New Jersey
Reports of antisemitism in N.J. reached record levels in 2021, group says – New Jersey Monitor
At Princeton College in Might 2021, Jewish college students have been verbally harassed outdoors a tutorial constructing.
4 months later, a Teaneck man smashed the home windows of a health care provider’s workplace with a hammer, demanding to know whether or not sufferers have been Jewish.
And through Hanukkah that yr, a sticker with a swastika was discovered outdoors a Mount Laurel synagogue.
These are simply three episodes that contributed to a file variety of antisemitic incidents in New Jersey in 2021, with 370 complete reported, in keeping with an annual audit launched by the Anti-Defamation League Tuesday. The determine represents a 25% improve from 2020, and it’s the very best quantity recorded because the Jewish advocacy group started monitoring incidents in 1979 utilizing data from victims and regulation enforcement.
The report comes only a week after officers charged a 27-year-old man with federal hate crimes after police say he violently assaulted and tried to kill at the least three folks in Lakewood as a result of they’re Jewish.
Antisemitic incidents have elevated practically yearly since 2013, apart from a drop in 2020 the Anti-Defamation League attributes to the pandemic. The 2021 information exhibits a return to pre-pandemic developments, with New Jerseyans experiencing antisemitism via harassment, vandalism, and assault the group referred to as “emblematic of a bigger nationwide drawback.”
“Jewish communities in New Jersey are coping with file ranges of antisemitism, and ADL is working carefully with victims, colleges, regulation enforcement, elected officers, and religion and neighborhood leaders to assist reverse this development,” Scott Richman, regional director of the group’s New York/New Jersey workplace, stated in a press launch.
Nationally, antisemitic incidents reached an all-time excessive in 2021, with 2,717 incidents reported. Fourteen % of these occurred in New Jersey, the second-highest quantity in any state, the audit says.
Bergen County noticed the most important variety of antisemitic incidents, with 70 recorded by the Anti-Defamation League. Subsequent was Ocean County with 44 and Middlesex County, 31.
Statewide there have been 252 reviews of harassment, 112 acts of vandalism and 6 reported assaults. A couple of third of the incidents came about in public locations. Others have been reported at colleges, personal houses, companies, and on-line. Thirty-five included photographs of a swastika.
“Our final objective helps to create secure and inclusive college climates to make sure that no pupil suffers from bias, discrimination or hate, and we sit up for persevering with our work with educators in New Jersey to assist them fight antisemitism and all types of hate in our colleges,” Richman stated.
Antisemitism was additionally evident throughout the state’s school campuses, which noticed a 17% improve in reviews of anti-Jewish bias. Swastikas have been drawn on educational buildings and mezuzahs have been stolen, the audit says.
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a traditionally Jewish fraternity at Rutgers-New Brunswick, was egged throughout a Holocaust remembrance occasion.
The very best variety of antisemitic incidents have been reported in Might, which the audit attributes to an outbreak of violence between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. Greater than 50 incidents have been documented in New Jersey that month, about 86% increased than the state’s common month-to-month totals, the report says.
In Clifton that month house owners of a hookah bar displayed a banner with a swastika and a rendering of Israel’s then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with a Hitler-style mustache.
The Anti-Defamation League says it’s notably involved with the New Jersey European Heritage Affiliation, a Central Jersey-based hate group fashioned in 2018. Of the 24 extremist-related incidents reported in New Jersey in 2021, half had ties to the group.
New Jersey
New Jersey State Police Gave a ‘Free Pass’ to Motorists with Courtesy Cards or Ties to Police, Investigation Finds – Insider NJ
The Office of the State Comptroller found even motorists suspected of dangerous driving offenses were let go by New Jersey State Police.
TRENTON—An investigation finds that New Jersey State Police troopers routinely gave preferential treatment to certain motorists who presented a courtesy card or asserted a personal connection to law enforcement—even when motorists were suspected of dangerous offenses, like drunk driving, according to a new report by the New Jersey Office of the State Comptroller.
OSC’s Police Accountability Project reviewed body worn camera footage of 501 no-enforcement stops by New Jersey State Police–meaning stops where New Jersey State troopers did not issue tickets or make arrests. In 139 or 27 percent of these no-enforcement stops, motorists presented a courtesy card, claimed to have a friend or relative in law enforcement, or flashed a law enforcement badge and then were let go, OSC’s report said. In some cases, the trooper released the motorist immediately, offering some version of “you’re good.” The report found that courtesy cards are in wide usage and function as “accepted currency” by state troopers. (In all but one case, the troopers gave the courtesy card back to the motorist, enabling the card to be used again.)
Reviewing more than 50 hours of body worn camera footage of the stops, which took place over ten days in December 2022, OSC found that troopers regularly decided not to enforce motor vehicle laws after receiving a courtesy card or being told the driver has ties to law enforcement. For instance, one motorist, who was stopped for driving over 90 miles per hour, admitted to drinking alcohol but was let go without a sobriety test after he presented two courtesy cards. Another motorist was stopped for driving over 103 miles per hour and was released after she volunteered that her father was a lieutenant in a local police department. The most significant consequence the troopers imposed in these stops was advising the motorists that they had left a voicemail message for the law enforcement officer named on the courtesy card or invoked as a friend or relative. OSC has released video excerpts of the footage.
“Our investigation shows that some people are being given a free pass to violate serious traffic safety laws,” said Acting State Comptroller Kevin Walsh. “Law enforcement decisions should never depend on who you know, your family connections, or donations to police unions. Nepotism and favoritism undermine our laws and make our roads more dangerous.”
Overall, close to half of the 501 non-enforcement stops reviewed by OSC involved speeding, many for more than 20 miles per hour over the speed limit. In three stops, drivers stopped for reckless driving, careless driving, and/or speeding, also admitted to drinking alcohol, yet were released without being asked to step out of the car for a field sobriety test. Both drunk driving and speeding are major causes of traffic fatalities. According to data compiled by the New Jersey State Police Fatal Accident Investigation Unit, in 2022, New Jersey recorded 646 fatal collisions that resulted in 689 deaths or 1.89 fatalities per day. This was among the highest number of traffic-related deaths in New Jersey in the past 15 years.
OSC initiated this investigation in response to reports that law enforcement officers’ decisions not to enforce motor vehicle violations were influenced by improper factors, including courtesy cards. Courtesy cards, often referred to as PBA cards, FOP cards, or gold cards, are given out by police labor associations to law enforcement officers. They also can be purchased through “associate memberships” with police associations and are sold by private companies.
OSC’s investigation found that courtesy cards are widely used. In 87, or 17 percent, of the no-enforcement stops OSC reviewed, motorists presented courtesy cards that came from municipal police departments, county and state agencies, as well as inter-state and out-of-state law enforcement agencies. They all appeared to be equally effective at getting motorists released without enforcement.
Asserting a relationship with law enforcement appeared to carry equal weight, OSC found. In 52 or 10 percent of the no-enforcement stops reviewed, the driver or passengers did not present a courtesy card but claimed a connection to law enforcement, and the trooper decided to let them go. In 29 of those stops, the motorist or passenger identified themselves as current, retired, or in-training law enforcement officers. Other stops resulted in no enforcement when the drivers or passengers claimed a relative, friend, or neighbor worked in a law enforcement agency.
In one stop, a trooper said he stopped a motorist for driving 97 miles per hour. After an extended conversation about the “friends” they had in common, the trooper told the driver to “stay safe” and let him go. In another stop, a trooper performed a computerized look-up of the driver’s credentials and discovered the driver had an active warrant for his arrest. But when the driver’s friend introduced himself, letting the trooper know that he was also an off-duty trooper, the stopping trooper walked back to the motorist, apologized for stopping him, and let him go without even mentioning the warrant. OSC was unable to determine from the footage what the warrant was for.
Other findings include:
- Providing preferential treatment to motorists who present courtesy cards or assert close personal relationships with law enforcement appears to have a discriminatory impact. Of the 87 courtesy cards observed in the sample, for instance, 69 were presented by White drivers.
- Even when courtesy cards were not present, racial disparities were observed in the sample. New Jersey State Police policy requires troopers to request all three driving credentials (license, registration, proof of insurance) when making motor vehicle stops, but OSC found overall, White and Asian drivers were less likely to have all three of their credentials requested and verified when compared to Black and Hispanic/LatinX drivers. Additionally, troopers conducted computerized lookups of Hispanic/LatinX drivers 65 percent of the time, while looking up White drivers only 34 percent of the time.
- In many stops, OSC was unable to ascertain why the troopers made the decision not to enforce motor vehicle violations because of the quality of the video footage or other factors. Still, OSC observed several of those stops involved dangerous offenses, underscoring the importance of reviewing no-enforcement motor vehicle stops, which are not routinely reviewed.
OSC made 11 recommendations, including that New Jersey State Police regularly review no-enforcement stops to better understand racial/ethnic trends in motor vehicle data and determine if additional training is needed. OSC also recommended that the Attorney General consider issuing a directive that would explicitly prohibit law enforcement officers from giving preferential treatment to motorists because of their ties to law enforcement or possession of courtesy cards.
Read the report.
Watch excerpts of the body camera footage.
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New Jersey
Authorities Debunk Viral Explanation for NJ Drone Sightings
The drones spotted over the Garden State were probably not looking for a missing shipment of radioactive material.
New Jersey
N.J. weighs making underage gambling no longer a crime, but subject to a fine
Should underage gambling no longer be a crime?
New Jersey lawmakers are considering changing the law to make gambling by people under the age of 21 no longer punishable under criminal law, making it subject to a fine.
It also would impose fines on anyone helping an underage person gamble in New Jersey.
The bill changes the penalties for underage gambling from that of a disorderly persons offense to a civil offense. Fines would be $500 for a first offense, $1,000 for a second offense, and $2,000 for any subsequent offenses.
The money would be used for prevention, education, and treatment programs for compulsive gambling, such as those provided by the Council on Compulsive Gambling of New Jersey.
“The concern I had initially was about reducing the severity of the punishment,” said Assemblyman Don Guardian, a Republican former mayor of Atlantic City. “But the fact that all the money will go to problem gambling treatment programs changed my mind.”
Figures on underage gambling cases were not immediately available Thursday. But numerous people involved in gambling treatment and recovery say a growing number of young people are becoming involved in gambling, particularly sports betting as the activity spreads around the country.
The bill was approved by an Assembly committee and now goes to the full Assembly for a vote. It must pass both houses of the Legislature before going to the desk of the state’s Democratic governor, Phil Murphy.
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