Thursday, May 31, 2012

Tire flies off truck on New Jersey Turnpike

See it on TV? Check here.tire off truck A tire flew off a truck on a highway shattering the front windshield of a tractor trailer on the New Jersey Turnpike in Fort Lee. (WABC Photo)

  Eyewitness NewsFORT LEE, N.J. (WABC) -- A tire flew off a truck on a highway shattering the front windshield of a tractor trailer.

The accident happened on the New Jersey Turnpike in Fort Lee just after 8:00 a.m.

The northbound truck was hit by the tire near mile marker 122. The driver was treated for unknown injuries.

The truck that lost the spare tire continued heading southbound before pulling over.

No injuries were reported.

Police are investigating what caused the truck to lose the tire.

CLICK TO SEE PHOTOS FROM NEWSCOPTER 7

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Sister of alleged Etan Patz killer says she went to cops

  Eyewitness NewsMOORESTOWN (WABC) -- The sister of Pedro Hernandez, who confessed last week to the 1979 killing of Etan Patz in New York City, now says she told police in the 1980s that her brother had killed a boy.

Norma Hernandez told ABC News that she went go to Camden police at some point to tell them of her brother's admission.

She also told The Star-Ledger that she did not have details about the killing but went to police about it in the 1980s. She says they did nothing at the time.

"This is the first we are learning of Ms. Hernandez's comments. Since this is an on-going homicide investigation, anything we do will be closely coordinated through the direction of the Camden County Prosecutor, Manhattan DA, and the NYPD," Camden Police Chief Scott Thomson said.

Pedro Hernandez confessed last week and is now charged with the murder of 6-year-old Etan Patz.

Norma Hernandez previously told The Associated Press that she would have turned her brother in if she'd had more information.

Hernandez has told police that he tossed out Etan's body with the trash near the SoHo bodega where the boy was killed in 1979.

The sanitation department is going through its records to see whether the trash could have been cleared by the city or a private hauler. The collection could have gone to the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island, but it could also have been incinerated or tossed in the ocean, which was a common practice at that time.

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Well-travelled bird spotted in New Jersey

See it on TV? Check here.red knot Red Knot in summer breeding plumage, on the Gulf coast of Texas on April 22, 2005. (AP Photo/Heather Forcier)

AP  Eyewitness NewsREEDS BEACH, N.J. -- A famous bird that's flown more than 325,000 miles over nearly 20 years has been spotted in southern New Jersey, near the Delaware Bay.

The red knot was spotted Monday in Reeds Beach by the scientist who banded it nearly two decades ago.

The bird was last spotted in Argentina in November, as it began its 9,000-mile trek to Canada. The birds fly 18,000 miles a year.

This bird has covered a distance equal to flying to the moon and halfway back.

Experts say 80 percent of the red knot population has disappeared in the bird's lifetime. Conservancy groups are working to protect the Delaware Bay, where the birds stop to eat horseshoe crab eggs.

The bird is the subject of a book due out in July.

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Man dies after being pullled from Bradley Beach waters

  BRADLEY BEACH (WABC) -- A 24-year-old man from Jersey City apparently drowned at the Jersey Shore Tuesday evening.

The victim was pulled from the ocean off Bradley Beach about 7 p.m.

Officials believe he was caught in a rip current.

Four other men in his group also had to be rescued.

There was no lifeguard on duty at the time.

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Search called off for missing New Jersey swimmer

See it on TV? Check here.  Eyewitness NewsLONG BRANCH (WABC) -- Search teams called off their search Tuesday for a 17-year-old boy who disappeared while swimming Sunday off Long Branch.

The loss is devastating for the family and friends of Rudy Mena, of Paterson.

The water and air search was halted Monday after approximately 14 hours, but resumed for a brief period Tuesday.

The Coast Guard says the search covered at 88 nautical square miles and involved helicopters, boats and divers. An aerial search was conducted from Asbury to Oceanic beach, and a Coast Guard boat searched from Long Branch to Monmouth Beach.

Mena vanished in knee-deep water Sunday evening. A wave knocked him over, and the teen never resurfaced.

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Looking For Fun? Popular Amusement Parks In New Jersey, California And Texas

1 dead, another wounded in Orange, New Jersey shootings

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsORANGE, N.J. (WABC) -- One man is dead and another is hospitalized after a shooting in northern New Jersey.

Acting Essex County Prosecutor Carolyn Murray says 19-year-old Malcolm Bagley of Orange was found just before 1 a.m. Sunday by Orange police who had responded to a report of shots fired in the 100 block of Taylor Street.

Bagley was pronounced dead at the scene a short time later.

Officers soon learned a 19-year-old East Orange man had been wounded in the shooting and been taken to a hospital.

But the victim's name and further details on his injuries were not disclosed.

It's not yet known what spurred the shooting or how many people may have been involved.

The investigation is being led by the prosecutor's major crimes task force.

Anyone with information is asked to contact task force detectives at (877) 847-7432 or (973) 621-4586

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Doctors assess mental state of Etan Patz suspect

AP  JENNIFER PELTZMOORESTOWN -- The man who has confessed to killing the 6-year-old boy at the heart of one of the nation's most prominent missing-child cases remained in a psychiatric hospital as court-appointed doctors assessed his mental state.

Defense lawyers said Pedro Hernandez, 51, has schizophrenia and a history of hallucinations and it's unclear how much that will factor in the case charging him with the 1979 murder of young Etan Patz.

But if his psychiatric record becomes an issue, he'll encounter a justice system that seeks to strike a balance between recognizing mental illness and holding people responsible for their actions - a balance that has shifted back and forth over more than a century and a half.

Meanwhile, Etan's father made clear that the attention to the case since Hernandez's arrest last week had taken a toll, telling reporters they had "managed to make a difficult situation even worse."

"It is past time for you to leave me, my family and my neighbors alone," Stan Patz said in a note posted on his apartment building's door.

Authorities on Tuesday continued to try to flesh out the man's startling admission in a case that galvanized the movement to publicize the problem of missing children.

Police encountered Hernandez, who worked in a nearby convenience store, shortly after Etan vanished on his way to school on May 25, 1979. But investigators never considered Hernandez a suspect until a tipster pointed them his way this month, saying he had made incriminating statements. He responded with an emotional and gruesome confession: He said he strangled the boy, hid his body in a bag and a box and dumped it near some trash, police said.

His statements launched police and the Manhattan district attorney's office into a complex process of building a 33-year-old case with, so far, no physical evidence.

And it has started the courts on a parallel path of exploring Hernandez's mental health. After defense lawyer Harvey Fishbein told a judge that Hernandez was schizophrenic, bipolar, had had visual and auditory hallucinations, and had been on psychiatric medication for some time, the judge ordered an examination to see whether he was mentally fit to stand trial.

The results aren't yet known, and either side could challenge the findings and get another exam. It will ultimately be up to a judge to declare whether Hernandez can go to trial. If not, he would be sent to a psychiatric hospital and evaluated periodically to see whether he had improved enough to go to court. Most people found unfit are eventually returned to court, legal experts say.

Such exams aim to assess whether someone is well enough to participate in a trial and aid his or her own defense. They are separate from an insanity defense, which revolves around the defendant's psychological state at the time of the alleged crime.

In New York and many other states, defendants have to prove they were so mentally ill that they didn't know what they were doing was wrong. If successful, they are sent to psychiatric hospitals until judged well enough for release, if ever.

Fishbein declined to comment Tuesday on whether he might pursue an insanity defense. It could be challenging to portray Hernandez's mindset so long ago, potentially involving digging up decades-old medical records, tapping friends' and relatives' memories of his behavior at the time, or both.

"The closer you can bring his mental health and treatment issues to the time of the crime, the more plausible it becomes that he was suffering from mental disorder at the earlier time," said Stephen J. Morse, a University of Pennsylvania law and psychiatry professor who's not involved in the case.

One of Hernandez's sisters, Norma Hernandez, said Tuesday that she went to police in Camden, N.J., years ago to report a rumor he had confessed at a prayer group. Camden police declined to comment on her remarks.

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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Tom Hays and Colleen Long in New York, Samantha Henry in Camden, N.J., and Patrick Walters in Philadelphia.

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Patrick the pit bull's ex-owner gets new court date

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEWARK (WABC) -- The woman charged with throwing her pit bull down a high-rise trash chute in New Jersey skipped her court date Tuesday and to explain why to a judge threatening her with arrest.

Kisha Curtis, charged with fourth-degree cruelty to animals, appeared in the Essex County Prosecutor's Office Wednesday morning. Curtis had received a waiver from her last court hearing because she was having a baby, and incorrectly believed the same applied at Tuesday's hearing.

A followup court hearing was scheduled for July 9. The dog, known as Patrick the pit bull, was found near-death at the bottom of the trash chute on St. Patrick's Day last year.

Prosecutors say the 27-year-old from Albany tied the dog to a railing in her former Newark apartment building last March and left the state for more than a week.

Patrick's plight and recovery sparked a worldwide outpouring of support.

Curtis is reportedly applying for a pretrial intervention program, which would wipe the criminal charge from her record.

She rejected a state plea offer that called for up to 18 months in prison, a $5,000 fine and 30 days' community service.

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New Jersey reminds drivers to restrain pets in vehicles

  Eyewitness NewsTRENTON (WABC) -- New Jersey drivers are being reminded that the phrase "Click It or Ticket" also applies to four-legged passengers.

The state has noticed a growing problem with drivers being distracted as a result of pets not being properly restrained.

Officials say the pets are not only in danger of hurting themselves and their human family members, but can be the cause of big fines and penalties. They add that unrestrained animals have little chance of surviving even a minor accident.

Police will be on the lookout for pets hanging out of windows, sitting on the laps of drivers or travelling in the open back of pick-up trucks.

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Man sues pharmacy for not allowing him to buy Plan B

JERSEY CITY, New Jersey (WABC) -- A New Jersey man claims a pharmacy refused to sell him Plan B and now, he's taking that pharmacy to court.

"I was thinking if this guy doesn't sell me this pill then I'm going to have a bigger problem than I already have," said Andrew Andrade.

Andrade says he desperately needed emergency contraception and his girlfriend couldn't pick it up because she was at work.

So he went to a Jersey City Rite Aid on Central Avenue to get the pill.

"I was a little upset. I said let me speak to the manager. Maybe the manager knows a little bit more about this. They introduced me to the pharmacy manager and he said I cannot sell the pill to you because I was a male," he said.

Andrade went to a nearby pharmacy where he was able to buy Plan B after showing identification verifying his age.

Long time customers of the Rite Aid say they're surprised this could happen here.

"I think it's discrimination...I think that's wrong. Everyone should have the right to buy it," said Carla Melendez.

A Rite Aid spokesperson says their policy is that anybody 17 and over, male and female can buy emergency contraception from their stores.

The company got a letter from the American Civil Liberties Union this morning and started an investigation in response.

"The perfect outcome would be that the pharmacy staff is straight so that people do not encounter any obstacles to get emergency contraception it's a time sensitive issue and they shouldn't face any barriers that are unlawful," said ACLU-NJ Deputy Legal Director Jeanne LoCicero.

Mr. Adrade says he and his girlfriend are both over 18 years old.

He says he's not going to sue he just wants better training put in place.

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In New Jersey It's Illegal to Drive Without a Basic Auto Insurance Policy

Popular ice cream vendor robbed, slashed in Totowa

See it on TV? Check here. TOTOWA (WABC) -- A popular ice cream vendor needed six stitches Monday night after getting stabbed and robbed on his route.

It happened shortly after 6 p.m. on Monday. The vendor, who didn't want to be identified, was selling his cold sweet treats in Totowa when a man armed with a knife attacked him.

He says his attacker entered the truck and robbed him, slashing his arm in the process. The bleeding vendor tried to drive away, and the violent thug grabbed what cash he could and bailed out.

Officials believe the attacker began his crime spree in Little Falls, stealing a Subaru earlier Monday.

Then, he approached the truck and asked if he could go inside. After the vendor said no, he came back two blocks later and forced his way in through the side window.

The suspect is still on the loose.

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Numerous dead cats found inside Bradley Beach home

See it on TV? Check here. AP  BRADLEY BEACH -- Authorities responding to a fire alarm call at a central New Jersey home say they found numerous dead cats in varying stages of decomposition inside the residence.

Bradley Beach Police Chief Leonard Guida tells the Asbury Park Press that officers and firefighters made the discovery around 2 a.m. Sunday when they responded to the three-story home in the Monmouth County community.

Guida believes the odor of decaying cats may have set off the fire alarm.

Authorities say the home's 65-year-old owner will likely face animal cruelty charges. They believe she may have become overwhelmed by the animals and her other responsibilities, including caring for an elderly relative.

Guida said the woman - who could not be reached for comment on Sunday - will also likely face code enforcement citations.

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Students charged in New Jersey teen's suicide

See it on TV? Check here.  Eyewitness NewsMORRIS TOWNSHIP, N.J. (WABC) -- Three students are accused of assaulting, robbing and threatening a 15-year-old student at Morristown High School who committed suicide, officials said.

Lennon Baldwin, a freshman at Morristown High School, killed himself back in March at the home where he lived with his parents and older brother Robby.

According to investigators, Baldwin's death came after weeks of bullying. One of the defendants, a classmate, allegedly assaulted Baldwin at Morristown High School on March 6. The incident was captured on surveillance video. The defendant was suspended from school two days later.

"This case again underscores our need as a society to eradicate the bullying of our youth, as regrettable consequences such as this case are far too numerous to be anywhere near acceptable," Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi said.

Authorities said the suspended student made numerous attempts to contact Baldwin to instruct him to tell school officials that the incident was a joke. The next day, Baldwin did tell the Dean of Students that the assault was a joke and the defendant was playing a prank on him.

On March 9, police say the defendant from the previous incident and two other teens met Baldwin at the Century 21 parking garage, where they threatened and robbed him, telling him it was punishment for the suspension over the March 6th incident.

The three teens were arrested two weeks later. Michael Conway, 19, was charged as an adult with making false statements to police. The other two defendants face robbery, theft, terroristic threats and related charges. They remain under house arrest, charged as juveniles.

Baldwin killed himself on March 28. More than 500 people turned out for his funeral. Baldwin was a champion bowler, and his family still displays his trophies in the window. He also loved skateboarding and animals.

The two students and Conway are not charged with bullying, but they are charged with crimes that under the state's new anti-bullying law fit the very definition.

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Amazon to end New Jersey tax holiday, build sites

AP  ANGELA DELLI SANTITRENTON -- Amazon.com, the world's biggest online retailer, has agreed to collect 7 percent sales tax on purchases made in New Jersey starting next summer, the same time it plans to begin building two new distribution warehouses in the state.

The agreement, announced jointly by Gov. Chris Christie and Amazon executive Paul Meisner at the Statehouse on Wednesday, could bring thousands of construction jobs and 1,500 permanent positions at the warehouses. The collection of sales taxes, which online retailers like Amazon are not required to do now, will bring the state an estimated $30 million to $40 million a year in new revenue.

Amazon has not picked the locations for the warehouses. The retailer will be eligible for state economic assistance grants totaling millions on its investment of $130 million to build the warehouses.

"We're going to keep working and partnering with companies like Amazon to secure continued growth for our state and our families," Christie said in announcing the deal. "Each of (other companies') decisions to locate, stay or expand in New Jersey recognizes the concrete steps we've taken to improve our business climate, to create jobs and deliver tax relief and deliver new job opportunities to families in our state."

Amazon collects no sales taxes from New Jersey customers now, but would have been required to do so once the warehouses open. New Jersey residents who buy from Amazon are supposed to pay the sales tax themselves when they file their state income taxes, though few do.

The retailer has agreed to build job-creating distribution centers in Indiana, California, Tennessee and South Carolina in exchange for sales tax exemptions. It had requested a 22-month sales tax exemption in New Jersey.

Assembly Majority Leader Lou Greenwald of Voorhees introduced legislation in February aimed at enticing Amazon to locate in the state by granting it limited-time sales tax immunity. Though the bill was designed in the long-term to eliminate the disparity between online retailers and those operating out of traditional storefronts, brick-and-mortar retailers opposed the bill.

But they applauded the deal.

"There has been no bigger issue facing retailers than sales tax fairness, and we need to now use this event to continue the momentum and pressure Washington to finally resolve this issue for all Internet retailers once and for all," said John Holub, president of the NJ Retail Merchants Association. "We applaud the bipartisan efforts in Trenton to deliver a level playing field for retail businesses large and small."

Assemblyman Al Coutinho, a Newark Democrat who stood with the governor to announce the deal, said the agreement accomplishes everything the legislation would have done.

"What matters is the job creation and economic growth that will come with this enterprise," said Coutinho. "We need jobs, economic growth and a level playing field, and we get all three with this agreement."

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Police investigate car fires in Englewood

ENGLEWOOD, N.J. (WABC) -- A row of cars went up in flames early Sunday morning in Englewood, New Jersey.

Now police and the cars' owners are trying to find out how it happened and who is responsible.

At least five cars were burned out in the suspicious fires that broke out at about 3 a.m.

It happened along West Palisade Avenue.

"My neighbor woke me around 3 o'clock and said she heard some noises, like some popping sounds," said resident Kenneth Walker.

"She looked out the window and my car was on fire."

Walker woke up to see his 1986 Fiero burned out.

"I loved that car, it was in really good shape," he said. "It only had 73,000 miles on it, for a 25-year old car."

One witness overheard investigators saying that someone may have driven down West Palisade Avenue and thrown incendiary devices at the cars.

Two hours after the cars were ablaze, families ran for cover when flames broke out at a house.

"I was sleeping when someone sudden came in running and they yelled out there's a fire in the house and we all ran outside," said resident Jose Rengifo.

Investigators believe the house fire was set at the same time as the car fires, but smoldered for a couple of hours before the flames started.

Investigators from the Bergen County Sheriff's officers and the Englewood Police Department have been on the scene.

The city's Memorial Day Parade is set for Monday and will not be affected by the investigation.

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Dharun Ravi to report to jail in Rutgers webcam case

See it on TV? Check here.AP  GEOFF MULVIHILLNEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. -- A former Rutgers University student convicted of using a webcam to spy on his gay roommate is poised to start serving his 30-day jail sentence.

Dharun Ravi, 20, is scheduled to turn himself in Thursday at the Middlesex County Jail.

In March, a jury found Ravi guilty of 15 criminal charges, including invasion of privacy and bias intimidation. He used his webcam in September 2010 to stream - and view - seconds of live video of roommate Tyler Clementi and another man kissing, and told others they could watch another encounter two days later. Clementi jumped to his death from the George Washington Bridge just days after the ordeal began.

Ravi could have remained free while prosecutors appeal his sentence. But during a hearing Wednesday, he agreed to waive his protection from double jeopardy. He is now not allowed to argue that he's already served his time if prosecutors prevail on their appeal and he receives a longer sentence.

Ravi requested permission Tuesday to start serving his sentence as he apologized for the first time for his actions, which he described in a statement as "thoughtless, insensitive, immature, stupid and childish." In court Wednesday, Ravi answered questions from his lawyer and Berman but did not say any more about his apology.

Ravi's lawyer Joseph Benedict said he's still appealing the conviction altogether.

It's not clear whether Ravi will serve the full 30 days. In most cases, New Jersey county jail inmates with 30-day sentences automatically have them reduced by 10 days for good behavior. A warden at Middlesex County Jail was not immediately available Wednesday to say whether that would apply to Ravi.

His lawyer said Ravi would also begin working on his 300 hours of community service and start paying the more than $11,000 in fines and assessments that are part of his punishment.

Some gay rights activists have portrayed Clementi's story as a prime example of the consequences of bullying young gays. Ravi's defenders see him as a scapegoat for a death that they don't believe he was responsible for - and was not charged with.

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Hernandez reportedly confessed to Etan Patz murder in church

MOORESTOWN (WABC) -- Reverend George Bowen oversees Maranatha Christian Fellowship church in Moorestown, where Pedro attended in recent years, but stayed mostly quiet.

Bowen's wife Rosemary and daughter Becky were active, and are leaning very much now on their pastor for support.

Back in the 80s, not long after 6-year-old Etan Patz was killed, Pedro Hernandez moved to Camden, and attended St. Anthony DePadua Catholic Church. It was there, reports say, he confessed during a prayer meeting that he killed a child in New York.

Tomas Rivera, is said to have been present during that prayer group confession. Eyewitness News tried to speak with Rivera, but a woman who answered the door said rivera could not say anything to the media.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly says the NYPD is trying to track down anyone with knowledge of Hernandez's earlier confession.

The friars at St. Anthony's say the prayer group meeting happened long before they arrived, but some of the old members from that time still attend. They say confessions don't happen under those circumstances anymore.

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Newark mayor's spokeswoman resigns week after flap

AP  Eyewitness NewsNEWARK, N.J. -- Newark Mayor Cory Booker's communications director has resigned. Anne Torres stepped down just a little more than a week after the mayor drew flak from fellow Democrats for criticizing the Obama campaign during an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press."

In a statement Tuesday, Torres wished Booker good luck and said she's enjoyed her six years' working for him.

Booker was considered one of President Barack Obama's biggest supporters. In his May 20 TV appearance he described as "nauseating" attack ads against Bain Capital, the private equity firm once run by Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

Booker subsequently backed off the remarks in a YouTube video, saying he was just expressing frustration with negative campaigning.

Torres' resignation was first reported by politickernj.com

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Deadly motorcycle accident ties up traffic

  Eyewitness NewsWOODBRIDGE (WABC) -- A deadly motorcycle accident caused major traffic tie ups in New Jersey on Memorial Day.

The crash happened on Route 440 near the Garden State Parkway Monday.

Authorities say 61-year-old Joseph Messina was heading north when he apparently crashed into a concrete divider.

He died at the scene.

The left lane was closed for several hours as police investigated.

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Saturday, May 26, 2012

The Income Boost Possibility From Sports Betting in New Jersey

Hiring a Health Coach in Hoboken New Jersey

Port Authority to stop taking toll tickets

AP  Eyewitness NewsTRENTON, N.J. -- The Port Authority will soon stop accepting toll tickets nearly 61 years after first issuing them to speed the ride.

Toll Scrip and Universal tickets will no longer be good at the agency's bridges and tunnels beginning July 1. The Port Authority will refund tickets at their original sales value.

The Port Authority first issued the tickets in 1951 to improve traffic flow and reduce congestion. Buyers received a 10 percent discount and the tickets were "good until used."

The agency stopped selling them after it started using E-ZPass in 1997.

Instructions for obtaining a refund are posted on the Port Authority's website.

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Judge decides text sender not liable for wreck

AP  Eyewitness NewsMORRISTOWN -- A woman who texted her boyfriend while he was driving cannot be held liable for a car crash he caused while responding, seriously injuring a motorcycling couple, a judge ruled Friday in what is believed to be the first case of its kind in the country.

A lawyer for the injured couple argued that text messages from Shannon Colonna to Kyle Best played a role in the September 2009 wreck in Mine Hill. But Colonna's lawyer argued she had no control over when or how Best would read and respond to the message.

State Superior Court Judge David Rand sided with Colonna's lawyer, dismissing claims against the woman in a lawsuit filed by crash victims David and Linda Kubert, who are also suing Best. David Kubert had his left leg torn off above the knee, while his wife eventually had her left leg amputated.

Stephen Weinstein, the Kuberts' attorney, has argued that Colonna should have known Best was driving and texting her at the time. He argued that while Colonna was not physically present at the wreck, she was "electronically present," and he asked for a jury to decide Colonna's liability in the case.

But Colonna testified at a deposition she didn't know whether Best was driving at the time.

Best has pleaded guilty to distracted driving, admitting he was using his cellphone and acknowledging a series of text messages he exchanged with Colonna around the time of the accident; the content of the messages is unknown. Records show Best responded to a text from Colonna seconds before dialing 911.

Best was ordered to speak to 14 high schools about the dangers of texting and driving and had to pay about $775 in fines, but his driver's license was not suspended.

Lawyers for Best and Colonna declined to comment after the hearing, and neither couple was in court.

Weinstein said Friday the Kuberts are disappointed with the decision and an appeal will be filed, but the couple is hopeful the attention the case has drawn will lead to change.

"Even though the case against Shannon Colonna has been dismissed, they are gratified that if by bringing the case they have accomplished the goal of making people think before they text, whether while driving or while the recipient is driving," he said.

Rand said it's reasonable for text message senders to assume the recipients will behave responsibly, and he also noted drivers are bombarded with many forms of distraction, whether they be text messages, notifications from smartphones, GPS devices or signs along the road.

"Were I to extend this duty to this case, in my judgment, any form of distraction could potentially serve as the basis of a liability case," Rand said.

But Rand stressed his decision shouldn't be read as minimizing the need for attentiveness while driving, and he said Americans have become "almost addicted" to wireless communication.

"That is the reality of today's world," he said.

Weinstein hopes for proceedings to move forward within the next several months.

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Black lawmakers oppose Chris Christie court pick

See it on TV? Check here. AP  ANGELA DELLI SANTITRENTON -- A group of black state legislators announced its opposition to Gov. Chris Christie's choice of a gay, black Republican for the Supreme Court on Thursday, mounting evidence that Democrats were ready to reject the second of the governor's high court picks.

The New Jersey Legislative Black Caucus told The Associated Press that attorney Bruce Harris's legal qualifications fall short of the high standard required of the court's seven justices. No blacks currently sit on the court.

"The nomination of Mr. Harris sends the wrong message - that we can only achieve diversity on the Supreme Court through lowering the bar for qualifications," said Sen. Ron Rice, the caucus leader. "In a state with many distinguished African-American lawyers and judges, nothing could be further from the truth."

The Republican governor failed to reappoint the court's only black justice in 2010, touching off a firestorm among Democrats. Justice John Wallace had two years to go before reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70.

The governor nominated Harris, a 61-year-old Morris County mayor, and Phil Kwon, a 45-year-old with a top spot in the state attorney general's office, to fill two open court slots in January. Democrats rejected Kwon in March over ongoing concerns regarding cash deposits from a liquor store owned by his wife and mother. Kwon, who was born in South Korea and came to the United States when he was 6, would have been the first member of the court to be born outside the United States and its first Asian-American member.

Both nominees received the endorsement of the Rev. Reginald Jackson, a prominent black pastor, who in March said they "represented much-needed diversity" on the high court.

"Whether they are the best, only time will tell, are they qualified, no question they are," he wrote in an endorsement letter.

The black lawmakers oppose Harris's confirmation because of his lack of judicial and litigation experience and his failure to make partner at any law firm.

Christie has continued to defend his choice, however, saying Harris's experience is in line with that of the other justices. He has criticized Democrats for seemingly having their minds made up before the confirmation has begun.

"Democrats continue to malign Bruce Harris' credentials even when his background and experience stand alongside any of the members currently sitting on the Supreme Court," Christie spokesman Kevin Roberts said. "The campaign to poison this nomination and attack Mr. Harris before he takes a single question is an embarrassment to the process and to the reputation and conduct of those charged with giving this man a fair hearing."

The caucus also expressed concern that Harris told the governor he would recuse himself from cases involving gay marriage, an issue for which Harris had advocated before being nominated. Harris, who has a degree from Yale Law School, lives with his partner of 32 years, Marc Boisclair.

Assemblywoman Bonnie Watson Coleman, the group's second vice chair, said it's "inappropriate" for a potential judicial nominee to make promises on specific cases to the governor.

"It's doubly inappropriate to commit ahead of time to recuse oneself from a case based on one's race, gender, ethnicity or sexual orientation," she said. "Mr. Harris's promise on recusal sets a dangerous precedent and only emphasizes why he is not qualified for the job."

The group of 17 black lawmakers includes Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver and other legislative leaders and veteran lawmakers.

Sen. Nick Scutari, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, last week told the AP Harris's confirmation was in doubt.

Democrats agreed to give the nominee a hearing on May 31. But Scutari told the AP he questioned whether Harris was "up to the job."

Sen. Ray Lesniak previously said he would not vote for the nominee because of his recusal promise to Christie on gay marriage cases.

Nominees need the approval of the Judiciary panel and the full Senate in order to be confirmed. Supreme Court justices serve for seven years, then can be reappointed for tenure to serve until age 70.

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NJ Transit Memorial Day weekend plans

See it on TV? Check here.   Eyewitness NewsNEWARK (WABC) -- NJ Transit has released its plans for the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

Details are below:

On Friday, May 25, extra outbound trains will operate on the Northeast Corridor, North Jersey Coast, Raritan Valley, Morris & Essex, and Port Jervis lines starting at approximately 1 p.m. One outbound Pascack Valley train (#9653, leaving Hoboken at 2:51 pm) will extend its existing service to terminate in Spring Valley. Extra buses will operate from the Port Authority Bus Terminal on more than two dozen bus routes starting around noon. Visit njtransit.com for details.

On Memorial Day, Monday, May 28, trains will operate on a weekend/major holiday schedule on all lines. Hudson-Bergen Light Rail will operate on a weekend schedule. Newark Light Rail will operate on a Saturday schedule. River Line will operate on a Sunday schedule. Bus schedules vary by route-customers are advised to check their timetables or visit njtransit.com for schedule information.

Summer Savings

With Memorial Day marking the "unofficial" start of the summer recreational season, this weekend is a great time for customers to take advantage of NJ TRANSIT's discounted travel packages to destinations including the Jersey Shore, Six Flags Great Adventure and Monmouth Park:

Beach Packages: Save up to $6.50 on admission to one of five beaches - Long Branch, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Bradley Beach and Belmar - by purchasing round-trip train fare and a beach pass for one price at NJ TRANSIT ticket vending machines (choose "Special Promotions" and select "Beach Package") or at ticket windows. Customers can purchase the package for $31.50 from New York Penn Station or any station on the Main, Bergen County or Pascack Valley lines (except from Metro-North stations), and for $23.50 from Hoboken Terminal or Newark Penn Station. Shore EZride Jitney provides shuttle service to beaches, shopping and dining locations in Long Branch, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove and Bradley Beach Friday through Sunday. For jitney info and shore activities, go to visitmonmouth.com. Six Flags Great Adventure or Hurricane Harbor: Save up to $51 by purchasing round-trip bus transportation and park admission together. NJ TRANSIT provides express bus service to Six Flags from the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York, Newark Penn Station, Philadelphia Greyhound Terminal and the Walter Rand Transportation Center in Camden. Monmouth Park: Board a train anywhere on NJ TRANSIT's rail system and save up to $6.00 when you travel to Monmouth Park Racetrack. Simply purchase a round-trip package to Monmouth Park from NJ TRANSIT ticket vending machines (choose "Special Promotions" and select "Monmouth Park") or at ticket windows, and receive Grandstand Admission and an official track program for $1 plus round-trip train fare.

For details on NJ TRANSIT's Summer Services and customer discounts, visit njtransit.com/summer.

On weekends, kids ride free on NJT

Every weekend, families riding NJ TRANSIT can save with the Family Super Saver Fare, which allows two children 11 and younger to travel free with each fare-paying adult. For the Memorial Day holiday weekend, the program will be extended and in effect from 7 p.m. Friday, May 25 until 6 a.m. Tuesday, May 29.

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Grenade-shaped screwdriver found in Newark luggage

  Eyewitness NewsNEWARK (WABC) -- There was a brief scare at Newark Liberty International Airport Thursday after a grenade-shaped object set off security alarms.

A piece of checked baggage passing through the TSA screening process appeared to contain a hand grenade, and TSA explosives experts were called to take a closer look.

Upon closer inspection, it was determined that the item was actually a replica hand grenade screwdriver set that a passenger had packed in his bag.

TSA officials say while it was an interesting novelty item, it was also something that understandably would catch the attention of officers who are constantly on the lookout for explosive devices.

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