New Jersey
Observed Defensive Issues by the New Jersey Devils and Suggested Adjustments
Last night was a disappointing overtime loss to the one team no one with a soul wants to see the New Jersey Devils lose to: Our Hated Rivals. Yes, The Big Deal made the big mistakes with the puck, one of which that led to the game-ending 2-on-1 rush against. Yes, he acknowledged the error. However, that was just one moment of a larger issue that has been present since the team’s Christmas break: the Devils have been giving up more on defense and it has been hurting them. More shots against. More odd man rushes against. More opportunities for opponents to get into games and prevail. The Devils ended their road trip with a 1-4-1 record and that was with an in-form Jacob Markstrom doing the best he can to keep the team in it. This needs further discussion – and changes.
Evidence of the Problem
Part of the issue is that the Devils were so hot defensively before Christmas that there was no way it was going to be sustained. Keeping one team to fewer than 20 shots is great. Doing it in seven straight games against the likes of Toronto, Los Angeles, Chicago, St. Louis (on the road), Columbus (on the road), Pittsburgh, and Our Hated Rivals is very impressive given the variety of quality of opponents. There was no way that was going to last forever and it did not. The issue is that it has turned another way.
After Christmas, the team’s on-ice against rates in 5-on-5 play – the rates of what the opposition is putting up against the Devils – have mostly went up compared to what they were before Christmas. Yes, this is a comparison of 37 games to 7, so it is not a fair one. Yet, it proves that the Devils’ defensive efforts have been objectively worse since Christmas. Your eyes are not playing tricks on you.
- Corsi (shot attempts): 54.65 CA/60 before Christmas to 57.98 CA/60 after Christmas
- Shots on net: 24.20 SA/60 to 28.64 SA/60
- Scoring chances: 23.89 SCA/60 to 23.69 SCA/60
- High danger scoring chances: 9.69 HDCA/60 to 9.37 HDCA/60
- Expected goals 2.21 xGA/60 to 2.42 xGA/60
- Actual goals: 2.05 GA/60 to 2.47 GA/60
The exception is in the rate of chances allowed, both all and high danger ones. They have actually improved a bit since Christmas. Yet, the pure increase of attempts and shots allowed have ballooned what the goalies are facing. Over the last seven games, they have allowed about as many as expected. Which is remarkable given some of the eye-popping saves that Jacob Markstrom has made since Christmas, such as the ones that dragged the Devils to a 3-2 win in Seattle.
Of course, those saves in of itself is another piece of evidence of that the Devils’ defensive issues in the last two weeks are legitimate. Yes, a goaltender has to bail out their team some times. When you observe the goalie making multiple bail out saves in most of their recent games, then it means the team is giving up big chances. Great for Markstrom, not so great for the guys in front of them.
This is why head coach Sheldon Keefe’s quotes to the media usually include some kind of theme about getting counter-attacked, such as this one to Catherine Bogart after the win in Seattle. That Keefe can say that after a win is further evidence that this problem is indeed a problem. It is a concern to me that the head coach of a team over 40 games into their season says the team needs to clean things up and they have not really done that even with the largely the same personnel on the ice after multiple games where these issues have cropped up. To that end, let us see what could be causing these rushes against and these increases in shot volume against. From there, some adjustments can be identified to hopefully reduce the problem.
The Causes of the Problems
Unfortunately, The Big Deal’s turnover that cost the Devils in OT last night was a good example as any of one of the causes of these issues: turnovers. The answer to those kinds of turnovers are pretty simple from my vantage point. Be more careful with the puck, especially in high-leverage situations where puck possession is critical. Like 3-on-3 overtime.
However, turnovers have been an issue in a larger sense for the Devils since Christmas. It is more than just giving away possession or making a bad read on a pass. I mean turnovers as any time the Devils just do not have possession anymore. Generally on offense, that could come from a missed shot, a blocked shot, a save with a rebound won by the the defending team. This is important to understand because those events can drive counter-attacks where the defending team transitions quickly into offense to take advantage of numbers and situation. It does not need to be from a giveaway. It could be from a bounce after an otherwise understandable decision to shoot the puck. It could be from a stop where the rebound eluded two Devils in close.
For example, take the amazing Markstrom stop in a 3-on-1 rush against the Devils by Seattle back on Monday. The play begins with the Devils on offense. The puck is knocked down and it gets to Shane Wright to lead an exit. The Big Deal is on the blueline because as part of the attack, Jonas Siegenthaler activated and so he was on the blueline. The issue is that Wright is heading downhill and all of the football fans of the People Who Matter know what that means. Hughes may have been in position physically but it was not going to stop Wright and he did not. Jonathan Kovacevic hustled back like crazy but tried to deny a pass from Wright and missed. Ondrej Palat backchecked as hard as he could to pick up Wright – but this left Oliver Bjorkstrand open as a trailer. A goal against was expected and Markstrom thankfully said no. But again, the genesis of this play was not a giveaway or a bad decision. A puck, perhaps an attempted shot, was knocked down. It dropped in a place for the Kraken to rush back and they did.
The play also highlights another issue that has been causing these rushes against and some of the struggles on defense: the rotation of players. When a Devils defenseman activates to move in closer on offense, a forward drops back to the blueline to fill in his space. On the Bjorkstand play, that was Jack Hughes. His play off the puck has been leaps and bounds better than it was years ago. But putting a forward in a position to play defense is still a risk regardless of whether the forward is Hughes, Nico Hischier, or Tomas Tatar. It is not always something to ask a player to do, much less one that could be doing more in the offensive zone. Further: Why was Jonas Siegenthaler activating? I like how he has done this season but he is far from my first choice to see a defender moving up on the play. And when a defender does get deeper on offense, it means he has a lot more ground to make up on defense if and when the play turns around. A quick defenseman like Luke Hughes can manage some of this. A not-so-quick defenseman like Dougie Hamilton, not so much.
Speaking of Dougie Hamilton, here is another highlight-reel save from the Seattle game from that same first period. Jared McCann receives a rim around the boards, looks up, and saw Andre Burakovsky in the middle on Hamilton’s left – and nothing in between them. The long pass was on target. As Hamilton had to turn around, Burakovsky had him beat. Thankfully, Markstrom stopped him one-on-one. But this is another source of these issues: the neutral zone. A routine offensive zone faceoff loss was not an issue until McCann looked up and saw Dillon outside of the dot lane – meaning he was close to the boards – and Hamilton on the same side as Dillon from the center line. It was a simple pass that could have been prevented had Hamilton been in the middle or at least to the left. Or if Dillon did not come around to the other side. That was an example of a lack of structure in the middle of the rink that led to a one-on-one situation. And it was hardly the only one since Christmas where the opposition just broke through (or in the case of Andre Lee’s goal, over) neutral zone.
Lastly, these rushes against have contributed to a general confusion on what is happening in the defensive zone. Which is a concern to me since, again, the roster has largely been together for over 30 games. The three defensive pairings for New Jersey might as well be written in pen at this point. So when I see these two third-period highlight saves from Markstrom, I’m thinking of the following:
- First save: Why did Dougie Hamilton leave Tolvanen after he got towards the crease? (This was the biggest sin on the play.) Additionally: Why did Brenden Dillon and Paul Cotter focus on Kaapo Kaako after the zone entry?
- Second save: How did Matty Beniers get behind both Luke Hughes and Brett Pesce with neither adjusting to pick him up? And how did Luke get the first attempt to try to deny Benier’s rebound attempt?
In thinking it further, I can understand Dillon focusing on Kakko to prevent him from going down and Cotter, in theory, could try to trap him in the corner. Hamilton left Tolvanen and tried to make a heroic blocking attempt that failed miserably as Tolvanen was set up for a tap-in where it not for the heroic save by Markstrom that was successful. As far as the second one, Luke Hughes was in motion whereas Pesce tried to block the initial shot that Beniers was in position to pounce on. In both cases, I see veteran defensemen going for blocks that, if made, would be appreciated. They missed and so they owe Markstrom a nice steak dinner. Had they focused more sticking with a man in coverage, the play may not even happen.
To summarize: I think the causes are turnovers, activating defensemen that leaves a forward back to defend, a lack of structure in the neutral zone, and general confusion in the defensive zone with perhaps too much of an effort on trying to block shots for the goalie. With that, lets discuss some adjustments to help each of them.
Adjustments for Improvement
The first major point is that eliminating odd man rushes against or chances against or even shots against is not the goal. This is hockey. An inherently chaotic game. Expecting perfection is what a fool believes and so that is not the goal. The goal for the Devils should be to reduce these kinds of plays against them. How can that be done? Let us go over the causes.
For the turnovers, there are a couple of things. For the simple giveaways, puck management just has to be better by the puck carrier. Whether that is Jack Hughes or Curtis Lazar, that is straight forward. For when pucks bounce off boards and bodies, the Devils should avoid the temptation of overloading the battle. Three guys do not need to be crashing the net to win a puck. One of those players can hang back in case it does not go, or even if the puck rebounds out further. The current way may be understandable but given how it is hurting, some discretion is worth trying.
Which brings to the second cause: activating defensemen. Look, Luke Hughes should have the greenlight to go. He has the speed and the puck control to make it work. Everyone else with the occasional exception for when Hamilton can step into a shot within 40 feet should not. Again, I like a lot of what Pesce, Kovacevic, and Siegenthaler have done this season. Very little of that have happened in the offensive zone. I know the Devils are looking to catch opponents by surprise. I am not sure #71 coming in to be an option close to the net is it. Especially if it means someone like Jesper Bratt dropping back to the blueline. Basically, the Devils need to do this less often or be more specific on when it happens.
As for the structure in the neutral zone, this is something that really needs to be drilled into the team. They are talented enough to pin opponents back on offense and have shifts of constant puck possession and pressure. Great. When those plays do not work, they need to drop back into something. When veteran defensemen are being caught on one side of the ice after a simple faceoff loss over a 100 feet away from the puck, that something has been lost. If there is something the coaching staff should focus on first, then it is likely this. Telling a team to ease up on activation and be more careful is direct. This one needs some actual thought into what kind of structure Keefe and his team would want to have between the two attacking zones.
For the defensive zone, I think there are two adjustments that could be made. The first is sell out less often for blocks. To reference Kent Wilson, blocking shots is like killing a rat. There are times where you have to do it. If you’re doing it a lot, then you have a bigger problem. In the Devils’ case, they’re trying to kill rats when they really need to stop leaving food around for said rat. Clumsy metaphor aside, this is something the Devils can focus on right away and it can help ease the seeming confusion of skaters moving about trying to react to a play that they are a half-second too late for. It can also help them pick up players getting behind them and getting on the goalie’s blindside. It can keep them from being caught stationary, which is usually what happens when someone goes for a block. At least being mobile can allow them to be able to react on defense.
The second adjustment is to emphasize keeping the opposition in front of them. One of the best changes to the Devils’ defensive zone play has been an allowance to be patient and make a play within their own zone to set up a better exit. They should apply this approach to when the opposition comes in. They do not need to panic if it is a 3-on-2 or a 2-on-2 with the opposition coming in hot. Let them have the 30-40 foot shot. Do not let a player get behind the defensemen or be able to set up in front of the goalie. The forwards are backchecking, the defensemen can focus more on defending the house. Doing this can help make it clear as to who needs to do what on defense and that can only help.
The Devils are very much in the middle of the grind of the NHL regular season. Their road trip is over but they will play every other day from now until the 20th with the exception of a two-day break after tomorrow’s game. There really is not much time available for a practice or instituting a wholesale change to how the Devils play. And I do not think there is a specific player or unit that needs to be changed that would somehow fix this. Which is why adjustments to established instructions are something the Devils need to do if they want to change their fortunes.
Your Take
Of course, these are all just what I am thinking based on what I am seeing since the team returned from Christmas. What about you? What do you think the Devils need to do to address their post-Christmas issues on defense? What adjustments would you make if you are Sheldon Keefe? Please leave your answers and other thoughts about how the Devils can address their defensive issues in the comments. Thank you for reading.
New Jersey
There’s One Right Conservatives and Liberals Alike Don’t Want Me to Have. I Tried to Find Out Why.
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I don’t think I actually wanted a gun. I grew up in Newark, New Jersey, where there was this saying: People with knives get stabbed. People with guns get shot. The conventional wisdom was that it was safer to be unarmed. If someone mugged you, just give them what you’ve got.
But things changed as I got older. I’m Arab. Muslim. Like many Muslim families after 9/11, I internalized the idea that being inviting and performatively friendly was more essential for survival than anything else. At my mosque growing up, the imam bought a box of American flags of all sizes and handed them out to worshippers. He hung one outside the mosque, and people stuck them in their car windows. Anything to not seem like a threat.
Now that I’m an adult, I’ve grown a bit bored of reassuring others I’m safe to be around. And if I’m honest, there’s something fun about poking a stereotype in the eye. Before, I never thought of myself as someone who could be a gun guy. True, I didn’t really think a gun would make me or my family safer. But as I wrote about gun culture for Slate and thought about my own relationship with guns, I became curious to own one of my own.
So in 2020, I applied for a Firearm Purchaser Identification, a permit to purchase a firearm that is required in New Jersey. After fingerprints, references, application fees, and months of waiting, I was told over the phone that I had no choice but to withdraw my application. The issue was a misdemeanor trespassing charge in New York from my street-photographer days. Under New Jersey law, that should not have disqualified me from owning a gun. I had never been convicted of a felony. No domestic violence charges. No mental health issues. It didn’t matter. The Newark Police Department’s firearm permitting office told me my application was being withdrawn. They insisted they were doing me a favor, and that a denial would bar me from reapplying if I got my record expunged.
Again, I wasn’t even sure I wanted a gun. But the interaction was curious. It didn’t matter that I pointed out I met the legal requirements. Again and again, I was unsuccessful. It had me thinking about who is presumed “safe” to own a gun, and who isn’t. I began speaking with Black and brown gun owners across northern New Jersey, particularly in cities where violence, policing, and race overlap in complicated ways. An Afro-Cuban neighborhood friend I went to high school with in Newark told me he had applied for his own permit and received it in just two weeks. When I explained that I tried multiple times and was still waiting months after my latest application, he looked genuinely confused. Then he asked what race I’d listed on the paperwork. “Other,” I told him. He burst out laughing. “You idiot,” he said. “You’re supposed to put white.”
The more people I spoke to, the more I learned I was far from alone in making that “mistake.” The greater question of who gets to, and should, own a gun turned out to far more complicated than I knew. Few people—on the left or the right—want to talk about it. The ending of my own story helps explain why.
In Paterson, New Jersey, Fanny, a nurse, applied for her permit more than six months ago—far longer than the legal limit of 30 days. She was bubbly, almost nervous, when talking about guns. “I just want to protect myself,” she told me. She had grown up without guns and found them scary and intimidating. Her interest only developed after she worked as a probation officer around sheriff’s officers and court staff. At first, she tried taking lessons with a white male instructor, but left discouraged and uncomfortable. “They’ve already been doing it for years,” she said. “Sometimes they’re not the most patient.”
Years later, when she was living alone in Paterson after buying her own home, her interest grew again. Crime in the city felt worse to her than it had when she was younger, and she felt increasingly uneasy about the world around her. “What if, God forbid, something happens and I can’t get to the phone right away? The cops may not come for 10 or 15 minutes,” she said. She summoned the courage to try again after she found a Black advocate for firearms training and safety, Valentina Richardson Green, on Instagram.
She arrived at her first lesson terrified. “When I first met with her, I was so scared,” Fanny said, laughing. “Seeing the gun and picking up the gun, I’m like, Oh my God, I don’t know what I got myself into.” Before they even stepped onto the range, Green sat her down and asked why she wanted to learn, where the fear came from, what made her nervous. Then she walked her through every part of the firearm, every safety rule, every mechanical detail. “I instantly felt comfortable,” Fanny said. “Instantly.”
Within weeks, she was returning every Saturday. Eventually Green convinced her to buy a membership at the range. “I never thought about doing that,” she said.
Then she applied for a permit in October 2025. She is still waiting. At one point, while browsing guns at the range, Fanny met a man from Woodland Park who casually mentioned that his permit had arrived in two weeks. She remembers feeling stunned. “It made me feel like I wanted to move,” she said.
Fanny struggled to explain why some people seemed to move effortlessly through the system while others stalled inside it: “I hate to say this. I believe it has to do with race.” She talked about the reputation of Paterson as being a “Black city,” about the sense that legal access to firearms isn’t meant for people like her. “I think they think that if we have access to these weapons, we’ll use them in a manner that will be destructive, and that’s not the case. With the political climate, a lot of people want to protect themselves. And minorities want to protect themselves, too,” she said. “They’re thinking, ‘If they get their permits and they get their guns, it’s going to be a war.’ But we’re not even thinking in terms of that. Like, we just want to protect ourselves. Especially women. We need to learn how to protect ourselves.”
What Fanny described wasn’t really about enthusiasm for guns so much as a growing distrust in the idea that someone like her shouldn’t have them. She did not sound eager about any of this. Even while discussing permits and training, she still spoke with caution and hesitation. At one point, when I asked whether more guns were really the answer in cities already struggling with gun violence, she stopped mid-thought. “It’s so hard,” she admitted. “It’s so hard to say.”
If Fanny represented the uncertainty surrounding gun ownership among women like her, her teacher, Valentina Richardson Green, represented the growing ecosystem built around answering it. She was easy to spot on Port 14 of Gun for Hire, New Jersey’s cavernous, fluorescent‑lit gun range. She’s a 5‑foot‑11 Black woman who was wearing a black T-shirt with “Naturally Armed” written in bold pink, shoulders squared behind a Glock 45, coaching a nervous first‑timer through breathing. She organizes monthly sessions for other women of color who are curious about shooting recreationally, or, in most cases, exploring avenues of self-defense. When the slide snaps forward and the handgun fires a round, Green nods briskly with approval, then resets for her next student, a nurse in borrowed safety glasses.
Green was born 5 miles south in North Newark. Her father was a police officer and kept his service pistol locked in a hall closet, but firearms were “never a thing we talked about.” Still, the threat of gun violence in a city like Newark is never too far away, and that colored her perceptions of ever owning one.
After earning a sociology degree, she climbed her county’s social services ladder, eventually running the entire welfare division. “Stress lived in my shoulders,” she says. On a birthday range trip in 2021, a friend put a pistol in her hands for the first time. “One squeeze, and every piece of weight left my body,” she said. That trigger shifted the way she felt about guns forever. On another visit to the range, she mentioned to an employee that she didn’t see too many people who looked like her there. “Why don’t you work here?” they asked. At one point, she kept three jobs: working in government, armed security shifts, and being a range safety officer. She does it so “women who look like me feel comfortable, feel seen,” she said.
Last August, she emptied her savings into establishing roving gun safety and education workshops specifically for women of color in a neighborhood ice‑cream shop. The owner offered her a steep discount. She used the setting as an opportunity to vet women who show up before she takes them to the range.
Twenty‑five women came to the inaugural session. One arrived by cab from Manhattan. Green told me one woman said she owned a gun already but wanted to learn how to use it. Another woman said she was experiencing domestic violence at home and wanted to defend herself. A single mother brought her young son, looking for ways to defend her family. The goal, Green said, was to create a place where women of color can feel comfortable to explore arming themselves, “to step into spaces where they didn’t think that they belonged and showing them we do belong.”
Part of the stigma among Black women in particular about owning a firearm, Green admitted, comes from a lack of awareness, but also an apparent systemic effort to keep guns out of the hands of Black and brown people. She learned how hard it can be to get the necessary permits to purchase a handgun. Green’s first permit took eight months. “I was giving them grace,” she said, “but I later learned it’s not eight months for everybody.” She also says the necessary application fees can be prohibitively expensive, as well as the steep costs of guns, which can pose another barrier for gun ownership among Black women: $1,500, she says, “is the low end.”
Though many gun stores and ranges have made recent strides in increasing the diversity of their staff, some ranges can feel intimidating when you don’t see someone who looks like you, she explained. She described the experience of “constantly being watched”—”the kind of watching we already know outside a gun range.”
The suspicion that race is factored into applications that Fanny described is difficult to prove from a single application. A long wait can always be explained away. With a system built out of individual decisions, each one becomes small enough to fall through any number of administrative cracks.
Ben Shore, the co-founder and director of Rise Against Hate, a nonprofit that uses data to investigate racial disparities, wanted to know what those decisions looked like in aggregate. The problem was that when he began looking at New Jersey’s public dashboard of firearm permit approvals and denials, he told me the dashboard did not make it easy to see race. “I think they did this on purpose. It makes no sense to do it this way. But they strategically pulled out different portions of race and other things that would show disparities,” he said. “If a data scientist is working on that, they would not have pulled that out.”
So Shore and volunteers at Rise Against Hate rebuilt the data themselves. “We had to actually take all the numbers from all the dashboards and create our own dashboards just to get down to the bottom of it,” he said. What they found, he says, was alarming. In Ocean County, he told me, “a Black person is about 50 times more likely to be denied a permit to carry versus a white person.” Statewide, he said, the disparity was roughly 10-to-1.
He compared those numbers to racial disparity cases involving marijuana enforcement. But even those cases, he said, paled in comparison. “Those numbers were usually like, they’re three times more likely, five times more likely. And that was enough to find discrimination,” Shore said. “Here we’re talking about numbers that are 10 times more likely, across the state, to be denied a permit.”
These weren’t people who were legitimately disqualified, either. “We’re not talking about people who are committing criminal acts. We’re talking about a law-abiding citizen, somebody with a clean criminal record, somebody who’s never been convicted of a crime, someone who applies for their firearm ID card,” he said. “They get approved for it. And then when they apply for the permit to carry with the same exact qualifications as their initial ID card, they’re getting denied if they’re Black. If they’re white, they’re not, because it’s up to the police officer’s discretion. Why is it that the same qualifications applied, but Black people are being denied at extremely high rates?”
“Your constitutional right varies by your ZIP code in New Jersey,” he said.
That stayed with me, because it matched what I had heard from Fanny in Paterson, and what a man from Woodland Park casually told her at a gun store when he said his approval came in two weeks. Shore said he knew of applicants who were denied in one part of New Jersey and approved after moving elsewhere, with no meaningful change in their background. “If you did move, and you moved to another county in New Jersey,” he told me, “you will 100 percent have your right.”
And even Shore’s study, he said, did not fully capture the issue. It counted formal denials, not withdrawals, like mine in Newark. “We did not count the withdrawals in the study,” he said, “but we do know that there are many withdrawals.” Indeed, my own application had not been officially denied. It had been withdrawn after a police officer told me I could not proceed unless I first expunged a misdemeanor that should not have disqualified me.
Shore also pointed me to a pending federal case involving a Muslim New Jersey attorney who said his gun-license application was denied after officials cited pro-Palestinian political posts online as threatening or terrorism-related. The case raised a different version of the same concern: that discretion in firearm licensing can turn race, religion, politics, or speech into suspicion. “It’s just crazy,” Shore said, “because even what you say can be used. Your First Amendment can be used to deprive you of your Second Amendment.”
The disparities Shore identified have begun attracting attention beyond gun-rights circles. John Petrolino, a firearms instructor and freelance Second Amendment journalist who has reported on New Jersey’s permitting system, told me he began filing records requests after noticing Black applicants were being denied at more than twice the rate of white applicants in the state’s permit-to-carry data. What troubled him most was how often denials appeared to rest not on criminal convictions or clear statutory disqualifiers, but on New Jersey’s broad “public health, safety or welfare” standard—the same kind of catchall that had swallowed my own application years earlier. “It’s an opinion-based thing,” he told me. “You could fill in the blank on how this could be abused.” He is now suing the state for not releasing those records.
Earlier this year, lawmakers reintroduced legislation in Trenton that would require the state to publicly report firearm permit approvals and denials by race, ethnicity, and gender. Supporters argue the measure is necessary because existing public dashboards obscure patterns that civil-rights advocates and researchers say have become increasingly difficult to ignore.
At the same time, more than 20 municipalities across New Jersey have passed resolutions reimbursing firearm permitting fees on the grounds that high costs attached to a constitutional right function as a discriminatory barrier, particularly in working-class communities. The resolutions have appeared in towns spanning eight counties, creating an unusual overlap between libertarian gun-rights arguments and broader concerns about racial and economic inequality.
Even as the debate gains more traction, much of it still unfolds at the margins of mainstream politics, carried largely by activists, independent researchers, and a loose coalition of gun-rights litigators who argue New Jersey’s permitting system remains structurally unequal. Joe La Porto, a libertarian journalist who has spent years around Second Amendment litigation, drafted the bill that was introduced by New Jersey state Rep. Dawn Fantasia that would have local agencies track the racial makeup of approvals and denials for firearm permits.
He hopes that by pulling the data and making it visible, New Jersey’s Legislature will “have an honest conversation about what to do about this.” He expects bipartisan support for it: “All we’re asking for is public discourse here. It’s simply data. Nobody should be afraid of data.”
We talked at a local gun range, and under the loud pops rattling behind the thick glass, he told me the gun debate has become intellectually dishonest. The moment firearms enter the conversation, he said, many liberals stop applying the same civil-rights framework they would bring to almost any other area of criminal justice. “Because this whole issue touches fingers in some way with gun control, it just becomes like a blackout zone,” he said. “Nobody wants to touch it. Even though I would argue that this is the central issue as it relates to criminal justice reform and looking at our society as a whole and what’s working and what’s not,” he said.
La Porto’s argument begins with the very first gun laws. “If we were to go back in time and we look at firearms regulation in 1791, or in 1868 when the 14th Amendment was passed, we don’t really have a long history of regulating firearms, except for in 1791,” he said. “If you were Black, you couldn’t own a firearm. If you were a Catholic, you couldn’t own a firearm. If you were a Native American, you couldn’t own a firearm.” After the Civil War, he said, the pattern became even clearer. “In the 1860s, after the Civil War, the immediate counterpunch to the Civil War was the Black Codes,” La Porto said. “Basically, the Southern states said, ‘OK, fine, we lost, we can’t have slaves anymore, but you know what we’re going to do? We’re going to pass a whole bunch of laws that make it impossible for Black people to have a job or own property or exercise a core constitutional right.’ ”
This, he says, is precisely why the modern Supreme Court cases that remade American gun law are so dangerous. He pointed to the Bruen case in 2022 that required modern gun regulations to be justified through the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation. “By creating a system where the government has to go back and link its current regulation to some heritage of regulation,” he said, “all we’ve got is racism.”
“The application of these laws has been almost uniformly to the detriment of poor and largely minority populations,” he said. That is where his argument shifted away from licensing and toward criminal justice. New Jersey’s Graves Act essentially establishes mandatory minimum sentencing if you’re arrested with a firearm. The law was originally aimed at combating gun crime, but La Porto says it unfairly targets Black New Jerseyans. “If you talk to folks in the public defenders’ offices, they’ll tell you that 90 percent of Graves Act cases these days are simple possession,” he said. “And in the vast majority of those cases, these are not criminals. These are just poor people living in dangerous communities that are just possessing firearms because they’re afraid for their lives.”
At the gun range, I asked La Porto to contend with New Jersey’s high gun‑death rate in cities like Camden, Paterson, and Newark, where I live. La Porto retorted saying this: “Poverty correlates perfectly with violent crime. Gun control doesn’t,” he said. “As long as we have to live in a world where there’s even moderate scarcity, violence is never going to go away.”
I should say that not everyone thinks the history here is so clear. Chris Rasmussen, a historian at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey who studies crime and punishment in America, was less willing to draw one straight line for every modern gun restriction back to racist intent. But he didn’t dismiss La Porto’s argument outright. In New Jersey, he said, gun ownership appears to have risen in the 1960s, especially after the urban uprisings of 1967 and 1968. Newark was central to that fear. “A lot of white suburbanites living near where you live, near Newark, started arming themselves because they were afraid of the Black people,” Rasmussen said. The same fear surfaced nationally around the Black Panther Party. In California, Panther members legally carried rifles to the state Capitol in Sacramento. Immediately afterward, California passed the Mulford Act. “I think a lot of white Americans got really freaked out,” Rasmussen said. “White people just saw Black men with guns.”
Still, Rasmussen resisted the cleanest version of La Porto’s argument. Modern gun laws, he said, were often driven by fear of crime as much as racial control: gangsters in the 1930s, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Lee Harvey Oswald’s mail-order rifle, the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, rising violent crime, and a broader sense that the country was becoming harder to govern.
“I can imagine they have been used that way by some discriminatory officials,” Rasmussen said. “But I think the extreme gun control is usually more directly connected to crime. Fears of crime.”
Still, he did not erase the racial question. Rasmussen compared the way gun laws are enforced to the war on drugs. “You couldn’t write the law to say people of color should receive longer sentences for possessing drugs. But you could enforce the law very selectively. You could arrest more Black men, and you could have judges give harsher sentences to Black men,” he said.
That felt closer to what happened to me in Newark. The statute did not explicitly forbid me from buying a gun. But in the space between the law and the person reviewing your permit application, everything is subject to one human’s impression of another. My friend in Newark said he didn’t think twice about listing himself as white on his application. “It’s 2026,” he joked. “Good luck telling anybody what race they are.”
That leads me to a twist that unfolded as I reported this story. Six years after I first applied for a firearm permit in New Jersey, I finally received one a few weeks ago. (I didn’t even have to check “white.”) The application that succeeded was submitted in January. Four months later, an approval arrived digitally in my inbox, without explanation. I can now legally purchase as many rifles as I want, and a handgun.
For years, the permit itself had taken on a symbolic meaning in my mind—less about ever actually getting a gun than what it meant to be told no over and over again. But once it finally arrived, I found myself wondering if I actually want one.
I texted a close friend from northern New Jersey, a Palestinian American Muslim who attended the same Islamic school I did growing up. He was ecstatic. Within minutes, he was joking about starting a gun club for former Islamic-school kids, schooling me about differences in calibers.
A few days later, that same friend brought me with him to the range on Memorial Day weekend. It was packed. He brought his 10-year-old son, too, along with what looked to me like an arsenal: rifles, handguns, and a large plastic container filled with ammunition. That may have been the first moment I understood how far I still was from the culture of this. My body still jumped at every loud pop from guns shot behind the thick glass. My friend’s son seemed entirely unfazed by all of it. While I stood at the counter filling out a lengthy waiver, he casually surveyed the wall of accessories for sale.
Later, at his house, he let me hold a few of his guns. He talked me through what to notice: weight, grip, balance, whether it felt like something I could actually learn on. I felt a little overwhelmed. Not afraid exactly, but aware that I was still at the very beginning of something that goes much deeper.
His advice was simple: “This is the fun part,” he said, smiling as he talked through the options. For as overwhelming it could all feel, it was nice to be reminded by someone like me that this was supposed to be fun. For all the symbolism I’ve attached to it, it’s something most gun owners just own to collect and practice shooting with.
Maybe gun ownership will remain something symbolic for me, and I’ll keep putting off actually buying one. For now, having the permit feels like enough. I waited six years for the state to decide if I was allowed to be the type of person who owns guns. I can wait a little longer before deciding whether I am.
New Jersey
Wet weather downs trees across New York, New Jersey
The weather overnight sent trees toppling onto cars and homes in New York and New Jersey.
The clean-up began Sunday, though rain is expected to return Monday.
Weather damage in New Jersey
In Linden, New Jersey, a fallen tree damaged Robert Goldson’s house.
“All we heard was– it felt like an earthquake,” he said. “We seen all the trunk basically tore up my garage in the back end of my house, so basically, the fire department got it.”
In Secaucus, New Jersey, part of Route 3 flooded near the Rodeway Inn. Crews were on scene to pump out the water. Local businesses did not appear to be affected, but traffic was impacted.
Weather damage in NYC
Meanwhile, in New York City, a large tree fell across bike lanes in Central Park.
Over in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a tree fell on Aaron Williams’ family car.
“So we don’t know the nature of the vehicle and how it’s going to function until the tree is removed,” he said. “And I’m hurting more than anything. And I know financially at the moment, we don’t have the finance to really fix this vehicle at the moment.”
He’s now thinking about how he’s going to take his children to school, swim practice, and how he’ll be getting his groceries.
Stay with CBS News New York for the latest on the forecast and weather damage across the region.
New Jersey
America’s Best Fishing States Index of 2026 includes the Garden State
Watch Betty’s Icebox in Asbury Park prepare for a great summer
Local shops on the beaches and boardwalks prepare for the summer season as Memorial Day weekend approaches.
It’s o-fish-ial!
New Jersey fishing industry is the reel deal.
FishingBooker, the online fishing guide company has released it’s report on America’s Fishing Index of 2026 which evaluates performance across Anglers’ Interest, Facilities, Financial, and Geographic pillars.
The extensive research was compiled from hundreds of thousands of fishing trips, reviews, and reports, as well as industry research based on 17 different criteria’s the report stated.
For the four edition, the report details the best US fishing states and real changes compared to last 2025.
Below are the results of the search for the Garden State:
New Jersey’s 2025 rank was 28, and its 2026 rank is 15. There is a 13-spot jump, and here’s why.
- With a total of 86 points, New Jersey has officially moved from the bottom tier into the upper half of the nation, proving that its diverse mix of urban freshwater and world-class saltwater access is a major draw for modern anglers.
- While the state is rising fast, Angler Interest remains a growth area. With a score of 22 out of 55, the data suggests that New Jersey’s actual fishing quality is currently outpacing its national reputation.
- A Geography score of 15 out of 25 reflects the state’s elite saltwater infrastructure. In 2026, the state’s Artificial Reef Program, one of the most active in the country, saw new vessel deployments (such as the Susan Rose), creating immediate hotspots for black sea bass, fluke, and tautog.
- New Jersey’s 2026 rise was fueled by a massive overhaul of its Trout Stocking program. By adding 19 extra days to the season and expanding stocking to 23 new ponds, the state has made freshwater fishing more accessible to suburban and urban families than at any point in the last decade.
Key Findings of the from research:
- The 2026 top 5 looks very different than in previous years, with North Carolina and South Carolina surging into shared 4th place and Michigan rising from 4th to 3rd.
- Florida takes the top spot in 2026, climbing from 2nd place last year and reclaiming its position as the best fishing state in the US.
- There are 3 more newcomers in the top 10 compared to 2025:
- The top 10 contains:
- 6 Atlantic states
- 2 Great Lakes states
- 3 Gulf Coast states
Top 20 Fishing States in the US
- Florida
- Maryland
- Michigan
- North Carolina and South Carolina (tied)
- Louisiana
- Texas
- Massachusetts
- New York
- Wisconsin
- Rhode Island
- Hawaii and Delaware tied
- Georgia
- Alaska and New Jersey tied
- Virginia
- Maine
- Minnesota
- Ohio
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