Friday, January 27, 2012

How two deaths may be saving lives

JERSEY CITY (WABC) -- The deaths of two Jersey City residents, who died tragically from carbon monoxide less than a year ago, may have been responsible for saving the lives last week of people working in a Jersey City warehouse.

One crew member on every Emergency Medical Services unit at Jersey City Medical Center now wears a carbon monoxide monitor as a direct result of this earlier incident.

According to Jim Dwyer, chief of the hospital's EMS squad, the decision was made to wear the device, which is the size of a pager, to improve safety for both his staff, other first responders and the public.

"It is colorless and odorless. You get so sick so fast you can't even help yourself," Dwyer said.

Each detector runs about 170 dollars. Paramedic Rob Luckritz, who clips one on every day now, calls them a no-brainer.

Paramedics had only been wearing the CO detection devices for a few days when they saw them work. Last week they got a call from 911 from a warehouse on Port Jersey Boulevard in Bayonne. Once they walked inside, the detectors started chirping like mad so they had a good idea what they might walking into.

"So they knew two things. One that it was dangerous and two how they might want to start treating the patient," Dwyer said.

The early detection prevented more serious, possibly fatal results, he said.

Carbon monoxide is a deadly, colorless, odorless poisonous gas that is produced by the incomplete burning of various fuels and is undetectable to human senses.

Initial symptoms include headache, fatigue, shortness of breath, nausea and dizziness, with mental confusion, vomiting, loss of muscular coordination and, eventually, loss of consciousness and death found with greater exposure to higher levels of carbon monoxide poisoning (above 150 ppm).

According to the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, about 170 people in the U.S. die annually from it.

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2 men shot inside check cashing store

irvington Two men were shot, one was killed, at a check cashing store in Irvington, New Jersey. (WABC Photo / WABC)

  Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsIRVINGTON, N.J. (WABC) -- Two men were shot inside of a check cashing store in Irvington, New Jersey.

It happened at Unitransfer Check Cashing on Springfield Avenue around 5:45 p.m. on Wednesday.

Both victims were transported to University Hospital, where one of the victims Daniel Joseph, 21, of Irvington was pronounced dead at the hospital.

The second victim who is unidentified is currently in surgery.

Police say so far they believe at least one of the victim's was targeted.

The investigation is being conducted by the Essex County Prosecutor's Major Crimes Task Force and the Irvington Police Department.

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

New Jersey parents say 3-year-old denied transplant

amelia rivera Amelia Rivera's parents say the 3-year-old was denied a transplant because she is disabled. (WPVI Photo / WPVI)

AP  By KEVIN BEGOS and MATT MOOREPHILADELPHIA -- The parents of a 3-year-old New Jersey girl say she's being denied a kidney transplant because of her mental disabilities, but experts caution the situation may be much more complex.

The girl's mother, Chrissy Rivera, last week posted a blog entry that described an encounter she claimed happened at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. She said she was there to discuss treatment for her daughter, Amelia, who was born with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, a rare genetic defect that can cause physical and mental disabilities.

For much more on this story please visit out sister station WPVI at: http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=news/health&id=8508844

Rivera wrote that a doctor, whom she did not name, told her and her husband, Joe Rivera, that Amelia wouldn't be eligible for a transplant because of her quality of life and her mental condition.

"I put my hand up. 'Stop talking for a minute. Did you just say that Amelia shouldn't have the transplant done because she is mentally retarded. I am confused. Did you really just say that?"' she wrote. "I begin to shake. My whole body trembles and he begins to tell me how she will never be able to get on the waiting list because she is mentally retarded."

Rivera's story was seen by Sunday Stilwell, the mother of two severely autistic boys, and she began an online petition last Friday, demanding that the hospital give a transplant to the girl.

By Tuesday night, more than 23,700 people had signed it.

"I read Chrissy's original blog post, and I just cried. I couldn't believe it," said Stilwell, whose boys are 6 and 9. "I shared it on Twitter with all my followers and on Facebook."

Children's Hospital said in a statement that it "does not disqualify potential transplant candidates on the basis of intellectual abilities."

"We have transplanted many children with a wide range of disabilities, including physical and intellectual disabilities," it said, adding that it is "deeply committed" to providing the best possible medical care for all children, including those with disabilities.

The hospital did not comment further, citing patient confidentiality laws.

Stilwell has been in contact with Rivera daily over the events.

"There's a lot of camaraderie" between parents of special-needs kids, Stilwell said. "Almost all of us, across the board, have experienced some discrimination. I've certainly had some bad run-ins with some certainly ignorant doctors, but nothing like this. That's part of the reason I did it. I couldn't actually believe this was happening."

Messages seeking comment from the Riveras through Facebook and to their home were left Tuesday but were not immediately returned.

The issue the Riveras face is not simple, said Arthur Caplan, director of the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics.

For example, the blog notes that Rivera told the hospital that "we plan on donating" the kidney, since they come from a large family.

"Most adults can't donate an organ, because it won't fit" a child, Caplan said. "You're starting to say you're going to use another child as a living donor, and that's ethically really trouble."

The supply of organs for child transplants is "extremely limited," Caplan added.

"So you have hard choices to make," he said. "Dialysis may be a better option."

According to the National Institutes of Health, 87,820 people were awaiting kidney transplants as of last February. The National Kidney Foundation, which seeks to enhance the lives of people affected by kidney disease, said 4,573 patients died in 2008 while waiting for kidney transplants.

A 2006 study from Ohio State University on kidney transplants for patients with mental disabilities found that the one- and three-year survival rates for 34 people were 100 percent and 90 percent, respectively.

"The studies reported good compliance with post-transplant medications due to consistent support from family members or caregivers," the paper noted.

The researchers added that previous controversies over mental disabilities and transplants led the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations to express concern that many people with disabilities are "denied evaluation and referral for transplantation."

Rivera's blog noted that doctors said Amelia won't need a transplant for six months to a year.

Some experts said that if Rivera's claims are accurate, the hospital's actions are very disturbing.

"Everyone deserves an equal chance to these organs, regardless of your mental capacity," said Charles Camosy, a professor of Christian Ethics at Fordham University.

Camosy said that while it's true that there are shortages of kidneys and other organs, the criteria used to make transplant decisions "should not ever devalue those that are mentally disabled."

"This is a growing movement that transcends liberal or conservative that says this kind of life, because it's so vulnerable, it deserves special protection," he said.

Whatever the medical details of Amelia's situation, her mother's blog captured the anger of parents with disabled children who don't want outsiders to decide life and death issues.

"Do not talk about her quality of life," Rivera wrote of her exchange with the doctor last week. "You have no idea what she is like. We have crossed many, many road blocks with Amelia and this is just one more. So, you don't agree she should have it done? Fine. But tell me who I talk to next."

Mary Beth Happ, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center whose research focuses on communication with non-vocal patients, said that the issue of severe mental disability and kidney transplants has been a source of contention for nearly two decades.

"Co-existing health problems such as weakened immune system and/or heart disease, which are prevalent in (Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome), are an additional risk that transplant centers and parents must consider," Happ wrote in an email.

But Happ and Caplan noted that it's virtually impossible to have a full discussion of Amelia's case because of medical privacy laws.

"We're seeing this more and more where very private, difficult medical decisions are debated in the media without the full facts," Happ said, adding that while the general discussion can be good, the risks of one side or another inflating the situation is "really problematic."

Caplan said he has heard of cases in which other transplant programs considered severe mental disability as a factor in transplants.

"With scarcity, social factors do count, with every transplant," he said.

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Traffic moving again after crash on NJ Turnpike

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEW JERSEY (WABC) -- An accident in the northbound lanes of the New Jersey Turnpike caused a traffic nightmare Wednesday morning.

The crash involved an overturned vehicle and happened near Interchange 8 around 9 a.m.

Two lanes were closed, and a 7-mile backup beginning around Interchange 7A caused 60-minute delays.

The accident was cleared around 10 a.m., and residual delays of about 15 minutes persisted.

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Suspect steals police cruiser during NJ break in

See it on TV? Check here.Edgewater police car stolen   Eyewitness NewsEDGEWATER (WABC) -- Police in New Jersey spent Monday morning searching for one of their own squad cars.

The cruiser was stolen by a suspect during an attempted break in of a jewelry store in Edgewater.

Police responded to the River Road store for a burglary in progress just after 1:30 a.m.

They caught two suspects attempting to break into the jewelry store, but a third suspect made his getaway in a marked police cruiser that was left unoccupied by one of the responding officers.

Police found the cop car around 9 a.m. a few miles away in Teaneck. The suspect is still on the run.

No officers were injured.

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Store owner shot and killed during robbery

  Eyewitness NewsNEWARK, N.J. (WABC) -- The owner of a mini mart in Newark was shot and killed during a robbery Tuesday evening.

It happened around 6 p.m. at the JNC Mini Market located at 346 14th Avenue corner of South 18th.

When Newark Police arrived, they found 37-year-old Miguel Torres shot inside the store.

He was taken to University Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The Homicide investigation is being conducted by the Essex County Prosecutor's Homicide Task Force and the Newark Police Department.

The investigation is active and investigators are currently viewing surveillance footage from around the location and other leads at this time.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Newark Police.

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Child porn stash uncovered in burning NJ home

  Eyewitness NewsEAGLESWOOD TOWNSHIP (WABC) -- A professor in New Jersey is under arrest Thursday after firefighters found child pornography in his burning home.

The fire broke out in Eagleswood Township along the Jersey Shore.

Police say firefighters were pulling sheet rock from the walls when child pornography images began falling from the ceiling.

Gamal El-Zoghby, a 76-year-old architecture professor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn is charged with child endangerment.

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Police release photos of Newark store shooting suspect

See it on TV? Check here. NEWARK, N.J. (WABC) -- Police are asking for the public's help after the owner of a mini mart in Newark was shot and killed.

The shooting happened Tuesday evening at the JNC Mini Market located at 346 14th Avenue corner of South 18th.

When Newark Police arrived, they found 37-year-old Miguel Torres shot inside the store.

He was taken to University Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The Homicide investigation is being conducted by the Essex County Prosecutor's Homicide Task Force and the Newark Police Department.

The investigation is active and investigators are currently viewing surveillance footage from around the location and other leads at this time.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Newark Police.

PHOTO GALLERY: POLICE RELEASE PICTURES OF SUSPECTS

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Former Dr. charged with using alias to practice medicine

See it on TV? Check here.ALAN L. LUPINACCI A former doctor is charged with continuing to practice medicine under a different name.

WYCKOFF, New Jersey (WABC) -- A former doctor is under arrest in New Jersey accused of continuing to practice medicine and surgery under a different name.

The Bergen County Prosecutor announced the arrest of Alan Lupinacci.

Lupinacci lost his medical license after pleading guilty in 1995 to 10 counts of criminal sexual content with his female patients.

In 2003, despite the suspended license it was found that Lupinacci was still practicing medicine at the Wyckoff Health Shoppe in Wyckoff, New Jersey.

Police again opened another investigation when they say Lupinacci again worked at a nutritional counseling facility, but under the name Dr. Alan Woods.

Lupinacci is accused of offering nutritional counseling services for an initial consultation fee of $375.00 for a three hour meeting with follow up appointments available for $125.00 per hour.

Additionally, after meeting with clients and recommending a nutritional and supplementation regime, the suspect would offer to provide them with various vitamins and supplementation products that he had for sale within the office or through an online website.

Authorities say over the 2 year period, Lupinacci was given over $80,000 for treatment and medicines to patients who believed they were being provided by a licensed and authorized medical physician.

The suspect was arrested at his office without incident and faces multiple criminal counts.

He's being held on $100,000 bail.

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Arrest made in Rangers' fans beating in Philly

See it on TV? Check here.  Eyewitness NewsPHILADELPHIA (WABC) -- A Glassboro, New Jersey, man surrendered to face charges of beating two New York Rangers fans in Philadelphia, an attack caught on camera and posted online.

Police say 32-year-old Dennis Veteri is charged with aggravated assault, conspiracy aggravated assault, simple assault and reckless endangerment.

Police said Veteri threw the punch that turned a verbal dispute physical, then landed a blow that knocked out the victim.

Off-duty Woodbridge police officer Neal Auricchio, an Iraq war veteran, suffered a concussion in the attack and required stitches.

"This was a very, very vicious beating," said police Capt. Laurence Nodiff.

Veteri surrendered to detectives Thursday and posted $50,000 bail early Friday.

Detectives are still looking for other assailants in the January 2 beating that followed the Winter Classic hockey game.

Nodiff said Veteri and two other men were the clear aggressors after Rangers fans showed up at an intersection that features two of Philadelphia's iconic cheesesteak stands.

A video of the fight posted on YouTube shows a man police identified as Veteri whipping off his coat and throwing a punch, sparking a melee that ends with Woodbridge Township, N.J., police officer Neal Auricchio lying in the pavement after being punched.

"As we all saw on the video it is a vicious beating with the conclusion of a knock down punch which knocks the police officer unconscious," Nodiff said.

Investigators said Auricchio suffered serious facial injuries that will require reconstructive surgery.

Police said the video prompted tips that eventually led them to Veteri by way of a credit card receipt from another restaurant at the intersection that was paid just before the fight.

Online court records show Veteri has a history of arrests in Philadelphia, including a guilty plea following a 1998 aggravated assault arrest.

Veteri also has a prior criminal record of aggravated assault and drug possession in Florida.

Veteri is due back in court Jan. 31 for a preliminary arraignment. You can watch the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rq4PLa253WI&feature=youtu.be

CLICK HERE for more on the story from sister station WPVI in Philadelphia

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Student accused of bringing a stun gun to school

TETERBORO, N.J. (WABC) -- Police say that 16 year old Bergen County Vocational Tech student brought a stun gun to school.

The Viper Tech 6.8 million volt rechargeable black stun gun with a flash light is strong enough, detectives say, to knock down a horse.

They say the student purchased the stun gun online.

Police also allegedly found a notebook filled with threats, including a "things to do in life list" that included killing a man and a police officer, bombing a school and committing suicide.

He also allegedly checked off items including stabbing a person, stealing and witnessing a murder.

Detectives are checking to see if teachers or students were on the list, but they do know the teen's parents were targeted.

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House fire kills man in Roselle, NJ

  Eyewitness NewsROSELLE, N.J. (WABC) -- Authorities say a man found inside a burning northern New Jersey home apparently died from smoke inhalation.

Fire fighters responded to reports of a burning home in Roselle before dawn.

Rescue crews found a man collapsed in the kitchen. He died a short time later.

Fire officials said that Albert Stapperfenne - believed to be in his early 60s - was the only person inside the single-family home when firefighters arrived around 5:20 a.m. Sunday.

The three-alarm fire apparently started in the living room on the home's first floor.

The blaze then spread up the stairs to the attic, causing significant damage to the home before it was contained around 6 a.m.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation, though authorities say it does not appear to be suspicious.

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Fire tears through homes in NJ; fatality possible

UNION CITY (WABC) -- An eight-alarm inferno burned through at least five row homes in New Jersey, gutting a block that also burned a decade ago.

Firefighters responded to reports of a man trapped in the basement of a Bergenline Avenue home in Union City just before 9:30 p.m. Wednesday.

They were quickly forced back by the heavy flames and were unable to search for the man. His fate was not known, and authorities say it might be as long as two days before they can go inside to look for him. The flames quickly spread down the block, comprised of buildings with apartments and stores.

More than 40 residents fled the flames and were spending the night at a nearby school.

"It's a devastating fire on a very cold night for these families," Union City Mayor Brian Stack said. "Some of these families are very poor. They are just trying to make ends meet."

Up to 10 firefighters were treated for minor injuries, many of them slipping on the accumulating ice from fire hoses.

Bergenline Avenue and several other nearby streets were closed.

Residents said the block went up in flames in a similar blaze 11 years ago.

The cause of the current fire is under investigation.

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NJ couple talks about escaping sinking cruise ship

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsNEW JERSEY (WABC) -- A couple from New Jersey ignored the advice of crew members to relax and have a drink and evacuated the sinking cruise ship in Italy. Ignoring that advice may have saved their lives.

"The scene from the Titanic when the plates fall, it was exactly like that," said Michael Stoll, cruise ship survivor.

Michael Stoll and his wife Addie were enjoying an Italian dinner on board the Costa Concordia Friday night when there was a sharp jolt, and then the ship began to tilt.

"I said let's get out of here, let's get our life vests,"

With dishes shattering around them, the newlyweds ran to their room, packed their valuables in a backpack and headed to the lifeboats.

All the while, crew members were telling passengers there was nothing to worry about, and that they should relax and have a cocktail.

"They said it was an electrical malfunction,"

"One of the crew members said go in, have a drink, calm down. And then we heard plates crashing,"

45 minutes later, the captain finally gave the order to start boarding the lifeboats.

But Mike and Addie say the passengers were on their own.

"It was chaos; people were pushing and shoving,"

Mike and Addie are grateful they got off the ship safely on one of the first lifeboats.

But they can't understand how the captain could put so many lives in jeopardy.

"You have to give orders, you have to give a signal, you are in charge of all of these people, you have to be responsible and he wasn't,"

The couple eventually made their way back to Rome and flew home Sunday night.

Their luggage is gone, sunk with the ship, but they're grateful to be back on dry land.

"Things could have gone worse, people died, we got out,"

After a few days of relaxing at home, Mike and Addie will go back to work and school Wednesday.

They say that will be their first and only cruise.

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Hoboken committee cancels St. Patrick's Day parade

  Eyewitness NewsHOBOKEN (WABC) -- The Hoboken St. Patrick's Day Parade has been canceled by the parade committee, which cited "the city of Hoboken's inability to protect our spectators, bands and participants."

The announcement was made on the web site HobokenSaintPatricksParade.org

The committee decided to cancel because the city wanted the parade held on a Wednesday instead of the first Saturday in March. Mayor Dawn Zimmer last year said the move was necessary to "reduce the amount of partying that occurs."

Police made 34 arrests related to last year's parade and issued 296 citations for things like urinating in public and carrying open containers of alcohol.

The following is the full text of the announcement:

Dear Hoboken Community,

The Hoboken St. Patrick's Parade Committee met earlier this week to discuss what would have been our 26th annual parade. After a long, arduous and sad meeting, the committee has decided to cancel the 2012 Hoboken St. Patrick's Parade. The City of Hoboken's inability to protect our spectators, bands and participants led us to this heartbreaking decision.

The parade committee is proud of its traditions and the countless Hobokenites who were honored to march down Washington Street over the years. Since 1986, the first Saturday in March has been a glorious day to honor Saint Patrick and our Irish heritage. We are forever indebted to our long-time sponsors, neighbors and friends who came out to enjoy the day each year.

For those who were not here in the beginning, or think that 26 years is not long enough of a tradition, we remind all that the parade was a strong catalyst in the revitalization of the Hoboken we love so dearly today. There are many opinions on this topic and many who will be surprised by our decision. We chose not to go to court and not to continue to negotiate over the heavy-handedness of one person. The idea of marching in a parade, in the dark, on a week night, is as insulting as it is unreasonable. While we remain devoted to our heritage, we love our city too much to lower ourselves to the level of those who speak from a place of ignorance and ethnic/religious intolerance.

Moving forward, we will proudly consider the gracious invitations we have received from other communities throughout the State of New Jersey to march in their celebrations of Irish heritage. Evidently, there are some elected officials elsewhere in the state who have figured out how to protect their residents during ethnic, religious and other community celebrations.

Like our ancestors before us, some of whom are credited with building Hoboken, we are not "St. Patrick's Day Irish."

We are committed, proud, and blessed with long memories.

As is our tradition, we cordially invite everyone to worship with us at our Irish Mass honoring Saint Patrick on Saturday, February 25th at 5:00 p.m. at Our Lady of Grace Roman Catholic Church.

Until we meet again, "May the road rise up to meet you. May the wind be always your back..."

Sincerely yours,

Hoboken St. Patrick's Parade Committee

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Christie proposes cutting income taxes in NJ

See it on TV? Check here.AP  By BETH DeFALCO and GEOFF MULVIHILLTRENTON -- The Democratic lawmakers who control New Jersey's state Legislature are skeptical about Gov. Chris Christie's proposal to cut the state's income tax rates by 10 percent.

Christie unveiled the plan at his State of the State speech Tuesday.

State Sen. President Stephen Sweeney called the proposal "a windfall for millionaires at the expense of schools."

Christie has not said how he would pay for the income tax cut.

A family with a taxable income of $600,000 would save around $4,000 under the plan. A family with taxable income of $50,000 would save under $150.

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

NJ launches prescription monitoring program

See it on TV? Check here.AP  By BETH DeFALCOTRENTON -- More than five years after New Jersey passed a law to start tracking prescription drug use, the state is launching a long-awaited database monitoring use of dangerous drugs with the intent of helping doctors spot abusers more quickly and authorities stop drug dealers.

The database has been collecting information since Sept. 1; to date, more than 4 million prescriptions have been entered. Starting this month, doctors and pharmacies, including mail-order operations, can access detailed patient information on prescriptions for painkillers, steroids, sedatives and stimulants.

"It's going to allow us to track all prescription filled in the state of New Jersey and into the state of New Jersey by pharmacies that ship into the state," said Thomas Calcagni, the director of the state Division of Consumer Affairs, which will oversee the database.

Including New Jersey, 40 states have such a program, according to the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws.

The number of Americans who abuse prescription drugs is greater than those who use cocaine, hallucinogens and heroin combined, according to a 2009 federal survey on drug use.

Push to get the New Jersey program operating became more of a priority following a series of stories by The Star-Ledger of Newark last year that exposed widespread abuse of steroids and human growth hormone by police and firefighters.

"There are benefits coming to this late in the game," Calcagni said. "We've learned a lot from their mistakes."

For example, unlike many of the other states, human growth hormone prescriptions will be tracked.

Law enforcement agencies will have access to the information, but only after obtaining a court order declaring probable cause, a higher standard than in most other states, which only require the search be related to an active investigation.

The Drug Enforcement Administration's New Jersey division "is committed to fighting the prescription drug problem with every available tool possible in order to protect our citizens," said Brian Crowell, special agent in charge of the division. He called the database invaluable in helping stop the spread of drugs.

The program cost $244,000 to set up and will cost $177,000 a year to maintain, but authorities say it will save much more by spotting abusers. The costs are covered in large part through a $350,000 federal grant. Optimum Technology of Columbus, Ohio, was chosen to oversee the database.

New Jersey's program will be more proactive in looking for abuse than many other states where the onus is placed on the doctors and pharmacists to contact law enforcement when they see suspicious activity, Calcagni said. His division will monitor the database for outliers and signs of abuse, warning doctors when patients exceed certain thresholds.

Prescription drug use has been steadily growing in New Jersey and around the country, surpassing cocaine and heroin use, and falling only second to marijuana use.

In 2010, there were more than 7,200 people in New Jersey who were admitted to certified substance abuse treatment programs as a result of prescription painkiller abuse, an increase of nearly 2,000 from the previous year and up more than 5,000 from 2005, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

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Baby born in Newark apartment building hallway

NEWARK (WABC) -- Talk about a special delivery.

A baby boy was delivered in the hallway of an apartment building in Newark, with help from a police officer and the stranger who flagged down the cop.

The baby entered the world earlier than anyone expected, and with a police escort.

The boy's mother ran out of her basement apartment on Mount Pleasant Avenue and into the hallway after she went into labor.

Police got a call of a woman needing help when Officer Vernon Bradbury from the Second Precinct arrived. He ran into the building, along with a stranger from the street. That Good Samaritan and Bradbury helped successfully deliver the baby in the hallway.

Mother and child were taken to University Hospital, where both are said to be doing well.

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Interfaith service held after NJ rabbi is targeted

  Eyewitness NewsRUTHERFORD, N.J. (WABC) -- People of different religions joined as one, uniting against hate in Rutherford, New Jersey.

An interfaith service took place Saturday night.

It was held at Congregation Beth-El.

That was the scene of Wednesday's firebombing targeting a rabbi.

It was the fourth attack against a Bergen County synagogue in the past month.

The service is meant to be a show of solidarity against hate crimes.

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New Jersey Bookkeeping Is The Right Thing For Your Business

Join us for a Town Hall Meeting in New Jersey

PARAMUS -- We here at ABC7 want to hear from you!

We invite you to a WABC-TV Town Hall meeting taking place on Wednesday January 25 in Paramus, New Jersey.

Join us at Bergen Community College in Paramus from 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. for our first Town Hall meeting of 2012.

A team of Eyewitness News anchors and reporters who cover New Jersey will be on hand to answer all of your questions.

The meeting will take place at the Technology Education Center at 400 Paramus Road.

We'll see you there!

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New Jersey Bookkeeper Will Provide You Perfect Assistance

30-year sentence upheld in NJ trooper death

  Eyewitness NewsCAPE MAY COURT HOUSE (WABC) -- A man who admitted to killing a New Jersey state trooper has lost hid bid to have his 30-year sentence vacated.

Middleton Dunmore, of Atlantic City, claimed he had ineffective legal representation when he pleaded guilty in 2006.

Dunmore got 20 years for robbing a convenience store in Dennis Township and another 10 years for manslaughter in the death of 32-year-old trooper Beteram Zimmerman III.

Zimmerman died in February of 2004 when his cruiser struck a utility pole while responding to the robbery call.

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PSE&G warns of attempted robberies

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsELWOOD PARK, N.J. (WABC) -- Officials report two men posing as PSE&G workers went door to door Monday afternoon in Elwood Park.

They claimed they needed the check for frozen pipes.

The would-be robbers tried to get older residents to let them in.

The utility company has this advice: residents should always ask to see ID before opening their door.

And the card should have the company logo, the worker's photo and employee number.

Even then, homeowners can ask the worker to wait.

In Monday's case, the robbers targeted Augusta Drive, the Boulevard and Kipp Ave.

Although one of the victims did let the men in, thankfully nothing was taken.

No one was robbed.

These are called diversion burglaries where one man distracts while the other steals.

For more information please contact PSE&G at 1-800-436-7734.

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Space heater blamed for North Bergen fire

See it on TV? Check here. NORTH BERGEN (WABC) -- A four-alarm fire burned through a three story building in North Bergen, New Jersey.

Heavy smoke and fire could be seen spewing from the building on Broadway in North Bergen.

Flames broke out shortly after 1:00 p.m. on the second floor and quickly spread through numerous stores on the first floor and into the apartments above.

The fire appears to have been caused by a space heater in a second floor apartment.

The residents of that apartment told police that the fire started in the space heater, and quickly spread through the apartment.

They evacuated as quickly as they could.

Fire marshals plan to investigate, but they haven't been able to get inside the building yet, and may not because it's in danger of collapsing.

Firefighters responded to reports of residents trapped on the upper floors.

Three firefighters and two civilians were injured.

None of the injuries are life threatening.

There were still hot spots being put out late Wednesday night. Nine families were left homeless by the blaze.

See images from the scene

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I-95 moving after crash snarls morning commute

New Jersey Turnpike tractor-trailer crash A tractor-trailer carrying coffee beans overturned and caught fire on the New Jersey Turnpike early Wednesday.

  Eyewitness NewsNEW JERSEY (WABC) -- A tractor-trailer carrying coffee beans overturned and caught fire on the New Jersey Turnpike early Wednesday.

The accident happened around 5:15 a.m. in the northbound express lanes at the interchange with Route 80. The crash created heavy delays in getting to the George Washington Bridge.

Two minor injuries were reported.

All traffic was diverted to the local lanes and the lower level of the bridge, where another accident was reported around 6:30 a.m. The truck was moved off the road and the lanes reopened around 7:15 a.m., but major delays plagued the morning commute.

The pair of accidents created a 1-2 punch that backed up traffic for miles.

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Pumpkin Picking in New Jersey - A Great Fall Activity for Kids

Romantic Destinations in New Jersey

Synagogue fire bombed; rabbi, family targeted

RUTHERFORD (WABC) -- A New Jersey synagogue was fire bombed early Wednesday, and investigators believe the rabbi and his family were the targets.

Wednesday night on Montrose Avenue in Rutherford, a police cruiser is parked outside Congregation Beth-El.

The scene of the latest attack on a Jewish institution has prompted New Jersey's branch of the Anti-Defamation League to issue this warning.

"Every synagogue must take extra steps to protect its constituents and building," a member of the league said.

It's the latest in a series of crimes targeting Jewish temples in Bergen County.

The attack happened just before 5 a.m. Wednesday.

Rabbi Nossan Schumani, his wife and five children were sleeping in the residence portion of Temple Beth El.

One of the firebombs was thrown clear through a bedroom window on the second floor and burst into flames.

"It was almost like dragon's breath," Rabbi Schuman said.

Rabbi Schumani and his wife were nearly killed, he said.

The rabbi burned his hands trying to smother the fire, while his wife woke up their five children and the rabbi's parents. All made it out safely and the fire did little damage.

Authorities are convinced that someone was trying to send them a message.

"This is certainly a hate crime. This is a bias crime. This is aggravated arson, but most importantly, we're now looking on this as an attempted homicide," Bergen County prosecutor John Molinelli said.

No one else was hurt, but the incident launched a major investigation. Detectives canvassed the area, walking on the roof of the building, looking for evidence. Several other explosive devices, including Molotov cocktails and aerosol cans, were discovered, but did not ignite.

"You can't just look at this as an arson," Molinelli said. "You look at this now as an attempted murder."

The attack in the normally quiet Rutherford neighborhood has rattled the nervous of neighbors.

"It's just outrageous that somebody would do something like this," neighbor Robert Genardi said. "Especially with kids asleep on the second floor."

There have been several bias incidents in Bergen County recently, including one in Paramus and one in Hackensack. At this point, police are not saying the fire bombing is related, but one man says this kind of irrational behavior is not surprising.

"It's not something really new, It's something that happens and you gotta go on."

The investigation is ongoing.

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Funeral services on Friday for NJ lawmaker

See it on TV? Check here.Alex DeCroce FILE In this Dec. 27, 2007 file photograph, New Jersey Assemblyman Alex DeCroce, R-Morris Plains, asks a question during a joint hearing of the Assembly Budget and Education committees in Trenton, N.J. Late Monday, Jan. 9, 2012, DeCroce collapsed and died at the Statehouse after the legislature wrapped-up the last day of their session. ( (AP Photo/Mel Evans,file))

AP  Eyewitness NewsPARSIPPANY, N.J. -- Funeral services will be held Friday for Alex DeCroce, the New Jersey Republican Assembly leader who died at the Statehouse this week after a late-night session.

The 10 a.m. service at St. Peter the Apostle Church in Parsippany will be followed by burial in Gate of Heaven Cemetery, East Hanover.

Visiting hours will be 3 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Par-Troy Funeral Home in Parsippany. DeCroce's family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the New Jersey Crime Victims Law Center.

A lawmaker since 1989, DeCroce was also a Realtor who owned his own company.

The 75-year-old collapsed late Monday night after the Assembly adjourned. He was pronounced dead by a colleague who is also a physician.

State police attributed the death to a heart-related issue.

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10-year-old boy accidentally shot in Keyport

  Eyewitness NewsKEYPORT, N.J. (WABC) -- A 10-year-old boy was shot in New Jersey Monday night.

The incident happened on Broad Street in Keyport.

The child's injuries are not life threatening, and the shooting is said to be accidental.

Police say he was playing with the gun when it accidentally went off, striking him in the leg.

He was admitted to Jersey Shore Medical Center, where he needed stitches. He will not need surgery and did not break any bones.

Sources say the gun belonged to his father, and it appears to be legally owned.

The shooting remains under investigation by Keyport Police and the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office.

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7-year-old girl, man hurt in Newark shooting

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEWARK (WABC) -- Newark police are investigating a shooting that left two people injured on Sunday.

The incident happened at approximately 9 a.m. inside a home on Astor Street.

Police responded to a report of shots fired and found a 27-year-old Newark man in the stairway suffering gun shot wounds to the arm and buttocks.

A 7-year-old girl also suffered undetermined injuries to her ear when a stray bullet penetrated an apartment through two walls.

It is unclear at this time if the child's injuries were the result of bullet or debris caused by the bullet.

The circumstances surrounding the shooting have yet to be determined and detectives have neither positively identified a suspect nor a motive.

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Protesters angry over police officer's acquittal

See it on TV? Check here. NEWARK (WABC) -- Dozens of people protested in Newark on Tuesday, angry about a jury's decision to acquit a police detective on charges he used excessive force during a scuffle.

The incident was recorded by a surveillance camera and Eyewitness News was the first to show you the video.

"No justice, no peace," the protesters chanted. "Stop police brutality in the black community!"

The two minute video captured a plain clothes narcotics detective confronting 15 year old Travis Rattray back in March 2010.

Detective Angel Pared checked his pockets then all of a sudden unloads, punching him in the face and slamming him into a window.

Travis and his mother gave reporter Phil Lipof the exclusive video and interview.

Travis and his mother didn't say a word on the steps of city hall on Tuesday because they're worried it could hurt their civil lawsuit, but they came here to show they're still fighting the city, the police department and the officers involved.

A jury found Pared not guilty last Thursday of aggravated assault, the most serious charge he faced, but they were deadlocked on three lesser charges including falsifying reports.

Protestors believe he should be fired.

"You have to be Stevie Wonder not to see that this baby was clearly punched by this officer. I don't know what this jury was thinking," demonstrator Donna Jackson said.

"We're saying when he comes up for departmental review, we sound the drum and raise all the hell we need," demonstrator Zayid Muhammed said.

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