New Jersey
Is It Too Soon To Say NJ Hit on Both Top Defensive Picks?
As fans of the New Jersey Devils, we know the importance of hitting on early draft picks and replenishing talent through the draft. We have been on both sides of this. Of course, the Devils have hit on both Nico Hischier and Jack Hughes, #1 overall picks from 2017 and 2019, and that was by far the most important development for this franchise since 2012. The Devils needed to go 2 for 2 on those picks to initiate a strong rebuild that had been needed for this franchise for years at that point, and they have. Jack Hughes is obviously one of the best players in the NHL and was a massive success with that pick, and while 2017 redrafts all have Cale Makar as the top player from that draft, no one on this team or in this fanbase is upset that Nico is here. He is the rightful captain of this team and is vital to this team’s success.
Of course, we know the other side of this too. From 2005-2009, the Devils’ first-round picks looked like this: Niclas Bergfors, Matt Corrente, no pick (traded it for the rights of Alexander Korolyuk, and Jim Fahey), Mattias Tedenby, and Jacob Josefson. This was about as bad as it could get. Bergfors played in 63 games for NJ, Matt Corrente played in 34, Alexander Korolyuk never played in the NHL again after the 03-04 season, Jim Fahey played in 13 games for NJ, Mattias Tedenby saw 120 games, and Jacob Josefson was the most successful at 276 games. Now, of course, none of those picks were high, as this was a time when the Devils were still a perennial playoff team. However, there is no doubt that what happened over those 5 drafts hollowed out this roster and was no small part in why the roster fell into disrepair after the 2012 Cup run. There wasn’t enough young talent to replace aging veterans, and the young talent that was drafted was simply not good enough. You can’t build a team solely on free agent signings and trades for veterans, and that was what Lou was reduced to doing at that time.
Now, with the hits of Jack and Nico, as I mentioned, this franchise gained a foundation that it could use to build into the perennial contender like it used to be. But that would not simply be enough. Even after those picks, the Devils were getting high picks, landing the 4th pick in 2021, and winning the lottery and hitting the 2nd pick in 2022. Back-to-back years, two more important picks to get this team back to where it should be. If it hits on those two picks, along with Jack and Nico, that is an amazing foundation for this franchise for a generation.
At this point, I think you could start saying that the Devils have indeed hit on those picks. Both were defensemen, needing to shore up the blue line after addressing the offense and scoring for other top picks. Luke Hughes came up last year and played well through the playoff run, and has cemented himself on this NHL team this season. Here is his card this season from Andy & Rono:
Luke has obviously been dynamic on the power play and as an offensive defenseman, but has a good defensive impact as well. It is electric watching him play sometimes, especially going back and forth with his brother.
But we knew he was expected up by now and is delivering on those expectations. What we were not sure of was whether or not Simon Nemec would be ready by now, and if he would be as strong of a hit with the 2nd pick as Luke looks to be with the 4th pick. But so far this season, since he has been called up, he is also proving that he is here to stay and can be a smashing success with that pick. Again, here is his card this year from A&R:
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Those are better numbers than Luke has on his card, with a fantastic defensive impact and quality point production despite not being billed as an offensive d-man. He has played himself into a cemented role on this team already, as there is no way Lindy Ruff and Co. can send him back to Utica with how he has been playing.
Further, check out both of their possession and expected goal metrics when compared to every other defenseman who has played at least 100 minutes so far this year. 248 defenders make the list, and the stats are from Natural Stat Trick.
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Those are some incredible numbers. Yes, they are buoyed by playing on a strong team, at least analytically, but they are not being carried to these numbers by teammates alone. They are contributing. To both be in the top 30 in possession among 248 d-men and to be in the top 25 in expected goals on that same list is highly impressive. If you asked the Devils brass what they wanted to see from these two guys before this season started, the numbers you’re seeing are probably at top end of what they could’ve hoped for. Nemec did not even start the season in the NHL, and Luke had only seen a little time here last season, so anything was possible. Especially considering defensemen usually take longer to develop than forwards do. But here both of them are, playing this well.
This is obviously a massive development for this team both now and for the long-term future. They are becoming part of the core, and at their ages, can be around for a very long time. When you have two strong guys like this solidifying the blue line, two guys who will only improve and get better, that is extremely promising. For now, it looks like these two picks are both going to be wildly successful, and we cannot ask for more than that.
New Jersey
‘This Cruelty is Intentional’: The New Jersey Lawmakers Fighting to Shut Down Delaney Hall
Until a week ago, most of the country had no idea where — or what — Delaney Hall is. Now, protests outside of the immigrant detention facility in Newark, New Jersey, have taken over national news, as militarized Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and New Jersey state troopers have attacked and arrested demonstrators and bystanders alike, seeking to quell resistance at the newest focal point of President Donald Trump’s war on immigrants.
The current crisis began on May 22, when a group of detainees inside began a hunger and labor strike over the “inhumane” conditions they said they were subjected to inside the facility, which is owned and operated by a private prison company called GEO Group. The detainees described disease, overflowing toilets, poor ventilation, and worm-riddled food — allegations that immediately sparked protests outside the facility.
For several New Jersey lawmakers, Delaney Hall has been an issue since Trump retook office — and most of them have been willing to put their own skin in the game. Senator Andy Kim, Congresswoman LaMonica McIver, and Newark Mayor Ras Baraka have all made appearances at Delaney Hall since the president launched his brutal crackdown on immigrants last year.
Some of the visits have been dramatic. On May 25, Senator Kim was pepper sprayed as he attempted to de-escalate a confrontation between protesters and ICE agents. Congresswoman McIver currently faces federal charges for an alleged scuffle with a DHS officer at Delaney Hall last year. “I’ve been preaching the same thing for over a year now,” she tells Rolling Stone. “This facility should not be open.”
Baraka was arrested in the same incident that led to the charges against McIver. “We started this before they even put people in that detention facility,” he says. “It’s a protracted fight. Ultimately we want the building to be shut down.”
That fight has had several inflection points, including last May, when McIver and two other New Jersey members of Congress tried to conduct routine oversight of the facility shortly after it had opened. The appointment went off the rails fast. Employees of GEO Group were dragging their feet, stalling until a group of DHS agents arrived and threatened to arrest Baraka. The chaos continued outside, when protesters got involved. In the melee between cops, protesters, and members of Congress, the DHS alleges that McIver was guilty of “assaulting, impeding, and interfering” with a federal officer.
“They looked at me as this young Black girl from the city of Newark — let’s target her,” McIver says. “If they’re doing this to me, see what they’re doing to everyone else.”
The vindictive charges, negligent treatment of detainees, and casual disregard of due process are all tied to greater policy goals that come from inside Trump’s administration.
“This is truly a Stephen Miller special,” McIver says, referring to the key Trump adviser who has made immigration enforcement his top priority. “They’re weaponizing every system of the government for their racist goals.”
Part of the reason New Jersey’s local politicians are so pissed is that they never asked for this. Before 2025, Delaney Hall had sat empty for several years, after its last iteration as a halfway house closed down in 2023. GEO Group re-opened it in 2025 and promptly won a $1 billion contract from the Trump administration to house immigration detainees. Baraka says the entire process was flawed from the start: GEO Group ignored local laws and permitting, bypassed zoning processes, and opened its doors to a flood of detainees and government funding.
The Trump administration operates a “revolving door of corruption” with the major companies running private prisons, Kim says. The current head of ICE, David Venturella, was a senior vice president at GEO Group until 2023, and a paid consultant almost up until the moment he was appointed to lead the agency. Tom Homan, Trump’s “Border czar,” has taken consulting fees from the company. GEO Group and CoreCivic, another major private prison company, collectively donated nearly $2.8 million to Trump’s 2024 election campaign — gifts they have been paid back for in full by a wash of federal contracts like the one supporting Delaney Hall.
“They’re using this situation with ICE to enrich themselves,” Baraka says. “There are private prisons all over the country that are popping up trying to get these contracts. We need to exercise our authority on the local level to keep these people accountable.”
But that authority isn’t always easy to use. Rep. McIver sits on the House Committee Homeland Security, which ostensibly has oversight over the actions of ICE and its subcontractors like GEO Group. But with Republicans in charge of Congress, she says it’s a constant “battle” with her counterparts to get any kind of accountability — or even an appearance at the committee — out of the Trump administration’s immigration apparatus.
“We spend a lot of time talking about China and not talking about all of the issues that are happening right in our own homeland,” McIver says. “The ICE director came one time. Trying to get these people in front of you to hold them accountable — it’s impossible.”
McIver and the committee got another chance on Wednesday however, when newly appointed DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin appeared before lawmakers. McIver opened with a simple question: Has Mullin ever actually been to Delaney Hall?
“No I have not,” Mullin answered.
McIver knew the answer, of course, but wanted it on the record.
“This is a man who hasn’t stepped a foot inside this location,” McIver told Rolling Stone the day before the hearing. “He doesn’t know what’s going on, he’s just doing Trump’s bidding.”
McIver used the majority of her time at the hearing to lay out, in detail, the plight of detainees inside Delaney Hall, and call out Mullin’s political grandstanding. Mullin has called for the ending of international flights to airports in “sanctuary cities,” specifically threatening Newark in recent days as a response to the protests there. He smirked at the end of McIver’s speech.
Elected officials who do attempt to visit Delaney Hall, meanwhile, meet a similar level of defiance. On Monday, May 25, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill and Senator Kim attempted to inspect the facility. ICE, which had armed agents outside the facility clashing with protesters, refused to let them in. Federal agents refused to back down or de-escalate in any way, ratcheting up the tension.
“There was just a feeling of inevitable violence over Delaney Hall that day,” Kim says.
Kim tried to keep the peace, but when a conflict broke out with protesters, ICE started blasting away with pepper spray, catching Kim as well as his constituents. In a phone call this week, Kim was still noticeably frustrated by the experience.
“There has to be some kind of effort to do this in a nonviolent way,” Kim says. “I was trying! And there was zero effort. They could care less. It really stuck with me. It was such a jarring experience just how little they cared.”
This casual brutality is baked into the system — designed by Trump, Miller, and their underlings to make navigating the immigration system in this country as painful as it possibly can be. The overflowing toilets, poor ventilation, even the abuse of protests outside — that’s all part of the plan. Kim says seeing — and feeling — this violence first hand gave it new meaning.
“It crystalized for me the magnitude of this problem that we’re facing,” Kim says. “This cruelty that we’re seeing is intentional.”
New Jersey
Dramatic video shows ferocious flames shooting from row house in Camden, NJ
Wednesday, June 3, 2026 4:08PM
CAMDEN, N.J. (WPVI) — Dramatic video captured ferocious flames shooting from a row house in Camden Wednesday morning.
Firefighters were dispatched to the home on the 1100 block of Baring Street just after 5:30 a.m.
Crews say they now have the flames under control.
No one was injured.
Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.
New Jersey
Justin Murphy wins New Jersey’s Republican Senate primary
Justin Murphy has defeated Robert Lebovics, Richard Tabor and Alex Zdan in New Jersey’s 2026 primary election for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate.
The Associated Press declared Murphy the winner at 11:25 p.m., , with Murphy leading the other GOP candidates with 33% of the vote. Murphy will face Democratic incumbent U.S. Sen. Cory Booker in November’s general election. Booker ran unopposed in the Democratic primary.
Justin Murphy is a former committee person in Tabernacle, a small town in the Pine Barrens of Burlington County. He dedicated his campaign to the men and women of the U.S. military and said he was running because he cares about the culture of America, parental rights, health care and economic opportunity.
Murphy, who is an attorney, said his top priorities include private sector growth, tax cuts and spending reductions. He said during his campaign that he is committed to standing up to terrorism and crime, he supports securing the country’s northern and southern borders and intends to fight for energy independence if elected.
He also pledged to work to ensure older residents have an excellent Medicare program and said he will fight to keep the Jersey Shore “windmill free.”
During his campaign, Murphy said China poses a serious threat to the U.S., but he supports engaging with the Chinese from a position of strength, politically and economically. He also said on his website that he opposes the legalization of recreational marijuana. He ran for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 2024 and finished in third place.
Here comes the midterms: Murphy to face Booker in November
Booker was elected to the Newark City Council in 1998, then served as the mayor from 2006 until 2013, when he won a special election for the U.S. Senate seat that was left vacant following the death of U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg. Booker was reelected the following year in the general election and was victorious in the 2020 general election.
Booker, a frequent critic of the Trump administration, has recently called for the Delaney Hall ICE detention center in Newark to be shut down and has strongly opposed the Department of Homeland Security’s plan to house an immigrant detention center in Roxbury Township.
Last year, Booker made the longest speech in the history of the Senate, lasting 25 hours and five minutes.
He is considered a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate and has introduced legislation to significantly expand the standard tax deduction for singles and married couples, which would lower taxes on low- and middle-income wage earners. Booker grew up in North Jersey and graduated from Northern Valley Regional High School in Old Tappan.
According to the most recent statistics available, there are 6,679,849 registered voters in New Jersey. There are 2,535,718 registered Democrats, 1,677,041 registered Republicans and 2,467,092 independents and others. The general election is Nov. 3.
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