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Affordable housing groups pumped $12B into N.J. economy, officials say

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Officials on Tuesday highlighted a report showing community development corporations in New Jersey have contributed about $12 billion to the state's economy since 1989

NEWARK — In their mission to provide affordable housing, commercial space and related services, New Jersey's community development corporations have been faced with limited financial resources, sometimes relying on volunteers and donations to complete their projects.

But according to a new study by a network of such organizations, the non-profit groups have packed an economic punch over the past 25 years to the tune of $12 billion.

"That's $12 billion with a B," said Staci Berger, president and chief executive officer of the Housing and Community Development Network of New Jersey, which produced the recent study on the economic impact of CDCs in New Jersey.

Berger joined with elected officials and other members of the state's community development sector at an event on Tuesday to share the results of that study and highlight the local impact of CDCs in Essex and Union counties.

The event was held at the Newark headquarters of New Community Corporation, one of the CDCs in the network.

According to the "Stronger Together" report, New Jersey CDCs have contributed about $12 billion to the state's economy since 1989. CDCs directly invested $6.5 billion and those investments created another $5.7 billion of economic activity, the report states.

With that economic impact over the past 25 years, CDCs have added 82,000 jobs through investments in real estate development and rehabilitation and contributed $5.5 billion in workers' wages and contracts with businesses, according to the report.

Since 1989, CDCs have undertaken more than 1,500 developments in New Jersey, including building and rehabilitating more than 21,000 affordable homes and building more than 2.5 million square feet of commercial space, the report states.

Community development corporationsElizabeth Mayor Christian Bollwage speaks at an event on Tuesday, Sept. 29, to highlight a recent report on the $12 billion economic impact of community development corporations in the state over the past 25 years. (Bill Wichert | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com)

On the local level, CDCs in Essex and Union counties have contributed $1.241 billion and $487 million, respectively, to New Jersey's economy over the past 25 years, network officials said.

In Essex County, CDCs have completed 313 developments, which have spurred 8,300 jobs and $590 million in labor income, officials said.

CDCs in Union County have completed 115 developments, spurring 3,100 jobs and $229 million in labor income, officials said.

Pointing to the various projects undertaken in Elizabeth — including the building of commercial space, senior housing and apartments for individuals with special needs — City Mayor Christian Bollwage said "these community development corporations have built better communities for our city."

Richard Rohrman, chief executive officer of New Community Corporation, noted during Tuesday's event that his organization plans to revitalize its properties throughout Newark. The corporation also provides job training, early childhood education and other services, Rohrman said.

"By committing to help the most vulnerable residents, including low-income seniors and the disabled, we aim to ensure that Newark's economic progress is sustainable, but it also includes all members of the community," Rohrman said.

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka said "these CDCs have believed and invested in the city when other folks have not."

"When other people were afraid to invest in the City of Newark, CDCs have always stepped up to the plate," Baraka said.

But the mayor added that more work remains to be done.

Although there has been investment in Newark's downtown area, Baraka said other areas have been neglected for decades and some buildings have been abandoned since he was a child.

"While we celebrate our victories today, we don't want to claim no easy victories," said Baraka, adding that "there's a long way to go and that we have a lot of work to do."


MORE: N.J. Supreme Court rebukes Christie administration, puts courts in charge of affordable housing

The latest report on the economic impact of CDCs comes at a time when such non-profit groups continue to face funding cuts from state and federal sources, officials said.

As one example, Berger noted after Tuesday's event that, over the past five years, the state has not provided direct funding to CDCs through realty transfer fees deposited into the state's Affordable Housing Trust Fund.

The fund was used in part to assist community developers to build affordable housing, but the state has been using the money for other housing programs and not housing development, according to Berger.

Without that investment on the state level, Berger said "it means that CDCs have to go out and borrow that money or they have to put important developments that communities need on hold until the resources become available."

Given such funding cuts, Bill O'Dea, executive director of the Elizabeth Development Company, which works with CDCs, told attendees at Tuesday's event that there is "a crisis in the not-for-profit world."

O'Dea's organization, which is a public, non-profit economic development corporation, has worked closely with non-profit groups "that are fighting to survive, that are fighting to keep their doors open, O'Dea said.

After Tuesday's event, O'Dea said funding cuts have caused non-profit groups to have trouble with maintaining staffing levels and undertaking new initiatives. Many non-profit organizations have depleted their reserve funds in order to maintain their programs, O'Dea said.

While providing nearly the same level of services, Elizabeth Development Company has been forced to reduce its staff by about 40 percent over the past seven years, in large part because of funding cuts, O'Dea said.

"Sometimes you just have to do more with less, and non-profits are really good at that, because people that work for the non-profits really believe in the causes...that they're working on," O'Dea said.

Bill Wichert may be reached at bwichert@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BillWichertNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.


SHU to welcome award-winning poet

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Award-winning poet Nicky Beer will kick off Seton Hall's fall semester Poetry-in-the-Round series with a free public reading Sept. 30.

ex0927college2.jpgPoet Nicky Beer will give the first reading for the fall semester Poetry-in-the-Round series at Seton Hall. 

SOUTH ORANGE -- Award-winning poet Nicky Beer will kick off Seton Hall's fall semester Poetry-in-the-Round series with a free public reading Sept. 30.

Beer's first book, "The Diminishing House," won the 2010 Colorado Book Award for Poetry, and her next book, "The Octopus Game," was described as "clever and arresting" by Publishers Weekly.

She received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Ruth Lilly Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation, a Mary Wood Fellowship from Washington College, a Discovery/The Nation Award and a Campbell Corner Prize.

The reading will take place in the University Center Faculty Lounge at 7 p.m.

Seton Hall University is located at 400 South Orange Ave.

If you would like to submit news pertaining to your college, please send an email to essex@starledger.com.

Which N.J. schools were named National Blue Ribbon schools?

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Fifteen New Jersey schools were honored for excellence by the U.S. Department of Education

Fifteen New Jersey schools have been recognized by the federal government as National Blue Ribbon Schools, a designation that celebrates excellence in academics or progress in closing the achievement gap among groups of students.

The schools -- nine public and six private -- were among 335 nationwide given the prestigious label, U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan announced Tuesday.

Two high schools in the Essex County Vocational Technical School District -- Bloomfield Tech and Newark Tech -- made the list, elating Superintendent James Pedersen and former interim Superintendent Frank Cocchiola, now an assistant to Pedersen.

In an interview, both men credited the district's collaborative atmosphere, with administrators, teachers and students working in close cooperation to boost academic performance.

Pedersen said the Essex County vo-tech district also emphasizes professional development for teachers, constantly improving the level of instruction. That two of the district's four schools were granted the Blue Ribbon designation "says something about our district," he said.

"To have one is great," Pedersen said. "To have two is unbelievable."


Related: Is your child's elementary school in the top 100 in N.J.?

Each of the 15 New Jersey schools was chosen for the "exemplary high performing" category, which weighs state or national tests, high school graduation rates and the performance of subgroups of students, such as those who are economically disadvantaged.

The National Blue Ribbon School program began 33 years ago. Since then, the federal Department of Education has recognized more than 8,000 schools.

An awards ceremony will be held Nov. 9-10 in Washington D.C.

Last year, 11 New Jersey schools were granted the designation.

The New Jersey public schools named to the program Tuesday include:

  • Bergen County Academies, Bergen County Technical Schools, Bergen County
  • Bloomfield Tech, Essex County Vocational Technical School District, Essex County
  • Elizabeth Haddon Elementary School, Haddonfield Public Schools, Camden County
  • Elizabeth High School, Elizabeth Public Schools, Union County
  • H.W. Mountz Elementary School, Spring Lake School District, Monmouth County
  • Liberty Corner School, Bernards Township School District, Somerset County
  • Newark Tech, Essex County Vocational Technical School District, Essex County
  • Southern Boulevard School, School District of the Chathams, Morris County
  • Voorhees High School, North Hunterdon-Voorhees Regional,  Hunterdon County

The private schools recognized include:

  • Academy of Saint Paul, Ramsey, Bergen County
  • Holy Cross Elementary School, Rumson, Monmouth County
  • Our Lady of Good Counsel School, Moorestown, Burlington County
  • Our Lady of Czestochowa School, Jersey City, Hudson County
  • Oratory Preparatory School, Summit, Union County
  • Trinity Academy, Caldwell, Essex County


Mark Mueller may be reached at mmueller@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @MarkJMueller. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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2 men accused of selling drugs out of Parsippany motel

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Police said they recovered a revolver with hollow point bullets, along with marijuana, heroin and MDMA

parcops.jpg                                                                        (Parsippany police) 

PARSIPPANY - A Pennsylvania man and an East Orange man were arrested Monday on charges they were selling drugs from "multiple rooms" at the Red Roof Inn in Parsippany, according to Parsippany police.

James Howell, 44, of Easton, Pa., and Richard Burwell, 46, of East Orange, were arrested following a raid at 11:30 a.m., police said.

Parsippany police officers, along with members of the Morris County Sheriff's K-9 Unit, executed a search warrant at the motel on Route 46 that yielded a Taurus .44 magnum revolver loaded with six hollow-point bullets; 17 small baggies containing suspected marijuana; 47 glassine folds containing suspected heroin; 16 grams of suspected cocaine; 44 pills of suspected MDMA, one bag containing 16 grams of suspected marijuana and one bag containing eight grams of suspected MDMA, police said.


RELATED: Man arrested on I-80 in Parsippany facing drug charges: report 

Also found were packaging and weighing equipment commonly used in the packaging and distribution of illicit drugs, police said.

Police said they arrested both men on the following charges: possession and intent to distribute heroin; possession and intent to distribute cocaine; possession and intent to distribute MDMA; possession and intent to distribute marijuana; possession of hollow point bullets; possession of a firearm while committing certain drug crimes, unlawful possession of a weapon and possession of a firearm by certain persons prevented from having one.

Both men were remanded to the Morris County jail in lieu of $50,000 bail, with no 10-percent option.

Ben Horowitz may be reached at bhorowitz@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @HorowitzBen. Find NJ.com on Facebook. 

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No 'cult' testimony at trial of mother accused of killing daughter, judge says

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Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin ruled a defense expert cannot testify Krisla Rezireksyon belonged to a religious cult and had been brainwashed by her pastor

NEWARK -- At the upcoming trial for a woman accused of killing her 8-year-old daughter in 2011, a defense expert will be barred from testifying she belonged to a religious cult and had been brainwashed by her pastor, a judge has ruled.

In a written decision issued on Friday, Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin said the expert could testify Krisla Rezireksyon suffered from "diminished capacity" at the time of the May 2011 death of Christiana Glenn.

But the judge ruled testimony about her being in a cult and being brainwashed was inadmissible at the trial, because those findings of the expert, Joel Morgan, are not supported by factual evidence.

"Dr. Morgan's characterization of Defendant's beliefs as being 'cult-like' and of her being (the) victim of brainwashing are problematic because they are speculative and do not appear to be within the scope of Dr. Morgan's expertise," according to the judge's decision.

"He neither defined 'cult' nor did he provide support for his conclusions, other than inferring from her low IQ and symptoms of depression that she was particularly vulnerable to brainwashing."

Morgan, a clinical neuropsychologist, described Rezireksyon's pastor as "a 'pathological narcissist' who preys on vulnerable individuals," but Ravin said that conclusion was "not based on sufficiently reliable information, as the expert did not examine the pastor or any other followers of the pastor besides Defendant," the decision states.


MORE: Judge OKs statement of mother, who said she spoke with 'Christ,' in alleged murder of her daughter

Rezireksyon, 34, and her roommate, Myriam Janvier, 27, have been charged with murdering Christiana Glenn, and abusing and neglecting Rezireksyon's two younger children.

Authorities have said Glenn was emaciated and had an untreated broken leg when she was found dead on May 22, 2011 in the family's Irvington apartment. Her siblings - Solomon and Christina Glenn - were also starved and sustained fractures that went untreated, authorities said.

Rezireksyon is scheduled to go on trial on Oct. 26, and Janvier is expected to be tried separately at a later date.

Ravin ruled in January that a statement Rezireksyon made to police would be admissible at her trial.

In the statement, Rezireksyon described how she and Janvier treated Glenn's injuries after the child fell while taking a bath two days before her death. After the girl's leg became swollen. Rezireksyon said she applied "sea salt" and "cornmeal and salt" to the leg.

When she found her daughter not breathing, Rezireksyon said she, her two younger children and Janvier prayed over the girl's body for an hour to 90 minutes before she called 911.

But in her statement, Rezireksyon denied belonging to a cult or being brainwashed.

Rezireksyon's attorney, Adrien Moncur, had argued the statement should be suppressed, claiming she was under "delusional spells" due to her pastor's teachings.

As part of her defense of "diminished capacity," Rezireksyon is preparing to argue she suffered from a "mental defect or deficiency" at the time of the alleged offense, according to the judge's decision.

Based on his evaluation, Morgan determined Rezireksyon's "mental capacity was significantly impaired, and that she was depressed and delusional around the time of the incident," the decision states.

Morgan diagnosed Rezireksyon with "mild mental retardation, dependent personality disorder, and psychosis, and found symptoms of schizoid personality disorder," the decision states.

The decision states Morgan "believes that Defendant suffers from a mental deficiency that affected her cognitive capacity to form the requisite mental states for the crimes with which she is charged, specifically those requiring 'knowing' and 'purposeful' conduct."

Ravin said Morgan could testify in regard to Rezireksyon's "diminished capacity," but noted that the jury would make the ultimate decision about that evidence.

"Dr. Morgan's testimony at trial would therefore be relevant to proving that Defendant had a mental disease or defect; the question of whether or not the condition in fact constitutes a mental disease or defect is a question reserved for the jury," the decision states.

Bill Wichert may be reached at bwichert@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BillWichertNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

New 20-story tower a symbol of commitment to Newark, Prudential says (PHOTOS)

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The project, which officially introduced itself to the city in a ceremony Tuesday, is a reminder of the company's commitment to the city, officials said.

NEWARK -- From a fifth floor outdoor patio in the new Prudential Financial tower Tuesday, a small group of company executives gathered Tuesday, listening to the sounds wafting up from Military Park below. The buzz of the park's weekly farmer's market, complete with a throng of local shoppers and melodic tunes being played in the square, could be heard in the background as state and local officials joined Prudential to formally welcome its new building.

The environment, Prudential Financial executives said, was exactly as it should have been.

"Prudential is more than just a business that happens to be in Newark," Lata Reddy, the vice president of corporate social responsibility, said in an interview after the company officially cut the ribbon on its newest tower in the city.

"It is a company that is part and parcel of Newark."


RELATED: See where Prudential Financial ranks on Fortune 500 list

The new $444 million glass office building on Broad Street is located just a stone's throw away from the company's headquarters at 751 Broad Street.

The 740,000 square foot, 20-story building has been in the works for about four years, Prudential executives said. In that time, the financial company has added about 1,000 positions to its Newark-based operation, many of which are now housed in the new building.

The decision to build the tower in the city's downtown was an easy one, Reddy said.

"We knew that we had an opportunity...to continue to contribute to the economic development of the city. By placing it in the heart of downtown, we figured we could have the largest impact."

In conjunction with the tower, the company said it has invested in about $150 million worth of revitalization projects surrounding the new building, including restoration projects at the former Hahne & Co. building (which will include a new Whole Foods), and in Military Park. The project also includes 47,000 square feet of retail development.

Prudential Chairman and CEO John Strangfeld called the entire project "a reaffirmation of our dedication to Newark and a symbol of the bright future that lies ahead for the city and our company."

The finance company traces its beginnings to a basement office on Broad Street in 1875. Throughout its 140-year history, the company has remained in the state's largest city. About 3,000 of the company's nearly 48,000 employees across the globe will be located in its new Newark tower.

Local and state officials, including Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, Senator Cory Booker, and County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo, gathered at its ceremonial opening Tuesday singing Prudential's praises for its ongoing commitment to the city.

"We are here about a family member," Central Ward Councilwoman Gayle Chaneyfield-Jenkins said during the ribbon-cutting ceremony. "A family member who stayed true...Prudential is our family."

prudential.JPGPrudential Financial's headquarters, located a few blocks from its new building. (Steve Hockstein | Bloomberg)

In addition to all of the outside investments, the building, itself, makes a sizable footprint on the city's downtown. At 309 feet tall, the Kohn Pedersen Fox-designed building spans two city blocks along Broad Street and includes a 19-story atrium, 3,700 square foot employee gym, a high tech trading floor, and 1.1 million LED light-up media wall.

It's design, Prudential Senior Vice President of Enterprise Services and Financial Systems Richard Hummers said, is understated.

"Prudential's culture (is not) ostentatious," he said. "We wanted (the building) to be current, contemporary, and state-of-the-art. We wanted it to be iconic, but we didn't want it to be...flashy."


SEE MORE: Prudential tops the house on new office tower

That design, he said, translated itself into an eco-friendly building that includes two living green walls, a 50,000 square foot rooftop terrace, electric car charging stations in its parking garage, and a built-in water conservation system.

Altogether, city and company officials said the investment will be one that will continue to contribute to the area for years to come.

"This is Newark," Mayor Ras Baraka said to the crowd at the ceremony. "It's a proud moment to be mayor."

Jessica Mazzola may be reached at jmazzola@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessMazzola. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Man with Tec 9 tried to lose shirt during chase, Newark police say

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A tip also leads to the arrest of an armed teen suspect Monday, police also say

NEWARK -- Two people, including a juvenile, were arrested Monday after being found with weapons, including a semi-automatic equipped to hold extra bullets, department spokesman Sgt. Ron Glover said.

police lights file photo.jpg 

A tipster provided police with a description of an armed youth on Clinton Place around 8:30 p.m., Glover said. Detectives assigned to the Gang Enforcement Division, as well as personnel from the State Police, FBI and State Parole, were patrolling when the tip came in.

The 15-year-old city resident was sitting on a crate outside a home on the 200 block of Clinton when detectives entered the area, then jumped up when he noticed police and ran towards a building, where he repeatedly yelled "open the door," Glover said. Detectives saw a gun handle sticking out of the youth's waistband, Glover also said.

Detectives chased him into the building and then into an apartment bedroom, where he was allegedly trying to hide a loaded, long-nose .357 Magnum behind a dresser. He has been charged with unlawful possession of a weapon, possession of hollow point bullets and resisting arrest. He was being held at the Essex County Youth Detention Facility.

A little more than two hours later, members of the Firearms Interdiction Team — consisting of city police and Essex County Sheriff's personnel — were patrolling near Second and Dickerson streets when they spotted Trayshawn Fuller, 18, of Newark. There was a rectangular bulge under Fuller's shirt that appeared to be a weapon and had a band strapped around his neck, Glover said.

When detectives stopped to investigate, Fuller ran into nearby yards, dropping a loaded Tec-9 semi-automatic equipped with a loaded, extended magazine containing 18 hollow-point bullets as he fled, Glover said, Fuller was quickly captured as he hid behind some bushes while attempting to take off his shirt.

Fuller was arrested and charged with unlawful possession of a weapon, possession of hollow point bullets, possession of a large capacity weapon, resisting arrest
and obstruction of the administration of law.

"Once again I applaud the continued success of these specialized units and the members assigned to them who continue to work hard with the common goal of making our streets safer.  The teamwork between the members of these units has to be commended and recognized,"  said Police Director Eugene Venable.

Paul Milo may be reached at pmilo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @PaulMilo2. FindNJ.com on Facebook

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Get ready for years of detours around I-280 in Newark

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A reader asked a timely question about when a project to rebuild the circuitous network of ramps between I-280 and Route 21 in Newark. When will work start?

Ever get on or off I-280 at Route 21 in Newark? Then you know that exit needs an extreme interchange makeover. 

Our question came from a commenter on NJ.com about the planned project that's been in various stages of discussion, planning and engineering since 2001.

Q: When is work supposed to begin for the new Route 21 North to Route 280 West interchange and other improvements at that spot?

A: The four stage project isn't as simple as it sounds and involves reconstruction of some of I-280's lanes and putting a new deck on the bridge that carries the highway over Martin Luther King Boulevard, in addition to improving an interchange that's wedged in a neighborhood.

But things are getting ready to roll. The DOT held a pre-construction public meeting on Sept. 15 in Newark about the $90 million federally-funded project.

wiz.jpg

GOT QUESTIONS?

Ticked off about mass transit? Wondering about road construction? E-mail your questions to NJ.com's transportation expert Larry Higgs. He'll answer your questions on Tuesdays and Thursdays on NJ.com. You can also Tweet @CommutingLarry.

At that meeting, the DOT struck to its schedule of a fall 2015 start, three years of construction and a winter 2018 completion date.

The project also involves building new bridges to carry I-280 over Route 21 and ramps, and putting a new deck on the bridge over Broad Street. Because of the bridge work, temporary lanes for I-280 will be built while work is done on the inner portion of the highway.

What are drivers going to encounter?

Traffic on I-280 west to Route 21 south and Route 21 south to I-280 east will be rerouted through temporary signals and jughandles. Broad Street to the I-280 east ramp and the Route 21 north ramp to I-280 east will be closed for construction, but rerouted through detours. I-280 east to Route 21 south will not be affected.
 
Drivers on the highway will encounter lane shifts and there will be two weekends during the second phase of the construction where I-280 will be reduced to one lane while a deck is installed on the Martin Luther King Boulevard.

Readers have questions about road and transit projects which we try and get answers to, whether it's updating what's happening with replacing a bridge that carries Route 18 over busy Route 1 in Middlesex County to how much traffic will the new Route 7 Wittpenn bridge handle In Hudson County. Keep the questions coming.

Larry Higgs may be reached at lhiggs@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @commutinglarry. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Integrity House to host corporate run

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On Oct. 7, the Integrity House will host the annual Newark Corporate Run in Washington Park to raise funds and awareness for substance abuse treatment programs and services.

ex0927fivek.JPGParticipants at the start of last year's Newark Corporate Run. 

NEWARK -- On Oct. 7, the Integrity House will host the annual Newark Corporate Run in Washington Park to raise funds and awareness for substance abuse treatment programs and services.

All proceeds from the event will benefit the community outreach programs and treatment facilities at Integrity House, which provides addiction treatment and support services for almost 2,400 adult and adolescent addicts each year.

In addition to the race, the event will include lunch, entertainment, a trivia contest and an awards ceremony for individual and team winners following the race.

Runners can sign up individually or in corporate teams, but teams must be registered before the day of the race; only individual runners will be permitted to sign up on race day. Race day registration begins at 10:30 a.m. and the race will start at 12:15 p.m.

To register, visit register.compuscore.com/newarkcorporaterun.

For more information, including registration fees, visit integrityhouse.org or call 973-623-7246.

N.J. lawyer admits cheating government out of $50K in taxes

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Woman was previously indicted for allegedly running a mortgage scam.

Hand.jpgStephanie Hand was previously indicted for allegedly running a mortgage scam, authorities said.
 

NEWARK -- An Essex County lawyer pleaded guilty Tuesday to skipping out on two years of tax returns, a move that authorities say cost the government more than $50,000.

According to a release from IRS Special Agent in Charge Jonathan D. Larsen, Stephanie Hand pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to file tax returns for her business, Newark law firm Hand Little, LLC, in 2008 and 2009. During those years, the firm grossed more than $326,000, Larsen said.

"Most individuals file truthful tax returns voluntarily and pay their share of taxes," Larsen said in the release.

"IRS special agents are doing their job to ensure the honest individuals do not have to pick up the tab of those people not filing their returns."

Hand is facing up to two years in prison and $50,000 in fines, officials said. Her sentencing is scheduled for Dec. 15.

In 2013, Hand was indicted for allegedly stealing $873,520 in a mortgage scheme. Authorities alleged Hand teamed up with two men to run the scheme, which involved using stolen identities to file fraudulent home mortgage loan applications.

The status of that case is unclear.

Jessica Mazzola may be reached at jmazzola@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessMazzola. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Newark rabbi mourned after fatal hit-and-run in Jersey City

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A Jersey City rabbi who died on Sunday after being gravely injured when struck in a hit and run on Sept. 21 is being buried today at King Solomon Memorial Park in Clifton.

JERSEY CITY -- The man who died Sunday after being gravely injured in a hit-and-run accident earlier this month was a rabbi for 15 years and described by grieving family members as "scholarly" and "talkative."

Rabbi Zechariah Lewi, 58, of the Commandment Keepers Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation in Newark was struck by a vehicle at about 7 p.m. while crossing Route 440 at Danforth Avenue on Sept. 21. At the time of the accident, he was returning home to Society Hill from his IT job in New York. 

"He was scholarly, humble, giving, caring, generous," said Zadikim Yisrael-Lewi, the wife of the rabbi, who was born William Kennedy in Harlem and went by his religious name. "He went the extra mile for people and he always listened in a situation and was not quick to pass judgment.

"It's ironic that his life was taken by someone who did not have the courage to stop," the grieving wife added as she sat in her home with family and friends this morning as they prepared to leave for the funeral. 

Police are still investigating the hit-and-run and looking for the driver who fled the scene. A witness told police the vehicle that struck Lewi was a black four-door Toyota Camry or Corolla with shiny rims and tinted windows, Jersey City police said. 

Lewi suffered two broken legs, a broken pelvis, collapsed lungs and had bruising on the brain, said Yisrael-Lewi. He died at 2:51 p.m. on Sunday with his wife at his side at the Jersey City Medical Center-Barnabas Health.

Yisrael-Lewi said her husband studied at the Israelite Academy in Queens and that he was versed in the Torah, Talmudic studies and Cabalism. He became a rabbi in 2000, five years before the pair married, she added. 

The night of the accident, Yisrael-Lewi returned home from her job as a legal secretary in New York at about 7:30 p.m. and was walking across the intersection when she saw the aftermath of the accident, not knowing her husband had been injured. 

"I saw a sock and glasses and I did not know they were his," Yisrael-Lewi said. "I thought, 'This must have been a very bad accident.' When I got home the security office called and said there had been an accident."

She walked back to the intersection and an officer said that her husband was at Jersey City Medical Center. She rushed to the hospital where another officer told her a speeding car had struck her husband and sped away, but that there was a witness. 

"I don't know that you can describe what that's like," Yisrael-Lewi said of her husband's death. "To stand there and to watch someone who was healthy, well-oriented, to have life just go, and you are standing right there is just an unbelievable experience."

Family members and friends said Lewi was very intelligent and laughed about it. His cousin, Gary Humphry, said "He was very smart and he let you know it."

The victim's wife added: "He was talkative, but it depended on the subject matter. If he was highly engaged in the subject, he would say, 'I'm not finished yet,' or 'Wait, I'm not done.'"

Asked what they would say to the hit-and-run driver who killed their loved one, Humphry simply remarked, "Coward." Another family member said she would tell the driver to "have a conscience and think about the family he left behind and who loved him unconditionally."

"Turn yourself in," added Yisrael-Lewi.

Meanwhile, a memorial page for Lewi has been posted on the BlackJews.org website. The page said that a few months ago Lewi opened for Commandment Keepers in Newark.

Anyone with information on the fatal hit-and-run is asked to call the Jersey City police tip line at 201-547-JAIL. 

N.Y. burglars hit 65 homes in Middlesex, Essex, prosecutor says

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A Middlesex County grand jury has charged two Bronx men with 142 counts arising out of 65 burglaries committed in nine communities in Middlesex and Essex counties.

new-gavel1jpg-36601cb88dfdf974.jpgTwo Bronx men were indicted in New Brunswick on 142 charges arising from 65 burglaries in Middlesex and Essex counties. 

NEW BRUNSWICK -- A Middlesex County grand jury has charged two Bronx men with 142 counts arising out of 65 burglaries committed in nine communities in Middlesex and Essex counties.

Middlesex County Prosecutor Andrew Carey said Wednesday that Felix Bruno, 33, and Anthony Goodwine, 50, were charged with committing the burglaries between Dec. 12, 2013, and Aug. 18, 2014 and collecting more than $850,000 in cash and jewelry.

The grand jury handed up the indictment Tuesday that included 25 counts against both men for committing the burglaries together, 113 counts against Bruno separately, and four against Goodwine separately.

Carey said the burglaries occurred on various dates in Edison, East Brunswick, South Brunswick, Piscataway, Old Bridge, North Brunswick, South Plainfield and Milltown. Two other burglaries, which occurred in Livingston, were transferred from Essex County, after investigators determined Bruno and Goodwine allegedly were responsible, the prosecutor said.

The grand jury charged both defendants with counts of conspiracy, theft by unlawful taking, burglary, and resisting arrest on Aug. 19, 2014, while attempting to flee from police before they were caught.

In addition, the grand jurors separately charged Bruno with burglary, theft by deception, two counts of unlawful possession of a .22-caliber handgun and criminal mischief by damaging the properties of two residents while committing the burglaries, Carey said.

Goodwine was also charged separately with burglary and theft by deception for the four burglaries he committed without his co-defendant.

Both men are in the Middlesex County jail, also facing burglary charges out of Ocean Township and Manalapan in Monmouth County, according to jail records.

Carey said the investigation into Bruno and Goodwine is still "active and continuing."

Anyone with information is asked to call their local police department or the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office at (732) 745-3300.

Sue Epstein may be reached at sepstein@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @susan_epstein. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Body found below N.J. Turnpike extension possible suicide, police say

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Authorities are investigating the body, which police said was found in Newark Wednesday morning.

14264792-mmmain.jpgAuthorities are investigating the body, which police said was found in Newark Wednesday morning. File photo of the New Jersey Turnpike. (Tony Kurdzuk | The Star-Ledger)
 

NEWARK -- State police are investigating the death of a man whose body was found below the westbound New Jersey Turnpike extension in Newark, authorities confirmed Wednesday.

Police investigating an abandoned Dodge in the area found a man's body below the overpass at about 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, State Police Capt. Stephen Jones said. The body was in a "barren" fenced-in area below the roadway, Jones said.

The man's death is being investigated as a possible suicide, Jones said. Authorities said they believe the abandoned car is related to the incident.

According to a preliminary investigation, the man is believed to be in his 30s and from Hudson County, police said. His identity was not immediately released.

An examination by the Essex County medical examiner's office will determine the cause of death, police said.

It is unclear whether or not the land the body was found on is state-owned, officials said.

Jessica Mazzola may be reached at jmazzola@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessMazzola. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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'Like a dream': Dozens become U.S. citizens at Essex ceremony

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At the first naturalization ceremony in the Essex County Superior Court, 34 people from a total of 17 countries became U.S. citizens at a ceremony on Wednesday

NEWARK -- About 30 years since they grew up across the street from each other in India, Manil and Urvi Makhija sat together on Wednesday in the front row of a Newark courtroom.

After getting married and having two sons, the Nutley residents were about to become American citizens.

"It's one of those dream stories," Manil Makhija said.

The couple were among the 34 people from a total of 17 countries who were naturalized as U.S. citizens during a ceremony at the Historic Courthouse in the Essex County Superior Court. The event was the first naturalization ceremony to be held in the county's Superior Court.

With their right hands raised, the new citizens recited the Oath of Allegiance. After they were finished, their family members and friends applauded as many of the new citizens waved tiny American flags in the air.

Following the ceremony, Montclair resident Lizel Persaud said she was excited about becoming a citizen, "because there's a lot of people that wish they were in my place."

"There's a lot of people I know that wanted this," said Persaud, who came to the United States from Guyana with her family five years ago.

"This is like a dream," Persaud added, "come true."


MORE: Red, white and new! 101 take citizenship oath in special ceremony at Liberty State Park (PHOTOS)


In addition to India and Guyana, the new citizens were born in Bolivia, Ghana, Portugal, Burkina Faso, St. Kitts-Nevis, China, St. Lucia, Columbia, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, Dominican Republic, Nigeria, Uruguay, Ecuador and Peru.

From those different countries, Essex County Assignment Judge Sallyanne Floria said the group would now become "one nation."

"You have accomplished what your fellow citizens born in the United States will never do," Floria told the new citizens during the ceremony. "You have earned your citizenship through your hard work, your dedication and your courage.

"You enrich our country by your presence, our country, my country and your country," she later added. "You have achieved the American dream and our country is stronger because of it."

But Floria also reminded the group that, along with the rights and privileges of being American citizens, "come duties, responsibilities and the importance of being an active member of our society."

Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo, Jr., Essex County Sheriff Armando Fontoura and state Sen. Teresa Ruiz (D-Essex) also participated in the ceremony.

For West Orange resident Patricia Gapasin, she wanted to become a U.S. citizen, because her three-year-old daughter was born in the United States and is a citizen.

Gapasin said the ceremony was even more exciting, because her daughter was there. Gapasin said she saw her own mother become a citizen a few years ago, and now her daughter was sharing the moment with her.

"It's a big honor to actually go through with it and actually be a citizen after so many years," said Gapasin, who came to the United States from Bolivia more than 20 years ago when she was a child.

"It's a privilege, because not everyone can do it."

Bill Wichert may be reached at bwichert@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BillWichertNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Newark woman goes on trial on charges of killing neighbor's dog

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Haniyyah Barnes, 28, of Newark, is charged with killing a two-year-old Shih Tzu by throwing the dog into oncoming traffic during an August 2011 parking dispute

NEWARK -- Around 11:30 p.m. on Aug. 26, 2011, Nazirah Bey said she was sleeping in a bedroom in her Newark apartment with her infant daughter when she was awakened by loud, banging noises near the front door.

When Bey checked out the commotion, she learned that her neighbor, Haniyyah Barnes, had kicked in the front door and was arguing with Bey's father over a parking dispute, according to Bey. Barnes then hit Bey multiple times before Bey pinned her against a wall, Bey said.

But after Bey let her go, Barnes ultimately turned to Honey Bey, a two-year-old Shih Tzu of Bey's that had begun barking, Bey said.

With Bey chasing after her, Barnes grabbed Honey Bey by the neck, ran outside and tossed the dog inside the street, where it was struck by a car and killed, according to Bey. Bey said she rushed to Honey Bey and the dog was "gasping for air," but she ultimately died.

Bey recounted that night on the witness stand Wednesday at Barnes's trial on charges of burglary, theft, animal cruelty and criminal mischief. Barnes, 28, of Newark, had pleaded guilty in April 2014, but Superior Court Judge Richard Sules in February allowed her to withdraw her guilty plea.

The altercation stemmed from a parking arrangement between Bey and Barnes, who lived two doors down from one another on Fabyan Place in Newark, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors have said Bey had allowed Barnes's mother to park in her driveway. On the night of the incident, Barnes became angry and kicked in Bey's front door, because Bey's car was blocking the mother's car, which was parked in the driveway, prosecutors said.

A Newark police officer was sitting in a patrol vehicle nearby and witnessed Barnes throw the dog into the street, prosecutors said. Barnes then approached Bey, leading the officer to pull her of Bey and arrest her, prosecutors said.

"This is not a whodunnit. These families know one another. We know who committed these acts. There are no issues of identification," Essex County Assistant Prosecutor Michele Miller told jurors on Wednesday in her opening statement.

Miller argued the evidence will show Barnes intended to commit a crime when she entered the home.

"There was no intent on the defendant's part for that dog to come out of the situation alive," Miller said.

But Barnes's attorney, Michelle Treiber, told jurors the state will not be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Barnes planned to rob the residence.

Treiber said prosecutors have "overcharged" Barnes.

"Once the facts have been presented, you will not find Ms. Barnes guilty of everything she is charged with," Treiber said in her opening statement.

Bill Wichert may be reached at bwichert@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BillWichertNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Vernal Coleman can be reached at vcoleman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @vernalcoleman. Find NJ.com on Facebook.


Robert Curvin, 'legendary' Newark civil rights leader and historian, dies at 81

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Robert Curvin was a leading activist during the 1950s and 1960s and a key advisor to many of Newark's first black political leaders

NEWARK — On July 12, 1967, Robert Curvin stood outside Newark's 4th Precinct headquarters, bullhorn firmly in hand.

Inside the building was John Smith, a cab driver still clinging to life after being arrested and beaten by police, drawing throngs of city residents ready to explode after decades of mistreatment and racial tension. Curvin pleaded for peace, but it was not to be.

The incident marked the beginning of five days of civil unrest — riots to some, a rebellion for others — that forever changed the course of Newark, and cast a pall over the city from which it is still working to emerge.

That Curvin, who died Tuesday at 81 after a lengthy illness, stood center stage in such a seminal event came as little surprise to those that knew him. An iconic activist, he was among the city's early leaders in the civil rights movement, serving as national vice chair and Newark chapter head for the Congress of Racial Equality, one of the major organizations credited with bringing issues of racial equality to the fore in the 1950s.

"He's a legend as it relates to civil rights here in Newark," said Sen. Ronald Rice (D-Essex). "Those of us from back in those days, we haven't really forgotten where we come from and how much had to be done. He was one of those people, up until his demise, that recognized there's still a lot to be done."


MORE: Late city historian Clem Price's memory to live on in Newark

In the years following the 1967 uprising, Curvin played a pivotal role in the city's political arena, working as a trusted advisor to its first black mayor, Kenneth Gibson, in 1970. Though he never accepted a city job, he also proved a valuable resource for Gibson's successor, Sharpe James.

"He knew everybody. Everybody knew him," said James. "He was a walking encyclopedia about where Newark's been, where we are today and where we are going."

Though he may have had the ear of the city's political elite, Curvin was busy building a lengthy resume that belied his unique aptitude for both activism and academia.

By 1990, he had helped establisj he non-profit New Community Corporation as a founding board member, spent seven years on the editorial board at the New York Times, earned a doctorate in political science from Princeton, served as dean of the Milano School of Management and Urban Policy at New School University, and begun a 12-year stint heading the Ford Foundation, which ended in 2000.

Curvin largely focused on academic pursuits during his later years, penning books on urban politics and the history of Newark. Just last year, he published "Inside Newark. Decline, Rebellion, and the Search for Transformation" — a comprehensive look at the city's path since the infamous riots.

"He was right in there at the top of his game, even at the end of his life," said People's Organization for Progress Chairman Lawrence Hamm, a fellow civil rights leader who had known Curvin for more than 40 years.

A longtime resident of Newark's Vailsburg section, Curvin and his wife Patricia remained in the same home on Reynolds Place for most of their lives. They raised a son, Dr. Frank Curvin, and a daughter, Nicole.

He also spent his final years serving his original alma mater, Rutgers-Newark, working as a visiting scholar and professor at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy on the university's New Brunswick campus.

In a statement, Chancellor Nancy Cantor called his death a "huge blow" to the campus community.

"In our midst was one of the country's most incisive social critics, deeply committed to issues of social justice and yet, he was so gentle and kind. He was someone we could all love and trust."

Dan Ivers may be reached at divers@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanIversNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Glimpse of History: Hoover sweeps through Newark

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NEWARK — In this photo from 1928, Republican presidential candidate Herbert Hoover shakes hands with unidentified local dignitaries from the observation platform of a passenger train in Newark. Hoover and vice presidential candidate Charles Curtis went on to defeat democrats Al Smith and Joseph Robinson in the November election with 58.2 percent of the popular vote to Smith's 40.8 percent....

NEWARK -- In this photo from 1928, Republican presidential candidate Herbert Hoover shakes hands with unidentified local dignitaries from the observation platform of a passenger train in Newark.

Hoover and vice presidential candidate Charles Curtis went on to defeat democrats Al Smith and Joseph Robinson in the November election with 58.2 percent of the popular vote to Smith's 40.8 percent. Hoover won the electoral college 444 to 87.

If you would like to share a photo that provides a glimpse of history in your community, please call 973-836-4922 or send an email to essex@starledger.com. And, check out more glimpses of history in our online galleries Thursdays on nj.com.

Newarkers fear road improvements won't be better for pedestrians, historic house

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A coalition of community groups are concerned that an extensive road project for Route 280 and Route 21 in Newark will be unsafe for pedestrians and a historic home.

The interchange between Route 280 and Route 21 in Newark has never made any sense.

 It's been this way for 60 years, from the time that the state Department of Transportation built the interstate. Motorists can't get to Route 280 west from Route 21, whether they're traveling north or south on the road. Nor can they get to Route 280 east, if they're driving north on Route 21.

The state plans to fix this traffic blunder - with $93 million in federal funds - by building new ramps and repairing deteriorating bridge decks on Route 280.

That all sounds good, but a coalition of 17 community groups says there are design problems that will make it unsafe for pedestrians. The coalition, which includes urban planners, preservationists and environmentalists, also says the plan undermines the structural integrity of the nearby Plume House, Newark's second oldest building, constructed in the 18th century.

Damon Rich, a Newark urban planner leading the charge, says there are no provisions for lighting beneath several sections of the proposed Route 280 overpasses and ramps, so that residents walking home from the Broad Street train station will have to pass through dark corridors. He also says traffic coming off the highway will make it difficult for pedestrians to walk or bike around neighborhoods, including Broad and Spring streets, as well as Grant Street and Eighth Avenue.

Waterfront access to the Passaic River on foot is not enticing, either, according to the group. Someone wanting to go fishing would have to walk along a narrow, isolated path.

"They are paying scant, if any, attention to the areas underneath the overpasses,'' Rich says.  "There are reasonable ways to build streets in 2015.''

The community groups have a point, if you consider statistics compiled by the New Jersey Bike & Walk Coalition. Executive Director Cyndi Steiner says 30 percent of the people killed on New Jersey roads last year were pedestrians.

"We have a problem in the state,'' Steiner says. "If there's an opportunity to make something safer for pedestrians, we're going to speak up about it.''

In a city where 50 percent of its residents do not drive, the coalition has good reason to make a stink about this project, which the coalition believes can be changed before it gets well under way.

The DOT says it is listening to the complaints about its plans for roadway improvements.

DOT spokesman Daniel Triana says a plan has been established to create adequate lighting underneath the bridge overpasses.

Access to the waterfront also has been addressed, according to Triana, who says that his department has worked with the Department of Environmental Protection on guidelines to make sure people can safely get to the Passaic River.

The Plume House issue has not been solved, however. It's an aging historical home, built before 1725, and Newark preservationists don't think it can withstand the Route 280/Route21 construction project.

They're worried because the house is 4 feet from the Route 280 overpass at Broad and State streets.  Liz Del Tufo, president of the Newark Preservation Landmarks Committee, says the foundation of the home has been damaged over the years by vibrations from heavy truck traffic on the overpass.

She wants the NJDOT to repair the foundation of the house before work begins on Route 280, but it doesn't look like that is going to happen.

Triana says NJDOT advised the community groups that they can seek grants to help with the preservation of the building.

"We want them to repair the foundation and they're refusing,'' Del Tufo says. "They don't think it's their fault. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that the damage was caused by the traffic on the overpass.''

What NJDOT will do is install sensors in the historic building to measure vibrations and changes that occur during the project.

If vibrations exceed a threshold limit, Triana says, the sensor will send an alert to the contractor. Then, NJDOT officials and the contractor will check out the situation to determine what needs to be done.

As part of the project, NJDOT plans to soften the appearance of the roadway with landscaping.

Such greenery may look nice, but residents want to know how long it will stay that way.

Several residents, including Janise Afalo, say NJDOT doesn't take care of the grass on its exits and entrance ramps to highways in Newark now.

"I give it a less than a year,'' Afalo says. "It looks pretty on the drawing board, but its' just going to become a dumping ground.''

Triana says NJDOT will maintain landscaping on State Street, and the city will be responsible for the work along Route 21.

The project has many moving parts. Getting them to work together - and to address community concerns - is tricky. There have been 20 meetings since the project was announced in 2008.

When the road is done, sometime in 2018, we'll see if this puzzle comes together in a way that satisfies everyone.

Barry Carter: (973) 836-4925 or bcarter@starledger.com or nj.com/carter or follow him on Twitter @BarryCarterSL

Prosecutors challenge controversial technique in professor's sex assault trial

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The state presented a rebuttal witness to challenge Rutgers-Newark professor Anna Stubblefield's claims that "facilitated communication" is effective

NEWARK -- At Rutgers-Newark professor Anna Stubblefield's sexual assault trial, prosecutors took aim on Wednesday at the typing method she claims to have used to communicate with a disabled man.

While the 34-year-old man, known as D.J., is unable to speak beyond making noises and the state's experts have said he is intellectually impaired, Stubblefield has testified they communicated through a controversial technique known as "facilitated communication."

Under that method, advocates claim facilitators provide physical support to assist users with typing on a keyboard. Critics have said the method is ineffective in light of studies showing facilitators influencing the users' messages.

After Stubblefield finished her testimony on Wednesday, the state presented James Todd, a psychology professor at Eastern Michigan University, as a rebuttal witness to challenge her claims about the overall effectiveness of the method.

Todd argued every "methodologically sound" study of facilitated communication have determined it to be an invalid means of communication. Such studies have demonstrated the facilitators controlled the users' responses, Todd said.

Todd also explained the alleged flaws in numerous studies cited by Stubblefield as evidence that the technique works.

"There are zero methodologically sound studies showing facilitated communication actually works," Todd testified. "It's become the single most scientifically discredited intervention in all of developmental disabilities.

"Facilitated communication is overwhelmingly rejected by the scientific community," he later added.

But on cross-examination, Stubblefield's attorney, James Patton, told Todd, "you have a lot of people that disagree with you" in regard to the validity of facilitated communication.

Patton noted how "peer-reviewed articles" have been published that depicted the technique as being effective.

Patton also highlighted how certain higher education institutions support facilitated communication. He also listed several universities that have faculty members who have endorsed the effectiveness of the technique as well as academic institutions that have included the method in their conferences and curriculum.

Todd claimed "peer-reviewed articles" are reviewed by a small number of individuals to determine whether they meet the standards of a given journal. Such review does not necessarily mean "the results are scientifically valid," Todd said.

As for the continued presence of facilitated communication within higher education settings, Todd said "there's lots of people who are highly educated who's been fooled by this."

Todd added that facilitators may believe the users are typing, but they are unknowingly moving the users' hands as part of the "Ouija board phenomenon," referring to the classic board game supposedly used to connect players to the spirit world.


MORE: Professor rejects claim she 'raped' disabled man

The former chairwoman of the philosophy department at Rutgers, Stubblefield, 45, of West Orange, is facing two counts of aggravated sexual assault for allegedly abusing D.J. in her Newark office in 2011.

Rutgers has placed her on administrative leave without pay.

D.J., who suffers from cerebral palsy and other ailments, wears diapers and requires assistance with walking, bathing, dressing and eating, his mother has testified. Other than making noises, D.J. does not speak, his brother said.

D.J.'s mother and brother have been designated as his legal guardians.

The state's experts have said D.J. has intellectual disabilities and is unable to consent to sexual activity, but Stubblefield claims D.J. is not intellectually impaired and that he consented through facilitated communication.

Stubblefield met D.J. in 2009 through his brother, then a Rutgers student, who was taking a course of Stubblefield's during which the professor discussed the technique. The brother later asked her for more information about the method to see if it might help D.J.

Over the roughly two years Stubblefield worked with D.J., she claims he wrote papers that were presented at conferences and wrote essays for a literature class he took at Rutgers.

Stubblefield said she and D.J. fell in love and ultimately disclosed their sexual relationship to his mother and brother in May 2011.

When Stubblefield was on the witness stand on Wednesday, Essex County Assistant Prosecutor Eric Plant pressed her about whether she thought it was wrong to have sex with the brother of a Rutgers student in her university office.

But Stubblefield claimed she was "not the first professor to engage in sex in my office." She said it was not wrong to use the private space "to see somebody in a mutual relationship."

"I don't think that was a terrible, horrible thing to do," Stubblefield said. "I don't think it was Rutgers' business.

"I think that it's OK for adults to engage in mutual relationships in private," she later added.

Bill Wichert may be reached at bwichert@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BillWichertNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Priest took more than $250K from 'grandmas' at wealthy church, authorities say

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The Rev. Alex Orozco is under investigation by the Essex County Prosecutor's Office for accepting large sums of money and gifts from elderly parishioners in Short Hills

He called them his grandmas.

The Rev. Alex Orozco befriended the elderly women shortly after his assignment to St. Rose of Lima parish in Short Hills.

Orozco was a new priest, charming and kind and afire with enthusiasm.

And always, it seemed, willing to accept money, parishioners said.

For a car. For a big-screen TV. For a house in the Poconos. For another house in his native Colombia. For credit card bills. For a second car. For plane tickets. For furniture. For dental work.

From 2013 through the end of last year, Orozco allegedly took more than $250,000 in cash and goods from women in the wealthy parish after telling them hard-luck stories about the financial woes afflicting him, his family members and his friends.

Alex Orozco13.jpgThe Rev. Alex Orozco said it was a mistake to take cash and gifts from parishioners when he served at St. Rose of Lima Church in Short Hills. He is now assigned to the Church of the Nativity in Midland Park. (Facebook photo) 

The case has sparked a criminal investigation by the Essex County Prosecutor's Office and has raised broader questions about the limits on what clergymen should accept from generous parishioners and whether some of those transactions rise to the level of fraud or theft.

A law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation said detectives are trying to determine how many people Orozco solicited money and gifts from at St. Rose before his transfer last year to a different post at the Church of the Nativity in Midland Park, Bergen County.

Both churches are in the Archdiocese of Newark, which has not informed either parish of the allegations, according to parishioners and the law enforcement official, who was not authorized to speak for attribution.

The official called the investigation "open and active," saying Orozco sometimes collected multiple payments from different parishioners for the same expenses -- car payments and insurance, for instance -- even though both were covered by the archdiocese.

'They want to embrace me'

In an interview with NJ Advance Media at the Midland Park rectory, Orozco, 37, acknowledged accepting large sums of money and other items, but he said that in most cases, he did not ask for them.

"People came to me and said, 'Father, do you need something? Father, do you need anything?'" Orozco said. "Always, always always. ... I try to be very open to people. I try to be the best of myself. They want to embrace me, helping me."

He said he did ask one parishioner, Patricia Brady, to help him buy a house in the Poconos so he could have a retreat away from the rectory. Brady, now deceased, gave him $25,000 -- a sum NJ Advance Media confirmed with the executor of her estate -- but Orozco never did buy the home.

Asked what he did with the money, Orozco said: "I couldn't do it (buy the house), so what I did was try to help other people. So basically I gave it away to people. I did. I helped many people in Colombia. Unfortunately, that happened."


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He also acknowledged asking another St. Rose parishioner to buy him a house in Bogota, Colombia, for his family after she offered her help.

The woman, who was interviewed by detectives in December, told NJ Advance Media that while she freely gave the priest money and gifts on many occasions without solicitation, she did not offer to buy the $150,000 house and, in fact, began to grow suspicious of his motives.

The woman spoke on the condition that she be identified only by her first name, Patty, because she is a wealthy widow who lives alone.

Orozco said he alerted the archdiocese to the criminal investigation in January, after he was questioned by detectives, and that he spoke with Archbishop Bernard Hebda, a co-adjutor archbishop who is expected to replace Archbishop John J. Myers when he reaches retirement age next year.

4 GaMeyers O'BoyleCo-Adjutor Archbishop Bernard Hebda, who is expected to replace Archbishop John J. Myers when he reaches retirement age next year, is seen at a news conference announcing his appointment to the Newark Archdiocese in September 2013. (Star-Ledger file photo)  

"He said, 'Don't worry. We are going to help you with this,'" Orozco said. "That was it."

Jim Goodness, a spokesman for the archdiocese, declined to comment on the investigation, calling it a personnel matter. He said the parishes have not been notified because Orozco maintains his innocence and has not been charged.

"Would you want someone to be talking about you if you were being looked into for something and it turned out to be untrue?" Goodness asked. "You're looking at potential harm."

Orozco's attorney, Edmund DeNoia, said the priest "unequivocally denies" he engaged in wrongdoing at St. Rose.

"To the contrary, he is and has always been a hardworking, compassionate and dedicated priest," DeNoia said in an emailed statement.

"There have been no criminal charges filed against Fr. Alex," DeNoia said, "and we firmly believe that any investigation into Fr. Alex's actions will result in his good name and reputation being cleared."

DeNoia did not respond to a follow-up question about whether Orozco reported the money he accepted on his income tax returns.

From actor to priest

In a Youtube video recorded in 2012, shortly after his ordination in the Newark Archdiocese, Orozco recounts his path to the priesthood.

He was a television actor, model and salsa dancer in Bogota, enjoying a measure of celebrity and the trappings that went with it, he told an audience of seminarians and young men considering religious life.

"I remember when I was working in television, I was making a lot of money. A lot of money," Orozco said. "I had a very nice car. I had a lot of stuff. And I was happy. But when Mary and God called me to follow this life, the real joy is not coming from material things. ... The real joy is coming to be with God."

Orozco, who repeated the story in his interview with NJ Advance Media, said he spent 10 years in a religious order in Colombia, taking vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.

A former classmate who had become a priest in the Newark Archdiocese then contacted him with an offer to attend Immaculate Conception Seminary at Seton Hall University, he said.

The archdiocese has among the highest rates of ordination in the country, in part because it aggressively recruits potential priests from Central and South America and from the Philippines, according to annual statistics compiled by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Ordained May 26, 2012, Orozco was immediately assigned to St. Rose in Short Hills, one of the most affluent communities in New Jersey.

A laundry list of needs

Patty, the widowed parishioner, said she met the priest soon after. He quickly befriended her, visiting her home for meals and occasionally bringing her presents. Sometimes he was accompanied by Juancho Munoz Montoya, a Seton Hall seminarian whom parishioners described as Orozco's friend from Colombia.

It wasn't an unusual arrangement. Patty, 82, said she is a woman of deep faith, appreciative of the work that priests do and the sacrifices they make. She said she has regularly helped people in need, giving away some of the fortune amassed by her late husband, an investment banker.

Parish priest under criminal investigationThe Rev. Alex Orozco, right, poses in a photo on New Year's Eve last year with Juancho Munoz Montoya, a former seminarian at Seton Hall University and friend from Colombia. (Facebook photo) 

"I'm a very Holy Spirit kind of person. I truly believe that," she said. "He has had his hand on my shoulder my entire life, and I thought this was another manifestation."

When Orozco told her of some of his financial difficulties, struggling to survive on his $1,200-per-month salary, she didn't hesitate to open her checkbook. The law enforcement official confirmed Patty's account of her spending, and Orozco, in the interview in Midland Park, acknowledged accepting most of the checks and items.  

Patty said she gave the priest $13,000 to pay off a sport utility vehicle and an additional $20,000 for another car when he traded in the first. Orozco, she said, never told her he received a vehicle allowance of about $500 a month.

When he said he needed work on his teeth, Patty said, she wrote a check for $6,000. She bought plane tickets for Orozco and Montoya to travel home to Colombia and back to New Jersey. At one point, she said, the priest told her a large, specialized window at his mother's home in Colombia had been damaged in a storm. It would cost $5,000 to fix it, he said. She wrote a check.

On another occasion, she said, Orozco told her Montoya's grandmother was at risk of losing her home in Bogota because she owed back taxes.


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"I said, 'Well, how much do you think that is?'" Patty said, adding that Orozco told her $6,500 would allow Montoya's grandmother to keep the house. She wrote another check made out to cash.

"You have no idea what a charming fellow he is," Patty said. "He could sell you the Brooklyn Bridge."

Orozco always appeared grateful, she said, but the stories of hardship kept coming.

For nearly two years, she said, she paid his credit card bills in full, making the checks out to Bank of America. She repeatedly asked to see bills and receipts, she said, and he repeatedly came up with excuses, saying he paid online and couldn't find receipts for his purchases.

"When we got to $75,000, I said, 'This is getting to be a lot, Alex,' and he totally ignored me," Patty said.

Parish priest under criminal investigationThe Rev. Alex Orozco, at bottom left, was one of 16 seminarians ordained in 2012. The new priests chat with Newark Archbishop John J. Myers on the day of their ordination. Orozco is now under investigation by the Essex County Prosecutor's Office. (Star-Ledger file photo) 

In the fall of 2014, Orozco transferred from St. Rose to the Bergen County church after the pastor there, the Rev. Peter Funesti, became gravely ill.

But the move didn't halt Orozco's contact, and he soon complained about the lack of furniture in the rectory, Patty said. Some $8,400 later, she said, Orozco had a new bed, new blinds and new furniture. Separately, she said, she bought him a 55-inch television, which they picked out together at Best Buy.

In total, she said, she spent more than $125,000 on the priest.

"He kept telling me, 'Oh, grandma Patty, you're the only one who helps me. You're the only one. There's no other person,'" she said.

It was a visit from an Essex County detective and an assistant prosecutor that confirmed Patty's growing suspicions about the man she had helped.

Someone had tipped them off that Orozco was collecting money from multiple parishioners at St. Rose and had given Patty's name.

"I told them what I had done for him and how he called me grandma Patty," she said. "And then one of them said, 'You're not the only grandma.'"

She said she has since learned several other people in the St. Rose Community gave Orozco thousands of dollars for airfare and for what he described as attorneys' fees to settle an immigration issue. A Millburn restaurateur, Patty said, also told her he provided Orozco with a $10,000 loan, secured by the priest's Rolex watch, gold prayer beads and various rings. The loan, she said, was repaid.

With all she has discovered, Patty said, she feels betrayed.

"He did this under the guise of the Holy Spirit and God, and that really makes me angry, because you don't do that to God," she said. "He was there to serve God, and he lost sight of that."

A house in the Poconos

Carmela Brady knew her husband's cousin was close to a priest and a seminarian. Patricia Brady, who had never married and who lived alone in a Short Hills home she inherited from her parents, enjoyed the attention, Carmela Brady said.

"They were taking care of her," said Carmela Brady, a Jackson resident and the executor of Patricia Brady's estate. "She was  happy because they were doting on her, and she had never had that in her life. She also had a real devotion to the church and to priests."

Patricia Brady, who was 84 when she died, had worked as a clerk at Millburn town hall, but she lived frugally and amassed sizable savings for retirement, Carmela Brady said.

Parish priest under criminal investigationThe Rev. Alex Orozco, with open-collared shirt at center, poses with friend Juancho Munoz Montoya, right center, and Patricia Brady, right. Brady gave Orozco $25,000 to buy a house in the Poconos, but he never made the purchase, he admitted. At left is a sister of Patricia Brady. (Facebook photo) 

Patricia Brady spoke fondly of Orozco and Montoya, both of whom called her grandma or Patsy, a nickname bestowed on her by a sister. When the two visited, she had Colombian recipes prepared for them by her caretaker, and at the suggestion of Orozco, she purchased a big-screen TV for her home, though she didn't watch much television, Carmela Brady said.

As the relationship with Orozco and Montoya deepened, Carmela Brady said, Patricia Brady grew increasingly estranged from the rest of her family. She occasionally told relatives not to bother visiting, saying she was in good hands with Orozco and Montoya, the executor said.

It wasn't until Patricia Brady's death in October 2014 that Carmela Brady and her husband, Thomas, learned about the money.

The couple heard Orozco had asked Patricia Brady to help him buy a house in the Poconos. Carmela Brady said she discovered a closed bank account that once contained $40,000. Checks for $25,000 and $2,000 had been written to the priest, she said. An additional $4,000 went to taxes. Carmela Brady said she can't trace the rest.

From other accounts, tens of thousands of dollars more had been given to another friend of Orozco, she said.

She also learned Orozco and Montoya had been named in a second will, drawn up in the year before Patricia Brady's death. The elderly woman's attorney refused to allow her to sign it, saying she appeared to be confused, Carmela Brady said.

"I can't say if undue pressure was placed on her, but it doesn't seem right," she said. "As a Catholic, it really upsets me, because now he is at a new church, and the archdiocese isn't doing anything about it."

Orozco, in his interview with NJ Advance Media, said he was unaware Patricia Brady had named him in a second will until after her death, though he knew she was thinking of it.

"She mentioned it to me many times, and I said, 'Please don't do that,'" he said. "Believe me, I would not have accepted. I promise that to God."

The priest would say nothing about Montoya, who, after completing his seminary studies, was to be ordained in the Diocese of Trenton, according to parishioners at St. Rose. He has since transferred to a seminary affiliated with the Diocese of Fall River, Mass., headed by Bishop Edgar da Cunha, the former vicar general in the Archdiocese of Newark and a friend of Archbishop Myers.

Montoya did not respond to messages requesting comment.

'This is very bad'

The Rev. John J. Dietrich said he knows how fervently parishioners across America want to help priests. It's part of his job to ensure that young clergymen know the limits.

Dietrich is director of spiritual formation at Mount Saint Mary's Seminary -- the nation's second-largest seminary -- in Emmitsburg, Md. He said he regularly tells the men under his tutelage to exercise prudence, avoid ostentation and gracefully decline gifts of significant value.

Parish priest under criminal investigationThe Rev. Alex Orozco is seen here in a Facebook profile picture. He says he hopes his mistake of accepting large sums of money from parishioners does not result in criminal charges or end his priesthood. (Facebook photo) 

"People do want to give priests gifts, but they should be limited to things like scarves and gloves," Dietrich said. "I've told the men you don't want a truck backing up to the rectory with a big-screen TV. I try to stress the simplicity of life. That is a core aspect of a priest's training."

Diocesan priests do not take vows of poverty. Even so, Dietrich said, it is critical for members of the clergy to guard against behavior that would damage their reputation or objective authority.

Informed by a reporter of the allegations involving Orozco, Dietrich replied, "This is very bad."

"What this touches upon is the sense of entitlement, and we condemn that in the seminary," he said. "It's the soul we're worrying about. If you lack the conviction of your words, you become a muddied instrument. It's the worldliness we're trying to prevent from infecting the priest's heart."

Charles Zech, an expert on parish finances and director of the Center for Church Management at the Villanova School of Business, called any priest's acceptance of cash from a parishioner a "real red flag."

"Priests don't have a lot of finer things, but any priest should draw the line when it comes to cash," Zech said. "That's where it crosses the line."

Orozco said repeatedly during his interview with NJ Advance Media it was a mistake to accept money and other items, and he said he hoped his actions would not result in criminal charges or the end of his priesthood.

"Unfortunately, I have to pay for that mistake, and if that's going to cost me my life in this country, I will give up this life," Orozco said. "I know this is going to be a big thing for the people, and I'm going to be so sad. I hope that this doesn't happen. I pray to God very much."

He also said it was a mistake he would not repeat.

"I will never in my life accept anything," he said. "Promise to God."

Correction: A previous version of this story said Orozco's attorney, Edmund DeNoia, was hired by the Archdiocese of Newark. DeNoia represented Orozco pro bono, a spokesman for the archdiocese said.

Mark Mueller may be reached at mmueller@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @MarkJMueller. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 
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