New Jersey
A new N.J. law is designed to stop pop-up parties from spiraling out of control
From Camden and Cherry Hill to Trenton and the Jersey Shore, what about life in New Jersey do you want WHYY News to cover? Let us know.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill into law late Monday that upgrades penalties for some disorderly conduct and establishes penalties for inciting a public brawl. The move comes amid growing concern over large gatherings of young people that have at times devolved into chaos along the state’s shore towns.
Several New Jersey towns in recent years have been overrun by unruly individuals in their teens and twenties who caused disruptions, overwhelming local police departments.
South Jersey Assemblyman Dan Hutchison, a prime sponsor of the measure in the lower house, said the law is intended to make New Jersey families feel safe.
“When you send your kids up to the boardwalk, you don’t want to feel that they could potentially be stabbed or shot or beaten to a pulp,” he said.
According to the new statute, inciting a public brawl is a fourth-degree crime if the person organizes or promotes a group of four or more individuals to engage in a course of disorderly conduct. A fourth-degree crime is punishable by up to 18 months in prison, a fine of up to $10,000, or both.
Individuals who participate in a pop-up party that causes a disruption or a disturbance can be charged with a disorderly persons offense, punishable by six months in jail, a fine of up to $1,000, or both.
He said the new law will hopefully act as a deterrent and give law enforcement officers the tools they need to maintain order in their towns.
“When they do make these arrests and young people see their friends going to prison, it’s going to make them think twice before they do these things,” Hutchison said.
New Jersey
Officials warn of NJ Transit train chaos if NBA Finals go to Game 6 with World Cup match same day
NEW JERSEY (WABC) — New Jersey Transit train riders should be prepared for chaos if the NBA Finals reach Game 6 at Madison Square Garden on June 16.
Getting to Penn Station from New Jersey will be nearly impossible after 5 p.m. becasue it’s the same day as the France vs Senegal match at 3 p.m. at MetLife Stadium.
NJ Transit will only run dedicated World Cup trains westbound from Penn Station New York from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ahead of the 3 p.m. match.
Eastbound NJ Transit trains will run into Penn Station New York, until the match ends at about 5:30 p.m.
After 5:30 p.m., the trains will discharge all passengers at either Newark Penn Station or Newark Broad Street Station, where passengers will be directed to either PATH or Newark Light Rail to get to Hoboken, and ultimately to the PATH 33rd Street Station. PATH will transport those passengers at no extra cost.
Knicks fans traveling into Manhattan for the 8:30 p.m. game may have to transfer through Newark and take the PATH into the city.
After discharging the passengers, the NJ Transit trains will then become dedicated World Cup trains for the next three hours to bring up to 40,000 fans back to Penn Station New York.
Regular eastbound service will resume about three hours after completion of the World Cup match, or about 8:30 p.m.
NJ Transit will advise Knicks fans headed in to Game 6 to arrive at MSG before 5 p.m., or be prepared to change trains in Newark.
At the conclusion of the Knicks game, regular rail service out of Penn Station New York back to New Jersey on all rail lines will be available.
Knicks fans will not have to utilize PATH to get back to New Jersey after the Knicks game.
Submit a tip or story idea to Eyewitness News
Have a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply.
Copyright © 2026 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.
New Jersey
The House Is Our Firewall. NJ-07 Is How We Build It. – Insider NJ
I do not come to this fight as an abstract matter of principle. I come to it as an immigrant, as a woman, as an LGBTQ+ ally, and as a mother of two daughters. I have spent a decade fighting to advance protections for marginalized communities — in policy committees, in legislative hearings, in the unglamorous work of advocacy that rarely makes headlines. And I can tell you: what is happening right now is different. The rollbacks are no longer incremental. They are structural. And they are personal.
When I think about what is at stake in this moment, I think about my daughters. I want them to live in a country where they are free. Where their identities are not questioned. Where they never have to wonder whether they belong. This past year has shown that that future is not guaranteed. It has to be fought for. And right now, that fight runs directly through the United States House of Representatives.
The current administration is executing a coordinated assault on the institutional frameworks that protect civil rights and foster inclusion. The weaponization of anti-DEI policies is erasing marginalized identities from public and corporate spaces. Voter suppression tactics are systematically targeting Black and brown communities. Federal protections for LGBTQ+ individuals — particularly queer and trans youth — are being dismantled in favor of discriminatory policy. The threatened gutting of the Department of Education puts public schooling, the single greatest engine of upward mobility, at risk — with the heaviest burden falling on low-income students and students of color. And for immigrants, the threat of mass deportations and family separation is not a hypothetical. It is a daily reality.
When the executive branch operates with such open hostility toward equity, a compliant Congress is not a passive failure. It is a dangerous liability.
We need a House of Representatives that will aggressively assert its oversight authority, use the power of the purse to defund harmful initiatives, and hold this administration fiercely accountable. That firewall can only be built by flipping competitive seats. And the path to the House majority runs directly through New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District.
To win NJ-07, we need a candidate who can neutralize the standard partisan attacks used against challengers in swing districts — and Rebecca Bennett is exactly that candidate. As a former U.S. Navy helicopter pilot and Air National Guard officer, her patriotism and national security credentials are unimpeachable. As a healthcare business leader, she brings private-sector credibility that resonates with this district’s voters. And as a working mother who understands what is actually at stake for families, she brings the moral clarity this moment demands.
Biography alone does not flip a district — infrastructure does. Bennett has built a campaign capable of going the distance in one of the nation’s most expensive media markets, with a top-tier team, formidable fundraising, and the organizational depth to compete against incumbent spending. She is not just a compelling candidate. She is our ONLY shot at defeating Tom Kean Jr.
I got into this work because I believe that the arc of history bends toward justice — but only when people work to bend it. I want my daughters to inherit a country that is still bending. Rebecca Bennett is running to make sure it does. That is why I am with her, without reservation, and without hesitation.
Anjali Mehrotra is a fierce advocate for representation and gender parity in all walks of life but especially at all levels of elected office. She served as a National Board member for National Organization for Women, on the state board for American Association of University Women of New Jersey and on the cabinet of Emerge New Jersey. All three organizations actively work to increase the number of women in Congress.
New Jersey
Protesters clash with ICE outside New Jersey detention facility
-
Now Playing
Protesters clash with ICE outside New Jersey detention facility
02:44
-
UP NEXT
DHS to require green card applicants to return to home countries to apply
03:24
-
Suicides in ICE detention centers rise in past year as NBC News obtains 911 calls
04:12
-
ICE may be at World Cup matches in U.S.
02:01
-
‘They wanted to kill me’: Teen mistakenly detained by ICE
02:13
-
Teen with terminal cancer makes plea for release of detained parents
01:52
-
Inside the heated clashes over the Trump administration’s deportation plans
02:36
-
‘It’s heart wrenching’: Ms. Rachel shares stories of kids in detention centers
09:19
-
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons resigns
00:24
-
ICE agent charged with assault for allegedly pointing gun at people driving in Minneapolis
01:59
-
Minnesota investigates the ICE arrest of a Hmong American man as a possible kidnapping
05:02
-
Family of man shot by ICE in California speaks out
03:15
-
ICE officers involved in California shooting
01:48
-
Trump addresses birthright citizenship, mail-in ballots during executive order signing
06:37
-
‘Unbelievable job’: Trump praises ICE at airports, open to deploying National Guard
02:11
-
Children’s entertainer Ms. Rachel comforts boy at Dilley detention center
00:44
-
Trump’s plan for border wall worries local residents and politicians
03:30
-
Gregory Bovino to retire from U.S. Border Patrol
01:01
-
Lawmakers push back against plans to turn warehouses into detention centers
04:27
-
Trump administration wants House GOP to focus on removing criminals, not ‘mass deportations’
04:35
Top Story
-
Now Playing
Protesters clash with ICE outside New Jersey detention facility
02:44
-
UP NEXT
DHS to require green card applicants to return to home countries to apply
03:24
-
Suicides in ICE detention centers rise in past year as NBC News obtains 911 calls
04:12
-
ICE may be at World Cup matches in U.S.
02:01
-
‘They wanted to kill me’: Teen mistakenly detained by ICE
02:13
-
Teen with terminal cancer makes plea for release of detained parents
01:52
Top Story
Top Story
Nightly News
Play All
-
Crypto4 minutes agoUS-Iran Escalation Pushes Bitcoin to $72,622 as $870M Long Bets Collapse
-
Fitness16 minutes agoI Spent Years Believing Exercise Wasn’t for Me—Until I Ran My First Half Marathon at 35
-
Movie Reviews28 minutes agoMovie review: ‘Power Ballad’ follows a weak Nick Jonas/Paul Rudd feud – UPI.com
-
World40 minutes ago
Think it’s hot now? The next five years will smash records, UN says
-
News46 minutes agoVideo: They Fought for the Voting Rights Act. Now They’re Fighting Its Unraveling.
-
Business58 minutes agoVideo: Ferrari’s Stock Falls After It Unveils Its Latest Car
-
Lifestyle1 hour agoKeke Palmer steals the (fashion) scene in ‘I Love Boosters’ : Pop Culture Happy Hour
-
Technology2 hours agoYouTube will let you ask AI to make a custom video feed