New Jersey
N.J. working to ensure election security as voting day draws near
Watching for bad actors
He said there are individuals, often in other countries, who are intent on spreading misinformation and disinformation.
“Each of us, I’m asking you, must be vigilant about the information that we share,” he said.
Laurie Doran, the director of the New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, said cyber threats have proliferated over the past decade, and NJOHSP is working with local, state and federal law enforcement agencies to ensure the 2024 election goes smoothly.
She said efforts are focused on prevention and preparedness, but stressed there are no known specific threats to New Jersey election officials or facilities at this time.
Platkin said in case of discrimination or harassment while casting ballots, voters can call the Division on Civil Rights hotline at 1-800-277-BIAS.
Way said more than 1 million New Jersey residents requested mail-in ballots and about 550,000 have already been received through the mail or in secure ballot-drop boxes.
She said postal delays are possible, so vote-by-mail ballots should be brought to drop boxes across the state if possible.
New Jersey
Man Shot, Killed In Cape May County: Prosecutor
WOODBINE, NJ — An investigation has been launched into the shooting death of a 22-year-old Whitesboro resident, the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office said.
Daquann Smith was fatally shot around 11 p.m. on Oct. 25 in Woodbine, authorities said. The shooting happened on the 300 block of Madison Avenue, according to officials.
After receiving reports of gunshots that night, New Jersey State Police went to the scene and found Smith fatally injured. The eight square mile borough does not have its own police department, they are served by state police, who have a station in Woodbine.
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There were no further details shared about the shooting.
“We extend our deepest sympathies to the family and friends of Daquann Smith,” said Cape May County Prosecutor Jeffrey Sutherland. “Our office along with the New Jersey State Police is committed to conducting a thorough investigation to ensure that those responsible for this senseless act are brought to justice.”
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The investigation is ongoing and the New Jersey State Police and the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office are urging anyone with information related to the incident to come forward.
“The community’s cooperation is vital in helping law enforcement build a complete understanding of the events that led to this tragedy,” authorities said.
Anyone with information about the shooting is encouraged to contact the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office at 609-465-1135, the New Jersey State Police-Woodbine Barracks at 609-861-5698, or anonymously on the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office website at cmcpros.net/tips.
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New Jersey
State Senate passes bill intended to halt book bans, protect librarians • New Jersey Monitor
A bill aimed at limiting book bans in public schools and libraries and protecting librarians from lawsuits is now on the governor’s desk.
Titled the “Freedom to Read Act,” the legislation would require the state’s education commissioner to develop policies on how library materials are selected and how challenges to books on library shelves should be evaluated. Local school boards and library boards would then adopt their own policies using this model.
“You and all New Jerseyans have the freedom to choose what you want to read, and parents have and will continue to have the freedom to choose what their children will read. But no one gets to decide that for you — not now, and not ever,” said bill sponsor Sen. Andrew Zwicker (D-Middlesex).
The Senate advanced the controversial bill with a vote of 24-15, with heavy opposition from Republicans. GOP lawmakers said they feared the law would allow children to access obscene materials and protect librarians who share obscene books with children.
“Putting our children at risk and potentially exposing them to material that they are not prepared for flies in the face of our protective duty,” said Sen. Joe Pennacchio (R-Morris). “Couching such material under the guise of the First Amendment is a very distortion of who we are and what we strive to be as Americans.”
The bill comes as the American Library Association says the number of books targeted for censorship has skyrocketed, many of them because they include LGBTQ or sexually explicit content. The number of unique titles targeted for removal from library shelves surged 65% from 2022 to 2023, the organization says. Parents in towns like Glen Ridge, Roxbury, and Bernards have lobbied to have certain books removed from libraries.
Meanwhile, librarians say they have faced harassment from parents demanding certain books be removed.
States across the country are weighing similar legislation. The governors of California and Maryland recently signed similar bills into law, while lawmakers in New York and Rhode Island are still voting on those measures.
Under the New Jersey bill, school and library boards would be barred from removing books because of the “origin, background, or views” of the material or those contributing to its creation.
The bill would also provide librarians and library staff with immunity from civil and criminal liability for “good faith actions.”
Sen. Mike Testa (R-Cumberland) said he interprets the immunity the bill would provide to librarians as an “intentional blanket exemption from New Jersey’s obscenity law or, for that matter, any other law intended to protect our children.”
Testa claimed there is already “obscene material” available in New Jersey schools, and he questioned why Democrats are pushing for an exemption if there isn’t sexually explicit content in schools.
“How exactly does a person distribute obscene materials to a child in good faith? I also think it’s incredibly telling that if some of these very same sexually explicit materials were shown to a child by a neighbor, that individual would be charged with a Megan’s Law offense, and rightfully so,” he said.
Sen. Jon Bramnick (R-Union), co-sponsor of the measure, said the bill would create new standards for libraries that don’t currently exist.
“Right now, in the wild, wild west, no board of education is setting the standard, and now we are saying it is time,” he said.
Bramnick also defended librarians, stressing that none of them intend to provide sexually explicit material. But if a questionable book does end up on library shelves, there must be consistent guidelines and policies to ensure “we have a standard in this society,” he added.
The bill passed the Assembly in June by a 52-20 vote.
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New Jersey
Two arrested after shooting death of mother of 5 in Millville, New Jersey, officials say
Two people have been arrested in connection with the shooting death of a 41-year-old mother of five in South Jersey over the weekend.
A sea of blue and silver balloons filled the sky in Bridgeton, New Jersey, Monday night to honor 41-year-old Bonnie Hitchens.
Hitchens was found Saturday morning unresponsive with several gunshot wounds in the passenger seat of a vehicle parked at this convenience store on East Greene Street in Millville, according to the Cumberland County prosecutor.
She was taken to Inspira Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead. A 31-year-old man was also shot multiple times but survived.
Eric Bundy-Johnson and Francessca Delvalle, both 34 years old, are facing murder charges. Officials have not given a motive.
James Hitchens, Bonnie’s brother, says “Bon Bon,” as she was nicknamed, was a devoted mother, sister, aunt and friend and that this loss is immense.
“Her smile, her laugh. Sometimes I think I hear her laugh out here,” James Hitchens said. “I just want everybody to know she was loved.”
For now, he says his family is focused on Bonnie’s children as they all grieve.
“We’re sticking together,” James Hitchens said. “We’re doing what we got to do as a family.”
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