Re: Downtown Jersey City Watch-Updates Thread
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Home away from home
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Downtown Jersey City Watch Dec 10th @ 7PM Grace Church enter through red doors on 2nd St, east of 39 Erie St
Agenda 7pm ? Members enter through red doors on 2nd Street Introductions and Brief Orientation *Regular dialogue between the Police and the Community *Proper terminology ? Auto Theft ? stolen vehicle Burglary to Auto ? items stolen from a vehicle Robbery ? robbery to person by threat of force Burglary (robbery of residence/business) *Updates from DJCW Toy Donations Drive (collect unwrapped toys and checks for JCPD) Deadline is Dec 14 Donate toys! You can bring them to our meeting or bring them to Grove Street Plaza on Sunday, 12 to 2PM. *7:30 ? 8 Police Updates ?Current Crime trends in Jersey City ?Reports on Harsimus Cove Area and Van Vorst Park Area ?Prevention ?Questions from members Incidents (pls. note ? incidents are also communicated to police on a weekly basis. Do not wait for our meetings to follow up on a crime.) *Captain's Compstat Monthly Mtg. *Community Engagement Consortium is a group of Community leaders and Jersey City Community Officers organized by the JCPD, Chief Comey, Juan Perez, Robert Kilduff, and Dan Wiley. Community Policing Consortium *Chief Comey?s call for Support for Rep. Holt?s proposed legislation for Commonsense Gun Control which would allow Federal Agents to share information on arrests w/gun possession and gun purchase with local police. Please email your Congressman or Senator (www.house.gov or www.senate.gov ). *January Mtg Cancelled-Holidays break, return in February 8:00-8:30 Cookies! Mulled Wassail Cider I hope we can have continued support from our current members as wells as new support from our new members. Thanks! Dale, Pam & Jim downtownjcwatch@gmail.com
Posted on: 2007/12/7 20:03
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Re: Stolen Trashcans/ Hamilton Park/ Thurs, 12.06.07
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We don't put trash cans out on the street, but instead, put out just garbage bags for collection. Between collections, the garbage bags go in the basement. I assume there's a reason you can't do the same thing. $84 is a lot to lose.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 19:34
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Re: Stolen Trashcans/ Hamilton Park/ Thurs, 12.06.07
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Just can't stay away
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span-
sorry about your cans. if you can get to national wholesale liquidators they have the 45 gallon cans with wheels for about half the price of lowes or home depot.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 19:10
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Re: ox restaurant
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Quote:
Yet still- here you are, posting away instead of packing up to move to Williamsburg.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 18:32
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Stolen Trashcans/ Hamilton Park/ Thurs, 12.06.07
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Newbie
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We're out $84. We had 2 of these.
Ridiculous. http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?action ... 097-8643-92/20&lpage=none
Posted on: 2007/12/7 18:27
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Re: Stolen Trashcans
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cut down, they are a great size to grow indoor dope in or used for artist's / sculptor needs
Posted on: 2007/12/7 18:21
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My humor is for the silent blue collar majority - If my posts offend, slander or you deem inappropriate and seek deletion, contact the webmaster for jurisdiction.
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Re: Stolen Trashcans
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Home away from home
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GPS.
Seriously. If the cops were smart they'd put gps in them and find out where they're dissapearing to. Why would people need a container that holds 50 gallons? They're obviously not going to be used to hold trash, when your name's on there.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 18:12
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Re: Lincoln Park Area: large group attack two outside Al's Diner, one in critical condition
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Not too shy to talk
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I'm so sorry to hear this.
RIP
Posted on: 2007/12/7 17:40
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Re: Jersey City man charged with smuggling fake Nikes from China
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Anyone that takes the Manhattan Ave exit off 1/9 will see these nikes for sale by that bar.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 17:16
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Re: Lincoln Park Area: large group attack two outside Al's Diner, one in critical condition
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Just can't stay away
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RIP
This is a sad sad thing.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 16:36
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Re: Man beaten outside Al's diner Sunday dies
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Quite a regular
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It's a shame, when I first read it in the paper...I brushed it off as gang violence or drug related. Then I got the phone call the next day & found out it was an old friend of mine.
I went to school with the kid. He was never in trouble a day in his life, always hard working and fun-loving. Eating breakfast at a diner and then killed, just because somebody thought he was someone else. Life is too short...live everyday to it's fullest.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 16:33
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Stolen Trashcans/ Hamilton Park/ Thurs, 12.06.07
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Newbie
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Hello,
As we went to place our two large trash cans out on the curb last night, Thursday, 12/06/07....our trash cans were no where to be found. Stolen...with trash in them! We have an iron gate around our property line. To take them took serious effort. What is wrong with people? Now we have to chain our trash cans to the gate...how pathetic! We called the police to file a report. The operator thought we were joking. Very, very, frustrating...
Posted on: 2007/12/7 16:14
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Re: A lot of Park Slopers are moving to the other side of Newark: Maplewood NJ.
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Quote:
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:48
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Re: A lot of Park Slopers are moving to the other side of Newark: Maplewood NJ.
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GP, you know I love ya but pleeeeeeeeze no more Maplewood stories!
TIA.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:42
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Man beaten outside Al's diner Sunday dies
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Man beaten outside diner Sunday dies
by Michaelangelo Conte Thursday December 06, 2007, 7:48 PM A 22-year-old Jersey City man who was beaten up by a group outside a diner early Sunday morning died Tuesday when he was taken off life support at University Hospital in Newark, officials said yesterday. Hudson County Prosecutor Edward DeFazio said his office was notified of the death yesterday and an autopsy performed today determined that Marcus Richey died as a result of blunt force trauma to the head and neck. The fatal injuries were caused by punches and kicks, DeFazio said. "His eyes were open but he never responded," his mother, Aurella Richey, said tonight. While speaking of that night, Aurella Richey fought back tears for more than a minute before saying, "I can't describe what it was like when they turned off the machine." The beating occurred at 3:15 a.m. Sunday outside Al's Diner on Communipaw Avenue, reports said. Richey and a friend got into an argument with a group of at least three men inside the diner, DeFazio said. When Richey and the friend left the diner the other group attacked him, DeFazio said. The friend was punched in the back of the head and knocked out, while Richey was beaten more viciously, DeFazio said, adding that the friend has since recovered. Aurella Richey, who lives in Greenville, said her son worked at Teterboro Airport. She said some of his coworkers put up a plaque in his honor and called her, telling her that "he was a really good worker, a really nice guy and he will be missed." She said her son attended local parochial schools and had been taking college courses in engineering. On days off and sometimes before work he ministered to youth classes at his old school. "Marcus had a lot of dreams," his mother said. Anyone with information on the homicide is asked to call the Hudson County Prosecutor's Office's Homicide Squad at (201) 915-1345.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:15
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Jersey City real estate agent fined for illegal apartments, Healy says it sends a "strong message"
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Jersey City real estate agent fined for illegal apartments, city says
by Paul Koepp Jersey Journal Thursday December 06 A licensed real estate agent in Jersey City has been slapped with $20,000 in fines yesterday for having illegal cellar apartments in two buildings she owns, city officials said. Municipal Court Judge Richard Nieto found Remedios Resides guilty of several fire and housing code violations for properties at 192 Mallory Ave. and 401 West Side Ave., according to the city. The units were deemed illegal cellar apartments following visits from the Jersey City Quality of Life Task Force two weeks ago, prompted by an anonymous complaint, officials said. According to the city, Resides was fined $5,000 in March for maintaining illegal cellar apartments at the same two properties, as well as two others. "The strong message sent today will be issued to anyone who places innocent people in harm's way," Mayor Jerramiah Healy said in a statement released yesterday. http://www.nj.com/hudsoncountynow
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:14
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Bergen Lafayette: He's killer in video, cops say
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He's killer in video, cops say
Jersey Journal Thursday, December 06, 2007 Security cameras that caught a September murder on tape led police to the Hudson County jail in Kearny yesterday, where they charged an 18-year-old Jersey City man with firing the fatal shots. Terrance Christopher Boyd, whose last known address was on Van Nostrand Avenue, was charged with killing 19-year-old Javon Williams on Sept. 30 at Oxford and Bergen avenues, Hudson County Prosecutor Edward DeFazio said yesterday. Boyd had been arrested and jailed Oct. 5 for failing to appear at a Sept. 10 hearing in a prior drug case, officials said. He has since pleaded guilty to drug possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school and is to be sentenced Jan. 4. The video, which law enforcement officials wouldn't release, shows Williams and a friend apparently retreating after an argument with a gunman, DeFazio said. The killer is seen taking out a gun and firing at both men, hitting Williams and continuing to shoot him after he went down, DeFazio said, adding that Williams was hit at least five times. The tape also shows people in a nearby parked car driving around the body and driving off after the shooting, DeFazio said. Homicide detectives said the video also shows a second car going by and the driver actually getting out and looking at Williams before driving away without making any effort to get him help, DeFazio said. Homicide detectives said the shooting appears to have been triggered by an argument and that the incident began at Bergen and Lexington avenues before moving to the place where the shots rang out. The prosecutor said the man with the gunman may have been armed as well. The video shows him with an object in his hand that may have been a gun that he did not fire. Boyd's bail has been set at $250,000 cash or bond in the murder, DeFazio said, adding that the investigation is continuing. MICHAELANGELO CONTE
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:13
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Lax Gun Laws in PA May Contribute to Rising Gang Violence
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Home away from home
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Lax Gun Laws in PA May Contribute to Rising Gang Violence
http://wfmz.com/view/?id=188427 69News - WFMZ TV There's also been talk of gangs in connection with last week's triple murder in Easton. Authorities are investigating a possible link to a murder in Hudson County, New Jersey. And the prosecutor there has a theory about why gangs are moving west and landing in the Lehigh Valley. WFMZ's Mike Lowe reports. Last week's triple murder made headlines from Easton ... to Jersey City ... ... As authorities investigate a possible link between a Jersey City murder and the killings in Easton's West Ward. DeFazio: "There is this undercurrent of gang activity -- more specifically, the Bloods. But whether they are specifically linked, I don't know." One link between the two cities *is* clear. DeFazio: "We have seen over the past few years, this migration." Gang members, heading west from New Jersey and setting up shop in Pennsylvania for a variety of reasons. Golazeski: "It's a sellers market, their drugs are much more profitable here." >> Northampton County detective Barry Golazeski says criminals recognize that the Valley is not as well equipped to deal with gangs as cities in New Jersey and New York. "In NYC, you have 30,000 cops. When you come to the Lehigh Valley, you can go from one end to the other and not see 30,000 officers." In Hudson County, New Jersey, prosecutor Edward DeFazio says there's one overriding reason the Lehigh Valley sees trouble moving in from the Garden State. DeFazio: "Handguns are much more easily purchased in Pennsylvania than in New Jersey." Statistics show that the vast majority of gun crimes in New Jersey can be traced back to Pennsylvania purchases. DeFazio says the criminals are getting their guns in Pennsylvania ... and now they're committing crimes in the Keystone State, too. DeFazio: "When you have a triple homicide in Easton, Pennsylvania, you'd like to think it would get people more focused on the issue." The issue of gun control is on Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell's radar screen. Last month, he tried and failed to push through tougher laws. DeFazio says he'd like to see stricter laws in Pennsylvania. He says one way to stop the flow of gang members across the border ... is to cut off the gun trafficking. "The No. 1 concern in public safety." In Jersey City, Mike Lowe 69 News.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:11
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MANY THINK GOV'T KNEW - Poll: Conspiracy theories have traction here
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MANY THINK GOV'T KNEW
Poll: Conspiracy theories have traction here Thursday, December 06, 2007 By PAUL KOEPP JOURNAL STAFF WRITER Hudson County residents are more likely than not to believe that U.S. government officials chose to ignore warnings about the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, according to a recent Jersey Journal/New Jersey City University poll. But that doesn't mean the 49 percent who expressed that belief - versus 46 percent who did not - are all conspiracy theorists, said NJCU political science professor Fran Moran, one of the poll's authors. "While everyone who believes in a conspiracy would answer 'yes' to (that question), not everyone who answered 'yes' would necessarily believe in the conspiracy," he writes. According to the poll, 29 percent said they believe U.S. government officials may have been involved in the attacks, while 64 percent said they did not believe that. Moran writes that although conspiracy theories about government involvement have been repeatedly debunked, the fact that nearly a third of respondents believe them anyway "reveals a deep distrust of government officials." He suggests that the "apparent ease" of the attacks may have made more people receptive to conspiracy theories that have gained currency both at conferences and rallies, and, of course, on the Internet. The theories have been widely accessible, Moran wrote, with 44 percent of those polled saying they are familiar with movies, books or Web sites that push the idea that the government was somehow complicit in the attacks. "We probably should have asked if they were familiar with 'The 9/11 Commission Report,' because in retrospect, I suspect that fewer people had read summaries of the official report than had seen the conspiracy information," he wrote. Traumatic political events demand explanations that match their magnitude, Moran said, citing the attack on Pearl Harbor, John F. Kennedy's assassination and the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. as events that have spawned conspiracy theories.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:09
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Re: A lot of Park Slopers are moving to the other side of Newark: Maplewood NJ.
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http://www.brooklynpaper.com/stories/30/48/30_48jerseybrokers.html
Jersey brokers fishing for buyers in Slope: ?Paradise? just a limo ride away Dec. 8 By Mike McLaughlin The Brooklyn Paper Two New Jersey real-estate brokers are so eager to get Brooklynites to move to their promised land ? Montclair! ? that they?re offering free limo rides to the bucolic suburb and complimentary lunches at the town?s ?Park Slope-style? restaurant, Raymond?s. It?s all to get residents of the real Park Slope to toss aside their biases and finally move to what Elaine Pardalos and Kathy Kulik call ?Park Slope West? (hmm, isn?t that the Gowanus?). ?Montclair is a very intellectual town and has a great commute, theater, museum, movies, and lots of little places to shop,? which creates an ?urban-suburban setting,? said Pardalos. Pardalos and Kulik, who created the tour for the Rhodes, Van Note agency, guided the inaugural expedition on Nov. 29, which included a reporter from The Brooklyn Paper and one ?curious? Park Slope woman, past Montclair?s manicured lawns, colonial houses and the town?s center. Their objective: to prove that, yes, you can own a home in a diverse community with the implausible combination of great public schools, restaurants and a walkable downtown, while still being able to see the Manhattan skyline, albeit through that odd brown cloud over Union City. Indeed, Montclair is good enough for Pardalos, who moved from Park Slope 13 years ago. ?I thought it was going to be dead, but people were walking on the streets and there were restaurants on Valley Road,? one of the main drags, said Pardalos, recalling her first trip to Montclair. ?I thought, ?I can do this.?? Many others have been slinking off to the town of 37,000, due west of Manhattan, for the reasons that so many people once abandoned the Upper West Side for Brooklyn. Personal space there isn?t at a premium, the pace is sometimes less manic, and there are independent movie theaters and eclectic eateries to assuage discerning, liberal tastes. Pardalos filled the time spent getting from Brooklyn to Montclair by cheerfully talking about the town?s perks, like commuter trains within walking distance and sophisticated events at the Montclair Art Museum. When the ?limo? (see below) emerged in Essex County, the brokers directed it through several residential sections of Montclair and the neighboring towns of hyper-affluent Glen Ridge and middle-class Bloomfield. Keeping in tune with Brooklyn lingo, the tour cruised up ?restaurant row? on Bloomfield Avenue, with a wide range of cuisines, and through Brookdale Park, which was designed by the sons of Frederick Olmsted, Prospect Park?s co-builder (so Montclair?s park is a sequel?). All the while, the brokers were quick to point out that Montclair prices are better than, say, Ditmas Park. An average three-bedroom house goes for around $700,000. Some of the Montclair?s most desirable corners for people clinging to city life are in the southern end of town, with its short walk to the train stations, and near the town?s three ?village squares? providing shops and services ? making it the core of New York City?s suburban inner ring. But this whole ?limo to hell? raised one major question for this Brooklynite: if Montclair is worth giving up Brooklyn for, why did Pardalos and Kulik need to drive people out to the suburbs and buy them lunch? ?It?s hard to get your head around the notion of leaving,? said Pardalos. Especially with all those Jersey jokes dying hard. (Like this classic: what?s the difference between a Jersey girl and the trash ? the trash gets picked up twice a week. Ba da bing!) ?We?ve don?t care,? said Kulik. ?We know better.? Real-estate brokers aren?t the only ones extolling the town?s virtues in ways that resonate with people in the Slope. ?I live on a block that is more diverse than where I lived in the city,? said Alma Schneider, a native Manhattanite and social worker who has survived the 12-mile transplant to Montclair. ?A lot of interesting people live here and a lot of New Yorkers are moving here? because ?you come to point where you grow up and you don?t need to be in the city just to be in the city.? So Schneider and her husband left the East Village, and after a brief stay in a three-bedroom house in Montclair, her family of seven now resides in a ?huge Victorian house? there. But for all its charms and proximity, Montclair underwhelems some people. ?I would move back to Park Slope in a heartbeat for me, myself and I, but this was about a decision driven by an expanding family,? said Camilla Seth, a mother of two. Seth and her husband resettled for ?totally stereotypical reasons,? namely, for a bigger home and excellent public schools (that cost about $12,000?$17,000 a year in taxes, by the way), but she feels like a fish out of water. Her neighbors ?have urban sensibilities, but day-to-day life is suburban. People are driving. People are in their single-family homes. The way they interact is different. ?What this has done is convince me that I am an urban person,? added Seth, who craves the hustle and bustle. And Montclair is definitely not urban. First, a car is essential. This concerned Park Slope resident Kendall Bernard, who took the brokers? ?limo? tour. ?Being able to step outside to have everything right there? is important, she said. Second, a spouse or extremely significant other is virtually mandatory in this family town. Rumor has it that there?s a singles scene, but it wasn?t on the brokers? tour, alas.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:07
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Re: Mall in Bayone??
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Quite a regular
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Thank you. I skimmed threw it and did NOT see any plans for a mall.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:05
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Jersey City man charged with smuggling fake Nikes from China
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10 charged with smuggling fake Nikes from China
Dec. 6 NEW YORK (CNN) -- Ten members of an international smuggling ring have been arrested and charged with paying more than $500,000 in bribes to smuggle millions of dollars in fake designer goods from China to the United States, according to the U.S. Justice Department. art.port.newark.gi.jpg Authorities say a sting targeted a smuggling ring pushing goods through a New Jersey port. The defendants were expected to appear Thursday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Frank Maas. The counterfeit goods included designer jeans, Nike shoes, Burberry and Chanel handbags, and Polo and Baby Phat clothing, according to a news release from the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York. The estimated value of the genuine versions of the goods would be more than $200 million, prompting U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia to describe the case as "one of the largest counterfeit smuggling cases ever brought in United States history." The suspects arrested Wednesday are accused of smuggling or attempting to smuggle scores of 40-foot-long shipping containers through the Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal in Elizabeth, New Jersey, since June 2006. The Chinese-made knockoffs were placed in containers with false bills of lading, which are the shipping documents used to determine a cargo's point of origin and destination. "One bill of lading claimed a container held 'noodles,' when in fact it contained counterfeit Nike sneakers," the news release said. Don't Miss * Louis Vuitton wins suit against Spears After the bogus goods cleared inspection at the New Jersey port, they were transported to New York-area warehouses, where they awaited distribution to retail customers. According to the news release, the bribes were paid directly to an undercover agent whose "near-daily" conversations with the suspects were secretly recorded or monitored. The undercover agent posed as a "corrupt longshoreman's union official, stationed at Port Newark, who had the ability to clear imported cargo through the United States customs and border security measures without detection or seizure," the news release said. The 10 suspects are charged with conspiring to smuggle goods into the U.S., smuggling goods into the U.S. and trafficking in counterfeit goods, the news release states. If convicted, they face up to 35 years in prison, at least $2.5 million in fines and an obligation to pay restitution to the manufacturers of the genuine versions of the goods. Among those arrested in the sting were Robin Huff, 46, of New York, a federally licensed customs broker who is accused of using a Customs and Border Patrol database to help push goods through the port. Also arrested were Chi On Wong, 36, and Man Wai Cheng, 34, both of New York, who operated a Brooklyn-based trucking company, KT Express Inc. Authorities allege Wong and Cheng charged smugglers a premium to transport goods around the New York area. On Wednesday, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents raided a house in Brooklyn used as KT Express' base of operations and three other locations. Federal agents seized $80,000 in cash and two KT Express trucks allegedly used in the operation, the news release said. Also arrested Wednesday were: ? Grace Quezon, 38, of Jersey City, New Jersey, who is alleged to have paid at least $400,000 to the undercover agent. She also is accused of smuggling or attempting to smuggle more than 25 containers of counterfeit goods. ? Michael Chu, 70, of New York, who is accused of paying more than $100,000 to the undercover agent and smuggling more than 20 containers through the port. ? Hsi Feng Li, 61, of New York, aka "the General," who is accused of telling the federal agent he could send the agent 50 containers of bogus goods a month. ? Yee Khiong Ting, 44, of New York, who is accused of coordinating shipments, paying bribes to the federal agent and selling the goods once they cleared customs. ? Troy King, 37, of New York, who allegedly worked with Chu and Quezon, and whom authorities accuse of arranging payments and overseeing operations. ? Wing Ki Lee, 36, of Jersey City, who is accused of working with King to smuggle containers into the U.S. on behalf of a Chinese manufacturer who was a primary supplier of the counterfeit merchandise. ? Dick Ong, 57, of Bergenfield, New Jersey, who is accused of tracking containers, arranging pickups and monitoring the status of containers that moved through the New Jersey port. E-mail to a friend
Posted on: 2007/12/7 15:04
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Re: Mall in Bayone??
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Home away from home
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Posted on: 2007/12/7 14:15
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Re: Mall in Bayone??
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some retail is inevitable with all that is planned back there but i wouldnt hold my breath on a true indoor. enclosed. dual anchored mall.
Posted on: 2007/12/7 14:15
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Re: Mall in Bayone??
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Quite a regular
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Not sure. How would I find out what their waterfront development is about?
Posted on: 2007/12/7 14:12
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Re: Mall in Bayone??
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Is that part of the waterfront redevelopment?
Posted on: 2007/12/7 14:07
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Mall in Bayone??
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Quite a regular
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I heard some rumblings about a new mall opening somewhere on Hook Road. It's suppose to have 2 anchor stores. Does anyone know if this is true???
Posted on: 2007/12/7 14:03
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Re: Willie Flood hires son twice for $50G-plus ( Yes, that son )
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Is "fox News" Arnold Diaz looking at these inappropriate hirngs by Councilwoman Flood? Did I miss something?
Posted on: 2007/12/7 13:34
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Re: Willie Flood hires son twice for $50G-plus ( Yes, that son )
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Public servants should be excempt from any drug charges like they seem to be excempt from any other trivial laws like parking rules!
Posted on: 2007/12/7 13:15
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My humor is for the silent blue collar majority - If my posts offend, slander or you deem inappropriate and seek deletion, contact the webmaster for jurisdiction.
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