New Jersey
AGs in New Jersey and Delaware take on fight to stop gun violence
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Attorneys General from 16 states, including Delaware and New Jersey, have established a coalition aimed at promoting accountability within the firearms industry regarding its significant contribution to gun violence.
The alliance, the first of its kind, aims to end the problem by coordinating enforcement of the states’ civil liability and consumer protection laws to promote public safety and save lives.
New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin is leading the charge on this initiative. He said the goal is not to curtail lawful gun ownership but to protect communities from misguided business practices that contribute to “unsafe gun proliferation,” which he said leads to mass shootings in churches, synagogues, schools, shopping malls, concerts, and supermarkets.
“Together with my fellow Attorneys General, I will fight to protect our state residents from the wanton disregard for human life caused by bad actors in the firearms industry, which contribute to rising gun violence,” Platkin said.
All 16 states that joined the coalition share the same goal.
Delaware Attorney General Kathleen Jennings said gun trafficking is one of the root causes of gun violence in the First State.
“If we can lower gun trafficking in our state, and if we can ensure that gun dealers, federally licensed firearm dealers, act responsibly,” Jennings said in an interview with WHYY News. “We have to use every tool available to us.”
Jennings said 60% of crime guns recovered in Delaware originate from straw purchases — when someone buys firearms from someone who is prohibited from buying them on their own. It’s something her office has been working to crack down on.
Last year, a federal judge upheld a state law allowing Delaware to enforce the KeKe Anderson Safe Firearm Sales Act.
It establishes a legal framework that holds firearm manufacturers and retail dealers accountable when they knowingly or recklessly engage in actions that pose a risk to the health and safety of residents in this State through the sale, manufacture, distribution, and marketing of firearm-related products.
“We have to make sure that dealers and other retail establishments are behaving, that they are holding themselves to a standard that we can trust,” Jennings said.
New Jersey
Scrap metal barge fire is under control, vessel moving to Camden
Scrap metal burned for more than 24 hours
Firefighting efforts lasted more than 24 hours until Wednesday morning when thermal imagery showed the fire extinguished, according to the Coast Guard’s Petty Officer First Class Matthew West.
The Delaware Emergency Management Agency assisted the Coast Guard in its response.
“Multiple fire companies worked diligently to extinguish the fire, while state agencies and the U.S. Coast Guard coordinated resources to support response operations and minimize impacts to federal waterways, coastal communities, and the surrounding environment,” according to a statement by the Delaware Emergency Management Agency.
It remains unclear what exactly was burning or what was released into the atmosphere from the scrap metal, but it was likely “a very toxic mix,” according to Jane Clougherty, professor of environmental and occupational health at Drexel University.
“Remember that because this is scrap metal, it’s from an earlier era, potentially, when a lot of lead was used, both in metals and in the paints on those metals,” Clougherty said.
New Jersey
Heavy police presence prompts concern in South Jersey neighborhood
MILLVILLE, N.J. (WPVI) — Residents in a Millville, New Jersey, neighborhood spent hours trying to understand what was happening after a New Jersey State Police helicopter circled overhead, and troopers eventually entered a home while searching for a suspect.
Video from a Ring camera shows state police and officers in tactical gear taking over the front porch of a home on the 100 block of Third Street.
Officers are heard speaking into a doorbell camera moments before entering the residence.
A woman who lives in the home and did not want to be identified said she was at work at the time of the incident, but her son was inside when police surrounded the house. She said her son later described the encounter to her.
“My son was here, he was a little freaking out, they actually made him come out with his hands up and guns were drawn,” she said.
The woman said her son told her troopers explained they were pursuing someone on foot in the area.
“They just said they were on a foot pursuit and the guy was jumping the fences behind my house. A construction worker saw him go down my steps, but didn’t know where he went from there. That’s why they need to make sure everything is safe,” she said.
Nearby residents also noticed the heavy police activity.
Michele Brown of Bridgeton said she was walking her dogs when she saw officers in the area.
“It was a lot I didn’t understand what was going on,” Brown said.
Brown said the scene was alarming for people nearby.
“Definitely startling cause you see all these cops with their guns out, and you’re just looking like, ‘Whoa’,” she said.
Action News reached out to New Jersey State Police for more information, but we did not receive a response.
In a statement, Millville police say the suspect was not apprehended after fleeing state police on foot.
There is no suspected threat to the community, the department added.
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New Jersey
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