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Secaucus, N.J.: The Commuter Town With a Suburban Vibe

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The Hudson County suburb of Secaucus, N.J., anchors the New Jersey Meadowlands, some 30 sq. miles of marshland, veined with estuaries and dotted with greater than a dozen cities. There was a time when folks fishing in these waters advised tales of reeling in a damaged statue from the previous Penn Station or discovering a physique buried underneath the seashore grass.

However no extra: At present, the marshes are interwoven with walkways and nature preserves. And Secaucus’s manufacturing unit retailers, which drew cut price hunters within the early Seventies, have been joined by quite a few retail chains.

For a lot of younger households, although, it’s the suburban vibe that’s the massive draw — together with the brief commute to the town.

“What makes Secaucus extraordinarily fascinating to consumers, at first, is its proximity to New York Metropolis, together with ample bus stops and free shuttles from most rental complexes to the practice station,” mentioned Michael Gonnelli, an actual property dealer who leads the Gonnelli Group at Re/Max Infinity, in Secaucus, and is the son of the city’s mayor (additionally named Michael Gonnelli).

That was true for Ling Dao and Jane Wang, who owned a house in Edison, N.J., and needed simpler entry to the town together with extra actions for his or her two younger youngsters. “Edison additionally felt very crowded, with restricted parks and playgrounds for the children,” mentioned Mr. Dao, 33, an data supervisor for a pharmaceutical firm.

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He and Ms. Wang, 35, a stay-at-home mom, seemed in Jersey Metropolis, Hoboken and Queens earlier than shopping for a three-bedroom dwelling close to downtown Secaucus earlier this 12 months for $765,000.

“Ultimately, we fell in love with Secaucus as a result of it’s very near the town, however is extra quiet and kid-friendly,” Mr. Dao mentioned. “We use the quite a few playgrounds. We additionally ceaselessly go to the city’s recreation heart to make use of the swimming pool and monitor. Throughout summer season, we attend free live shows and films in Buchmuller Park.”

Bledar and Zlatina Brahimi left close by Edgewater for Secaucus final summer season, as a result of “in Edgewater,” mentioned Mr. Brahimi, 30, who works in finance, “there have been nice metropolis views, however the whole lot was co-ops and condos.” They seemed in New York Metropolis, however discovered it overpriced.

The couple hope to start out a household, Mr. Brahimi mentioned, and “what helped slender down our alternative was the varsity system and tax charges.”

In Secaucus, he and Ms. Brahimi, 28, who works in accounting, have been capable of finding a five-bedroom, three-bathroom home with an in-ground pool and “a reasonably good dimension yard,” for $700,000.

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Secaucus, a city with a median family revenue of $125,142 and a inhabitants of about 22,200, in response to 2020 census knowledge, occupies 6.5 sq. miles (about 10 p.c of which is water) in Hudson County. It’s bordered by the Hackensack River to the north, east and south, and Union Metropolis and Jersey Metropolis to the east.

The housing stock contains single- and two-family properties in a variety of kinds, together with ranches, Capes, colonials, townhouses and luxurious high-rise condominiums. Harmon Cove, a gated group with about 1,400 models that embody townhouses and high-rise condos, sits on the Hackensack River, within the western a part of city.

Rental choices embody the Harper at Harmon Meadow Flats, on the japanese fringe of city, and Xchange, a fancy with some 2,000 models catering to youthful renters who need a straightforward commute to Manhattan, to the south. (Secaucus Junction, the practice station, is reverse the advanced.)

Numerous chain eating places could be discovered on the Plaza at Harmon Meadow, a shopping mall in northeastern Secaucus with a Panera Bread, an Olive Backyard and a Bonefish Grill. Retail choices there embody chains and massive packing containers — Walmart, Sam’s Membership, HomeGoods, T.J. Maxx. Development is anticipated to start out quickly on a brand new Hometown Market grocery story within the heart of city.

Secaucus can also be dwelling to Meadowlands Exposition Heart, a Kerasotes multiplex cinema and Sheraton, Marriott, Aloft and Hilton resorts.

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At $6,646, the typical residential property tax in Secaucus is the bottom in Hudson County, in response to New Jersey’s Division of Neighborhood Affairs. In contrast, Weehawken residents pay a median of $12,138.

The “property taxes are a few of the most inexpensive in all of northern New Jersey,” mentioned Mr. Gonnelli, the dealer.

In accordance with the New Jersey A number of Itemizing Service, 52 single-family properties offered in Secaucus at a median worth of $580,000 throughout the 12-month interval ending Feb. 28. Throughout the identical interval a 12 months earlier, 30 single-family properties offered at a median of $527,500.

In the course of the 12-month interval ending Feb. 28, 107 condos and townhouses offered at a median worth of $387,000, down barely from the $390,000 median worth on 94 gross sales the earlier 12 months.

In early April, the New Jersey A number of Itemizing Service confirmed 41 properties on the market, from a two-bedroom condominium in Harmon Cove Tower listed for $235,000 to a two-family home with 4 bedrooms listed for $990,000.

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Secaucus can look like a tangle of highways. The japanese spur of the New Jersey Turnpike hugs the city’s southern and japanese boundaries, whereas Route 3 cuts off the principle thoroughfare of Paterson Plank Street from the remainder of city, with an overpass connecting the 2 sections.

Downtown, nonetheless, affords a stark distinction to the shops, chain shops and highways. It’s dwelling to the general public library, the municipal authorities heart, a senior heart and small companies like Filomena’s deli, Fortunate Nails and Marra’s Drug Retailer, which has been in enterprise for practically a century. Different downtown sights embody the ice rink, the City Museum and Buchmuller Park, which hosts out of doors live shows and the Secaucus Little League.

It could be onerous to seek out one other municipality the place guests searching for a nature protect are directed to Bob’s Low cost Furnishings. However simply behind the shop is Mill Creek Marsh, the place guests can see turtles, shorebirds and different wildlife.

The city’s parks embody Schmidts Woods Park, Trolley Park (which affords views of the American Dream Ferris wheel in East Rutherford) and Laurel Hill County Park, which has a canoe launch, kayak leases, biking and strolling paths, and ball fields, together with a cricket pitch.

The Secaucus Public Faculty District serves about 2,265 college students in prekindergarten via twelfth grade. In the course of the 2019-20 faculty 12 months, 33 p.c recognized as white, 32.1 p.c as Hispanic, 29.3 p.c as Asian and three.9 p.c as Black.

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The district operates 5 faculties: Milridge (for prekindergarten), Clarendon (kindergarten via fifth grade), Huber Avenue (prekindergarten via fifth grade), Secaucus Center (sixth via eighth grade) and Secaucus Excessive Faculty. Excessive Tech Excessive Faculty, a Hudson County magnet faculty, serves college students in ninth via twelfth grade. On 2019-20 SAT checks, college students scored a median of 531 in studying and writing, in contrast with 536 statewide; their common rating in math was 544, in contrast with 536 statewide. The commencement fee in 2020 was 96.7 p.c, in contrast with a statewide common of 91 p.c.

New Jersey Transit trains depart the Secaucus Junction station for Penn Station in Manhattan, Newark Liberty Worldwide Airport and different locations together with Atlantic Metropolis, Monmouth Park and Philadelphia. The experience to Manhattan sometimes takes about 12 minutes. A one-way ticket is $4.25, and a month-to-month cross is $126.

Touring by bus can take about quarter-hour to an hour, relying on visitors. The round-trip bus fare from Secaucus Junction to Port Authority is $7; a month-to-month cross is $107.

In 1658, Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor of the colony of New Netherland, negotiated a treaty between European settlers and the Lenni-Lenape people who referred to what’s now Secaucus as “Islandt Siskakes” — the primary identified point out of the world. On the time, it was an island surrounded by swamps and creeks, in response to “Historical past of Secaucus,” a 1950 guide that devotes a complete part to “Jersey mosquitoes.”

Secaucus wasn’t integrated as a city till 1917, when it was an agricultural group identified for its pig farms. Within the Nineteen Fifties, with the development of the New Jersey Turnpike, it steadily grew to become the commuter city that it’s as we speak.

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New York

Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 30, 2024

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Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 30, 2024

-
Jury Deliberation Re-charge
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF NEW YORK CRIMINAL TERM
-
-
PART: 59
Χ
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK,
-against-
DONALD J. TRUMP,
DEFENDANT.
BEFORE:
Indict. No.
71543-2023
CHARGE
4909
FALSIFYING BUSINESS
RECORDS 1ST DEGREE
JURY TRIAL
100 Centre Street
New York, New York 10013
May 30, 2024
HONORABLE JUAN M. MERCHAN
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE PEOPLE:
ALVIN BRAGG, JR., ESQ.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY, NEW YORK COUNTY
One Hogan Place
New York, New York 10013
BY:
JOSHUA STEINGLASS, ESQ.
MATTHEW COLANGELO,
ESQ.
SUSAN HOFFINGER, ESQ.
CHRISTOPHER CONROY, ESQ.
BECKY MANGOLD, ESQ.
KATHERINE ELLIS, ESQ.
Assistant District Attorneys
BLANCHE LAW
BY:
TODD BLANCHE, ESQ.
EMIL BOVE, ESQ.
KENDRA WHARTON, ESQ.
NECHELES LAW, LLP
BY: SUSAN NECHELES, ESQ.
GEDALIA STERN, ESQ.
Attorneys for the Defendant
SUSAN PEARCE-BATES, RPR, CSR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
LAURIE EISENBERG, RPR, CSR
LISA KRAMSKY
THERESA MAGNICCARI
Senior Court Reporters
Susan Pearce-Bates, RPR, CCR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter

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Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 29, 2024

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Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 29, 2024

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF NEW YORK CRIMINAL TERM
-
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK,
PART: 59
Indict. No.
71543-2023
CHARGE
-against-
DONALD J. TRUMP,
DEFENDANT.
BEFORE:
4815
FALSIFYING BUSINESS
RECORDS 1ST DEGREE
JURY TRIAL
X
100 Centre Street
New York, New York 10013
May 29, 2024
HONORABLE JUAN M. MERCHAN
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE
PEOPLE:
ALVIN BRAGG, JR.,
ESQ.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY, NEW YORK COUNTY
One Hogan Place
New York, New York 10013
BY:
JOSHUA STEINGLASS, ESQ.
MATTHEW COLANGELO,
ESQ.
SUSAN HOFFINGER, ESQ.
CHRISTOPHER CONROY, ESQ.
BECKY MANGOLD, ESQ.
KATHERINE ELLIS, ESQ.
Assistant District Attorneys
BLANCHE LAW
BY:
TODD BLANCHE, ESQ.
EMIL BOVE, ESQ.
KENDRA WHARTON, ESQ.
NECHELES LAW, LLP
BY: SUSAN NECHELES, ESQ.
Attorneys for the Defendant
SUSAN PEARCE-BATES, RPR, CSR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
LAURIE EISENBERG, RPR, CSR
LISA KRAMSKY
THERESA MAGNICCARI
Senior Court Reporters
Susan Pearce-Bates,
RPR, CCR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter

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Critics Fault ‘Aggressive’ N.Y.P.D. Response to Pro-Palestinian Rally

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Critics Fault ‘Aggressive’ N.Y.P.D. Response to Pro-Palestinian Rally

Violent confrontations at a pro-Palestinian rally in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, on Saturday reflected what some local officials and protest organizers called an unexpectedly aggressive Police Department response, with officers flooding the neighborhood and using force against protesters.

At the rally, which drew hundreds of demonstrators, at least two officers wearing the white shirts of commanders were filmed punching three protesters who were prone in the middle of a crosswalk. One officer had pinned a man to the ground and repeatedly punched him in the ribs, a 50-second video clip shows. Another officer punched the left side of a man’s face as he held his head to the asphalt.

The police arrested around 40 people who were “unlawfully blocking roadways,” Kaz Daughtry, the department’s deputy commissioner of operations, said on social media on Sunday.

Mr. Daughtry shared drone footage of one person who climbed on a city bus, “putting himself and others in danger.” The Police Department, he wrote, “proudly protects everyone’s right to protest, but lawlessness will never be tolerated.”

Neither Mr. Daughtry nor the police commented on the use of force by officers. A spokeswoman for Mayor Eric Adams did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the police response. The Police Department’s patrol guide states that officers must use “only the reasonable force necessary to gain control or custody of a subject.”

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Bay Ridge has a significant Arab American population and hosts demonstrations in mid-May every year to commemorate what Palestinians call the Nakba, or “catastrophe” — when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were forced from their homes during the war that led to Israel’s founding in 1948.

Andrew Gounardes, a state senator and a Democrat who represents the area, said local politicians had been in touch with the commanding officer of the 68th police precinct before the preplanned protest and said there had been no indication that there would be such a heavy police response. He called the videos he saw of the events “deeply concerning.”

“It certainly seems like the police came ready for a much more aggressive and a much more confrontational demonstration than perhaps they had gotten,” he added.

Justin Brannan, a Democrat who is the city councilman for the area, said the protest was smaller than last year’s but that officers had come from all over the city to police it. He said their approach appeared to be directed by 1 Police Plaza, the department headquarters in Manhattan.

“These were not our local cops. Clearly, there was a zero-tolerance edict sent down from 1PP, which escalated everything and made it worse,” Mr. Brannan said.

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“I’m still waiting on information and details about the arrests that were made,” he added, “but from my vantage point, the response appeared pre-emptive, retaliatory and cumulatively aggressive.”

The Republican state assemblyman whose district includes parts of Bay Ridge, Alec Brook-Krasny, had a different perspective. He said an investigation would determine whether the officers’ actions were warranted, but he said some protesters were “breaking the law” by refusing to clear the street.

“I think that those bad apples are really hurting the ability of the other people to express their opinions,” Mr. Brook-Krasny said.

Some local residents supported the police and said they were tired of the protests’ disruptive impact. “Enough is enough,” said Peter Cheris, 52, a 40-year resident of Bay Ridge, who said he had viewed the videos of the protest. “If you’re going to break the law, you deserve it,” he said.

Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, singled out the presence of the Police Department’s Strategic Response Group, a unit that is sometimes deployed to protests and has been the subject of several lawsuits brought by the civil liberties union and other groups.

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The police unit’s handling of the demonstration “was a violation of New Yorkers’ right to speak out and risks chilling political expression,” Ms. Lieberman said in a statement. “N.Y.C.L.U. protest monitors witnessed violent arrests, protester injuries, and even arrests of credentialed members of the press.”

She added: “The continual pattern of N.Y.P.D. aggression against pro-Palestine demonstrators raises important questions about the city’s disparate treatment of speakers based on their message.”

Abdullah Akl, an organizer with Within Our Lifetime, the pro-Palestinian group that organized the protests, said the response took organizers aback, particularly for a demonstration that occurs every year in Bay Ridge and is known to be frequented by families with children.

“It was really an unusual and unprecedented response,” Mr. Akl said.

He said he witnessed two men being pushed to the ground. One of them can be seen in a video with blood streaming down the side of his face. Nerdeen Kiswani, chair of Within Our Lifetime, said three protesters — including the two who can be seen being punched — were treated for their injuries at hospitals.

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The Police Department has arrested hundreds of demonstrators since street protests began shortly after the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7 and Israel’s subsequent invasion of Gaza. The protests have been largely peaceful, with few injuries or violent clashes.

In a turning point, on April 30 officers cleared Hamilton Hall at Columbia University, which had been occupied by protesters for 17 hours. Many officers showed restraint during the arrests, though a handful were filmed pushing and dragging students as they removed them from the building.

On Sunday, Ms. Lieberman said police response to the protests in Bay Ridge underscored the importance of implementing the terms of a $512,000 settlement the civil liberties union and the Legal Aid Society reached with the city this month. The settlement set new terms for how the Police Department manages protests, creating a tiered system that dictates how many officers can be sent to demonstrations and limits the use of the Strategic Response Group. It will take years to put into practice.

The settlement is one of several that stemmed from the George Floyd racial justice protests in 2020. Last year, the city agreed to pay $13.7 million to settle a class-action lawsuit that claimed unlawful police tactics had violated the rights of demonstrators in Manhattan and Brooklyn. In March, the city agreed to pay $21,500 to each of roughly 300 people who attended another Black Lives Matter protest in 2020 in the Bronx. Those people were penned in by the police, then charged at or beaten with batons, according to a legal settlement.

Andy Newman and Camille Baker contributed reporting.

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