patrol cars on the scene and smashed [his] head against same."  He claimed that the officers then threw him to the ground, beat him with closed fists and kicked him in the face.  The officer allegedly then picked him up to carry him to a patrol car and "purposefully dropped" him causing his head to strike the pavement.  He claimed to have received several injuries including a "fractured left orbital socket."

The case is captioned Dove v. Gloucester Township, Camden County Superior Court Docket No. CAM-L-2934-13 and Dove's attorney was Adam S. Malamut of Cherry Hill.  Case documents are on-line here.

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OPRA suit challenges State's refusal to disclose OPRA requests

Details
Written by: John Paff
Category: Open Government Advocacy Project
Created: August 12, 2014
No comments on “OPRA suit challenges State's refusal to disclose OPRA requests”

On Wednesday, October 8, 2014 at 3 p.m., the Hon. Mary C. Jacobson, A.J.S.C. will hear argument in my Open Public Records Act (OPRA) case against the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission.  My order to show cause, civil complaint, exhibits and brief, filed by Walter M. Luers, Esq. of Clinton, are are on-line here.

My lawsuit challenges the MVC's denial of my request for "all OPRA requests submitted to the MVC between 05/05/14 and 05/12/14."   The MVC oddly denied my request on the basis that disclosure would give "an advantage to competitors" and because "there is an interest of third parties in protecting the confidentiality of their requests for access to public documents"

Penns Grove and Carneys Point pay $2,000,000 to settle police wrongful death/excessive force suit

Details
Written by: John Paff
Category: Police Accountability Project
Created: August 07, 2014
No comments on “Penns Grove and Carneys Point pay $2,000,000 to settle police wrongful death/excessive force suit”

On June 18, 2014, the Borough of Penns Grove and the Township of Carneys Point (Salem County) agreed to pay $2,000,000 to the four minor daughters of a man who died while in police custody.

In her suit, Judith Mincey, the mother of MoShowon Leach, claimed that Penns Grove Police Officers Raymond Rinnier and Joseph Schultz choked Leach to death during his arrest on March 21, 2010.  According to the complaint, Leach was disoriented and "fighting the air" when police were called to the parking lot in which he was located.  Leach allegedly ignored the officers' requests for him to stop and while he was entering the residence of a relative, Officers Rinnier and Schultz allegedly "descended upon him, maced him and took him to ground."  There, Schultz allegedly told Rinnier to "choke him out." Leach was pronounced dead a short time later.  Schultz allegedly said at the scene that “Ray [Rinnier] had to put [Leach] to sleep.”

Read more …

  1. Libertarian Candidate: “Marlboro Day” Violates First Constitutional Amendment
  2. OPRA suit seeks Perth Amboy police records regarding alleged teacher-on-teacher sexual assault
  3. Democrats and Republicans Lose Ballot Column
  4. Substance Dependence Is a Mental Illness, Not a Crime

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The NJ Libertarian Party is NJ's third largest political party, founded in 1972. Our vision is for a world in which all individuals have the right to exercise sole control over their own lives, and have the right to live in whatever manner they choose, so long as they do not forcibly interfere with the equal right of others to live as they choose. Our goal is to build a political party that elects Libertarians to public office, and moves public policy in a libertarian direction.

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