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Reward offered for tips in 'senseless' killing of teacher in N.J.

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The 29-year-old grade school teacher was not the intended target of a 2011 shooting, investigators say

Dawn ReddickDawn Reddick (Star-Ledger file photo) 

NEWARK -- Authorities on Saturday marked five years since the slaying of a 29-year-old third-grade teacher from Virginia -- who was killed by an apparent stray bullet as she walked to a Chinese restaurant while visiting Newark -- by announcing an up to $10,000 reward for information in the case.

Newark native Dawn Reddick, a former honors student at Arts High School who earned a master's degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University, returned to the city to drop off her nephew and only planned to stay for a few days.

Reddick died July 30, 2011 after she was shot in the head on Maple Avenue amid a surge of violence that summer in Newark, according to authorities. 

"Dawn was apparently the unintended victim in the tragic incident," said Newark Public Safety Director Anthony Ambrose, who commanded the initial investigation when he served as chief of detectives for the Essex County Prosecutor's Office. In a statement, Ambrose called the killing a "senseless death."

Just passing through, young teacher gunned down in her native Newark

The Essex County Sheriff's Office is offering a reward to solve the case, Ambrose said. Other victims in the shooting included a 7-year-old girl, who suffered a graze wound, along with two men who also survived.

Reddick taught third graders in East Orange before she moved to Charlottesville, Va. and started a career at a local elementary school, her father, James Reddick, previously told The Star-Ledger. In Virginia, Dawn Reddick won a teaching award after being nominated by parents and colleagues at the Clark Elementary School where she worked.

"She loved her job," James Reddick said in the interview. "She loved her kids."

Ambrose urged anyone with information to contact the Essex County Prosecutor's Office Major Crimes Homicide Task Force at 1-877-847-7432 or the Newark police division toll free tip lines at 1-877-NWK-TIPS (1-877-695-8477) or 1-877-NWK-GUNS (1-877-695-4867). Essex County authorities previously announced a reward and issued a public plea for tips shortly after the slaying, but no one has been charged with the shooting.

Noah Cohen may be reached at ncohen@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @noahycFind NJ.com on Facebook.


Newark police investigating 2 shootings on Friday night

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Police said both shootings are in the early stages of their investigations.

NEWARK -- Police are investigating two non-fatal shootings that occurred within an hour of each other on Friday night.

The first shooting happened shortly before 9 p.m. on Victoria Avenue, Newark police Capt. Derek Glenn said. The victim, only identified as a 22-year-old, was treated at Rutgers Medical Center in Newark for a gunshot wound that is not life-threatening.

At 10 p.m., a second shooting victim, identified as a 24-year-old Newark man, walked into Rutgers Medical Center and said he was shot on Mahogany Court, Glenn said. He, too, was treated for a non life-threatening gunshot wound.

Mahogany Court is located about a half of a mile south of Victoria Avenue. It's unclear if the two incidents are related.

No additional information was available Sunday morning. Both shootings are under investigation, Glenn said. 

Police urged anyone with information on either shooting to contact the police department's 24-hour Crime Stopper tip line at 877 NWK-TIPS (877 695-8477) or NWK-GUNS (877 695-4867). All anonymous Crime Stopper tips are kept confidential and could lead to a financial reward.

Alex Napoliello may be reached at anapoliello@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @alexnapoNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Newark man badly hurt in Parkway crash in Middletown Sunday morning

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Police say the 26-year-old driver was thrown from the vehicle in the Sunday morning crash, which shut down the southbound express lanes for two hours at about 6:30 a.m.

File-logo-NJSP.JPGState Police say a Newark man was seriously hurt in a Sunday morning crash on the Garden State Parkway in MIddletown that closed the southbound express lanes for two hours 

MIDDLETOWN -- A 26-year-old Newark man was seriously injured on the Garden State Parkway Sunday morning, when police said he lost control of his SUV and was thrown from the vehicle.

Michael Silva was taken to Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune following the 6:27 a.m. crash, which occurred at Mile Post 110.8 in Middletown, said Sgt. Jeffrey Flynn, a State Police spokesman. Flynn said Silva suffered "serious injuries" in the crash.

The southbound express lanes were closed for two hours as a result, Flynn said.

Silva was in the southbound local lanes of the Parkway when he lost control of his Ford Explorer, Flynn said, adding that the SUV crossed into the express lanes and rolled over "multiple times." At some point, Silva was thrown from the vehicle, Flynn said.

Flynn could not say whether speed or any factors contributed to the crash.

"It's under investigation," he said. "Fortunately, no one else was hurt."

Steve Strunsky may be reached at sstrunsky@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @SteveStrunsky. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Newark shooting victim mum on who shot him, police say

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A 22-year-old man shot multiple times at the violence-plagued Terrell Homes public housing complex refused to cooperate with an investigation into the shooting

NEWARK -- Detectives are investigating a non-fatal shooting Sunday at a Newark public housing complex plagued by gun violence, but without much help from the young man shot, according to the city's public safety director.

A 22-year-old Newark man was shot "multiple times" at about 5:30 p.m., at the Terrell Homes complex on Riverview Court, off Chapel Avenue, said Newark Public Safety Director Anthony Ambrose. 

The victim was taken to University Hospital for treatment. But other than giving his name, age and address, he refused to say anything about the shooting, Ambrose said.

"He's not cooperating as far as who shot him," said Ambrose, adding that there had been two homicides and a half-dozen non-fatal shootings since January at the Riverview Court complex, which overlooks the Passai River

Ambrose said a shooting victim's lack of cooperation can indicate any number of things, from being acquainted with the assailant, or even a friend in the case of a mishap, to gang activity, to fear of further violence or retribution regardless of who did the shooting.

"We don't know if it's gang-related," Ambrose said. "We do know there was some type of party going on there."  

man was shot and killed at the Terrell Homes in March, after the daytime shooting of a 20-year-old man there on Jan. 4, in the city's second gun killing of the year.

Ambrose said a shooting investigation involving an uncooperative victim is in some ways like a homicide investigation, with detectives relying on witnesses and various sources of information other than the person shot.

Steve Strunsky may be reached at sstrunsky@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @SteveStrunsky. Find NJ.com on Facebook.


 

Rio 2016: Why N.J. fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad should be Team USA flag bearer | Politi

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Ibtihaj Muhammad will become the first Muslim woman to compete in a hijab for Team USA, and choosing her to carry the flag at the Opening Ceremonies would celebrate our country's diversity. Watch video

The 500 athletes representing Team USA in Rio de Janeiro will march into iconic Maracana Stadium on Friday night, and while they'll be wearing matching Ralph Lauren uniforms, they'll be as diverse a group as the country they'll represent in the Olympics this month. 

Only one of those athletes will have the honor of carrying the flag at the front of the procession, a choice the captains from each sport will make this week. But that choice is an easy one, and at a divisive time in our nation's history, one that would make a powerful statement to the world.

Ibtihaj Muhammad should be the flag bearer for Team USA. She is a Maplewood native, a first-time Olympian and an internationally ranked sabre fencer who has developed her own line of clothing.

She is also Muslim woman, and when she steps on the piste to begin competing next week, she'll do so wearing a hijab.

Imagine the statement, at a time when one presidential candidate has proposed a complete ban on Muslim immigration into the country, that the U.S. athletes would make if a Muslim woman carried our flag at the Olympics with the world watching.

Imagine the powerful message that decision would send not only to the Muslim girls here in the United States, but to Muslims around the globe who wrongly believe the bigotry of a few ignorant loudmouths represent the values of our entire country. 

Meet all the N.J. Olympians headed to Rio

Yes, Muhammad is the perfect choice for that important symbolic job, and if you don't think politics are part of the Olympics, you haven't been paying attention the past 100 years. Muhammad, for one, understands her platform goes far beyond her off-the-radar sport.

"America is all that I know. I feel American down to my bones," she told a small group of reporters this spring. "For anyone to challenge that idea that I'm not American or that I don't belong, it's frustrating. I want people to see a Muslim woman in hijab represent the United States this summer."

Her story is truly an American one. Muhammad tried volleyball, track, softball and other sports growing up in Essex County, but the constant alterations she had to make to her uniform grew tiresome.

Then her mother caught a glimpse of the fencers -- covered, of course, from head to toe in protecting gear -- training in the Columbia High cafeteria when her daughter was 13 and encouraged her to give it a try. 

"I didn't find fencing," Muhammad said. "Fencing found me." 

She went from Columbia High to Duke University, where she continued to fence while she double-majored in international relations and African Studies and minored in Arabic. Now 30, her climb to elite status in Olympic fencing wasn't always easy, and that journey made her selection to the U.S. team this spring even more satisfying.

Many athletes, including some who are far more famous, shy away from political waters. Muhammad? She is using this international spotlight to speak out against hatred and bigotry, and she hopes, to be a role model for any Muslim girls who are watching. 

"The reason I'm so public about the experiences I've had, especially in these last few months, is that I want the public to know this (discrimination) is commonplace and it shouldn't be," she said. "We have to change our conversation. We have to be more accepting of our neighbors and try to combat the bigotry that we're experiencing now. More than anything, I want things to change."

Here are N.J. best all-time Olympians

For that reason, Americans will not only see Muhammad competing in Rio, but on the set of the Today Show, or in the pages of Time magazine with the headline "A New Face for Team USA," or teaching Michelle Obama to fence during a recent Team USA event.

So many Olympians use their long-awaited moment in the quadrennial spotlight to pitch products, but Muhammad is using it to get a message out to the world. It's a pretty powerful one, too. 

"I think it's unfortunate that we're in this moment, especially during the presidential election where people feel so comfortable voicing their dislike or discontent for people of a particular background or particular religion," Muhammad said.

"We as Americans have to fight that because it goes against the very values that we stand for. I feel like I'm in this position and I have to use it and I have to use it well. I want to reach as many people as I can, not just with my skills in my sport but with my voice." 

Only one U.S. athlete can carry the flag into Maracana Stadium during Opening Ceremonies on Friday night. Ibtihaj Muhammad, for this time in American history, is the perfect choice.

Steve Politi may be reached at spoliti@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @StevePoliti. Find NJ.com on Facebook. 


A look at the major fires wiping out N.J. landmarks

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There have been at least 14 multiple-alarm fires in in New Jersey over the past year that have damaged or destroyed landmark businesses, buildings, churches and restaurants. Watch video

There have been at least 14 multiple-alarm fires in New Jersey over the past year that have damaged or destroyed landmark businesses, buildings, churches and restaurants.

The iconic Hillcrest Tavern and Coach Room in Bridgeton, which dates to 1782, was destroyed in a January fire. The historic Music Hall building in Clinton burned to the ground in May, and a suspicious fire in March at the Jerzeez Diner in Vernon left the structure in ruins and resulted in its co-owner being charged with arson and insurance fraud.

One of the biggest fires occurred in February in Hillsborough, where an inferno engulfed a warehouse complex and kept firefighters busy for nearly three days. There was also a massive blaze in Keyport in April that wiped out five businesses and three buildings in the borough's waterfront business district.

Fire destroys popular 50's themed diner

Here is a list of the known multiple-alarm fires that damaged or destroyed popular businesses, buildings, churches and restaurants in New Jersey over the past year. Only the blaze at the Jerzeez Diner was deemed suspicious. No one died in any of the fires.

October 2015

Oct. 22 - Monroe - Ternay's Shop in the Wood, an antique furniture store that had been at its Glassboro Road for more than 40 years, was left in ruins.

Oct. 23 - New Brunswick - The Poile Zedek synagogue, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, was heavily damaged.

November 2015

Nov. 10 - Paterson - The Paterson Armory, a city landmark since 1896, was demolished after a seven-alarm fire gutted its interior.

January 2016

Jan. 18 - Bridgeton - A blaze burned down the iconic Hillcrest Tavern and Coach Room, part of which dated to 1782 as a stagecoach route from Trenton to Cape May.

Jan. 19 - Bayonne - The Castle Clock and Gift Shop, an antique clock store located in the city for more than three decades, was destroyed.

February 2016

Feb. 6 - Millville - The Gil Bear's Tavern,which closed in 2013, burned down in a fire that kept firefighters on the scene for nine hours.

Feb. 11 - Hillsborough - A massive fire raced through the Veterans Industrial Park warehouse complex. The blaze burned for almost two days.

March 2016

March 8 - Vernon - A suspicious 4 a.m. blaze destroyed the Jerzeez Diner in Vernon. Co-owner Tina Dinkos was later charged with arson.

April 2016

April 8 - Keyport - Eight firefighters were hurt when flames ripped through the borough business district, destroying five businesses and three buildings.


April 13 - Millville - High winds knocked a tree onto power lines going into the Mount Pleasant United Methodist Church, sparking a blaze.

May 2016

May 3 - Delaware Twp. - The Rosemont Cafe sustained heavy damage. The owners have vowed to rebuild.

May 15 - Clinton - The Music Hall building, which dates to 1881 and was renamed Clinton Center, was reduced to ashes after a blaze.

May 24 - Freehold - JB's Diner, a popular 50s theme eatery, burned down. Owner Cupertino Herrera said he plans to rebuild.

July 2016

July 31 - Franklin Twp. (Gloucester County) - A fire ripped through Colucci Lumber Company on Delsea Drive in the Malaga section of the township.

Dave Hutchinson may be reached at dhutchinson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @DHutch_SL. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

N.J. pets in need: Aug. 1, 2016

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Humans are better equipped to handle the heat than dogs and cats because people perspire.

There's summer heat, and then there's oppressive summer heat.

We've experienced some of the latter recently, and while we do everything we can to keep ourselves cool, it's important to remember our pets as well.

Evan pool.jpgEvan has it all figured out. 

"If it's hot to you it's just as hot for your dog or cat, and probably even worse," said John Gickling, a board certified veterinarian in emergency and critical care. "We're better equipped to handle the heat because we perspire."

Some tips on making sure your pets can deal with excessive heat:

*  If you walk your dog, pick the coolest time of the day, follow a shady route and bring water for your pet.

* Older pets, overweight animals and dogs with short snouts suffer more in high heat.

* If your pet is outdoors, make sure it has a cool place to lay and that water is always available. Avoid taking your pets anywhere that has concrete or blacktop until temperatures normalize.

*  Dogs may be overheating if they can't get up, aren't alert or can't stop panting. If you suspect overheating, hose your dog off but never use ice water, which worsens the situation. If this doesn't work, a visit to a veterinarian is important.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find The Star-Ledger on Facebook.

He tortured and killed 19 cats. Now some fear he's at it again

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Notorious cat serial killer Anthony Appolonia spent five years in prison in New Jersey. Now free, he's allegedly adopting cats again. But where are they? Watch video

A half hour into his interview with police, Anthony Appolonia broke down, according to the chief investigator on the case.

Appolonia said he was sorry. He begged authorities not to be mad. And in gruesome detail, he described how he had tortured and killed 19 kittens and cats he adopted through newspaper ads in just two months.

He said he broke their bones. Stomped on them. Threw them against a wall. Let them suffer for minutes or hours. Then he drowned them, the kittens in the toilet, the larger cats in the bathtub.

All because he thought they no longer liked him, he said.

On Dec. 4, 2008, the Monmouth County man was sentenced to five years in prison, one of the harshest animal cruelty punishments in state history.

Today, more than three years after his release, the 58-year-old Appolonia is living in Delaware.

And he is once again adopting cats he can't account for, according to four people who say they unwittingly gave him the pets.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaAnthony Appolonia is seen at his sentencing in December 2008. He received the maximum five-year term for torturing and killing 19 cats. (File photo) 

Appolonia, using his own name and various aliases, accepted at least five cats in the past 10 months after responding to Craigslist advertisements offering free or low-cost kittens and cats, the previous owners told NJ Advance Media.

The cats are now nowhere to be found. The former owners suspect they are dead.

In a two-hour interview in his Dover, Del., townhouse, Appolonia denied accepting cats, contending animal rights activists angry about his previous killing spree are out to frame him. At the time of the interview, conducted July 7, there were no cats in the home.

"I've done nothing wrong," he said. "I did the crime. I did the time. If people say they gave me cats, they're fabricating it. They're (expletive) liars."

He said he has been under the care of a psychologist for a "small mental problem" since his release and that the psychologist, whom he did not identify, "knows I haven't done anything."

The people who told NJ Advance Media they gave Appolonia cats said they do not know one another and had no motivation to speak out other than to find justice for their pets.

All said they learned of his criminal history in January, when warnings about Appolonia were posted to Craigslist and Facebook.

"I bawled like a baby when I learned about his past," said Tammy Elliott, 48, a Lincoln, Del., resident who said she delivered a kitten to Appolonia's townhouse, a short distance from Dover Air Force Base, in October. "It still haunts me."

Those interviewed provided phone numbers from which they said Appolonia called. All match numbers linked to him in public records.

They also forwarded three emails in which a person seeking cats introduces himself as Tony Appolonia or Michael Racanelli. The emails contain Appolonia's home and cell numbers. Appolonia has extended family members with the last name Racanelli, public records show.

The number of cats allegedly given to Appolonia could be higher.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaA mugshot of Anthony Appolonia on the day of his arrest in December 2007. 

A Wilmington, Del., woman who said she spurned his request for a cat after searching his name on the internet last November warned other Craigslist users about him.

The woman, Jessica Riley, said two people quickly replied to her, saying they had given Appolonia a total of three kittens. Those who emailed Riley could not be reached. Craigslist email addresses are no longer functional once a post is deleted or expires.

Others told NJ Advance Media Appolonia called them in search of cats as recently as June, this time using the name "Steve," from one of the phone numbers connected to Appolonia through public records. Appolonia has a brother named Stephen.

The people did not give the cats to him, either because they thought him odd or because they received a warning about him after placing the ads, they said.

Stephen Appolonia, a Colts Neck resident, declined to comment on the allegations against his brother.

"We really have no contact with him," he said.

Many of those interviewed were highly critical of the Delaware Office of Animal Welfare, which investigates cruelty cases in the state. They said they had filed complaints about Anthony Appolonia as far back as January, calling the agency's investigation slow-footed, inept and anemic even as Appolonia allegedly continued to hunt cats.

Others said they had reached out to animal welfare officials several times and did not receive a call back.

"Delaware doesn't seem to care," said Lynn Spencer, a New Jersey actress and animal rescuer who alerted NJ Advance Media to suspicions about Appolonia after investigating him on her own. "This is an atrocity. The lives of kittens and cats are going unnoticed."

Mark Tobin, chief of the agency's enforcement bureau, confirmed in a telephone interview that Appolonia has been under investigation since early this year.

He said the probe had been hampered because the chief investigator had suffered a serious injury on the job and had been out for several months.

Reassigning the case had "caused a lag," Tobin said, adding that the new investigator was "planning on being proactive."

Tobin declined to say how many complaints the agency had received about Appolonia, characterizing it only as "a ton."

"We are actively trying to collect evidence -- evidence that will result in a conviction in this case," Tobin said. "We are doing everything possible to get this accomplished."

'I'm not doing it anymore'

Standing in a second-floor hallway of his rental townhouse, not far from Route 10 in a lower-income Dover neighborhood, Anthony Appolonia made the sign of the cross.

"I'm very, very sorry for what I did," he said. "I'm remorseful."

He had invited a reporter inside the unit, where he has lived for nearly a year, to show he has nothing to hide, he said. He granted the interview on the condition that he not be photographed or recorded.

The former Aberdeen Township man spoke openly about torturing and killing 19 cats in just eight weeks in 2007. He said he had not hurt animals before that period. Appolonia previously lived in Union Township, Berkeley Heights, Chatham, Clark, Colts Neck and Lavallette, records show.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaA memorial display outside the Monmouth County Courthouse on the day of Anthony Appolonia's sentencing in 2008 featured photos of cats killed he killed. (File photo)  

"I was coming up on my 50th birthday," he said. "I was stressed at the time. I had no job, no social life and disagreements. I'd rather not say with who. I have a great family."

Finding cats couldn't have been easier. He responded to dozens of newspaper ads, in most cases convincing the owners he would provide a stable, loving home for the animals. In some cases, he adopted multiple cats from people, traveling throughout Monmouth, Ocean, Middlesex and Mercer counties.

The killings might have gone on indefinitely had members of the animal rescue community not become suspicious after hearing about his frequent adoptions. It was their tips to the Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals that sparked the criminal probe.

While Appolonia did not go into detail about what compelled him to kill at the time, his 2007 confession provides clues.

Stuart Goldman, the officer who led the investigation for the Monmouth County SPCA, said Appolonia told investigators in his videotaped statement he loved the cats he adopted. Then something turned.

"He said he would take the cats and sit down on the couch with them to watch TV," said Goldman, now president of Animal Cruelty Enforcement Services, a private company that investigates cruelty cases and pursues civil or criminal sanctions.

"They were his friends," Goldman said. "He would start by petting them. And all of a sudden he would look at them and think they were mad at him, that they didn't like him. They weren't his friends anymore. He developed an anger, and as he described it, he had to hurt them. He would have to punish them."

3  GOLDMA30 RAW IMAGESStuart Goldman, formerly with the Monmouth County SPCA, was the chief investigator on the Anthony Appolonia cat-killing case. He is seen here in a 2004 file photo. 

Goldman never found the bodies, and he said there was no sign of killing or violence in Appolonia's immaculate apartment. Appolonia, he said, confessed to wrapping the dead animals in newspaper, placing them in plastic bags and discarding them in the Dumpster at his apartment complex.

Appolonia pleaded guilty to animal cruelty charges in September 2008. Three months later, Superior Court Judge Edward Neafsey sentenced him to the maximum term, citing a prior conviction for credit card fraud and the impact the killings had on those who gave Appolonia cats.

"What was aggravating about the situation was not just the crimes themselves, but that he held himself out to the public as someone on a mission of mercy by taking in cats people couldn't care for," Neafsey, now retired, said last month. "I received more letters from the public and victims in that case than in any other case, including all of the homicides I had."

After his release from prison in November 2012, Appolonia said, he lived for a time in a homeless shelter in Newark, Del., and then with a friend he met at the shelter before securing the $850-per-month townhouse. He said federal disability benefits help him pay the rent.

He said he has not owned or harmed a cat since his arrest.

"I'm not doing it anymore," Appolonia said. "I'm trying to get my life together. I just want to be left alone."

He said he does not use the internet, a claim he later contradicted by acknowledging he goes on Craigslist at a local library to look for jobs. But he reiterated he does not search for cats on the classified site.

Without prompting, Appolonia invited a reporter to search the two-bedroom townhouse, its only furniture two couches, a television and a telephone stand. There was no evidence of cats or pet products.

When the reporter asked to see the first-floor bathroom, Appolonia reached for the closed door and froze, suddenly shaking. He then ordered the reporter out, threatening to call the police and complaining of harassment.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaA view of Anthony Appolonia's Delaware townhouse. (Mark Mueller | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com) 

Some 15 minutes later, he called the reporter back and asked him in again, saying he was embarrassed about an unflushed toilet and that he had suffered an anxiety attack.

"The bathroom gave me bad memories because I used to drown them in the toilet or the tub," he said, referring to the New Jersey killings. He said he had begun shaking because he is hypoglycemic and had suffered an episode of low blood sugar.

An examination of the bathroom showed it to be spotless. Appolonia said he did not remove anything between the time the reporter left and returned.

To buttress his contention that he could not catch a cat, he displayed a grossly swollen left leg, the result, he said, of a condition known as lymphedema.

He also complained that since January, when people posted the warnings on Craigslist and Facebook, his life has been more difficult.

"Basically, this is ruining my social life, because a lot of women are animal lovers," he said. "On the bus a month or two ago, two women confronted me and said, 'This is the cat killer.' I'm tired of it."

Frank Cuffee, a construction worker who has been remodeling the vacant townhouse next door and who has come to be friendly with Appolonia, was present during the interview. Cuffee said that in the three weeks he'd been working there, he had not seen Appolonia with a cat.

"He's a cool guy," Cuffee said. "He just wants that part of his life to be over with."

'He seemed so nice'

James Waite and Heather White said they didn't want to part with their 2-year-old cat, a black and white calico they named Tony. But because the cat had reacted aggressively to their new baby, the couple said, they needed to find him a new home.

They turned to Craigslist, which is awash with offers for free cats, and posted an ad in late summer 2015, they said.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaJames Waite and Heather White of Delaware said they gave this cat, named Tony, to Anthony Appolonia around September 2015. (Courtesy James Waite and Heather White) 

Appolonia quickly responded, they said, adding they delivered the cat to his townhouse.

"He just seemed like a lonely old man," said Waite, 24.

White, 25, said she asked Appolonia if she could stay in contact with him to make sure the cat was adjusting. He agreed and even called her the next day to say it was working out fine, White said.

"He seemed so nice," she said.

The couple precisely described the home's location and interior, remarking on the lack of furniture, and noted accurately that Appolonia was significantly heavier than he was in pictures published after his arrest and sentencing.

In addition, Waite said, Appolonia had "one really fat leg."

Earlier this year, the couple saw a Craigslist post that linked to a 2008 Star-Ledger story about Appolonia's sentencing.

White said she called and texted Appolonia repeatedly.

"I tried to be nice," White said. "I texted him and said I heard all this stuff about you. I just wanted to make sure our cat was OK, and he started yelling at me in a text back. He said, 'I don't know who you think you're talking to. Don't text me or call me again!'"

Waite and White said they repeatedly reached out to the Office of Animal Welfare without receiving a response. In mid-July, NJ Advance Media gave their cell phone numbers to Tobin, the chief of the enforcement bureau. The couple said Saturday they had yet to receive a call.

Tears of regret

Tammy Elliott said she had a similar experience with Appolonia.

Elliott, who lives in rural Delaware, said Appolonia seemed enthusiastic and friendly when he called her in mid-October about her Craigslist ad offering a five-month-old kitten she had rescued.

She said she warned him the kitten, an orange tabby, was skittish. He said he planned to name her Daisy, Elliott said.

In hindsight, Elliott said, there was one red flag. Appolonia told her to be discreet when bringing the kitten to his townhouse because he didn't want his "nosy neighbors" to know he had a cat, she said.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaTammy Elliott of Delaware said she gave this cat to Anthony Appolonia for adoption at his townhouse in Dover, Del., in October 2015.(Courtesy Tammy Elliott) 

She delivered the kitten a few days later, spending about an hour with Appolonia, she said.

"He said he suffered from anxiety and said his therapist told him it would be good for him to have a cat," Elliott said.

Breaking into tears, she added: "That cat was already scared and needing love, and when I think of what she must have went through...."

Like Waite and White, Elliott precisely described the townhouse, its location and Appolonia.

Two days after she left, Elliott said, Appolonia called her again to tell her it didn't work out.

"He said she was too skittish, but he knew a lady with a little girl, and the little girl, the daughter, fell in love with the cat and so he gave it to them," Elliott said.

Appolonia then asked her if she knew of an older kitten for adoption, Elliott said, tearing up again as she described arranging for her friend to give Appolonia a cat.

When she learned in January about Appolonia's past, Elliott said, she asked others who had allegedly given Appolonia cats to contact her. She said she then forwarded at least five responses to the Office of Animal Welfare and spoke to the investigating officer.

The same month that Elliott said she gave Appolonia the orange tabby, the former New Jersey man allegedly adopted two more kittens from a couple in Smyrna, Del., about 10 miles north of Dover.

Myra Hitchens said she and her husband met Appolonia at the Smyrna rest area off Route 13 after he responded to her Craigslist ad. Appolonia, who does not own a car, arrived by bus, Hitchens said. He had a cat carrier with him, she said.

Cat Killer Anthony AppoloniaMyra Hitchens, of Smyrna, Del., said she gave Anthony Appolonia this cat and its littermate in October 2015. (Courtesy Myra Hitchens) 

Months later, she saw the alert about Appolonia - including his photo - on Craigslist.

"I said, 'Oh my God. That's the one I gave the kittens to,'" Hitchens said, adding that she gave a statement to the Office of Animal Welfare. "I was really upset."

NJ Advance Media provided Appolonia with specific details of the allegations against him in a follow-up phone interview. He again denied accepting cats and said he had not met with James Waite, Heather White, Tammy Elliott or Myra Hitchens.

Anyone could know the layout of his townhouse, he said, by looking inside a similar rental in the complex.

When asked how someone would know about his enlarged leg, his weight gain since 2008 or the lack of furniture in his townhouse, he declined to respond, instead demanding that no story be published.

"You're not only going to put me in the hospital," he said, "it's going to tear my family apart."

Painful memories

For the New Jersey residents who gave Appolonia cats in 2007, the new allegations revive old heartaches.

"We all thought he would go back to doing it," said Lois Justice, 81, of Lakewood, who gave him an adult cat. "He comes on as a very nice person, but he's not."

Ben Hoffman, 74, of Belford, and his late wife gave Appolonia two cats that year. The kittens were among three Hoffman had nursed back to health after finding them outside, their mother gone.

Appolonia, he said, wanted the third cat as well. Hoffman told him it wasn't yet strong enough. He still has it today.

"This guy should never have been released," Hoffman said. "But how do you give a life sentence for killing cats?"

Mark Mueller may be reached at mmueller@njadvancemedia.com or at (862) 763-1404. Follow him on Twitter @MarkJMueller. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Where are they now? N.J. alums in pro baseball, mid-summer edition

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We had a look in April - what's changed since then?

Newark kids are healthier but still living in poverty, new study finds

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The annual Newark Kids Count report was released Monday, and showed improvement in several key health areas.

Newark children.JPGChildren sit on the edge of the pool as they wait to get the OK to go in the pool at Life Camp in Pottersville, part of the Greater Newark Fresh Air Fund. (Tony Kurdzuk/The Star-Ledger)

NEWARK -- While most families in the state's largest city continue to live in poverty, progress is being made when it comes to the well-being of the city's children, according to a new report released Monday. 

That's the takeaway from the 2016 Newark Kids Count report. The annual report tracks trends in the well-being of children in Newark, from child poverty and education to juvenile arrests and childcare in the city.

Sixty-nine percent of children in Newark live in low-income households, said Cecilia Zalkind, president and CEO of advocates for Children of New Jersey, the report's author. But the report shows improvements are being made in certain health areas, she said. 

"For the more than 72,000 children that call Newark home, we are moving in the right direction when it comes to their health and well-being," Zalkind said. "But our work is far from done."

Nearly 13,000 of Newark children, or 18 percent, lived in extreme poverty in 2014. That's compared to 7 percent of children who live in extreme poverty statewide. The study classified extreme poverty as a household with a family of four that has a combined annual income of $11,925 or less.

Still, that number is down 13 percent from 2010, the report said.

Here are other areas the report highlighted where progress is being made:

* Births among teenagers, ages 15 to 19, have declined from 11 percent of all births in 2011 to 10 percent in 2012, the most recent year the data is available. Newark's teen birth rate remains twice as high as the statewide average, the report said.
* The number of babies born with low-birthweight has steadily declined, the report shows, from 531 in 2008 to 428 in 2012.
* When it comes to education, the city's graduation rate continues to improve. Crime and substance abuse cases in schools declined and enrollment in city's charter schools has more than doubled from the 2010-11 school year.
* Juvenile arrests are down from 773 in 2010 to 489 in 2014, according to the report.


The report shows that the city needs improvement when it comes to childcare and alleviating stress on families when it comes to paying rent.

The number of licensed childcare centers in Newark has steadily decreased from 202 in 2011 to 156 in 2015, the report said. In that time, overall childcare capacity has dipped 7 percent. And while the number of vouchers to help families pay for childcare is up slightly from 2010, there was a drop-off from 2013 to 2014.

A majority of Newark households, 57 percent, spend more than 30 percent of their household income on rent, the report said.

Zalkind said its imperative that families in Newark have "access to the supports and safety nets" to help kids grow up in an environment that's safe, healthy and educational.

In March, elevated levels of lead were found in drinking water at 30 school district buildings. Officials at the time, however, cautioned that they do not believe the contamination would pose any serious health risks.

According to the report released Monday, fewer children were found to have elevated blood lead levels in 2015, the year before the elevated levels were discovered in Newark schools. The data also shows that fewer infants between the ages of 6 and 26 months are being tested for lead.

Zalkind said she hopes the report's findings will help lawmakers and community organizers alike determine the areas that need the most attention "for the betterment of all children in our state."  

Alex Napoliello may be reached at anapoliello@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @alexnapoNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

N.J. needle-exchange programs for addicts running out of clean needles, report says

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The needle exchange programs in Atlantic City, Camden, Jersey City, Newark and Paterson don't have as many clean needles this year to share because the city-run programs can't afford them.

TRENTON -- The premise behind needle exchange programs is simple -- give addicts a clean needle for every dirty needle they turn in to help prevent the spread of HIV, and hopefully link them to treatment if they are willing.

But the exchange element of this equation is falling short, according to a report in The Record. All five of the needle exchange programs in New Jersey, located in Atlantic City, Camden, Jersey City, Newark and Paterson don't have as many clean needles this year to share because the city-run programs can't afford them.

Last year, the centers give out about 1 million needles. In the first six months of 2016, however, they have handed out 314,931, according to the report. 

Private donors and donations have long been a source of support for the programs. Yet the patience of these donors is wearing thin because the state has refused to fund these legal and by its own account effective harm-reduction programs that provide a path to treatment, Tom Billet, financial manager of the needle exchange program in Camden, told the newspaper.

Supplies could run out by summer, Billet said.

N.J. needle exchange program is called a success by officials

The five programs had once shared $150,000 in grants from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but Congress reinstated a ban on public support four years ago, according to the report. 

A bill is on Gov. Chris Christie's desk that would no longer limit the number of needle or syringe exchange programs in the state, although no funding is attached. It's not clear whether the governor will sign the bill into law, but Christie has made drug treatment and recovery a cornerstone of his administration.

A study by the state Department of Health found the programs succeeded in drawing participants into treatment.

Atlantic City was the first city to establish a syringe exchange program under state law in 2007.

Susan K. Livio may be reached at slivio@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @SusanKLivio. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Newark man pleads not guilty to plotting West Orange murder

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Zaki Jones, 33, is one of three men charged with conspiracy in the December 2015 killing of 26-year-old Naji Everett of Orange. The other two have also entered not guilty pleas.

NEWARK -- A 33-year-old Newark man pleaded not guilty Monday to charges he plotted with two other men the shooting death of an Orange man in December.   

Zaki Jones, 33, of Newark, entered the not guilty plea before Judge Ronald Wigler in Superior Court in Newark.

Jones, Rasuan Foster, 29, of East Orange, and Jarret Mceachin, 29, of Orange, were indicted last month on murder and other charges in the death of 26-year-old Naji Everett of Orange.

Charges also included conspiracy, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, and unlawful possession of a weapon charges in connection with the shooting.

The three men were arrested in March in the Dec. 15 fatal shooting of Everett outside a home on Joyce Street in West Orange. Prosecutors said Everett was pronounced dead at the scene at about 6:30 a.m.

Foster and Mceachin entered not guilty pleas in a separate hearing on July 26.

2 other W Orange suspects.jpgRasuan Foster, left, and Jarret Mceachin have also pleaded not guilty 

Prosecutors have not said what motivated the killing.

Jones, bearded, with his braided hair and hands cuffed behind his back, was represented in court Monday by a public defender, John McMahon. McMahon was filling in Monday for Sterling Kinsale.

Judge Wigler set Oct. 11 as an initial discovery conference, essentially a status hearing. The same date applies to Foster and Mceachin, said Assistant Essex County Prosecutor Justin Edwab, who is handling the case.

Edwab declined to discuss the case.
 
During the brief hearing, the judge confirmed that Jones was a U.S. citizen, and said he was confident that Jones would have ample opportunity by then to talk to his lawyer. 

Steve Strunsky may be reached at sstrunsky@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @SteveStrunsky. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 


 

28-year-old man shot dead in East Orange, cops say

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The shooting took place early Thursday morning, the prosecutor's office said.

EAST ORANGE -- Authorities are investigating the fatal shooting of a 28-year-old Montclair man on Park Street this past Thursday.

Tahji Hale was shot at about 2:15 p.m. on the 100 block of Park Street, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn A. Murray and East Orange Public Safety Director Sheilah Coley said in a news release Monday.

Both the East Orange Police Department and the Essex County Prosecutor's Office Homicide/Major Crimes Task Force are investigating the shooting, they said.

No arrests have been made as of Monday but the investigation is active and ongoing, Murray and Coley said.

Anyone with information can contact the Essex County Prosecutor's Office Homicide/Major Crimes Task Force tips line at 1-877-TIPS-4EC or 1-877-847-7432.

Justin Zaremba may be reached at jzaremba@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JustinZarembaNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Cops allegedly find poolside pot farm in Fairfield

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Officers responding to a report of a fight Sunday morning discovered a "grow" operation, the police chief said

FAIRFIELD -- A scuffle between two men Sunday led police to a home that had been converted into an elaborate marijuana grow operation complete with timed lighting and other specialized equipment, Chief of Police Anthony Manna said in a statement.

Police were called to the Nell Court home around 8:18 a.m. where Timothy Olster, 40, and Jose Sanchez, 30, had been fighting, Manna said. Olster allegedly hit Sanchez in the nose and Sanchez smashed a window on Olster's SUV with a brick.

Police also found marijuana residue and packaging materials in Olster's bedroom, two marijuana plants being watered in the laundry room, as well as a cluster of six-foot plants growing near the backyard pool, Manna said.

Pot crop found in NJ state forest

An Essex County Sheriff's K-9 team called to the home also discovered a "hot box" tent containing timed lighting for the plants, soil pods, fertilizers, packaging materials and Tupperware filled with dried marijuana, Manna also said.

Both men were charged with possession of over 50 grams of marijuana, possession of between 10 and 49 marijuana plants, maintaining or operating a controlled dangerous substance production facility, possession with intent to distribute, conspiracy to distribute and possession of marijuana. Olster was additionally charged with simple assault and Sanchez with criminal mischief.

Both men were being held in Fairfield pending a bail hearing. They are scheduled to appear in Superior Court in Newark Aug. 11.

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

 

Husband of victim in 'Melrose Place' crash: 'Our feelings have been validated'

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Former actress facing resentencing in fatal drunk-driving crash. Watch video

MONTGOMERY -- The husband of the woman killed by former "Melrose Place" actress Amy Locane-Bovenizer in a 2010 drunk-driving crash feels vindicated.

Fred Seeman was outraged by the three-year sentence Locane-Bovenizer received on February 14, 2013 in the death of his wife, Helene Seeman. He shouted at the judge. He held up a family photo. He stormed out of the courtroom.

On July 22, the state's Superior Court Appellate Division expressed their outrage as well, ruling that the judge didn't provide adequate explanation for the light sentence and ordering a resentencing hearing.

Locane-Bovenizer could have been sentenced to up to 15 years.

"The Appellate Division affirmed the conviction and our feelings," Seeman told NJ Advance Media on Monday. "We now feel our feelings have been validated and justified. You have learned, experienced justices who basically said the judge was wrong.

"And they didn't even leave it at that. They pointed out exactly where he was wrong. They said they were 'distressed' by the court's failure to recognize what the family and prosecutor said. It was an amazing 50-plus page decision. They left no stone unturned in examining every aspect of the trial. "

Locane-Bovenizer, 44, was convicted of vehicular homicide and assault by auto in the crash that killed Helene Seeman and sentenced to three years for each charge to run concurrently. She was released from prison on parole in June of 2015 after serving two and a half years.

When Judge Robert B. Reed cited the actress' two small children, one of whom has Crohn's disease, as the reason for his leniency, Seeman yelled to the judge that having sick kids isn't a get-out-of-jail pass.

The Somerset County Prosecutor's Office appealed the sentence, saying it sent a "bewildering message" about the penalty for drunken driving. A date for the resentencing hearing hasn't been set. It's unclear if Judge Reed will preside over the resentencing hearing.

'Melrose Place' actress Amy Locane sentencing in 2013

The appeals court didn't suggest a proper sentence. Locane-Bovenizer was sentenced under the guidelines for third-degree vehicular homicide, even though she was found guilty of the crime in the second-degree.

"We just want whatever is called for under the law, nothing more, nothing less," said Seeman, who applauded the efforts of Assistant Prosecutor Matthew Murphy in the case.

The state's public defender's office, which represented Locane-Bovenizer in the appeal, declined to comment on the Appellate Division's ruling.

"Judge Reed watched us pour our souls out and then right in front of us he ignored us," said Seeman, a lawyer. "We will again put forth before the judge that we believe that a stronger message has to be sent to anyone who wants to drink and drive. There's a price to be paid. Society can't withstand these losses.

"My wife was an extraordinary woman and now she's gone. I don't want anymore wives, anymore mothers to be lost. My son is about to have a granddaughter and my wife will never be able to hold her. This has to stop. People can't drink and drive."

Locane-Bovenizer's blood-alcohol content was more than three times the legal limit on June 27, 2010 when her SUV crashed into a Mercury Milan turning into a driveway in Montgomery Township, prosecutors said.  She was driving 53 mph in a 35 mph zone, prosecutors said.

Helene Seeman, the passenger in the Milan, was killed in the crash. Fred Seeman was critically injured. He said he recently underwent surgery to repair a hole in his diaphragm resulting from the crash.

Seeman insists the family hasn't lived the past three years stewing in bitterness about how Locane-Bovenizer got off with a slap on the wrist.

"We tried not to focus on that because you can't live your life like that," he said. "We left it up to the courts."

Locane-Bovenizer expresses remorse for fatal accident

In its ruling, the three-judge appellate panel said that the "defendant's sentence must be vacated for resentencing as it is illegal in departing from the mandatory-minimum sentence, as it failed to meet the high standard for a downgraded sentence, and as concurrent sentence were an abuse of discretion."

The panel said that "the trial judge did not identify compelling reasons to downgrade defendant's second-degree offense, other than harm to defendant's children."

Locane-Bovenizer filed a cross-appeal challenging the underlying merits of her conviction.

The Seeman family has filed a wrongful death civil suit stemming from the crash.

"As a family, we relive it every day," said Seeman. "When people talk about closure, it's something that happens to somebody else. It doesn't happen to the family that endures it. My wife's death has left a huge hole in our lives and it'll never be replaced. All of this doesn't change that."

Dave Hutchinson may be reached at dhutchinson@njadvancemedia.com.Follow him on Twitter @DHutch_SL. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

N.J. college student saves suicidal man on Tappan Zee, report says

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The 21-year-old was making his way back to New Jersey when he spotted the man trying to jump off the bridge.

A college student from South Orange pulled a suicidal man to safety after the man tried to leap off the Tappan Zee Bridge, the Hartford Courant reports. 

The 21-year-old, who is a student at University of Hartford, was making his way back to New Jersey on July 15 when he saw the man trying to jump off the bridge, the report says. 

A New York police officer, who happened upon the two while on duty and helped pull the suicidal man to safety, called the New Jersey man a hero, according to the report.

Craig McCarthy may be reached at CMcCarthy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @createcraig. Find NJ.com on Facebook.     

 

N.J. man sues Pokemon Go developers to get gamers off his lawn

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The class-action lawsuit filed in California seeks damages or monetary relief

A New Jersey man fed up with Pokemon Go players catching creatures on his property has filed a class-action lawsuit against the creators of the wildly successful mobile game.

Jeffrey Marder, of West Orange, claims in the suit that the developers have profited from encouraging millions of gamers to play Pokemon Go on or adjacent to private property without the consent of the land owners. 

Pokemon Go: Our interactive map

The lawsuit filed in federal court in California seeks damages or monetary relief over the game's use of real world locations, Pokestops and Pokegyms, where users will congregate to play the augmented reality game.

The game was released on July 6 and within days became the most downloaded mobile game ever. Using the GPS on a smartphone, the game encourages players to walk around in the real world searching for imaginary critters. The game utilizes the phone's camera to display Pokemon. Players then flick the screen to try and capture the critters. Pokestops and Pokegyms have become meet-up points for gamers.

In the lawsuit, Marder says that within the first week of the game's release, "strangers began lingering outside of his home with their phones in hand." At least five gamers also knocked on Marder's door asking for permission to catch Pokemon in the homeowner's backyard.

Marder says in the suit that these Pokemon were placed at his West Orange home by the game's developers without his permission. 

The lawsuit names Niantic Inc., the Pokemon Company, and Nintendo Company. The companies did not immediately respond for comment. 

J.C. Smith, The Pokemon Company's consumer marketing director, told The Associated Press last week that the company is updating the augmented-reality game so it remains fun for players but respects the real world.

The suit claims Niantic is liable for the nuisance of the "intentional, unauthorized" placing Pokemon, Pokestops and Pokegyms, which prevents property owners from enjoying their land.

The suit also details other instances where the game's placement of Pokestops or Pokegyms at homes or businesses have led to complaints, including three locations in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.

Craig McCarthy may be reached at CMcCarthy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @createcraig. Find NJ.com on Facebook.     

2 men wanted for shooting at each other, police say

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Anyone with information urged to call authorities

NEWARK -- Authorities are seeking help from the public to locate two Newark men accused of shooting at each other in the city.

Braulio Lopez, 19, and Joshua Garcia, 20, were identified as the shooters after an investigation by the city police division's Cease Fire Shooting Task Force, according to Public Safety Director Anthony Ambrose.

The pair both missed each other in the July 27 incident on Carteret Street, authorities said in a statement. Police launched an investigation after responding to reports of gunfire in the area. A motive was not immediately disclosed.

Reward offered for tips in 'senseless' killing of teacher in N.J.

Ambrose asked anyone with information to immediately call police using the city's 24-hour Crime Stoppers tip line at 877-NWK-TIPS (877-695-8477) or NWK-GUNS (877-695-4867). Police said anonymous tips are kept confidential and could lead to a reward.

Noah Cohen may be reached at ncohen@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @noahycFind NJ.com on Facebook.

July was 9th hottest in N.J. in 121 years

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High temperatures didn't crack the 100-degree mark, but last month was still among the hottest Julys ever recorded in the Garden State.

Remember all those brutal heat waves in July? The ones that had us all sweltering in the sun, dripping in the humidity and secretly wishing for an early autumn?

Well, they didn't break any temperature records or hot-day streaks in New Jersey, but they helped July 2016 become one of the state's 10 hottest Julys on record.

The average temperature across the entire state last month -- the mean between the average highs and average lows in each region -- was 77.2 degrees, according to New Jersey State Climatologist David Robinson at Rutgers University. That's 2.2 degrees above normal for July and ranks as the 9th warmest July since reliable records started being kept in 1895.

Heavy rain floods Great Adventure

Three noteworthy tidbits about the July heat: 

* Six of the 10 hottest Julys ever recorded in New Jersey all occurred during the past 11 years: 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2016.

* Of all the years in the Top 10 for July warmth, 2016 is the only one that didn't have at least one weather observation station reach 100 degrees during the month, Robinson said. The mercury hit 99 in Newark on July 25 and topped out at 98 degrees at several other weather stations on July 23, including Hamilton, Jersey City and New Brunswick.

* Most regions of New Jersey had three separate heat waves last month (defined as three or more consecutive days with temperatures hitting 90 degrees or higher). The first heat wave lasted three days, from July 6 to July 8, the second lasted five days, from July 14 to July 18, and the third stretched eight days, from July 21 to July 28, according to climate data from the National Weather Service and the New Jersey Weather & Climate Network at Rutgers. 

Drought watch in North Jersey

As for precipitation, New Jersey averaged 6.7 inches of rain in July 2016, which is 2.18 inches above average and ranks as the 15th wettest July since 1895, Robinson said. This was the wettest July since 2004 and the fourth wettest since 1975.

The wet July helped keep precipitation totals in the South Jersey region significantly above normal for the year. However, parts of North Jersey -- including the Newark area -- are almost 5 inches below normal for the year, according to weather service data.

Newark finished July with 6.08 inches of rain (1.32 inches above normal for the month), but has had only 22.88 inches of precipitation so far this year, which is 4.79 inches below normal.

In South Jersey, Atlantic City finished July with 8.83 inches of rain (5.1 inches above normal for the month) and now has 31.2 inches of precipitation so far this year, which is 7.1 inches above normal.

Last Thursday, the state Department of Environmental Protection issued a drought watch for the northern half of New Jersey, urging residents to voluntarily conserve water. The watch covers Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union and Warren counties.

Heavy rain that fell over several parts of the state this past weekend -- some areas received as much as 4 to 6 inches in several hours, causing flash flooding -- has helped the drought situation, "but we're still going to need more" rain to get all the reservoirs replenished, Larry Hanja, a spokesman for the DEP, said Tuesday morning. 

"The northern part of the state, which is very dependent on reservoirs, has experienced some of the driest conditions in the state over the past several months. Conditions in other parts of the state, though not as severe, are showing signs of stress, and residents of these areas should also conserve water " said DEP Commissioner Bob Martin prior to the weekend storms.

Len Melisurgo may be reached at LMelisurgo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @LensReality or like him on Facebook. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Dog escapes Newark airport terminal, rescued in nearby marsh after chase

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Dart escaped from pet holding area and ran across airport property

NEWARK -- A dog that ran off at Newark Liberty International Airport Tuesday morning was rescued after it darted into a marsh, authorities said.

Dart, an adult male collie headed to Asia with his owner, escaped from the United Airlines PetSafe at Terminal C at about 8:05 a.m., setting off a chase across airport property, the Port Authority said this afternoon.

Passengers on Newark-bound flight aid unconscious woman

Dart zigzagged through traffic and several parking lots next to Terminal C to a rental car lot next to a gas station at the intersection of Brewster and Lindbergh roads, police said.

He then ran into a marsh, eventually getting stuck in mud. Port Authority police then brought a rowboat and animal snare into the murky water. The officers wrapped an animal snare around Dart and brought the pooch into the boat.

The dog was returned to land and cleaned before being reunited with its owner.

Jeff Goldman may be reached at jeff_goldman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JeffSGoldman. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

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