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Newark woman leads Harrison cops on Route 280 chase in 'outrageous' incident: official

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A 39-year-old Newark woman faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted on charges she led Harrison police on an "outrageous" chase onto Rt. 280 yesterday before being arrested on an off ramp.

JERSEY CITY -- A 39-year-old Newark woman faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted on charges that she led Harrison police on an "outrageous" chase onto Route 280 yesterday before being arrested on an off ramp, authorities said. 

After Karla I. Guevara, of Summer Avenue, was pulled over during a traffic stop police learned that she had an expired driver's license. Officers were prepared to let her passenger drive the vehicle away, only to learn the passenger had no license, Hudson County Assistant Prosecutor Catherine Healy said of the allegations.

As a result, the officers were going to have the vehicle towed away when Guevara allegedly hit the gas and fled onto Route 280 where police lost her, Healy said. 

Later, officers spotted the vehicle on an exit ramp and took Guevara into custody, but not before she allegedly punched an officer in the right eye, Healy added.

Healy noted that Guevara has no criminal record but called the incident "outrageous."

The defendant is charged with aggravated assault on the police officer, eluding police and resisting arrest.

Guevara's bail was set at $40,000 cash or bond when she appeared on the charges this afternoon in Central Judicial Processing court in Jersey City via video link from Hudson County jail in Kearny. 


36-year-old man shot, killed in 9th Plainfield homicide this year

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The victim was identified as 36-year-old Al-Muakhkhir Kearney of Newark, authorities said.

PLAINFIELD -- A 36-year-old Newark man shot in Plainfield Thursday night died of his injuries later that evening, acting Union County Prosecutor Grace H. Park announced Friday.

The victim was identified as 36-year-old Al-Muakhkhir Kearney of Newark, Park said.

Around 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Plainfield police responded to a report of an unresponsive male on the 100 block of Netherwood Avenue and found Kearney, Park said. She said he was rushed to JFK Hospital in Edison, but was pronounced dead about an hour later.

Thursday night's fatal shooting marks the ninth homicide in Plainfield this year. The yearly total is also already higher than the combined number of shootings in 2014 and 2015.

This incident is under joint investigation by the Union County Homicide Task Force, Plainfield Police Division, Union County Sheriff's Office Crime Scene Unit and Union County Police Department Ballistics Unit.

Anyone with information is being urged to contact Homicide Task Force Sgt. Johnny Ho at 908-403-8271 or Detective William Guy at 908-347-2212.

The Union County Crime Stoppers also are offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to an arrest and indictment in this case; tips can be given anonymously by phone at 908-654-TIPS (8477), via text message by texting "UCTIP" plus a message to 274637 (CRIMES), or online at www.uctip.org.

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

Adopted people can start getting N.J. birth records revealing their parents next month

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So far, 166 birth parents have filed a request to hide their name and identifying information in the birth certificate of their surrendered children.

TRENTON -- A law passed after 34 years of relentless lobbying that will allow adopted people to obtain their original birth certificates containing information about their parents, their medical history and identity will take effect in January. 

State Health Commissioner Cathleen Bennett released an announcement late Friday as a reminder that birth parents who wish to have these documents redacted of their name must make that request by no later than Dec. 31, 2016.

So far, 166 birth parents have filed a request to hide their name and identifying information, 77 have requested direct contact, and six have requested to be contacted through an intermediary, such as an adoption agency, health department spokeswoman Donna Leusner said.

The department has received 476 applications from adopted people seeking their birth certificates. 

Adoption law among biggest in 2014-15 

That's out of a universe of 170,000 envelopes containing birth records from adoption from 1940 to 2015, some of which contain information about more than one child, Leusner said.

In 2014, Gov. Chris Christie signed the law allowing the disclosures, with the idea that would be enough time before it took effect to publicize the change and to let parents request their anonymity.

The final bill was a compromise with adoption advocates who fought for the law citing a civil right to know their identity, and New Jersey Right to Life, the New Jersey Catholic Conference, the ACLU of New Jersey and the N.J. Bar Association which argued birth parents expected anonymity.

Pam Hasegawa of Morristown, a founder of the N.J. Coalition for Adoption Reform and Education, said the experience in other states shows few birth parents request no contact.

In the eight states in which records are open -- Alabama, Colorado, Illinois, New Hampshire, Maine, Ohio, Oregon and Rhode Island -- a total of 757 birth parents have requested redactions, according to information compiled by the American Adoption Congress. Birth records have been shared with nearly 44,000 people.

Hasegawa, who was adopted, said after decades of searching she finally connected with relatives for the first time this year using a DNA testing service. She said she finds many people have used other search methods rather than waiting for the law to catch up to technology. But all the years of effort lobbying for the bill and searching for her family was worth it, she said.

"I was so relieved to know where i came from, whom I came from -- just relieved I have a place on the human continuum," she said.

NJCARE has mailed out thousands of informational cards to New Jersey libraries and to adoption agencies and adoption rights groups across the country to spread the word about the law. 

New Jersey Right to Life and the New Jersey Catholic Conference, representing the bishops in the state, have posted information about the law on their websites, Right to Light Executive Director Marie Tasy said.

The organizations worry that birth mothers will feel betrayed and that pregnant women and girls might not carry a baby to term if they fear they will be found out, Tasy said. "We hope the enactment of this law does not result in an increase in the number of abortions," she said. 

"Our position has always been that it should be up to the birth mother to decide whether to have an open or private adoption and not the state," she added. 

The health department has been notifying national adoption agencies and community organizations to publicize the changing law, and will use social media to remind birth parents of the coming deadline.

"A complex, multi-step process is involved in searching 300,000 sealed birth records and matching them against adoption decrees and redaction requests," Bennett said. "To ensure that the Department provides accurate records while honoring the privacy request of birth parents, the Department will send adoptees their records by mail after a careful search is conducted."

adoptionfiles.jpgThere are 170,000 adoption records at the Department of Health that state employees will comb through to comply with a law that takes effect on Jan. 1, 2017 that provides adopted people a copy of their original birth certificate. (Photo courtesy of the N.J. Dept. of Health)

Birth parents don't have to do anything if they do not wish to redact the birth record, according to Bennett's announcement. However, if a birth parent has not requested any information be redacted, an adoptee will receive a copy of their original birth certificate with all information recorded at the time of their birth. Redaction requests will not be accepted after December 31.

In order for the contact preference form to be accepted, the birth parent must also submit a completed family history form, which includes medical, cultural and social history information about the birth parent, according to Bennett's announcement.

"Birth parents who choose to have their names redacted can reverse that decision at any time and make their identities known," according to Bennett's announcement.

Birth certificates are not public records and may only be sought by adult adoptees, their direct descendants, siblings or spouses of adopted persons, adoptive parents, legal guardians or other legal representatives of the adopted person.

Applicants must complete this form and pay a $25 fee. Additional copies $2. Adoptees must supply proof of identity in the form of a photo ID in the application, according to the health department website.

The state stopped sealing birth certificates for adopted children in 2015, under the law.

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

Gunmen shoot up Bloomfield bar injuring 5, police say

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Police said three different guns were used but did not know how many shots were fired. Nearby residents said they heard between eight and nine loud pops.

BLOOMFIELD -- Five people were shot late Friday night when gunmen opened fire on a city bar, shattering the glass front door and side window, police confirmed Saturday. 

The shooting occurred at about 11:45 p.m. at Sports in the City Food & Lounge in Bloomfield when multiple gunmen starting shooting into the bar from the street, according to city Police Director Sam DeMaio. 

Police said three different guns were used in the shooting according to shell casings from the scene but did not know how many shots were fired.

Nearby residents said they heard between eight and nine loud pops. 

"I thought it was fireworks," said Marcia Pires, who lives catty-corner from the bar. 

Shortly after, she said the whole block had been closed down with more than 20 police cars at the intersection. 

The five people who were shot were brought to University Hospital in Newark for non-life threatening injuries, according to DeMaio. 

About 30 people were in the sports bar for a party when the gunmen started shooting, he said.

Security gates covered the door and windows at the closed bar Saturday morning. Shattered glass could be seen scattered along the sidewalk at the intersection of First Avenue and N. 13th Street.

"It's unsettling," said Troy Davis, the owner of the Juke Joint next door to the bar. "I always have my children in here playing."

Witnesses told police the gunmen took off down First Avenue into Newark following the shooting.

One gun was recovered at the intersection, according to DeMaio. 

The corner location was previously a pizza place, Mr. Dinos Pizzeria & Restaurant, before it shut down last year, according to neighbors.

Pires said the bar had drawn a "strange" crowd since opening.

"I don't think a bar is a good idea there," Davis said. 

Police are still interviewing the witnesses who were in the lounge, located at the just feet from the Newark border.

The Essex County Crime Stoppers is offering a $5,000 reward for any information about the shooting that leads to an arrest. Residents can call 973-680-4090 with information. 

NJ Advance Media reporter Noah Cohen contributed to this report. 

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

N.J. college in mourning after back-to-back murders of students

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Two New Jersey City University students were murdered in seemingly unrelated off-campus killings.

JERSEY CITY -- Two seemingly unrelated murders in Newark and West Orange over the past two months do have a connection - both victims were young female students at New Jersey City University.

Sarah Butler, a 20-year-old from Montclair, went missing on Nov. 22,  police said. Her body was found more than a week later in a section of Eagle Rock Reservation in West Orange. Authorities have determined her death was a homicide.

Last month, Cedar Knolls resident Syasia McBorroughs, 23, was one of six people who were stabbed at a Newark residence during a brutal attack allegedly motivated by a Facebook post. She and two young children died as a result of the attack.

Though neither murder occurred on campus, officials say the women's deaths have left a big hole in the school community.

"The loss of Sarah and Syasia is devastating for their families, friends, and the NJCU community," said school spokeswoman Ellen Wayman-Gordon.

Calling their murders "tragic,"  she noted that the college is offering counseling to students affected by the homicides.

Student was slain, body placed in park

To bring campus awareness to the tragedies, students say they are planning a candlelight vigil and balloon release in the victims' memory Monday evening.

"I am a resident assistant at New Jersey City University, Sarah Butler was one of my students," said Jeniyah Wilkins, one of the students promoting the vigil.

"(These girls) attended NJCU and were murdered. ... The goal is to raise awareness."

Authorities have charged Jeremy Arrington, of Newark, in the stabbing deaths of McBorroughs and the young boy and girl, 11-year-old Al-Jahon Whitehurst and his 8-year-old sister Aerial Little Whitehurst, who were also killed in the stabbing spree.

Officials have not yet named a suspect in Butler's murder, but have called the investigation into the homicide "extremely active" and offered a reward for information leading to a conviction.

The two homicides come a little over a year after the campus was rocked by the brutal beating death of student Robert Hayes, who was killed in Newark in July of 2015.

Hayes was found naked and badly beaten on a Newark street, and died from the injuries he sustained in the beating. Three men who admitted to playing roles in the beating were earlier this year given prison sentences ranging from four to seven years, which were decried by his friends and family members as not enough.

NJCU officials say students are left recovering after losing their classmates and friends.

"At times of tragedy such as this, we must call upon our community to comfort one another (and) to grieve with one another," Wayman-Gordon said. 

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

Volunteers at huge charity drive pack 500K meals for needy

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The charity food drive was organized by Liquid Church, a non-denominational Christian church founded in 2007 with locations throughout the state.

PARSIPPANY -- A family of seven were among the hordes of volunteers Saturday assembling meals that will be distributed to families in need.

Standing by a long table under a heated tent, Jamie Hemberger was packing up 12.4-ounce bags of macaroni and cheese, each with enough for six servings.

She was joined by her husband, Mike, and their five children ranging from 3 to 13 years old.

Hemberger said the event was providing their children - Caleb, Noah, Jonah, Micah and Mariah - with a powerful holiday lesson.

"It's to show our children to give back, that it's not all about them getting things," Hemberger said.

The charity food drive was organized by Liquid Church, a non-denominational Christian church founded in 2007 with locations in Essex, Middlesex, Morris, Somerset and Union counties.

Kate Rogers, an outreach coordinator, said Saturday's daylong effort involved 1,100 volunteers packing approximately 500,000 meals in multiple locations.

Of that, 190,000 meals were being packed in Parsippany, in the parking lot by the church's campus on Webro Road.

In addition to the volunteers who were packing, an additional 1,900 were aiding the effort in other ways, Rogers said.

Rogers said the church organized a similar outreach last year and that the goal was to "saturate the state" with examples of service as exemplified by its Christian faith.

"Jesus Christ has called us to serve the hungry," she said.

Theresa Caffarra, a volunteer, was packing meals near the rear of the tent at 10 a.m.

"We're touching people in a tangible way," Caffarra said, adding that the effort would help those in need understand "that people care, that Christians care."

Nearby was Vi Lurski, another volunteer.

"Look at everybody, the whole dynamic of everybody coming together and fulfilling the needs to those in need - just the power of giving instead of always receiving," she said.

Rob Jennings may be reached at rjennings@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @RobJenningsNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Officials investigating fire at vacant Newark building

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Authorities are investigating the cause of a fire at a vacant building Saturday morning.

NEWARK -- Officials are investigating a blaze at a vacant building on Wainwright Street early Saturday morning, according to officials.

Firefighters responded to the blaze at around 3:45 a.m. It was brought under control about a half hour later, police said.

There were no injuries and no one was inside the building at the time, police said.

The cause remains unknown and is under investigation by the Newark Fire Division and the Essex County Arson Squad.

Spencer Kent may be reached at skent@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @SpencerMKent. Find the Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Man charged in N.J. quadruple shooting that killed toddler, uncle

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1-year-old boy, 21-year-old man shot to death last month, according to authorities.

Stevenson Valentin copy.jpgStevenson Valentin (Photo: ECPO) 

ORANGE -- A Maplewood man was charged with two counts of murder and other offenses for a quadruple shooting that killed a toddler and the boy's 21-year-old uncle at an Orange home last month, prosecutors said Saturday.

Stevenson Valentin, 28, was arrested after a traffic stop by Newark police officers in the city, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn A. Murray and Orange Police Director Todd Warren said in a joint statement. Stevenson was ordered held at the county jail in lieu of $1 million bail.

In addition to murder, Valentin was charged with weapons offenses and aggravated assault for the shooting that also left a 15-year-old boy and the toddler's father wounded, authorities said.

Toddler, man killed in quadruple shooting identified

Gunfire erupted the afternoon of Nov. 3 at a house on the 200 block of Cleveland Avenue, where the shooter opened fire on the 1-year-old boy, identified as Marcus Milien, his uncle, Morlens Milice, and the boy's father along with a teenager, according to authorities. Marcus Milien and Morlens Milice died while the two other victims suffered non life-threatening gunshot wounds.

Witnesses described seeing a lone gunman run to a car and flee the scene after the shooting.

The killings promoted outrage in Orange, where residents said the area has been plagued with gun violence stemming from gang-related feuds. At least one other shooting occurred in the same neighborhood days before the deadly attack.

Authorities did not immediately disclose a possible motive for the killings.

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


Man pinned in hole by oil tank rescued by firefighters in Montclair

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The man was pulled from the hole after about 40 minutes and taken to a local hospital for minor injuries

MONTCLAIR -- More than a dozen firefighters rescued a man who was pinned in a hole in the front yard of a Montclair home Saturday afternoon. 

The unidentified man was working on an oil tank after 2 p.m. when the tank fell and trapped him in the hole, according to Montclair Police Capt. Steve Greybush. 

The man was pulled from the hole after about 40 minutes and taken to a local hospital for minor injuries, Greybush said.

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

16-year-old boy charged with murder of livery cab driver

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Man found fatally shot after police responded to car crash late Wednesday.

ORANGE -- Authorities on Saturday said a 16-year-old boy was charged with murder in the slaying of a livery cab driver, who was found shot to death after his car crashed on a city street.

The teen, whose name was not released because of his age, is also accused of felony murder and weapons offenses in the killing Wednesday night of Jonas Larose, 55, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn A. Murray and Orange Police Director Todd Warren announced in a joint statement.

Authorities also charged the teen with a robbery that occurred about 24 hours before the shooting, according to prosecutor's office Chief of Detectives Quovella Spruill.

Police found Larose, of East Orange, unresponsive in his wrecked livery cab around 11 p.m. on the 200 block of Snyder Street, according to the prosecutor's office. Officers were initially called for a vehicle crash and discovered the driver had been shot.

Man charged in N.J. quadruple shooting that killed toddler, uncle

The livery cab apparently crashed into a parked car, hit a tree and a fence. One nearby resident said he heard at least two loud pops and a crash late Wednesday.

Members of the Essex County Prosecutor's Office Homicide Task Force were credited with making the arrest. 

The prosecutor's office also on Saturday announced the separate arrest of a 28-year-old Maplewood man on murder and other charges in the killing of a toddler and the child's uncle in Orange. 

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

 

Westwood man accused in attack, robbery at Newark gas station

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Man, 19, is charged with robbery

NEWARK -- A 19-year-old Westwood man was arrested for robbing a gas station early Saturday in Newark, authorities said.

Corey J. Walker is accused of assaulting a gas station attendant and demanding money from the employee at Globe Gas on Raymond Boulevard shortly before 3 a.m., Public Safety Director Anthony Ambrose said.

Newark police spotted the vehicle Walker was driving speeding near Raymond Boulevard and Jefferson Street and took him into custody, Ambrose said in a statement. Walker was charged with robbery.

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

 

Woman threw cat off third-floor balcony, N.J. authorities say

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Animal cruelty incident was captured on video, according to officials.

Tikeemah J. LassiterTikeemah J. Lassiter (Photo: Dept. of Public Safety) 

NEWARK -- A 19-year-old woman is accused of throwing a cat off a third-floor balcony in an incident that was captured in a video posted on social media, authorities said Saturday.

Tikeemah J. Lassiter, of Clinton, was visiting relatives in Newark when she tossed the animal off the balcony on the 300 block of South Orange Avenue Thursday, according to city Public Safety Director Anthony Ambrose.

A concerned citizen alerted city police about a video showing Lassiter throw the cat, Ambrose said. She was arrested Saturday and charged with animal cruelty.

The cat survived and was turned over to the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, officials said. A veterinarian would examine the cat before the agency determines where to place the animal, which did not belong to Lassiter. 

In the video, a woman is seen hurling the cat off the balcony to a sidewalk below. The animal does not move on the ground in the footage shared online. The video also captured laughter as Lassiter allegedly threw the cat.

She was also charged for an assault warrant issued by New Jersey Transit police, according to authorities. Details of that incident were not immediately available.

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

 

2 killed, 1 critically wounded in separate Newark shootings

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Police have not identified any suspects in either shooting

NEWARK -- Two men were killed and one man was critically injured in two separate shootings early Sunday in Newark.

Police found two men suffering from gunshot wounds shortly after midnight on North Munn Avenue near Bradley Court, the Essex County Prosecutor's Office said in a news release.

Shahire Williams, 19, of Irvington, was pronounced dead at Rutgers University Hospital, authorities said. A 24-year-old, was in critical condition, the prosecutor's office said. No other details on that shooting were provided.

At 2:30 a.m., another man was found with a gunshot wound on the 200 block of Clifton Avenue, a few blocks from Branch Brook Park, authorities said.

Westwood man allegedly robs gas station

He was sent to the hospital in critical condition but died later, the prosecutor's office said. His name was not released pending notification of his family.

Police have not made any arrests or identified any suspects in either shooting.

Anyone with information should call the Essex County Prosecutor's Office homicide tips line at (877) TIPS-4EC.

Myles Ma may be reached at mma@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @MylesMaNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Keys to Thomas Edison's 'invention factory' in N.J., lightbulbs sell for $60K

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The keys to the lab where Edison invented the phonograph were sold at an auction in Dallas

DALLAS -- Keys to the New Jersey lab where Thomas Edison invented the phonograph and some of the lightbulbs that he perfected sold for more than $60,000 at auction on Saturday.

Thomas Edison AuctionThis photo provided by Heritage Auctions shows Thomas A. Edison: Keys to his Menlo Park Laboratory on display. Six keys in all from the famous inventor's Menlo Park home and work place were auctioned Saturday, Dec. 3, 2016 in Dallas. (Heritage Auctions via AP) 

The keys sold for $10,625 at an auction run by Heritage Auctions in Dallas. A bulb created by a German inventor who claimed to have invented the incandescent lightbulb before Edison did was sold for $23,750, while a set of five Edison bulbs used in a court case sold for $30,000.

The items were acquired by Charlie Knudsen, 69, of Pittsburgh, and had belonged to his great-aunt. She was married to one of the attorneys whose law firm represented Edison in patent lawsuits.

Tags on some of the keys list the doors that they opened, including Edison's 1876 lab that became known as the "invention factory." Another key says "motor shed," and a third "shop."

Edison had applied for about 400 patents, including improvements to the incandescent bulb, before he left for New York City in 1882, said Kathleen Carlucci, director of the Thomas Edison Center in New Jersey.

The lab itself was built by Edison's father about 30 miles northeast of Trenton and was the world's largest in its day. Carlucci said it also was "the first research and development facility."

The bulbs up for auction were part of a collection used in patent infringement lawsuits. "One bulb in particular was used in a case where he (Edison) was able to prove he had a patent," Knudsen said.

After making lightbulbs commercially viable, the "Wizard of Menlo Park" turned his attention to New York City where he worked to develop an electric utility.

Bringing plant life back to Thomas Edison's N.J. home

Squatters took over the abandoned Menlo Park property, raising chickens and crops, Carlucci said. Local residents held dances in the lab.

Today, Menlo Park is a national historic site and a state park. None of the original buildings remain, but a museum and education center highlight Edison's accomplishments.

A 131-foot memorial tower to commemorate his work on the lightbulb stands on the site. It was restored last year and its 14-foot tall replica bulb shines in the night.

Newark students' fast raises hunger awareness

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Students participate in a "Feast for Famine."

NEWARK -- Students at Newark Collegiate Academy recently took part in a "Fast for Famine" drive at school to raise awareness about hunger.

More than 150 students began a 24-hour fast on Nov. 18; the students stayed overnight at the school, where they spent their time working on charitable projects such as making blankets for the children at the Children's Hospital at Beth Israel Medical Center and sandwiches and holiday cards for families at the YMCA of Newark before their fast came to an end.

The students also raised $780, which they donated to the Make-A-Wish Foundation and Charity Water.

To submit school news send an email to essex@starledger.com.


Suit details N.J. brothers' fight over ailing mom's fortune

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Steven Winograd is suing his brother, Barry, over $2 million in jewelry and a painting worth $80,000.

WYCKOFF -- A Verona man is accusing his brother, a Wyckoff resident, of stealing their mother's fortune, which includes $2 million in jewelry and a painting worth $80,000, according to a lawsuit filed recently in Bergen County Superior Court.

bergencourt.jpgBarry Winograd is accused of absconding with his mother's fortune, according to a suit filed in Bergen County Superior Court. (File photo) 

Steven Winograd alleges in court papers that his brother Barry Winograd took ownership of valuable items belonging to their mother, Ruth Winograd, who is "incapacitated" and undergoing medical and nursing care.

The suit states that shortly after Steven obtained power of attorney over his mother, Barry broke into the home where their mother lived and "absconded with an original painting (by) a renowned artist, Pedro Greenberg, (that) has an an anticipated value of $80,000."

Before the theft, Barry was entrusted with $2 million in their mother's jewelry, which he had agreed to secure in his home safe, the suit states.

But when Steven asked Barry for the jewelry so he could liquidate the gems to pay for their mother's nursing treatment, Barry refused, the suit states.

Steven Winograd, "who possesses a durable power of attorney of Mrs. Winograd's person and property has demanded the return of stolen property to no avail," the suit states.

The suit demands return of stolen property, along with compensatory, punitive damages, interest and other relief.

Barry Winograd could not be reached for comment.

Anthony G. Attrino may be reached at tattrino@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @TonyAttrino. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Man accused in killing of toddler, uncle has long criminal past

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Stevenson Valentin, 28, had previously been arrested for a slew of other charges, including burglary, illegally possessing guns, possessing cds, carjacking and simple assault.

ORANGE -- The Maplewood man arrested in the shooting deaths of a 1-year-old boy and his uncle last month has a lengthy history of prior arrests, according to records at the Essex County jail.

Stevenson Valentin copy.jpgStevenson Valentin (Photo: ECPO)

Stevenson Valentin, 28, was taken into custody after Newark police pulled him over for a traffic stop, authorities said. He faces murder, weapons offenses and aggravated assault charges.

Records show he had previously been arrested for a number of other charges including carjacking, burglary, assault, threatening violence, drug possession and weapons offenses dating back to 2008.

Valentin is accused of shooting four people last month as they were sitting on the porch of a house on the 200 block of Cleveland Avenue in Orange. The shooting left 1-year-old Marcus Milien and his 21-year-old uncle, Morlens Milice, dead. The toddler's father and a 15-year-old boy were also injured.

Winston Jimenez, who lives next door to the shooting scene, said he had called the police to report loud shouting and what seemed like fighting at the property in the past.

He said he could hear the fights until the early hours of the morning, sometimes around 2 and 3 a.m. Authorities were unavailable Sunday to comment on whether they had before visited the house.

Suit details brothers' fight over mom's fortune

Neighbors said they hoped the string of violent occurrences, stemming from gang-related activity, would lessen.

Jimenez's children are grown, but he said he has tenants with young children who have told him they will move if the shootings continue.

"It is just too violent," Jimenez said.

Authorities didn't release a possible motive Sunday behind the killings. Valentin was held at the county jail in lieu of a $1 million bail.

Sara Jerde may be reached at sjerde@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @SaraJerde.

 

Buzz Aldrin's South Pole evacuation was prompted by altitude sickness

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Buzz Aldrin tweeted a joke about Kim Kardashian as he was recovering.

New Jersey native Buzz Aldrin posted updates on Sunday indicating he was in good spirits - and cracking Kardashian jokes - as he continues to recover after being evacuated from the South Pole Thursday due to altitude sickness.

Aldrin, 86, was in Antarctica as part of a tour group. He said in a statement that he felt short of breath and, when examined, staff found congestion in his lungs and low oxygen levels. Both are symptoms of altitude sickness, he said.

"I didn't get as much time to spend with the scientists as I would have liked to discuss the research they're doing in relation to Mars," Aldrin said in a statement released on his website. "My visit was cut short and I had to leave after a couple of hours. I really enjoyed my short time in Antarctica and seeing what life could be like on Mars."

He is waiting on congestion in his lungs to clear up before he travels back to the United States, according to the update on his site.

Aldrin has kept busy exercising in the halls of a Christchurch hospital. He also posted a photo showing him reading in bed:

Sara Jerde may be reached at sjerde@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @SaraJerde.

These were N.J.'s highest-paid private college presidents, survey says

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Presidential pay packages topped $700,000 at three of New Jersey's private universities, the survey found.

PRINCETON -- The average pay for private colleges and university presidents jumped up by more than 8 percent in 2014 as the annual compensation packages for some leaders rose into the millions, according to a new survey.

The Chronicle of Higher Education, a national publication that covers college campuses, released its annual survey of presidential compensation at private colleges Sunday. The report, which used the latest available tax filings from 500 private colleges, found the average president or chancellor earned $531,817 in 2014, a 8.6 percent increase compared to the previous year.

"An 8.6 percent raise beats inflation, but it's not the first time we've seen such an increase," said Dan Bauman, the database reporter at the Chronicle of Higher Education who compiled the list.

Many of the top presidents saw their pay soar thanks to "deferred compensation," which are usually lump-sum bonuses built into their contracts that are paid out only if a president stays in office a certain number of years.

N.J.'s highest-paid public college presidents

"Deferred compensation packages can launch some presidents' take home pay into the seven-figure range, but their boards tell us it's how they keep the best leaders they can," Bauman said. "Sometimes, for a college president, it doesn't hurt to stay for the long haul."

The top-paid private college presidents in the country in 2014 was Wilmington University President Jack Varsalona, the survey found. His total compensation package of nearly $5.5 million included $427,345 in base pay, $381,040 in bonus pay and $9,985 in health and other non-taxable benefits. The remaining $4.6 million came from other payments, including a lump-sum deferred compensation payment, the report found.

The other top-earning private college presidents were: Mark S. Wrighton, president of Washington University in St. Louis ($4.2 million); R. Gerald Turner, president of Southern Methodist University ($3.4 million); Amy Gutmann, president of the University of Pennsylvania ($3 million); Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University ($2.5 million); Morton Schapiro, president of Northwestern University ($2.4 million); Robert Fisher, president of Belmont University ($2.1 million); Robert Zimmer, president of the University of Chicago ($2.1 million); James Jones Jr., president of Trinity College in Connecticut ($1.7 million); and David Skorton, president of Cornell University ($1.6 million).

New Jersey's private college presidents did not rank in the top 10, but four campus leaders earned more than the national average, according to the survey.

The top-earning New Jersey private college president was Christopher Eisgruber, president of Princeton University, who earned $875,925 in 2014, according to the school's tax filing.

Eisgruber is earning less than his predecessor, Shirley Tilghman, who took home a total compensation package of $931,327 in 2013 before she stepped down to return to teaching.

Princeton University officials did not respond to requests to comment on the presidents' pay.

In New Jersey, Eisgruber was followed by Nariman Farvardin, president of Stevens Institute of Technology, whose compensation package totaled $790,558 in 2014, according to the report.

"President Farvardin's base salary in 2014 was $625,000.  The additional compensation above that amount, beyond a small transportation allowance, is directly related to his achievement of multiple objectives approved by the Board of Trustees," Stevens officials said in a statement.

Farvardin was followed by A. Gabriel Esteban, president of Seton Hall University ($726,343), and Paul Brown, president of Monmouth University ($676,564).

Click through the photo gallery above to see the pay for presidents at other New Jersey private colleges.

The survey only included the 500 private colleges and universities around the nation with the largest reported endowments. So, several of New Jersey's smaller colleges, including Bloomfield College and the College of Saint Elizabeth, are not included in the ranking.

Many Catholic colleges and universities were also not included because they have nuns or priests as presidents who either get no salary or turn their pay over to their religious orders.

Georgian Court University in Lakewood reported its pay for Sister Rosemary Jeffries as $0 in 2014, according to its tax form. Jeffries retired last year.

Most private colleges do not publicly disclose their presidents' salaries. The Chronicle survey uses the Form 990 tax document schools file with the IRS to determine presidential pay packages. Because there is a delay in the release of tax documents, the presidential pay data is usually a few years old by the time it is released.

Each summer, the Chronicle of Higher Education does a similar survey of public college presidents, whose current contracts are public.

The 2014-2015 survey found that University of Houston President Renu Khator  was the highest-paid public university president with a total compensation package of $1.3 million.

Rutgers University President Robert Barchi ranked 19th in the nation with $742,509 in total compensation, according to the survey. New Jersey Institute of Technology President Joel Bloom ranked 39th in the country among public college leaders with a total compensation package of $632,000 and Rutgers-Newark Chancellor Nancy Cantor ranked 131st with $403,365.

Kelly Heyboer may be reached at kheyboer@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KellyHeyboer. Find her at KellyHeyboerReporter on Facebook.
 

Montclair man charged in Newark shooting death

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James Goff, 22, of Irvington, was shot to death in Newark early Sunday

NEWARK -- A 22-year-old Montclair resident was charged Sunday with gunning down an Irvington resident in the city, authorities said.

brandon-williams.jpgBrandon Williams 

Brandon Williams faces a murder charge in the death of James Goff, 22, in the 2:30 a.m. shooting on Clifton Avenue, acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn A. Murray and Newark Public Safety Director Anthony F. Ambrose said in a joint statement.

Williams was detained shortly after the shooting by Newark Police officers and later charged, authorities said. He also faces weapons offenses.

No motive was given for the shooting.

Goff was one of two men killed in separate shootings early Sunday in Newark.

Shahire Williamson, 19, of Irvington, was shot to death just after midnight on North Munn Avenue. A 24-year-old man was critically injured in that incident, said Chief of Detectives Quovella M. Spruill of the prosecutor's office.

Authorities said no arrests had been made as of Sunday evening in the North Munn Avenue shooting.

Bail for Williams was set at $750,000, with no 10 percent option, and authorities said he remained held at the Essex County Correctional Facility in Newark.

Anyone with information on either shooting is urged to call the Essex County Prosecutor's Office homicide tips line at (877) TIPS-4EC.

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

 
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