Saturday, October 6, 2012

Dispute over naming Clifton Park park over deceased publisher

  Eyewitness NewsCLIFTON PARK, New Jersey (WABC) -- A battle over a name as a renowned Harvard professor and attorney is threatening to organize a loud and determined crusade if a New Jersey city approves renaming a park after a beloved local publisher.

"Chester Grabowski is an anti-semitic racist bigot," said Alan Dershowitz.

The Harvard law professor doesn't hold back when it comes to Chester Grabowski.

Grabowski was the publisher of the Post Eagle in Clifton.

He died 6 months ago, and some have suggested a park or a street should be named after him.

Because, his son says he did a lot of good for a lot of people.

"People stop us every day and say if it wasn't for your dad and thanks for your father," said Mathew Grambowski.

Mathew is a councilman in Clifton and says his father knew presidents, kings and even the pope.

0He doesn't defend some of what his father said, but doesn't believe he was a bigot either, and is horrified by what Dershowitz has been saying.

"And if you're saying that's why he shouldn't be honored, what about the people who do have reason to honor him?" He asks.

But Deshowitz says nothing but his family should ever bare Grambowski's name.

"He told the Polish people to be mad at the Jews for killing Christ... He was a horrible man," he said.

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Passengers injured when bus overturns in Wayne

  Eyewitness NewsWAYNE (WABC) -- A bus carrying about 60 people overturned Saturday morning on an Interstate 80 exit ramp in Wayne, New Jersey.

The accident happened at about 7:45 a.m. when the bus overturned on a highway exit ramp and slid down an embankment.

Police believe the driver was travelling at a high rate of speed, and was unable to negotiate the curve coming off the exit ramp.

Some windows burst during the collision and the frames pinned three people, but they were quickly freed and taken to hospitals with the other victims.

The bus was chartered by Cynthia Tours based in Toronto. The passengers were a mix - some were part of a church group, others were coming down to visit family. There were also drop off locations in both Manhattan and Flatbush. The bus was attempting to come over through that overpass when it skidded into a muddy ditch.

"I just felt a big boom, people started flying," said passenger John Anthony.

Anthony was the first to climb out of the broken front windshield of the Canadian Tour Bus and call for help. He took pictures of the frantic rescue.

All 56 people on board left Toronto at 6 p.m. on Friday evening. They passengers had plans to spend their three-day Canadian Thanksgiving holiday weekend in New York. The bus then lost control and flipped over near Exit 53 on I-80 East in Wayne around 7:40 Saturday morning.

That is when passengers sprang into action. Warren Lawrence helped 15 people out of a rooftop hatch.

"The bus was lying on its side - people want to get out," Lawrence said.

The cause of the crash is still under investigation. The 51-year-old driver is Neville Larmond, who is in the hospital suffrering from a gashed arm. As a matter of routine, investigators will look into whether drugs and alcohol were involved.

The accident backed up traffic in the area for hours while law enforcement officials and emergency services vehicles attended to the scene.

Several highways connect there, and the area is known locally as the "spaghetti bowl".

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOS FROM THE SCENE

CLICK HERE TO SEE RAW AERIAL VIDEO FROM THE SCENE

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Steroid-related meningitis outbreak grows

AP  By MIKE STOBBENEW YORK -- A deadly meningitis outbreak rose to 47 cases in seven states Friday, as clinics scrambled to notify patients across the country that the shots they got for back pain may have been contaminated with a fungus.

The tally of deaths from the rare fungal meningitis remained at five. But a seventh state, Michigan, was added to the list with four cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

Tennessee's cases now total 29; Virginia, six; Indiana, 3; two each in Maryland and Florida and one in North Carolina.

Looking for a source of the outbreak, investigators have focused on a steroid custom-made by a specialty pharmacy, New England Compounding Center in Framingham, Mass. Health inspectors found fungus in at least one sealed vial of the steroid at the company's facility this week.

The pharmacy recalled 17,676 single-dose vials of the steroid, methylprednisolone acetate. Shipments went to clinics in 23 states.

As a precaution, the Food and Drug Administration urged physicians not to use any of the company's products, and on Friday released a list of them.

The first known case in the meningitis outbreak was diagnosed about two weeks ago in Tennessee. Three of the five deaths are in Tennessee; the others in Virginia and Maryland.

Meningitis is an inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord. Symptoms include severe headache, nausea, dizziness and fever.

The type of fungal meningitis involved is not contagious like the more common forms. It is caused by a fungus that's widespread but very rarely causes illness. It is treated with high-dose antifungal medications, usually given intravenously in a hospital.

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Online:

CDC:

http://www.cdc.gov/hai/outbreaks/meningitis.html
More from the CDC

Recalled list:

http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/ucm322752.htm

--

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Teachers, bosses charged in school sex scandal

AP  GEOFF MULVIHILLCAMDEN -- Six months ago, a student came to Triton High School Principal Catherine DePaul with a disturbing story: She believed another student was involved in a sexual relationship with a teacher at the school, and she'd seen explicit text messages the two had exchanged.

At that moment, prosecutors say, a cover-up was put in motion that ultimately unraveled Thursday when DePaul, an assistant principal and three teachers were charged with offenses ranging from child endangerment to sexual assault and official misconduct.

Each of the five adults has been suspended from the school in the Philadelphia suburb of Runnemede, and each could face at least five years in prison if convicted.

The teachers - all men in their late 20s or early 30s - are accused of striking up relationships with female students during the 2011-2012 school year.

Sexual relationships between teachers and students are not unheard of. Camden County prosecutor Warren Faulk noted that the media seems particularly fixated on the female teacher-male student cases that are reported around the country each year. But what distinguished the allegations at Triton High was the inaction by administrators who ignored policies and safeguards that were in place and instead allowed a culture "where teachers thought they could get away with improper relationships with their students," according to Faulk.

"These charges constitute individual personal, moral, legal and ethical failure," Faulk said at a news conference Thursday.

Faulk said rape charges could not be filed because the sex acts were consensual and the girls were 17 or 18 at the time - old enough to consent under state law.

According to court documents, math teacher Dan Michielli, 27, of Blackwood, had intercourse with a student multiple times during the school year. He is charged with official misconduct, sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a child and criminal sexual conduct.

Gym teacher and boys' soccer coach Nick Martinelli, 28, of Cherry Hill, is charged with official misconduct involving an 18-year-old. Prosecutors say he touched and kissed the girl when she was a student and had intercourse with her after she graduated in June.

Math teacher and girls' track coach Jeff Logandro, 32, of Blackwood, is charged with official misconduct, criminal sexual contact and endangering the welfare of a child. A court filing says he inappropriately touched a female student.

Authorities say a student, not one of the alleged victims, told a substitute teacher in April that teachers were "hooking up" with students. Authorities say the substitute teacher then told DePaul.

Prosecutors say the principal met with the student, who told her she'd been to one of the teacher's homes with a girl who was involved with him and had seen the explicit text messages. Authorities say DePaul asked her to write an account of what she had heard and that Assistant Principal Jernee Kollock stayed with the student to help her write the statement, even helping her with her grammar - but also making it seem less serious.

Around the same time, Faulk said, DePaul learned one of the teachers had driven an alleged victim and another student to Ocean City in violation of district policy. But, he said, the teacher was merely reprimanded.

Faulk said neither administrator contacted authorities. Both were charged with official misconduct.

Faulk said DePaul later said she wished she had been more concerned for the students than the teachers.

The defendants either could not be reached or did not return messages left Thursday by The Associated Press. All five are due in court Oct. 11.

The teachers were suspended by the Black Horse Regional School District last month; the administrators were suspended Thursday. Superintendent John Golden said in a statement that the district was cooperating with authorities, notifying families of students of the allegations and offering counseling.

"In addition, we have initiated a comprehensive review of our existing policies, protocols and training and education materials to prevent this from happening again at this or any district school," the statement said.

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Friday, October 5, 2012

Funeral service Friday for teen killed in Bloomfield crash

  Web produced by Bill King, Eyewitness NewsBLOOMFIELD (WABC) -- Funeral services will be held in New Jersey Friday for a teenager killed in a car crash last weekend.

Hundreds of mourners turned out at a wake in Bloomfield Thursday night to pay their respects to 16-year-old Christina Lembo.

Friends remember Lembo, a junior at Bloomfield High School, as a sweet, smart athlete. Four other people were hurt in the crash, none of them seriously. The driver, Omar Baldeon, was consumed with thoughts of what, if anything, he could have done differently.

Baldeon was driving with two classmates in the car just after 11 p.m. when a black Camaro that eyewitnesses believe was drag racing with another car blind-sided him, slamming into his Honda Civic.

No charges have yet been filed. The case is expected to go to a grand jury.

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOS FROM THE SCENE

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Fire tears through florist in New Brunswick

  Eyewitness NewsNEW BRUNSWICK (WABC) -- A third-alarm fire burned down a New Brunswick warehouse used to manufacture artificial flowers late Wednesday.

The blaze tore through Reyes Florists on Somerset Street just after 10:30 p.m.

One home sustained minor damage from the spreading flames, which shot out of the roof of the warehouse. One firefighter was treated for a leg injury and another for heat exhaustion. They were both treated and released from the hospital.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

CLICK HERE for images of the scene.

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New Jersey - A Garden of Delights For Genealogy and History

2 seriously hurt in 5-car crash in East Brunswick

  Eyewitness NewsEAST BRUNSWICK (WABC) -- Police continue to investigate a five-car accident that left two people seriously hurt in New Jersey Monday.

The drivers collided at the intersection of Ryders Land and Winton Road in East Brunswick.

Two of the victims were rushed to the hospital.

It is still not clear what caused the crash to happen, but traffic was backed up for hours.

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5 kids, mom forced to jump from New Jersey fire

  Eyewitness NewsNEWARK (WABC) -- Five children and their mother were forced to jump to escape a fire racing through their building in New Jersey overnight Wednesday.

Luckily, some Good Samaritans were there to help.

LINK: RAW VIDEO OF RESCUES The fire broke out at the building on South Orange Avenue in Newark around 12:30 a.m. The six people who were injured were members of a family that had just moved in to the third-floor apartment where the fire started one day prior and were waiting for the utility to turn on their power.

Until then, the family was using candles for light, and it is believed the fire was started by a candle left burning in the bathroom.

Authorities say an off-duty EMT passing by saw smoke billowing from the building. He rushed inside and began banging on doors.

Luckily, the hospital is directly across the street, and all the victims were rushed there after escaping the flames. They are all listed in stable condition.

Eyewitness News reproter Matt Kozar got an exclusive look inside the apartment. He reports that much of the damage was in the bathroom, where the walls were charred and the insulation and framing were exposed. Even the electrical sockets were fried.

CLICK HERE to see exclusive images from inside the apartment.

The building is located next to gas station, so firefighters had to work fast to get it under control. Luckily, they were able to contain it.

The building does not have any fire escapes. Investigators say it's not clear whether the owner was at fault because some buildings have different regulations. But many residents were upset the kids had to jump out of the window and didn't have another way to get out.

CLICK HERE to see other images from the scene. To make a donation to the family, please send it to:
House of Bishops
264 Glenwood Avenue
Bloomfield, NJ 07003

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Court: New Jersey beach club must open entire beach

AP  Eyewitness NewsTRENTON, N.J. -- A state appellate panel has ruled that a central New Jersey beach club must open its entire beach to nonmembers.

In their 23-page ruling issued Friday, the judges said the public cannot be shut out because the beach in front of the Sea Bright Beach Club was created through beach replenishment funded by taxpayers.

The Star-Ledger of Newark (http://bit.ly/Qx2l1Q) reports the ruling invalidates a 1993 agreement between the state Department of Environmental Protection and the beach club, which allowed the club to prevent nonmembers from sitting on the sand there.

The state had reached that agreement with the nine beach clubs in Sea Bright in exchange for easements along their oceanfront properties for a beach replenishment project that transformed Sea Bright beaches from a narrow strip to a wide sandy field. The general public was allowed to walk through only a 15-foot-wide path just above the water line, but couldn't set down beach chairs or towels and couldn't stop to fish, swim or surf.

The state sued the beach clubs in 2006 seeking to revise the 1993 agreement to allow the public full use of the beach, and eight of the clubs eventually settled. However, the Sea Bright Beach Club held out, contending the wide beaches wouldn't have been possible if the beach club hadn't granted the easements.

A state judge voided the 1993 agreement in 2010. But while this appeal was pending, the state and the beach club reached an interim pact giving the general public access to an 80-foot stretch on the club's northernmost border.

"We are pleased that the court vindicated the public's right to access these beaches, particularly since public funds were utilized to re-build them," state Division of Law Director Christopher Porrino told the newspaper.

David Apy, the beach club's attorney, said a decision on whether to appeal the appellate court decision to the state Supreme Court will be made after he reviews the ruling and discuss it with beach club officials.

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Inspections continue at NJ Turnpike overpass

AP  Eyewitness NewsWASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -- Southbound lanes on the New Jersey Turnpike in Mercer County have been reopened.

Two southbound lanes were closed Thursday morning so engineers could conduct a more detailed inspection of the Interstate 195 overpass that was damaged in an accident Wednesday. They're scheduled to conduct another inspection Friday.

Authorities say a dump truck overturned and burst into flames, killing the driver. The accident caused shutdowns and major traffic delays on the toll road and 195.

Westbound traffic continues to be restricted to one lane at the I-195 overpass in Robbinsville.

I-195 traffic will eventually use a new overpass that's under construction. A Department of Transportation spokesman says the overpass was originally scheduled to be completed in December but that officials will try to speed up that timetable.

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Middle class the focus of New Jersey Senate debate

AP  Eyewitness NewsMONTCLAIR -- The state's two major-party candidates for the U.S. Senate tussled Thursday over whose policies would be better for the middle class in the first of three scheduled debates before their Nov. 6 election.

The incumbent, Democrat Robert Menendez, told of his rise from tenements to the U.S. Senate and said he's spent his political career fighting for the middle class. His Republican challenger, state Sen. Joe Kyrillos, said it's not working.

"I'm waiting to see some really good evidence of the middle class doing well under your watch, Bob," Kyrillos said, citing higher unemployment and a larger national deficit than when Menendez joined the Senate six years ago, before the start of the Great Recession.

Menendez argued that taxes for high-wage earners should be allowed to rise to help balance the budget and fund important government programs. Kyrillos said that any tax increases will lead to job cuts. Echoing Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, he said tax rates should be reduced and deductions and credits eliminated and that will improve the economy.

Menendez was animated and Kyrillos was more deliberate in his first statewide debate as the two try to get traction in a race that's not getting a lot of attention.

As with all politics in New Jersey these days, the subtext surrounds Republican Gov. Chris Christie. He's done six fundraising events for Kyrillos, whom he's called perhaps his best friend in Trenton, and said this week that he'll appear at four campaign events with him between now and the election.

Despite the help from a popular if divisive governor, Kyrillos lags in polls. And New Jersey hasn't elected a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 40 years.

Menendez, meanwhile, has a chilly relationship with Christie. He was asked during the debate at Montclair State University if that's a problem.

Menendez, who joined the Senate in 2006 to fill an unexpired term and was elected to a full term later that year, said he's worked with Christie on some important issues.

"I have a professional, cordial relationship with the governor," he said, and he pointed to federal funding he's helped bring to New Jersey partly at Christie's behest.

Kyrillos retorted, "Those aren't special."

"That's part of the in-basket," he said. "What we're talking about here is the ability to communicate with the governor, whoever he is."

In the rapid-fire debate, the candidates were held, with rare and brief exceptions, to two-minute answers.

Candidates covered abortion: Both say they support abortion rights, though Menendez charged that Kyrillos has changed his stance over the years.

They addressed Iran policy, with Menendez saying the economic sanctions he sponsored are working and Kyrillos saying it doesn't look as though the sanctions are working and President Barack Obama is not showing enough leadership in the Middle East.

And they tackled Amtrak. Menendez said it must be preserved but didn't go into detail about in what form. Kyrillos said he's open to privatization if it means good service and reasonable rates.

The only laugh lines of the debate came on the national rail system.

"I love taking the Amtrak down to Washington, D.C.," Kyrillos said. "I hope to do it a lot more starting in January."

Menendez responded that he supports that.

"I hope you're going to come visit me a lot on Amtrak," he said. "You can visit our office. We'll give you a Capitol tour."

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Suspect arrested in Paterson sex assaults

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsPATERSON, N.J. (WABC) -- Police have arrested Rafael Velez, who was wanted for at least two sexual assaults in Paterson, New Jersey.

Velez, 42, was arrested just after 3:30 on Thursday in Newark on two counts each of aggravated sexual assault, kidnapping, possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose and robbery for two separate incidents in Paterson.

In the past three weeks, Velez has allegedly assaulted two teenagers at knifepoint on the top floor of an office building while doctors and lawyers were working on the floors below. Officials say Velez served 16 years in prison for sex assault and kidnapping, and was only recently released.

Paterson police say the incidents happened on Monday and on September 14, on the sixth floor of 129 Market Street, an historic office building in downtown Paterson less than half a block from City Hall.

Velez allegedly threatened the 18- and 19-year-old girls with a knife and told them he would kill their families if they reported the sexual assaults.

"He has targeted young, attractive women and then asked them to come walk with him," Paterson police Lieutenant Richard Reyes said.

On Wednesday afternoon, Paterson police surrounded 18 Market Street after receiving a tip that Velez worked at a textile factory there. Police evacuated the building and searched for three hours, but Velez apparently escaped.

"We searched the entire location and we brought in the K9 unit and we were unable to locate him," Reyes said.

Police are also investigating whether Velez is also responsible for the sexual assault of a 19-year-old woman on McBride Avenue near the Great Falls on Monday.

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Caught on tape: Hockey player jumps through glass

  Eyewitness NewsNEW JERSEY (WABC) -- A New Jersey hockey player celebrated a goal and ended up showered with broken glass.

Junior hockey player Taylor Cox scored his second goal of the game for the New Jersey Junior Titans and skated towards the wall of the rink, where he was in for quite a surprise.

As he jumped up against the boards, the glass shattered, sending him careening into the bleachers though the shards.

Cox was not injured.

After a quick replacement, the Titans went on to win their game against the New Jersey Rockets, 4-1.

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Residents warned about terrifying phone scam

JERSEY CITY (WABC) -- There's a warning about a phone scam targeting people in the tri-state area.

People are receiving calls saying a relative has been kidnapped and they need ransom money, but it's all fake and the calls aren't even from this country.

"I want you to be afraid, and test me. You're going to see my face. Alright. Don't call the police everything will be just fine. What happened they got nervous alright," the phone call said.

That is audio of a new scam with a new horrifying twist.

Jersey City Police say men call saying their holding people's family member hostage and they demand money and threaten to kill their loved one.

"You're brother has already seen my face. I don't want anybody else to see my face alright. My cousin took out a gun and broke his head you see, I told him to calm down, he wanted to act stupid. That's what happens to him," the caller said.

Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah T. Healy and Deputy Police Chief Peter Nalbach say the calls come from Puerto Rico and Florida.

This has been going on in the tri-state area for several months and in Jersey City for several weeks.

"They're just fishing getting somebody who's gullible and they don't ask enough questions. Fortunately, this woman's brother called because she would have been scammed out of the money," Jersey City Deputy Police Chief Peter Nalbach said.

Investigators say one woman fell for the scam and believed her brother would be murdered, fortunately that sibling called just before she made the transfer.

"We want all of our citizens to know that there are a lot of scammers out there. This is the latest scheme scam or flip flam that some of these have come up with. We want you to be alert, aware, and vigilant," Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah T. Healy said.

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Clementi family won't sue in Rutgers webcam case

AP  Eyewitness NewsNEW JERSEY -- The parents of a Rutgers University student who killed himself after his roommate used a webcam to see him kissing another man have decided not to sue anyone involved in the case.

Family attorney Paul Mainardi tells The Star-Ledger of Newark that Joseph and Jane Clementi are devoting their energies to the foundation that they established in their son's name.

The parents filed court papers preserving their right to sue Rutgers soon after Tyler Clementi's death in 2010. They accused New Jersey's largest university of failing to prevent his death.

His roommate, Dharun Ravi, last year spent 20 days in jail after being convicted of bias intimidation, invasion of privacy and witness tampering. He's appealing.

Tyler Clementi leaped to his death from the George Washington Bridge.

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Dog with bruises and missing dog, same groomer

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsUNION CITY, N.J. (WABC) -- After Eyewitness News' story aired Friday about Tania Parker and little Pearly, her 4 pound Maltese that went missing an hour and a half after being dropped off at Bow Wow Care in Union City; we got a call from Marla Cooley.

"I said oh my goodness it's the same place!" Bykes-Cooley said.

Immediately she saw Bow Wow's owner Adrian Gonzalez and made the connection.

That's where she took her Maltese Winnie back in July.

When they picked Winnie up there was a big problem.

"I said, 'Oh my God' what happened to her belly? Why didn't you call me?' He said, 'I thought I'd take care of it,'" Bykes-Cooley said.

Winnie's belly is nice and pink now, but the day Marla picked her up it was red and bruised and she had scratches on her legs as well.

After hearing that story Eyewitness News had to come back and talk to Bow Wow's owner, but when we got there it was closed with only a number to call.

So Eyewitness News called it.

Gonzalez answered.

He said the shop is closed because he is taking care of his mother who is ill.

He says Pearly still hasn't been found and Marla's story is nonsense.

He says Winnie just got a rash.

But Bykes-Cooley had a vet bill for $500.

"The vet was outraged said absolutely not this was not a rash. Something happened with this dog, this dog has been bruised," Bykes-Cooley said.

Gonzalez says he runs a good, fair business and he denies the claim.

Now remember, Tania is still waiting to find out what happened to her dog.

Friday she was devastated.

"She could get hit by a car, she don't know how to like eat in the streets, she's never been out there," Parker said.

Marla says she just doesn't want any other dogs to get hurt or go missing.

"He took no ownership and if you can't do that when you are taking care of dogs, then you don't need to be in business," Bykes-Cooley said.

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Amtrak problems resolved; normal commute expected

AP  NEWARK -- Amtrak has resolved signal problems that caused delays for evening commuters on NJ Transit's rail lines into and out of New York City.

An Amtrak spokesman says the signal problems are centered near Rahway. Spokesman Clifford Cole says work crews are on the scene.

Some minor delays continue, but the morning rush hour is expected to be normal.

NJ Transit had cancelled several departures from New York City on the Northeast Corridor and North Jersey Coast lines between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. and was cross-honoring bus and train tickets on PATH trains between New York and New Jersey.

Raritan Valley Line trains were delayed up to 30 minutes.

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ONLINE: njtransit.com

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Gas prices jump 6 cents on New Jersey toll roads

  Eyewitness NewsTRENTON, N.J. (WABC) -- After several months of gas prices going up, we're seeing an unsettled trend in New Jersey.

One week after gas prices dropped six cents from $3.82 to $3.76 along the New Tersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway, they jumped back up six cents Friday morning.

Analysts expected lower prices at the pump, mostly due to falling crude oil prices and stations switching over to less expensive winter blends.

The price of regular unleaded gasoline went up after two week of decline. That followed 10 straight week of price hikes after10 weeks of decline leading up to summer.

The highways offer some of the cheaper gas in the area, and motorists are taking note.

"I live on Staten Island, but I try to fill up in Jersey every chance I get," driver Tony Ablavskiy said.

Gas prices only increase once a week on the two highways, maintained by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority. The Authority surveys 100 gas stations, located off the highway, every Wednesday and Thursday to determine an average statewide price, and implements the increases Friday morning. The service area per-gallon cost cannot be more than 3 cents above that average price.

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Missing New Jersey girl, 10, found at friend's house

  Eyewitness NewsLONG BRANCH (WABC) -- Police looking for a girl who disappeared after leaving school near the New Jersey shore found her at a friend's house Thursday morning.

State Police say 10-year-old Lizbeth Vasquez was last seen leaving the Anastasia School in Long Branch on Wednesday afternoon.

She reportedly spent the night at the friend's house.

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new jersey, long branch, missing children, new jersey news

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Christie admits he was wrong about 'HomeKeeper'

NEW JERSEY (WABC) -- It's not often the governor of New Jersey admits he made a mistake, but that's exactly what Gov. Chris Christie is now doing after an Eyewitness News investigation into how the state mishandled a federal program with hundreds of millions of dollars to prevent foreclosures. Now, the program will get kick-started to help save homes.

"Don't show up once in a blue moon and think you're going to dominate my press conference," Christie said last week, when Eyewitness News reporter Jim Hoffer asked about the program.

"I'm not, I'm just trying to get an answer," Hoffer replied.

Eyewitness News was trying to get a straight answer from him as to why the state still had left unspent most of the $300 million the federal government gave New Jersey two years ago to help families facing foreclosure.

This week, Christie changed his tune.

"Sometimes, I know it's going to be shocking for everyone to hear, government doesn't always work the way it's supposed to," he said.

A much less combative and calmer Christie says after the report aired, he spoke to the commissioner in charge of overseeing the loan foreclosure program.

"I said to Rich, 'What other factors other than the moratorium has contributed to us only giving out $41 million of the $300 million?'" Christie said. "He said our criteria were too stringent under the last Commissioner, which caused more people to be rejected that should have been accepted."

People like Brenda Klein, single mother Celeste Wright and 83-year-old Odessa Jenkins. All were denied help to stave off foreclosure, along with 2,600 other families who applied to the HomeKeeper program.

Now, the agency says it's making changes to speed up the distribution of the remaining $253 million dollars, including opening up eligibility requirements, increasing staff from 6 to 50 full-time workers and raising awareness through public service announcements. Christie says it's already working.

"We are obviously doing better than we were before, and more people are being helped," he said.

Christie still insists that a national moratorium on foreclosures is one reason his state was slow in approving loans. He says there was no urgency, but other states such as Oregon and North Carolina used that time to get the money to families before the moratorium was lifted.

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If you have a tip about this or any other issue you'd like investigated, please give our tipline a call at 877-TIP-NEWS. You may also e-mail us at the.investigators@abc.com.

Follow Jim Hoffer on Twitter at twitter.com/nycinvestigates and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/jimhoffer.wabc

Follow Sarah Wallace on Twitter at twitter.com/swinvestigates and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/sarahwallace.wabc

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new jersey, foreclosure, foreclosed homes, chris christie, investigations, jim hoffer

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Fire spurs evacuation of nursing home

AP  Eyewitness NewsEMERSON, N.J. -- Dozens of residents and staffers had to evacuate a northern New Jersey nursing home when a small fire broke out in the boiler room and sent smoke throughout the building.

The fire at the Emerson Health and Rehabilitation Center was reported around 10 a.m. Sunday and was quickly doused.

But the smoky conditions forced about 135 people to flee the building, and they had not been allowed to re-enter as of early Sunday afternoon.

Emerson Borough Fire Chief Joseph Castrovillari tells The Record (http://bit.ly/SqzZ5Y) that two minor injuries were reported, but he did not know who was injured or what types of injuries they suffered.

It's not yet known what sparked the fire.

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new jersey, bergen county, fire, new jersey news

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NJ teen who set off Twitter fire storm found safe

  Eyewitness NewsCLARK (WABC) -- The New Jersey girl who sparked a flurry on Twitter this weekend by posting that someone was in her house shortly before she went missing has been found.

The girl, Kara Alongi set off the firestorm after the following tweet sent around 6:00 p.m. on Sunday night: "There is someone in my hour ecall 911." Police believe that is supposed to read "There is someone in my house. Call 911."

"The Clark Police Department is pleased to announce that at approximately 4:30 p.m. on October 2, 2012 Kara Alongi was found safe and unharmed. She was discovered by troopers with the New Jersey State Police walking along the side of the Turnpike near Exit 1. As dictated by protocol she was taken to a local hospital in South Jersey for an evaluation. Her family was notified shortly after she was found and they were reunited at the hospital yesterday evening. A detective from the Clark Police Department also responded to the hospital as a standard part of a missing juvenile investigation.

Kara was transferred to a north Jersey hospital overnight for additional evaluations and was released a short time later and returned home early this morning. The investigation by the Clark Police Department remains active and detectives will seek to determine the teen's whereabouts and methods of transportation over the last 48 hours. Additional information will be released as it becomes available."

Police said earlier this week that they believed the tweet was a hoax.

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new jersey, clark, missing person, new jersey news

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Final trial begins in Newark schoolyard killings

AP  Eyewitness NewsNEWARK -- The attorney for the sixth and final defendant charged in the 2007 killings of three friends at a Newark playground says his client was a bystander at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Gerardo Gomez, who was 15 at the time of the slayings, is the youngest of six men and boys charged in the case.

Opening statements are under way in his trial in Superior Court in Newark.

The prosecution told jurors Thursday that they would hear a case of "children killing children, and killing them with shocking violence."

Gomez was waived to adult court and faces life in prison if convicted of murder and felony murder.

Three of the defendants were convicted and two have pleaded guilty. Most were admitted members of the MS-13 street gang.

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new jersey, newark, new jersey news

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Thief hits Jersey City firehouse during gas leak call

  By Bill King, Eyewitness NewsJERSEY CITY (WABC) -- Police in New Jersey are searching for a brazen thief who targeted a firehouse while firefighters were out on a call.

The suspect, who allegedly swiped an iPod and car keys last week from Engine 22/Ladder 4 in Jersey City, apparently got away on a bicycle.

Firefighters, who were responding to a gas leak, say this isn't the first time their house has been burglarized.

"It's definitely not the best feeling in the world," Battalion Chief Steven McGill said. "You're at work, you think everything is going to be safe there."

In this case, they told police they were returning from the call when they saw a man on a bike pedal out of the firehouse and head north on Ocean Avenue. They then found the rear door of the firehouse unlocked, and one firefighter discovered his $300 iPod was gone. A second had his car keys removed.

"In very urban areas, houses get robbed," he said. "On occasion, unfortunately, firehouses also do get broken into."

McGill believes the thief was targeting tools, after firefighters found several saws placed near the back door. He believes the robbery would've been much worse had the trucks not returned when they did.

"As you're protecting the community, usually the community takes the initiative to help protect you, also," he said> "And when this happens, it's upsetting."

The suspect was reportedly wearing a red hooded sweatshirt. The city is planning to install deadbolts to help prevent future incidents.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Jersey City police tip line at (201) 547-JAIL.

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new jersey, jersey city, robbery, new jersey news

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PATH fare hikes take effect Monday

AP  Eyewitness NewsJERSEY CITY -- PATH train riders are now shelling out more for their trips.

Starting at 3 a.m. Monday, the price of a one-way ride on the interstate transit line operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey went up a quarter to $2.25 per trip. It marks the second phase of a toll and fare increase package approved by the authority in August 2011.

PATH riders who use the PATH Smart Card can get a discount to a one-way fare of $1.70, off the $2.25 fare. But cash customers and those using Metrocards will pay full fare.

PATH riders are also paying more for multi-day passes. The seven-day Smart Link pass now costs $3 more, or $24, while the 30-day Smart Link pass is $73, up $8.

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mass transit, path train, abc7 traffic center

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New Providence HS named best school in NJ

Web produced by Jennifer Matarese, Eyewitness NewsNEW PROVIDENCE, N.J. (WABC) -- A recent survey ranked New Providence High School the number one school in New Jersey.

"We work so hard here and the teachers work so hard that it's really great that it's paid off," said Kathryn Meyers, a student.

In a survey, done every other year by New Jersey Monthly Magazine, New Providence was rated tops in the state.

New Jersey has a long-standing reputation for having a number of really good high schools, so to be rated number one is quite an achievement, and the New Jersey Monthly rankings are based on a lot of information.

"All the data comes from the state, from the Department of Education, and the Department of Education gets the data from the schools and from the testing services," said Ken Schlager, of New Jersey Monthly Magazine.

The rankings for the more than 300 state high schools are determined by graduation rates, school environment, and standardized test scores.

"We teach skills and we want kids to be critical thinkers. If you have that skill, you will do well on any test," said Paul Casarico, Principal of New Providence High School.

Students in advanced placement American History are expected to discuss topics.

"It's not so much about memorizing the people and the places and the dates, but learning how to think like a historian and analyze some really complicated issues in the past," said Stephanie Hornstein, a teacher.

The students also get to be well rounded.

"We are able to participate in sports, in musical activities, in the fine arts and different clubs," said Catherine Canete, a student.

"So I think once you build that culture where students want to be here, then it permeates itself into the classroom," Casarico said.

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new jersey, education news, art mcfarland

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