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 What's Up With New Jersey ..?

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Temple
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Temple


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PostSubject: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptySat Dec 14, 2019 8:59 pm

Democratic impeachment holdout Jeff Van Drew (NJ) planning to switch parties

Van Drew is one of two Democrats who voted against opening the impeachment inquiry into Trump and has remained against the effort, even as the House prepares to vote to impeach the president next week.
Van Drew's decision comes after a meeting with Trump on Friday.

"The move is also certain to score major points with Trump, whose support could be crucial in a crowded GOP primary.
Trump and Van Drew are expected to hold an event together next week, according to sources on Capitol Hill.

Multiple senior Democrats tried to reach out to the New Jersey freshman on Saturday but were unsuccessful. Van Drew did not respond to calls and texts from POLITICO seeking comment.

Rumors had swirled around Capitol Hill this week that Van Drew was considering leaving the Democratic Party but he strongly denied those claims on multiple occasions.
Van Drew flipped his GOP district in southern New Jersey, helping deliver Democrats the House majority. The district, which still leans Republican, voted for Trump in 2016.

If Van Drew voted to impeach Trump, 69 percent would be more likely to back him in next year's election and 22 percent would be less likely.

One Republican familiar with the situation said Saturday afternoon that the crossover was imminent. “In the works as we speak,” the member said, noting that Van Drew had a meeting “at length” with Trump on Friday.
The meeting between Trump and Van Drew was first reported by the Washington Post.

Republicans on Capitol Hill had been whispering all week about whether Van Drew might join their ranks — some senior Republicans had even encouraged the move.



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Sara
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PostSubject: Re: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptySun Dec 15, 2019 7:42 am

My best estimation is that Trump made him an offer he can't refuse.
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Temple
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Temple


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PostSubject: Re: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptySun Dec 15, 2019 10:02 pm

Published 3 hours ago on December 15, 2019

Blue Dog Democrat abandoned by staff after switching to GOP to defend Trump during impeachment: report

“Five senior aides to Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey resigned on Sunday as the lawmaker formally prepared to switch parties, stating they were “deeply saddened and disappointed by his decision,” Politico reported Sunday.

Politico obtained a copy of the joint letter they sent to chief of staff Allison Murphy.


What's Up With New Jersey ..? EL3ky6NX0AAOz7D?format=jpg&name=medium
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The Wise And Powerful
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PostSubject: Re: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptyFri Dec 27, 2019 4:33 am

$10,000 in a Coffee Cup: 8 Politicians Swept Up in N.J. Corruption Cases
The New York Times•December 25, 2019

What's Up With New Jersey ..? 024c9791fe445390f372a75773529d26
Clockwise from top left: Carl Washington Jr., Jason O’Donnell, John Cesaro, John Windish, Sudhan Thomas, Ronald DiMura, Mary Dougherty and Lavar Ledbetter. (New Jersey Office of the Attorney General via The New York Times)

One aspiring politician is accused of getting her bribe in a coffee cup chock-full of $100 bills. Another, a mayoral hopeful, of receiving his at his campaign headquarters in a bag stuffed with $10,000.

There was also a councilman who accepted a cash-stuffed envelope from a man who explicitly asked for a “quid pro quo,” according to a court document, and an official who funneled thousands of dollars into a charity he ran, then diverted the money for personal use.

These were among the allegations made in the eight political corruption cases announced by New Jersey prosecutors over five days this month. Taken together, the accusations offered a striking picture of entrenched small-time corruption at a time when questions of impropriety consume the national political debate.

“To say we have a long and sordid history of corruption in this state would be understating it,” said New Jersey’s attorney general, Gurbir S. Grewal.

All but one of those charged were current or former elected officials or political candidates, and the accused included both Republicans and Democrats. They included a small-town mayor, a school board president and a man trying to hold on to his position as county freeholder.

‘I just wanna be your tax guy.’ ‘Done.’

In some ways, they were charged with crimes that were remarkably old-school. Between May and July of 2019, Jersey City’s school board president, Sudhan Thomas, was given $35,000 in cash in envelopes, according to a criminal complaint. One envelope filled with $25,000 was handed off in a restaurant parking lot.

In return for funds for his reelection campaign, Thomas offered to make the briber, who became a cooperating witness, the school board’s real estate counsel, the complaint said.

“Real estate … that’s perfect,” the witness said at one meeting, according to the complaint.

“Yeah, nobody questions anything,” Thomas said, the complaint said.

Thomas was one of five politicians linked to a monthslong bribery investigation that involved the same unnamed witness and several sting operations. Even at a time when the attorney general has made fighting misconduct and restoring public trust a focus of his office, Grewal said that some of the accusations made last week stood out for their boldness.

“I’m no longer shocked by what I see from this chair,” Grewal said. “But I’m still occasionally surprised that somebody would so brazenly say, ‘I’ll give you this position if you make this donation,’ and nobody questions that stuff.”

All five politicians caught in the stings were charged with second-degree bribery and face up to 10 years in prison. Three, who were holding public office at the time, faced an additional charge of taking of an unlawful benefit by a public servant for official behavior.

In a statement, Thomas, a Democrat in New Jersey’s second-largest city, denied the allegations and accused Grewal’s office of unfairly targeting him for suing the state for $2.1 billion he said the Jersey City school district was owed.

In another sting operation in neighboring Bayonne, Jason O’Donnell, a former state assemblyman who was running for mayor, requested $10,000 in “street money” from the witness during a dinner in New York City, according to a criminal complaint.

The witness eventually passed the money to O’Donnell in a white paper bag at a meeting in O’Donnell’s campaign headquarters in May 2018, the complaint said.

The complaint said that the witness reiterated, “I just wanna be your tax guy,” to which O’Donnell replied, “Done.”

That same month, John Windish accepted a $7,000 cash bribe during a bid to be reelected to the borough council of Mount Arlington, a community of 5,000 in the New York City suburbs, prosecutors said.

After handing over a money-stuffed envelope, the witness said he needed Windish to “commit that I’m your borough attorney” and give him more work, according to a criminal complaint.

“You got it,” Windish replied, according to the complaint.

O’Donnell denied the allegations and his lawyer said he would plead not guilty. Windish could not be reached for comment.

A coffee cup full of cash

Not every politician caught in the stings was happy to be handed stacks of cash. Some of them, prosecutors said, preferred checks.

In May 2018, John Cesaro was a freeholder in Morris County, a wealthy suburban locale about 30 miles west of New York City. Mary Dougherty wanted to be one. (A board of freeholders in New Jersey is akin to a group of county supervisors elsewhere.)

According to a criminal complaint, her $10,000 payoff from the witness at first came in a takeout coffee cup packed with $100 bills.

In return, the witness wanted Dougherty’s support for him keeping his position as a counsel to Morris County if she won, the complaint said, to which she agreed.

But Dougherty later returned the cash, saying she wanted checks instead, the complaint said. To avoid violating campaign financing limits, Dougherty is accused of discussing with the witness that the money should be given through straw donors — individuals who contribute to a candidate but are later reimbursed by someone else for their contribution. Such donations are illegal in New Jersey.

It was the same for Cesaro, who is also accused of accepting $10,000 in cash and then later asking for checks, at one point saying that he did not know how to “pass” the cash around.

In one meeting, he appeared to make his understanding that the checks would come from straw donors clear, the complaint said.

“It’s not like they’re going to have to use their money,” he told the witness of potential donors, according to the complaint. “You know what I’m saying?

Dougherty and Cesaro both denied the allegations.

The mayor who money laundered

Before he was elected mayor in 2015, Ronald J. DiMura worked for years as the treasurer for the local Democratic Party and on local campaigns in the borough of Middlesex, a small community 30 miles southwest of Manhattan.

Those financial positions enabled DiMura, 63, to steal $190,000 from campaigns, then use a charity he operated to launder the money, according to an indictment.

Between January 2013 and June 2019, DiMura made “purported donations” from the campaigns to the charity, prosecutors said.

But the nonprofit only spent a “small fraction” of that money on charitable deeds, with the rest diverted into DiMura’s bank account or a business account that he controlled, the indictment said.

DiMura, who is also accused of soliciting a $10,000 donation from a developer when he was mayor, was charged with nine counts, including theft by deception, money laundering and official misconduct and tampering with public records.

The most serious charges have a sentence of up to 10 years in prison, and he could be fined up to $500,000 on the money-laundering charge.

DiMura was set to leave office at the end of the year after being voted out. But he resigned on Thursday, ahead of schedule, according to a statement from Middlesex’s borough council.

DiMura’s lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.

He took money meant to clean up his town

Carl Washington Jr., a councilman in Penns Grove in southern New Jersey, worked as a local coordinator for a statewide anti-littering initiative, managing funds intended to help ensure that parks and other public areas stayed pristine.

But prosecutors accused Washington, 46, of stealing more than $8,000 from the program, saying he doctored paperwork in order to obtain fraudulent checks.

The checks were made out to organizations that were run by Washington and several associates, including his nephew, Lavar H. Ledbetter, prosecutors said. Those associates cashed the checks, then returned some of the money to Washington and Ledbetter, 31, prosecutors said.

Both men were charged with official misconduct, conspiracy, theft by unlawful taking, and misapplication of entrusted property.

Washington did not respond to requests for comment but told NJ.com that he and Ledbetter were innocent, claiming the allegations were levied against him by a political rival.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2019 The New York Times Company
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PostSubject: Re: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptyFri Dec 27, 2019 6:26 am

All are crooked Drats.
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Sara
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Sara


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PostSubject: Re: What's Up With New Jersey ..?   What's Up With New Jersey ..? EmptySat Dec 28, 2019 8:00 am

Jersey's always had NY's overflow of crooks. In the 80's, some jerk from Queens came in to Atlantic City and scammed a lot of contractors, etc., out of money. Other developers came in, overshot their finances, and bought up all the farmland all over the state, which is now filled with overpriced condos and apartments. Some roads were widened a little but nowhere near enough to support all the extra traffic. Flooding increased as more land was paved. Everybody wanted to make a quick buck and get out. When Sandy hit, low lying areas were devastated and many people STILL have not gotten help, while the 1%'ers scammed the insurance companies on their vacation homes.

Everybody thought it was OK back then to vote for more money to go to schools, "for the chiiiiiiiiildren", etc., and now property taxes are higher than mortgage payments. A dollar at a time, everyone sold out, bought into scams, etc. It's a damn shame what's happened to the state. I'm glad I left, but I wish I hadn't had to. I'd love to go back - back in TIME.
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