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1-year sentence for man convicted in $3.4M burglary spree

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Anthony Hanks will also be on probation for three years and pay millions in restitution, authorities said.

handcuffs.jpgHanks will serve a one-year, one-day sentence, authorities said. (File photo)
 

NEWARK -- A New York man who was convicted of multiple crimes in connection with a $3.4 million, multi-state burglary spree will spend a year and a day in prison, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman announced in a release Tuesday.

In addition to the prison sentence, Anthony "T.J." Hanks, 37, of Brooklyn, N.Y. - who was convicted on multiple counts after a three-week trial in November 2015 - will serve three years of probation, and was ordered to pay $2.1 million in restitution, Fishman said in the announcement.

According to authorities, Hanks' cousin, Daniel "Tokyo" Gatson, of North Bergen, ran the burglary ring, which altogether hit 27 upscale homes in six states up and down the East Coast, including several in New Jersey, between 2011 and 2013. The two, along with a handful of other accomplices, made off with millions of dollars worth of jewelry, watches, cash and other valuables, authorities said.

'Greedy' burglary ring leader gets 25 years

Before hitting a home, the group would cut phone, cable, alarm, and other wires running to and from the house. They would break into the homes wearing masks while a getaway driver remained nearby, authorities said.

The ring was taken down after a task force led by FBI tracked members' cell phones.

Four others charged in the case pleaded guilty and testified against Gatson and Hanks.

Gatson - who authorities said began this crime spree five days after being released from a 10-year prison sentence carried out in connection to the break-in of former NBA star Patrick Ewing's New Jersey home - was sentenced earlier this year to 25 years in prison.

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


WATCH: Cop leaves hospital to cheers a day after shoot-out with bombing suspect

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A bullet grazed Officer Peter Hammer's head during a Monday shootout with suspected bomber Ahmad Khan Rahami. Watch video

NEWARK -- Peter Hammer was cheered as a hero when he exited University Hospital in a wheelchair today.

Lines of applauding colleagues met the Linden police officer as he was discharged from the hospital after being struck by gunfire Monday in a shoot-out with suspected bomber Ahmad Khan Rahami. 

A bullet went through the window of a police car, and the bullet or glass from the window skimmed Hammer's head, officials said. The 12-year veteran of the police force remained in the hospital overnight for observation.

A second officer, 14-year department member Angel Padilla, was shot in the mid-section while wearing a bulletproof vest, authorities said. He was released from Robert Wood Johnson Hospital in Rahway on Monday night. 

Outside his home, Hammer answered reporters who asked how he was feeling.

"I'm feeling like I got shot in the head," he said. "I'm glad to be alive. I'm glad to be home. ... I appreciate all the concern. I spoke to the President, the director of the FBI. Everybody's concern is overwhelming to me."

Linden Police .jpgOfficers Angel Padilla (left) and Peter Hammer (right) were injured apprehending suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami.

The Union County Prosecutor's Office asked reporters to respect the officers' privacy as they recover. 

"The entire law enforcement community here in Union County is deeply touched by the immense outpouring of support from across the country for the efforts of all five responding officers, who exhibited tremendous courage in an extremely volatile situation," the office said in a statement. 

Rahami faces five counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer and related weapons charges. Bail is set at $5.2 million.

His capture marked the end of an hours-long manhunt for the 28-year-old Afghanistan native, who officials suspect of planting a pipe-bomb device that exploded near a military charity run in Seaside Park and putting other bombs in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood. The New York City detonation injured at least 29 people. 

Officials also found five bombs late Sunday near the Elizabeth train station, about a mile from Rahami's home. 

Rahami, who was living above his family's fried chicken restaurant in Elizabeth, is also expected to face federal terrorism charges

Hammer and Padilla responded Monday morning to a call about a person sleeping outside an East Elizabeth Street bar after owner Harinder Bains recognized the man as a wanted suspect from media reports. 

When the officers approached the man, who turned out to be Rahami, he immediately started shooting, police said. 

Authorities arrested Rahami after a gunshot wound to the leg took him down. He underwent surgery at University Hospital on Monday and stayed there overnight. An FBI spokesman said Rahami was not seriously injured.

Staff reporter Jessica Remo contributed to this report.

Marisa Iati may be reached at miati@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @Marisa_Iati. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Man charged with making Livingston social media threats

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Bergen County man also faces child pornography charge

John CoulourisJohn Coulouris, 18 (Photo: Essex County Prosecutor's Office) 
LIVINGSTON -- An 18-year-old Hackensack man is accused of threatening acts of violence in Livingston earlier this month, authorities said Tuesday.

John Coulouris was arrested at his home late Monday on a range of charges, including endangering the welfare of a child by distributing child pornography, invasion of privacy, terroristic threats and two counts of cyber harassment, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn A. Murray and Livingston Police Chief Craig M. Handschuch announced in a joint statement.

Coulouris posted messages on various social media sites "threatening violence in Livingston on or about Sept. 6," officials said in a statement. Livingston police learned of the menacing posts based on reports from concerned citizens.

The statement issued Tuesday did not specify if Coulouris allegedly threatened any specific location in the township, but police previously responded to threats against Livingston High School.  

Threats to 'shoot up' school not coming from students, officials say

Authorities on Sept. 13 announced they were investigating a "a non-specific threat" on social media, which mentioned the town's high school. Officials assured residents the threats were not considered credible, but increased police presence at the school.

The threats continued on social media and reportedly included a message that a person would "shoot up" the school. In response, the district canceled its planned back-to-school night and had a delayed opening.  

"Please know these actions were not made by a current LHS student," Superintendent Christina Steffner and Livingston High School Principal said in a previous joint statement. "Police have called the threats not credible."

The prosecutor's office did not immediately disclose what led to the child pornography and invasion of privacy charges against Coulouris. It was also not yet clear what, if any, connection the Bergen County resident had to the town or school district.

Coulouris was ordered held at the Essex County jail in lieu of $175,000 bail, according to officials.

"Additional charges may be forthcoming," the prosecutor's statement added. "The investigation is active and ongoing."

Authorities asked anyone with information to call the prosecutor's office tips line at 1-877-TIPS-4EC or 1-877-847-7432.

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

Christie: Fight for Rutgers Cancer Institute of N.J. left 'blood on floor'

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Rutgers new outpatient cancer institute in Newark may be able to reduce the city's cancer mortality rates by cutting down on late-stage diagnosis.

NEWARK --  The fight to create the Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey was acrimonious, but at its opening on Tuesday, Gov. Chris Christie said that "in my six and a half years as governor, there's nothing I've done that's more important than this."

Speaking to doctors and hospital administrators gathered in a tent in its parking lot, the governor said the years-long battle over to reform and absorb the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey into Rutgers had "left some blood on the floor" politically, but the final result mattered more.

For years, Newark's citizens have suffered from what clinicians term the "urban disadvantage" -- higher proportions of late stage breast cancer among the urban poor.

With the opening of Rutgers Cancer Institute, that may start to reverse, hospital officials said.

N.J.'s safest hospitals

"It will help hundreds of patients in Newark who previously didn't have access to clinical trials," RBHS-Newark provost Robert Wieder told NJ Advance Media on Tuesday.

John N. Kastanis, the new CEO of University Hospital in Newark, noted that Newark in particular suffers from disproportionately high mortality rates "because
diagnosis occurs in the latest stage of disease."

Expanding access to cancer care for Newark's poorest was something that was deeply personal to the governor, who was born in Newark and who, during his abortive 2016 presidential bid, spoke often of his mother's final days before succumbing to lung cancer.

"There isn't a family that isn't affected, including mine," Christie said.

The center's path did not run smooth. Bitter negotiations over how to carve up the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey consumed both the McGreevey and Corzine administrations. But under a compromise reached under Christie in June 2012, UMDNJ dissolved and merged most of its schools with Rutgers, with University Hospital becoming its own state-funded entity -- and the home of Rutgers Cancer Institute.

"We didn't want two classes of healthcare in the city," said Christie, who said that Rutgers Cancer institute's outpatient trials will expand care to residents "regardless of income level, assets or employment status."

Claude Brodesser-Akner may be reached at cbrodesser@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @ClaudeBrodesser. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Feds charge Ahmad Khan Rahami: weapons of mass destruction, bombing

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Rahami is charged with possessing weapons of mass destruction, bombing, destruction of property, and use of a destructive device.

NEW YORK -- Federal charges have been filed against Ahmad Khan Rahami, the man suspected of planting bombs in New York and New Jersey.

Rahami, 28, is charged with using weapons of mass destruction, bombing, destruction of property, and use of a destructive device in the New York incidents, according to the complaint filed by the Southern District of New York.

A federal law enforcement source tells NJ Advance Media that the U.S. District Court in New Jersey will file charges in the Seaside and Elizabeth bomb-plantings shortly.

According to the complaint, a family member of Rahami had a cell phone video of him igniting an explosive in the immediate vicinity of his Elizabeth hom. The video was taken two days before the Chelsea bombing, the complaint says.

"The video depicts Rahami in a backyard ... the lighting of the fuse, a loud noise and flames, followed by billowing smoke and laughter," the complaint says.

The complaint also says Rahami bought several bomb components on eBay.

Rahami, a naturalized citizen from Afghanistan who was living in Elizabeth, was captured in Linden after a shoot-out with police. He has been charged with five counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer in Union County.

Rahami's father, Mohammad Rahami, told reporters outside his fried chicken restaurant this morning that he called the FBI about his son.

"I called them two years ago," he said, while pointing at authorities, as FBI agents continued to investigate his business and home. "He stabbed my son. He hit my wife and I put him in jail two years ago."

A federal law enforcement official confirmed to NJ Advance Media that Mohammad Rahami called the FBI and claimed his son was a terrorist two years ago after that incident, initiating a review by federal agents.

"He used the T word," the official said. "It was something to the effect of, 'My son is acting like a terrorist.' He didn't say he was looking up information on internet or building bombs, he just used the T word."

The official said the FBI then began database checks on Rahami and checked with law enforcement, but found "no derogatory information whatsoever." When agents then went back to Mohammad Rahami, he recanted what he had said and the investigation was closed.

Ahmad Khan Rahami was not interviewed by agents, the official said.

"We get leads like this all the time and 99.9 percent of them go nowhere," the official said.

Another official said Ahmad Khan Rahami had a notebook with jihadist writings on him when he was arrested after the shout-out in Linden.

The mother of Ahmad Khan Rahami's daughter yesterday filed for full custody of the girl.

"(Rahami) has been charged with police attempted murder, and is currently under protective services after possible terrorist related activity in NYC 9/17/16," the mother stated in her handwritten message on the application.

Jessica Remo may be reached at jremo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessicaRemoNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Essex County seniors invited to wellness day

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The event is free and open to all Essex County senior citizens.

9f89945691ec54ea5dda737ae89404db.jpg 

WEST ORANGE -- Local seniors are invited to the 11th annual Essex County Senior Wellness Day on Sept. 27 at the South Mountain Recreation Complex at 560 Northfield Ave.

Free and open to all county seniors, the event will include flu shots, health screenings and information on nutrition, financial wellness and exercise.

Representatives from area hospitals, senior care facilities and nursing homes will be on hand as will employees from various county agencies.

Musical entertainment also will be featured and all in attendance will receive free refreshments and bagged farmers market produce. Admission to the Turtle Back Zoo also is free for seniors on Wellness Day.

For transportation to the event, call 973-618-1280. For more information, call 973-621-4400.

To submit news for the Senior Spotlight column, please call 973-836-4922 or email essex@starledger.com.

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

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Stench of a dozen cat carcasses draws cops to Nutley apartment

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Authorities are still investigating the condition of the apartment, which was found to have living cats, and the skeletal remains of deceased cats they had eaten to survive.

Nutley Police.JPGNutley police responded to the apartment to find living and dead cats among trash and garbage. (File photo)
 

NUTLEY -- Authorities found about a dozen dead cats inside a Lloyd Street apartment after neighbors reported a "very strong foul odor" in the area, police said.

Police and health department officers who responded to the Nutley apartment Sept. 14 were met by an "overwhelming, horrendous stench," police said. Inside, they found the remains of about 12 cats alongside 13 living cats, who were "severely neglected and unhealthy," police said.

Most of the carcasses were just skeletal remains, as the bodies had been eaten by the other cats, police said. The township's animal control officer is in the process of determining exactly how many dead cats were in the apartment, and for how long they had been there, officials said.

Animal control officers are also evaluating the conditions of the living cats.

Child gets 70 stitches after dog attack

The unkempt apartment also had garbage and litter boxes overflowing with fecal matter strew throughout it, authorities said. A health inspector is working to determine whether or not it can be inhabited, officials said.

The tenant of the apartment, who police did not identify, will likely be charged after the conclusion of the animal control officer's investigation, authorities said. The tenant had not lived in the apartment for several weeks, police said.

It is unclear if or when the surviving cats will be put up for adoption.

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

Former Archbishop Peter Leo Gerety, world's oldest Catholic bishop, dead at 104

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Gerety was considered one of America's most progressive bishops during his 12-year tenure as Archbishop of Newark

Archbishop Peter Leo Gerety, considered one of the most progressive Roman Catholic bishops in America during his 12-year tenure as head of the Archdiocese of Newark, died Tuesday, the archdiocese confirmed. He was 104.

Gerety, the world's oldest Catholic bishop, marked his 77th year as a priest and 50th year as a bishop in June. He spent his final years at St. Joseph's Home for the Elderly, run by the Little Sisters of the Poor, in Totowa.

COPY PHOTO Pope John Paul II greets former Newark Archbishop Peter Gerety, in this photo from the 1980s .  Rutherford, NJ  7/18/12 (John Munson/The Star-Ledger)Pope John Paul II greets former Newark Archbishop Peter Leo Gerety in the 1980s. (File photo) 

"He made an enormous contribution because of his love of the poor and his deep interest in African American Catholics," said retired Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who succeeded Gerety as Newark's archbishop in 1986. "He took the message of the Second Vatican Council as a call to action and devoted himself to trying to follow its directives in the churches that he led."

Archbishop Gerety, who was bishop of Portland, Maine, before coming to Newark in 1974, gained headlines when he conducted mass general absolutions to bring lapsed Catholics back to the church, formed a Black Apostolate, supported equal rights legislation for women and paid off tens of millions of dollars in diocesan debt.

He marched for civil rights in Selma, Ala., protested the Vietnam War, brought Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity to Newark and launched RENEW, an adult small-group spiritual revival movement that has spread worldwide.

"Today this local church of Newark mourns a remarkable churchman whose love for the people of God was always strong and ever-growing," Newark Archbishop John J. Myers said in a statement Wednesday.

"He served as shepherd of this great archdiocese during a time of spiritual reawakening in the years after the Second Vatican Council, and a time of deep financial difficulties," Myers said. "He very carefully led the church, her people and institutions through those challenges."

Msgr. Francis R. Seymour, the archdiocese's archivist and Gerety's longtime secretary, said the former archbishop died peacefully at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday in the Totowa residence.

In recent weeks, Seymour said, Gerety didn't speak much, but he remained lucid and followed conversation, nodding to show understanding. He called the retired archbishop a humble man who worked fiercely for the betterment of all.

"He brought a whole new spirit to the church, a spirit of inclusion based in part on his deep devotion to social justice," Seymour said.

Born in Connecticut in 1912, the oldest of nine sons of Peter and Charlotte Gerety, both transplanted New Jersey natives, his childhood name was "Bossy Leo," his brother, Edward Gerety, now deceased, told The Star-Ledger in 2005.

It was a family of achievers. Two sons became doctors, two became priests, two became engineers and two became lawyers -- one of whom, Pierce, headed refugee operations for the Eisenhower administration. The youngest Gerety brother died in Germany during World War II.

Leo, as he was called by his family, was uncertain about his own future after graduating high school, where he won scholastic honors and was captain of the high school football team, his brother said.

"He didn't immediately set his course to the church, but worked several jobs. My favorite was when he got hired on border control by the state of Connecticut. It was during a Japanese beetle infestation and his job was to check cars for (alien) bugs," the brother said.

diicol 3 MUNSONRetired Archbishop Peter Leo Gerety offers a blessing during the Mass of Thanksgiving at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart to honor Gerety's 100th birthday in 2012. (File Photo) 

Delaying his religious calling served him later in life, Edward Gerety said: "Unlike many priests who entered the church right out of school, Leo was more worldly, more sophisticated, more confident. Beyond that, he was also brilliant and incredibly wise."

He entered St. Thomas Seminary in Bloomfield, Conn., and was sent to St. Sulpice Seminary in Issy, France. He was ordained at Note Dame Cathedral in Paris in 1939. He spent 27 years as a parish priest, primarily in Connecticut, where he became known, according to church officials, for his dedication to "cultural unity."

In part to serve the immigrant populations in his inner-city parishes, he became fluent in Italian, French and Spanish. In 1942, he started an interracial social and religious center in New Haven, which later became the first African American Roman Catholic parish in Connecticut. It was named after St. Martin de Porres, the patron saint of interracial justice.

Seymour, Gerety's secretary, said the archbishop remained connected to the parish throughout his life, visiting often.

"He always loved to go there, and people remembered him. Their children and grandchildren remembered him," Seymour said. "He always got a very warm reception."

In 1966, Gerety was named bishop of Portland, Maine, embracing the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, the international convocation meant to modernize the Roman Catholic Church.

Eight years later, in 1974, he was appointed archbishop of Newark, an increasingly multicultural archdiocese serving more than a million Catholics in Essex, Union, Hudson and Bergen counties.

While staunch in his support of traditional Catholic values -- he once wrote President Jimmy Carter chastising him on his pro-abortion stance -- Archbishop Gerety embraced change and championed civil rights.

He encouraged women to take a more active role in the church. In 1981, he issued a pastoral letter that said, "we are compelled to acknowledge that women have been and are still being denied their rightful place in society and in the church, their true talents and gifts left in large part unrecognized."

He approved five -- and personally conducted two -- Mass rites in the archdiocese, giving public penance to an estimated 5,000 New Jersey lapsed Catholics in an effort to bring them back into the church.

Msgr. Franklyn Casale, Gerety's former secretary and vicar general and now president of St. Thomas University in Miami, said the archbishop made the church more accessible, growing the ranks of lay people in all facets of ministry.

"In his mind, he had a great gift, and that was the priesthood, and that made him a strong leader with great energy and vision, and the vision at the time was to get lay people totally involved in the church as it was renewing itself," Casale said.

Gerety was the first Roman Catholic archbishop to insist on living in Newark, rather than a lavish residence then owned by the archdiocese in Llewellyn Park in West Orange. He moved into the rectory next to Sacred Heart Cathedral just seven years after riots devastated the city.

He sold the pricey West Orange property to pay down the massive debt the archdiocese had accumulated. He also sold other property -- but never schools or churches -- to retire a debt that has been estimated as high as $60 million.

One of his more controversial moves was to lend the cathedral for the 1976 installation of Episcopalian Bishop John Spong, because the Episcopal cathedral wasn't big enough to hold the anticipated crowd. The reaction was dramatic, with some Catholics crying heresy.

In his archdiocese biography, church officials call the act "precedent shattering" and a prime example of how, under his leadership, "the cathedral...opened its doors to the world."

Thomas J. Reese, author of "Archbishop: Inside the Power Structure of the American Catholic Church," noted in his 1989 book: "...Some archbishops not only permit initiatives, but actively support people with initiative... (Gerety) found and supported creative people."

Brendon Byrne, who was New Jersey governor when he attended Archbishop Gerety's installation, recalled him as "a good shepherd, in the best sense of the word."

"He always gave you the feeling that he was there to help you," Byrne said. "He was the kind of guy who would understand your problems, not judge them."

Archbishop Gerety retired in 1986 but continued to stay active. In 1989, when the archdiocese celebrated a half century in the priesthood, he was called a "visionary" and a "giant" by fellow priests.

At his 50th anniversary, Archbishop Gerety talked about the changes during those 50 years: "For the better, certainly, was the civil rights revolution, for the worse has been the loosening of the cohesiveness of family life."

He prayed for a new generation of the Catholic clergy to "push forward with ever increasing vigor the imperatives of the Second Vatican Council ... evangelism, liturgy, concern for the poor and the deprived, the elimination of racism."

Archbishop Gerety's eight brothers predeceased him. He is survived by numerous nephews, nieces and their children. Funeral arrangements were pending.

Former staff writer Judy Peet contributed to this report.

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


Pair of Rutgers law professors call pet ownership immoral, form of torture

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The couple calls their abused animals refugees and says they have the right to be free regardless of their quality of life with humans.

Two Rutgers law professors say that owning pets is immoral and would be considered torture if humans were forced to endure the same treatment.

Although Gary Francione and Anna Charlton live with six rescued dogs, the couple calls their abused animals refugees, and says they have the right to be free regardless of their quality of life with humans.

"Although we love them very much, we strongly believe that they should not have existed in the first place," the two wrote in an essay in a digital publication on Aeon. "We oppose domestication and pet ownership because these violate the fundamental rights of animals."

Dog found on sweltering roof adopted

Francione and Charlton say animal rights should line up with human rights so pets are protected from being treated as "replaceable resources."

"When we talk about animal rights, we are talking primarily about one right: the right not to be property," the essay "The Case Against Pets" reads. "We all reject human chattel slavery. That is not to say that it doesn't still exist. It does. But no one defends it."

The essay argues against the concept of human treatment of animals, claiming that the way human owners care for their pets would be torture if people endured the same treatment.

"However 'humanely' we treat animals, they are still subjected to treatment that, were humans involved, would be torture."

The couple also takes a stance against aquariums, zoos, scientific testing, or any other way humans have domesticated animals for their own use.

"To say that an animal has a right not to be used as property is simply to say that we have a moral obligation to not use animals as things, even if it would benefit us to do so," the couple writes.

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

 

Girls Soccer: NJ.com Top 20 for Sept. 21

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Seven Top 10 teams were upset during the first two weeks of the season.

Manasquan, Nutley say goodbye to a fallen 'hero'

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Daniel McCann III, 51, died hours after a routine drill in Manasquan.

KEARNY -- Members of the Manasquan Fire Department and Nutley Emergency Service lined the steps outside St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Church Wednesday morning to say goodbye to one of their fallen "heroes."  

Daniel McCann III, a Kearny native, died on Sept. 16 after he suffered a fatal heart attack, hours after he participated in a routine drill at the Manasquan firehouse.

He died on his 51st birthday.

A longtime public servant, McCann was the chief engineer at Manasquan Firehouse 27-1 while also working at the Nutley Emergency Service. He drove up to Nutley from Manasquan every morning. McCann was recently honored by the Manasquan Fire Department for dedicating 25 years of service.

Shortly before 11 a.m. Wednesday, the Manasquan H & L Co. No. 1 truck made its way up Kearny Avenue, passing under a large American flag hoisted up by a Kearny fire truck, to the front steps of St. Cecelia Church.

McCann program.JPGDaniel McCann III died on Sept. 16, 2016, at the age of 51. (Alex Napoliello | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

Members of the Manasquan Fire Department carried McCann's casket, which was draped in an American flag, off the fire truck, up the stairs and through the doors of the church's brick facade. 

"From the time he was a teenager, he dedicated his life to serving," Father John F. Connor said during his homily. "... He touched so many people in so many different towns."

McCann's career in public service began not that long after he graduated from Queen of Peace High School in North Arlington when he became a member of the Kearny Volunteer Emergency Rescue Squad. McCann also volunteered with the North Arlington Volunteer Emergency Squad, where he met his wife, Stefanie Melton.

In his 20s, McCann moved to Manasquan where he became a volunteer firefighter with the borough's fire department.

McCann died "too soon," Connor said. But God has a plan that sometimes can't be understood, he added.

"So Dan, rejoice and be glad, for your reward in heaven is greater," Connor said.

On Sept. 15, the day before he died, McCann visited his parents after work. He participated in the fire drill that evening. McCann was planning on heading down to the Fireman's Convention in Wildwood, something he had done every year since joining the Manasquan Fire Department. 

But around 4 a.m. on Sept. 16, he suffered a heart attack. 

"Good-bye sweet hero," read a funeral program. "Your wife and your family love you so much."

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

Hedge fund billionaire with longtime N.J. ties charged with insider trading

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Leon Cooperman and his wife contributed $25 million to St. Barnabas Medical Center in 2014.

TRENTON -- The Securities and Exchange Commission filed insider trading charges against hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman, formerly of Short Hills and one of the 500 wealthiest people in the world, the commission announced Wednesday.

Cooperman, founder of Omega Advisors, allegedly used information he obtained as a major shareholder of Atlas Pipeline Partners to make money off the company's plan to sell a natural gas processing facility Oklahoma. A company executive informed him about the pending sale, the SEC announcement said.

Atlas's stock price later rose 31 percent after the sale was announced, according to the SEC announcement.

When the SEC sent a subpoena to Omega about his trading history with Atlas, Cooperman contacted the executive and attempted to concoct a story they could tell investigators, according to the announcement. The unnamed executive was "shocked and angered" by Cooperman's conduct.

"We allege that hedge fund manager Cooperman, who as a large APL shareholder obtained access to confidential corporate information, abused that access by trading on this information," said Andrew J. Ceresney, director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "By doing so, he allegedly undermined the public confidence in the securities markets and took advantage of other investors who did not have this information."

Cooperman's attorney, Ted Wells and Dan Kramer of New York described the SEC's claims as "entirely baseless," according to a statement from their office.

"Mr. Cooperman acted appropriately at all times and did nothing wrong. We intend to vigorously defend against the charges and will not allow the SEC to tarnish the legacy Mr. Cooperman has built over the course of a legendary career spanning five decades," the attorney's statement said. 

3 from N.J. among 500 richest in world

The SEC also accused Cooperman of failing to report roughly 40 transactions and earnings involving publicly-traded companies that he owned. 

Leon Cooperman and his wife, Toby, now reside in Boca Raton, Fla., according to the SEC complaint. They were major philanthropists in New Jersey, giving St. Barnabas Medical Center $25 million, the hospital's largest donation, in 2014.

The Coopermans are among the group of 120 or so people who have taken the Warren Buffett Giving Pledge. That pledge, devised by the Omaha billionaire, encourages the wealthy to decide how much of their fortune they truly need, then to give away the rest. 

In a September 2011 letter to Buffett
, Cooperman wrote that he and his wife were "enthusiastically" taking the pledge to donate the majority of their personal wealth to charity.

Cooperman has also been a generous donors to New Jersey politicians from both parties, according to the state Election Law Enforcement Commission. Beneficiaries include Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine, Republican Govs. Christie Whitman and Thomas H. Kean, GOP gubernatorial candidate Jim Courter, Newark Mayor Cory Booker and the slate of city council candidates running with him.

Forbes ranked Cooperman the 462nd richest person in the world last year, estimating his wealth at $3.8 billion. He climbed the ranks at Goldman Sachs before leaving in 1991 to found hedge fund Omega Advisors. The fund is worth $10.7 billion, CNBC reported Wednesday.

He was the 133rd richest person in nation, according to the Forbes 400 rankings in 2014.

Correction: An earlier version of this story said Cooperman lived in Short Hills. He has moved to Florida.

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

Witness testifies on role of defendant charged in murder of man dumped in North Bergen in 2012

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A witness testified today on the role of Mark Browne in the horrific beating inflicted on Darryl Williams who was later dumped behind in North Bergen gas station beneath a mattress weighed down with cinder blocks on Dec. 31, 2012.

JERSEY CITY -- A witness testified today on the role of Mark Browne in the horrific beating inflicted on Darryl Williams who was later dumped behind in North Bergen gas station beneath a mattress weighed down with cinder blocks on Dec. 31, 2012.

"Mark Browne was telling everybody, 'Hit him. Hit him,' and Browne was putting the pillowcase over his head," testified Qudeera Adams today, adding that Williams was lying on his stomach in his Newark bedroom and Daeshawn Jennings was beating him with a table leg.

The day before, Williams' girlfriend, Latoya Mozee, showed up with bruises and wearing heavy makeup. After she spoke to Browne, "he said he was going to knock Jaden (Williams) out and teach him not to hit girls," Adams said. "We all went to ShopRite. He sent Nydia Mozee inside and told her to buy duct tape."

Adams said Browne then picked up a gun case he said contained a BB gun and a 9mm handgun. She said they then went to a Newark chicken restaurant to pick up Kathleen Jones and found Jennings who she knew as "Certified" begging for change outside. Browne "asked him to knock out Jaden. He offered him $20," Adams said.

Adams said they drove in Browne's Cadillac Escalade to the apartment Latoya Mozee and Williams shared. She, Browne and Jennings went in through the back door and Nydia Mozee and Kathleen Jones entered through the front. Williams and Latoya Mozee where already inside, Adams testified.

"We go up the stairs and when we get inside, Mark Browne went in first, then Certified and I went in last. It's the kitchen area right there and there's a table right there and that's where Certified got the table leg from. It was already broke, so it was sitting on the side."

Adams said when she got to the bedroom, Jennings was beating Williams with the table leg, the Mozee sisters and Jones were in the room and Browne was egging all on to beat Williams and he was shooting him with the BB gun. She said Williams was "screaming and yelling and squirming all over."

Browne "Put the pillowcase over his head. Jaden was saying 'Stop' and Mark Browne wanted him to be quiet."

Browne "was telling us to hit him, stomp on him, but I was telling him my foot as broken and I couldn't stomp. Kathleen was jumping on (Williams') head," Adams said, adding that Browne "was just telling everyone to hurry up, keep stomping. It stopped when Jaden stopped moving."

Adams said that during the beating, Browne "was telling me he wanted me to hold (Williams') legs and he gave me the BB gun and I shot (Williams) twice because he told me to do it. He wanted Jaden to stop moving. Stop squirming."

The cooperating witness said Browne used duct tape to gag Williams and used a belt, tape and wire to tie his arms behind his back. She said they wrapped Williams in a blanket and Jennings and Browne carried him out and placed him in Browne's Escalade.

Adams said Browne drove all of them to a location she was not familiar with and Browne and Jennings carried Williams out before they drove away. She said they discarded the blanket as they went. She said their next stop was at a Pathmark where Latoya Mozee and Browne bought cleaning products. Adams identified the pair on video from the supermarket shown by the prosecutor.

They drove back to Williams' apartment and "Mark Browne told us to clean up, me and Latoya, and he left," Adams said.

"How much blood was there?" asked Hudson County Assistant Prosecutor Michael D'Andrea.

"There was a lot," said Adams, adding that it took all day and all night to clean the apartment.

Under cross examination by defense attorney Benjamin Morton, Adams admitted that in her first interview by homicide detectives she lied, saying she had an alibi and was with her sister at the time. She then admitted she lied in a subsequent interview, saying she could remember nothing because she had been high, was drinking and had had taken Xanax.

Adam admitted that after she was arrested on the charge of murder she also began by lying but said she then told the truth. Under the plea deal, the charge of murder, which carries a possible sentence of 30 years to life, would be reduced to the charge of conspiracy to commit aggravated assault and if she cooperates fully, she will face five years in prison or less when sentence.

Jennings was sentenced to 18 years in state prison after pleading guilty to aggravated manslaughter, while Kathleen Jones was sentenced to 12 years in prison in July after pleading guilty to the same charge.

Latoya Mozee pleaded guilty to endangering an injured victim and Nydia Mozee pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, according to the transcripts of the plea hearings.

Williams was dumped off Tonnelle Avenue near Route 3. He managed to crawl out from under the mattress and some 20 or 30 feet toward Tonnelle but as the pillowcase became more and more blood-soaked, he suffocated, a medical examiner testified. 

At the end of testifying for the prosecution, Adams broke down in tears and repeated "I'm sorry," for having been involved. 

Morton will continue his cross examination when the trial resumes tomorrow morning before Hudson County Superior Court Judge John Young in the Hudson County Administration Building Newark. 

7 arrested, $24K worth of heroin seized in Essex drug bust

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Seven arrested in "major" ongoing drug investigation in Essex County.

NEWARK -- Seven people were arrested Wednesday as part of a "major" ongoing drug investigation in Essex County, a release from the office of the county prosecutor said.

A narcotics task force, led by the Essex County Prosecutor's Office, busted individuals at three locations in Newark and Irvington, in addition to seizing ammunition, body armor, drugs and cash, the release said.

Police confiscated a total of 124.32 grams of heroin, with an estimated street value of $24,000, along with cash, hollow point bullets and bullet proof vests, the release said.

200 crack vials seized in Essex bust

"The arrests today are an indication of the importance this office and the Newark Police Department put on combating illegal drug sales in Essex County,'' said Acting Prosecutor Carolyn Murray.

"The seizure of this large amount of heroin, packaged for distribution, removes a significant quantity of heroin from the amount available for sale on the street.''

According to authorities, those arrested include:

  • Altariq Wagner, 28, of Newark, who was charged with conspiracy, distribution of heroin and distribution within 1,000 feet of a school. Bail for Wagner was set at $50,000 cash or bond.
  • Jerrez Wagner, 26, of Irvington, who was arrested and charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with the intent to distribute, possession of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school. His bail was set at $125,000 cash only.
  • Reginald Jones, 42, of Newark, who was charged with conspiracy, possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, possession of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school and possession of hollow point bullets. In addition two bulletproof vests were seized. Jones' bail was set at $75,000 cash or bond.
  • Steven Moultrie, 50, of Newark, who was charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, possession of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school and hindering apprehension. He was released with a summons.
  • Latoya Jones, 35, of Newark, who was arrested on an outstanding East Orange Public Department warrant. She was released on her own recognizance.
  • Yoko Negron, 45, of Newark, who was charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, possession of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school and possession of hollow point bullets. She summonsed, released and is scheduled to appear in court at a later date.
  • Jose A. Chavez, 29, of Newark, who was charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, possession of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school and possession of hollow point bullets. He was summonsed, released and is scheduled to appear in court at a later date.

Michael Anthony Adams may be reached at madams@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @MichaelAdams317. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Newark member of Crips gang gets 5 years for drug offense

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The gang controlled drug trafficking in various Newark neighborhoods, authorities said

NEWARK--  A city man who belonged to a gang that controlled narcotics distribution in some parts of the city was sentenced Wednesday to five years in prison, U.S. Attorney for New Jersey Paul Fishman said in a statement.

Max LaRue, 27, belonged to the Grape Street Crips, a gang which ran the crack-cocaine trade at 6th Avenue and N. 5th Street and elsewhere in Newark. LaRue, who previously admitted to one count of conspiracy to distribute the drug, will also be on parole for four years following his release from prison.

As part of a wider investigation into the gang's activities, authorities seized a number of so-called "community guns," weapons stashed on the street in hiding places known to gang members. Among the weapons were assault rifles and several semi-automatic handguns.

 

Vintage photos of what we used to wear in N.J.

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Mary Phelps Jacob invented the modern brassiere in 1913.

In our 2015 gallery on fashions and styles, I pointed out some of the timeline highlights related to clothing, fashion and styles in history. Here are a few more:

gosomewhere01.jpgThis is me at age 6 wearing my "gosomewhere" shirt. I called it that because when Mom told me to put it on, we were going to 'go somewhere' interesting. Makes perfect sense. 

*  According to inventors.com, Thomas Hancock patented elastic way back in 1820. Hancock also invented the 'masticator,' a machine that shredded rubber into fine pieces that could be reused for other purposes ... like elastic.

*  Albert Parkhouse patented his wire coat hanger in 1903 after first fashioning the item himself for use by his fellow employees at the Timberlake Wire and Novelty Company in Jackson, Mich.

*  Mary Phelps Jacob invented of the modern brassiere in 1913. As a substitute for corsets that featured whalebone and support rods, she took two silk handkerchiefs and, with help from her maid, sewed them together using some pink ribbon and cord.

*  Polyester was invented in 1941 in part to provide an alternative to natural fabrics, which were rationed during World War II.

MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey

*  According to harpersbazaar.com, the miniskirt, actually first referred to as a "minidress," made its debut at Derby Day at Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne, Australia, on Oct. 30, 1965.

Here's a gallery of some of the fashions and styles we New Jerseyans have worn through the last 152 years (yes, we have a photo from 1864.) Make sure you have captions enabled to read all about these classic photos.

Can't get enough? Here's a link to our 2015 fashion gallery.

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

CEO pay at N.J.'s non-profit hospitals is a big issue. Here's what Top 10 make

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A precedent-setting tax court case involving Morristown Medical Center highlighted the eyebrow-raising pay scale of nonprofit hospital CEOs.

TRENTON -- Ask hospital leaders whether New Jersey's nonprofit hospital CEOs earn too much money, and they will confidently say no. Their compensation packages are based on what other CEOs are making in a highly competitive market. 

But a tax court judge last summer sharply disagreed with that assessment, describing this method of comparison as a "wholly self-serving" justification. 

State Tax Court Judge Vito Bianco ruled Morristown Medical Center should lose its tax-exempt status -- in part because of its parent company CEO's $5 million-a-year pay package. 

Today's non-profit hospitals generate "significant revenue and pay their professionals salaries that are competitive even by for-profit standards," according to Bianco's decision.

Months later, a settlement was reached that allowed Morristown to remain a nonprofit entity, while paying out $15.5 million over the next decade to help offset property taxes. And Morristown's CEO Joe Trunfio, who earned an enviable $5 million in compensation, has retired.

In 2014, his last full year as the head of Atlantic Health System, Trunfio earned $4.7 million in salary and bonuses, according to the most recent IRS tax filings.

The tax court ruling has spawned 35 other tax appeals from municipalities ready to prove the non-profit hospital in town operates more like a for-profit company as Bianco said Morristown Medical Center had.

But experts in the hospital business doubt Bianco's ruling will have a chilling effect on CEO compensation. The 10 highest-paid nonprofit hospital CEOs in New Jersey earned from $2 million to $4.7 million in 2014, according to IRS records. 

Morristown hospital loses property tax case

J.B. Silvers, a nationally recognized expert on hospital CEO compensation and professor at Case Western Reserve's business school, said as high as some compensation packages appear, there are mechanisms to keep them in check.

"What holds it down is the IRS. In order to maintain not-for-profit status, you cannot pay excessive compensation," Silvers said. "They can literally lift the not-for-profit status. It has happened."

Hospital trustees will protect themselves by hiring an executive compensation firm to bring them "comparables"  -- examples of how much other hospital CEOs in similarly sized hospitals or hospital chains are making, Silvers said.  

A handful of large hospital systems with the highest paid CEOs confirmed to NJ Advance Media their boards of trustees go about it the same way -- by reviewing comparable salary information collected by outside consultants.

The bottom line figure includes much more than the base salary. The $2.5 million in compensation for CEO William McDonald of St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center in Paterson, for instance, "reflects a salary of $861,223 plus a one-time retirement savings payment," according to a hospital spokeswoman.

Count on CEO pay to remain competitive, especially in the Obamacare era, Silvers said. The landmark health care law expects hospitals and their orbit of outpatient services professionals to prevent illness and re-admissions. Hospitals will eventually be paid moreso for how well they manage health than just treat disease.

"Getting someone in there to deal with the cost and quality side is a difficult thing to do," Silver said.

The 10 highest-paid nonprofit hospital CEOS in New Jersey in 2014:

1. Joseph Trunfio, Atlantic Health: $4.7 million

2. John K. Lloyd, Meridian Health: $3.5 million

3. Robert Garrett, Hackensack University Medical Center: $3.3 million

4. William McDonald, St. Joseph Health System: $2.5 million

5. David Tilton, AtlantiCare: $2.47 million

6. Barry Ostrowsky, Barnabas Health: $2.27 million

7. Audrey Meyers, Valley Hospital: $2.2 million

8. Michael Maron, Holy Name Medical Center, $2.2 million

9. Chester Kaletkowski, Inspira Health Network: $2 million

10. Richard Miller, Virtua Health: $1.94 million.

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

Trump: I'll expand stop-and-frisk to cut crime in black communities

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Donald Trump said the program "worked incredibly well" in New York City, despite widespread criticism. Watch video

TRENTON -- Donald Trump suggested Wednesday he would aim to reduce crime in America's black communities by expanding stop-and-frisk, the police program a federal judge said discriminated against minorities in New York City.

The tactic has also drawn similar criticism for its use in Newark.

During a Fox News town hall at a predominately black church in Cleveland, Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, was asked how he would help stop black-on-black violence.

"I would do stop-and-frisk," said Trump, a New York City native and resident. "I think you have to. We did it in New York, it worked incredibly well. And you have to be proactive. You know, you really help people sort of change their mind automatically."

Speaking via phone with Fox News on Thursday morning, Trump said he was "really referring" to using stop-and-frisk in Chicago. 

"I think Chicago needs stop-and-frisk," the real estate magnate and former Atlantic City casino mogul said on "Fox & Friends. "People can criticize me for that. Or people can say whatever they want. But they asked me about Chicago, and I think stop-and-frisk with good, strong law and order."

Under stop-and-frisk, police officers are allowed to detain and search people they deem suspicious, based on "specific and articulable facts."

The program grew in New York City under then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who is now a top Trump adviser. And it expanded exponentially under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who ran the city from 2002 to 2013.

But critics said it encouraged racial profiling and data showed it disproportionately targeted minorities. 

In 2013, a federal judge said the New York Police Department's use of the tactic was unconstitutional. The city has since scaled back.

Newark's police department agreed to revamp its stop-and-frisk program in March, after data released in 2014 showed it also targeted blacks at a disproportionate rate.

Current New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, called Trump's praise of the program "appalling" and suggested "he's either ignorant about the history of the city or he's lying about it."

Trump made the remarks as he aims to improve his standing in black communities. He is currently polling in the single-digits among black voters.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @johnsb01. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Man accused of stealing 30 religious statues from neighbors to sell online

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The 19-year-old was arrested after selling the stolen statues online, police said.

NUTLEY -- Police have arrested a man who they say stole nearly 30 religious statues and other items from people's lawns and sold them online.

Andrew Lewis, 19, took dozens of statues in and around Nutley since Jan. 1, police said.

Lewis 3.jpegThe statues were placed for sale on the OfferUp website, police said.
 

Lewis would usually take photos of the statues while they were still on residents' lawns, and post them for sale on OfferUp, a website that facilitates local second-hand sales.

Lewis allegedly sold and stole about 30 outdoor items, including the statues, lawn furniture, and planters, police said. He had dozens of listings on the site, police said.

"This man was preying the same community which he lived, and it was only a matter of time before he was apprehended," Police Director Alphonse Petracco said in a statement about the arrest.

Police had released surveillance photos showing Lewis taking the statues, and received an anonymous tip that helped them determine his identity, police said. They were able to locate him via his online selling activity, police said.

Stench of cat carcasses leads cops to Nutley apartment

According to authorities, the items stolen include:

  • A Mary/Jesus statue from a home on Manhattan Court
  • Weber Grill from a home on Coppola Street
  • Virgin Mary statue from a home on Centre Street
  • Mother Theresa statue from a home on Union Avenue
  • Milk can from a home on Woodland Avenue
  • Vase from a home on Church Street
  • Lion statue from a home on Evergreen Avenue
  • Virgin Mary statue from a home on Franklin Avenue
  • Virgin Mary statue from a home on Oakridge Avenue
  • Saint Anthony statue from a home on Chase Street
  • Bench flower pot from a home on Speer Place
  • Wicker patio furniture from a home on Woodland Avenue
  • Wicker patio furniture from a home on Stager Street
  • Bicycle and flower pot from a home on Ackerman Street
  • Mother Theresa statue from a home on Race Street
  • Madonna statue from a home on Cross Street
  • Wicker Furniture from a home on Manhattan Court

Police Chief Thoms Stromolo noted that Lewis is cooperating with police in Nutley and in other nearby municipalities affected by the thefts.

"After his arrest, (Lewis) was cooperative and remorseful," Strumolo said.

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

N.J. native Jabrill Peppers did what? Weekly look at Michigan's Heisman hopeful

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Through Week 3, the East Orange native is making a strong case.

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