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N.J. school official accused of recording boys in shower placed on unpaid leave

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Patrick Lott, 54, who was making $120,000 a year, remains at Somerset County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bail

patrick-lott-vice-principal-shower-camera-charges.JPGA copy photo from a 2010 Bernardsville Middle School yearbook of Assistant Principal Patrick Lott. Lott is accused of secretly videotaping boys showering in the locker room at Immaculata High School in Somerville.

SOMERVILLE — Patrick Lott, the Somerset County assistant principal charged with multiple counts of child endangerment last month, has been placed on an indefinite unpaid leave of absence, according to Somerset Hills Schools Superintendent Peter Miller.

The Somerset Hills Regional Board of Education voted unanimously at a special executive session on Monday night that Lott, the assistant principal at Bernardsville Middle School, be put on unpaid leave. He was making $120,000 a year, according to public records.

Lott, 54, of Somerville, is alleged to have secretly videotaped boys showering at Immaculata High School, where he was a coach and a volunteer, according to the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office. Authorities said there were 22 victims, including nine boys who are under the age of 16. According to court reports, the video recordings were recovered at Lott’s home on Dec. 13 and Dec. 16.

Lott remains held at Somerset County Jail on $500,000 bail.

Today, Miller emailed a question-and-answer document to district parents, hoping to address their most common and pressing concerns about the investigation.

In the document, Miller says no Somerset Hills School district students or facilities are involved in the charges against Lott and no recording equipment have been found in those schools in searches by the prosecutor’s office.

The document also states that district had not received any complaints relating to child endangerment or child abuse from students, parents, staff, administration, Board of Education members, other schools, community organizations or civic groups affiliated with Lott.

Lott’s last day at Bernardsville Middle School was Dec. 9. Lynn Sharp has been acting as the school’s assistant principal in Lott’s place.

Related coverage:

Di Ionno: Monsignor says Immaculata community won't 'run and hide' from sex crime allegations

N.J. educator's alleged teen shower recordings are latest black eye for Somerville parochial school

N.J. educator accused of secretly videotaping teens in school shower tried to commit suicide, sources say

Attorney: N.J. vice principal accused of videotaping boys in shower is struggling to raise bail money

Respected N.J. vice principal accused of videotaping boys in school shower: 'No one is perfect'


Thousands turn out for funeral of N.J. park ranger killed in New Year's Day shooting

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Margaret Anderson, a 34-year-old mother of two young girls, was allegedly shot and killed by 24-year-old Iraq War veteran Benjamin Colton Barnes Watch video

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TACOMA, Wash. — Top federal officials, fellow park rangers and thousands of well-wishers have gathered in Washington state to celebrate the life of Margaret Anderson, a Mount Rainier National Park ranger who was fatally shot on New Year's Day.

A funeral procession of law enforcement vehicles, ambulances, fire trucks and other emergency service vehicles arrived at Pacific Lutheran University this morning.

Later, hundreds of rangers, police officers and others stood at attention and saluted, as Anderson's family and friends followed her flag-draped casket into the auditorium. An overflow venue has been set up at Rainier View Christian Church in Tacoma.

Anderson, a 34-year-old mother of two young girls who grew up in Westfield, was shot and killed after setting up a roadblock to stop a vehicle that blew through a checkpoint on the road to the park's visitor center. The driver of that vehicle shot Anderson in her car and ran away, authorities said.

Searchers found the body of the suspect, 24-year-old Iraq war veteran Benjamin Colton Barnes, in a snowy creek. An autopsy showed he died of hypothermia and drowning.

"You don't think of this kind of this situation going into a national park," said Grant Smith, operations director for Explorer Search and Rescue Pierce County.

Michael Jacobs, a retired park ranger, drove 700 miles from California to show his support for Anderson's family, colleagues and the community.

"Ranger Anderson joined to help people and to serve," said Jacobs, a reserve deputy with the Placer County Sheriff's Department and one of hundreds of law enforcement and other officers who came to honor Anderson. "It was extremely tragic."

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis were scheduled to speak, along with ministers.

Anderson had served as a ranger at Mount Rainier south of Seattle for three years. She was married to another ranger, Eric Anderson, who was on duty elsewhere in the park when she was killed.

The daughter of a Lutheran minister, Anderson grew up in New Jersey and earned a bachelor's degree in fisheries and wildlife from Kansas State University and a master's degree in biology from Fort Hays State University in Kansas, according to media reports.

She began working with the National Park Service as a law enforcement ranger at Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah, where she met her husband. She also worked as a law enforcement park ranger at Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historic Park in Maryland.

Related coverage:

Fatal shooting of national park ranger sparks sadness in N.J. and Washington state

Suspect in fatal shooting of N.J. park ranger is dead, authorities say

Man suspected of shooting park ranger from Westfield is believed to have been found dead

Killing of Washington state park ranger from Westfield is a 'tragedy beyond a tragedy,' neighbor of victim's parents says

Mount Rainier National Park ranger who grew up in Westfield is killed

Two New Brunswick men killed in separate shootings

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Oswaldo Lozada, 21, was shot and fatally wounded near the intersection of Louis and Somerset streets about 8:30 p.m. Monday, and at 6:49 a.m. today, the body of a man was found in Pittman Park on Handy Street

louis-street-shooting.jpgThe intersection of Louis and Somerset streets where Oswaldo Lozada, 21, was fatally shot Monday night.

NEW BRUNSWICK — Two men were killed in two unrelated shootings in less than 11 hours late Monday and early today in New Brunswick, where police have investigated more than a dozen shootings in the last two months.

Oswaldo Lozada, 21, was shot and fatally wounded near the intersection of Louis and Somerset streets about 8:30 p.m. Monday, Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan said in a joint statement with New Brunswick police Director Anthony Caputo.

Police responding to multiple 911 calls at 8:32 p.m. found Lozada on Louis Street, Kaplan said.

Lozada was taken to city's Robert Wood Johnson University where he was pronounced dead at 9:51 p.m., authorities said

At 6:49 a.m. today, the body of a man was found in Pittman Park on Handy Street, the prosecutor said.

He said the man, whose identity was withheld, was pronounced dead at 7:15 a.m. in the park.

An autopsy determined the man had been shot.

Aniayah Ingram, 16, who lives in a house next to the park, said she was leaving for school at about 7 a.m. when she saw the body in the park about 100 feet from her home.

"He was wearing light blue pants and black boots," Ingram said. She and her family had not heard anything shooting and didn't see the body and the police until she walked out of the out of the house.

"It's crazy," she said.

Authorities said the two fatal shootings are not related.

Pittman Park is less than a block from the intersection of Handy Street and Throop Avenue where a city man, Barry Deloatch, 47, was shot and killed by a New Brunswick police office Sept. 22. The Middlesex County prosecutor's office is investigating that shooting, which sparked a series of protests by residents and activist. A lawyer for one of the two officers involved said Deloatch was swing a two-foot long board at the officer as the two struggled on the ground.

Ingram said her family heard the shooting on Sept. 22.

Authorities ask that anybody with information about the shooting of Lozada call city police Detective Ronoldy Martinez at (732) 745-5200 or Investigator Jeffrey Temple of the prosecutor office at (732) 745-3373.

Anybody with information about the victim in Pittman park is asked to call city police Detective Drew Weiss at (732) 745-5200 or investigator Michael Daniewicz at (732) 745-4018.

New Brunswick police have received more than a dozen reports of shootings since early November. None of the previous shootings was fatal.

Related coverage:

Relatives of New Brunswick shooting victim allege he was running away when he was shot

Man is fatally shot by New Brunswick police during scuffle

Demonstrators in New Brunswick continue to protest fatal shooting of man by police

Montville man arrested after police confiscate more than 14,000 prescription pills

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Charles Cotterell, 60, is accused of selling prescription drugs in Parsippany, said Patrolman Earl Kinsey

essex-county-drugs.JPGVarious prescription drugs seized by police in Essex County are seen in this file photo. Last month, a Morris County investigation netted authorities more than 14,000 prescription pills, valued at nearly $60,000.

PARSIPPANY — A Montville resident was arrested after officers confiscated more than 14,000 narcotic pills from his home, according to Parsippany police.

Charles Cotterell, 60, is accused of selling prescription drugs in Parsippany, said Patrolman Earl Kinsey.

He was arrested on Dec. 21 after a nearly month-long investigation, Kinsey said.

Detectives seized several boxes of medications and $59,516 from his home, Kinsey said.

Cotterell was charged with knowingly distributing schedule 2 narcotics, possessing schedule 2 narcotics with the Intent to distribute and possession of 161 hypodermic needles.

Cotterell pleaded guilty in 2000 to one count of corporate misconduct and served five months in prison. A state grand jury indicted Cotterell on charges he submitted forged and falsified financial statements and provided fraudulent documents when seeking performance and payment bonds.

Cotterell falsely claimed the firm, U.S. Remedial Services Inc., was associated with a minority subcontractor, which helped allow it to become a subcontractor on three construction and remediation projects, according to the state Department of Law and Public Safety.

Cotterell and the company are accused of submitting false bills to the projects' general contractors and not paying subcontractors.

More Morris County news

Hotwired state dump trucks are used in Cherry Hill thefts

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Four times in the last five month, thieves have hotwired a state dump truck and backhoe to knock down fences at a transportation yard

dump-truck.jpgPolice say four times in the last five month, thieves have hotwired a state dump truck and backhoe to knock down fences at a transportation yard.

CHERRY HILL — Police say someone has been borrowing New Jersey Transportation Department vehicles in a series of odd and complicated thefts in Cherry Hill.

Police say four times in the last five month, thieves have hotwired a state dump truck and backhoe to knock down fences at a transportation yard.

With the fences down, they had access to used radiators, road signs, posts, copper wiring and other metal goods, which they stole.

Cherry Hill Police Lt. William Kushina tells The Courier-Post of Cherry Hill in most cases, the vehicles were returned to the yard.

But Kushina says in the latest incident on Dec. 31, a driver abandoned the dump truck on Route 70 and ran away.

No arrests have been made.

More Camden County news

Joran van der Sloot pleads guilty to killing woman in Peru

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"Yes, I want to plead guilty. I wanted from the first moment to confess sincerely," he told the court.

PERU VAN DER SLOOT TRIAL.JPGDutch Joran Van der Sloot during his trial in Lurigancho prison, Lima, Peru, today. Van der Sloot is charged with the alleged robbery and assassination of Peruvian Stephanie Flores in May 2010. He could face a sentence of 30 years of imprisonment.

LIMA, Peru — Joran van der Sloot pleaded guilty today to the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman he met at a Lima casino who was killed five years to the day of the unsolved disappearance in Aruba of an American teen in which he remains the main suspect.

"Yes, I want to plead guilty. I wanted from the first moment to confess sincerely," he told the court. "I truly am sorry for this act. I feel very bad."

Van der Sloot's lawyer argued after his client's brief statement that the defendant killed Stephany Flores as a result of "extreme psychological trauma" he suffered from the fallout of the 2005 disappearance on the Caribbean island of Aruba of Natalee Holloway.

The 24-year-old Dutch citizen's trial opened last week but was adjourned to today after Van der Sloot asked for more time to decide how to plead. He said last week that was inclined to confess but doesn't accept the aggravated murder charges the prosecution seeks.

Van der Sloot entered the plea in hopes of a reduced sentence. The panel of three judges has 48 hours to render a sentence.

Prosecutors sought 30 years in prison on first-degree murder and theft charges. The defense claimed the killing was manslaughter, whose minimum sentence is 5 years.

Van der Sloot claimed in a confession shortly after the May 30, 2010, murder of 21-year-old Stephany Flores that he killed her in a fit of rage after she discovered on his laptop his connection to the disappearance of Holloway.

But prosecutors say Van der Sloot killed Flores, a business student from a prominent family, in order to rob her after learning she had won money at the casino where the two met. They say he killed her with "ferocity" and "cruelty," beating then strangling her in his Lima hotel room.

Holloway, an Alabama teen, disappeared a high school graduation trip to the Caribbean island of Aruba where Van der Sloot grew up.

N.J. man found with steroids charged with impersonating law enforcement

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Michael A. Samuels, 47 also was found to owe $330,000 in child support after he was arrested at his girl friend's house early Tuesday morning

spring-lake-heights.jpgSpring Lake Heights police arrested a man who claimed to be a federal law enforcement officer Tuesday.

SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS — An Upper Freehold Township man has been arrested after police said he pretended to be a law enforcement officer and was found with a vial of steroids, according to a report on APP.com.

Michael A. Samuels, 47 also was found to owe $330,000 in child support after he was arrested at his girlfriend's house early Tuesday morning. He claimed to be a federal law enforcement officer. Samuels has been arrested in five other Monmouth County towns on charges such as assault, assault with a firearm and impersonating police.

More Monmouth County news

New York Rangers plan to honor N.J. cop beaten following hockey game in Philadelphia

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The New York Rangers plan to honor the Woodbridge police officer beaten at their Philadelphia game last week, by hosting him at their Feb. 27th game against the Devils Watch video

woodbridge police-officer-neal-auricchio.JPG Woodbridge police officer Neal Auricchio, pictured in this Star-Ledger file photo from September 2006, was beaten during a brawl on a Philadelphia street after Monday's hockey game between the New York Rangers and the Philadelphia Flyers, police said.

NEW YORK — The New York Rangers plan to honor the Woodbridge police officer beaten at a restaurant following last week's NHL Winter Classic in Philadelphia.

The New York Post reports, Iraq war veteran and Woodbridge police officer Neal Auricchio will be the guest of honor at New York's Feb. 27 game against the Devils.

While waiting in line at Geno's Steak House after the game, he and a friend
were attacked, apparently because they were wearing New York Rangers jerseys.

Police released video footage where several men wearing Flyers jerseys are seen punching first one victim — knocking him to the ground and beating him — and then beating Auricchio, the second victim

No arrests have been made in the attack.

Related coverage:

N.J. cop beaten in Philadelphia hockey brawl identified

Video: Woodbridge cop is allegedly beaten while wearing a Rangers jersey in Philadelphia


Hillside man arrested by Newark cops after allegedly brandishing handgun outside store

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William Kyree Addison now faces weapons offenses after police seized a loaded 9mm. Taurus handgun from him around 1:50 p.m. Tuesday

samuel-demaio-newark-police.JPGNewark Police Director Samuel DeMaio is shown in this file photo.

NEWARK — Officers on patrol in Newark’s South Ward arrested a 20-year-old Hillside resident after he walked out of a grocery store brandishing a handgun.

William Kyree Addison now faces weapons offenses after police seized a loaded 9mm. Taurus handgun from him around 1:50 p.m. Tuesday, said Sgt. Ronald Glover, a city police spokesman.

The officers had stopped several men for committing quality-of-life violations in the 500 block of Clinton Avenue, Glover said, when they noticed Addison walk out of a nearby store and place a black handgun into his waistband. The 20-year-old ducked back into the store and tried to discard the weapon, but he was arrested a short time later.

"I commend these Police Officers for their dedication in apprehending this individual that resulted in making Newark a safer place," said Police Director Samuel DeMaio.

More Newark news

New Brunswick man charged with robbery, murder of man found dead in park

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City police today charged a 19-year-old city man with the robbery and murder of another man whose body was found in a park early Tuesday morning

pittman-park.jpgKevin Vauters, 19, was charged with the fatal shooting of city resident Eugene Lockhart, 26, whose body was found in Pittman Park on Handy Street at 6:46 a.m. Tuesday.

NEW BRUNSWICK — City police today charged a 19-year-old city man with the robbery and murder of another man whose body was found in a park early Tuesday morning.

Kevin Vauters, 19, was charged with the fatal shooting of city resident Eugene Lockhart, 26, whose body was found in Pittman Park on Handy Street at 6:46 a.m. Tuesday, Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan said in a statement.

Vauters is being held on $1 million bail, charged with murder, armed robbery and possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose, Kaplan said in the statement issued jointly with New Brunswick police Director Anthony Caputo.

A passerby discovered Lockhart's body and called police, and Lockhart was pronounced dead at the scene at 7:15 a.m.

At 10:25 p.m., less than 16 hours after the body was found, police arrested Vauters at his home on unrelated warrants from municipal court, the prosecutor said.

Investigators obtained further evidence to charge Vauters with the murder today.

Kaplan commended police for a quick response to the shooting.

In the park Tuesday, 10 votive candles and five brightly colored balloons were left by a tree where Lockhart's body was found.

James O'Neill, spokesman for the prosecutor's office, said he could disclose what was taken in the robbery, and could not comment on whether a gun was recovered. He said details of the municipal court warrants were not available.

Police are still investigating the shooting and ask anybody with information to call city police Detective Drew Weiss at (732) 745-5200, or Investigator Michael Daniewicz of the prosecutor at (732) 745-4018.

Lockhart was the second of two murder victims shot in the city within a span of 10 hours.

Oswaldo Lozada, 21, was shot and fatally wounded near the intersection of Louis and Somerset streets about 8:30 p.m. Monday. That shooting remains under investigation.

Related coverage:

Two men killed in separate New Brunswick shootings

Trial of 5th defendant in Newark schoolyard killings to begin

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Carranza, who is serving an eight-year prison sentence in an unrelated case and was free on bail when the schoolyard killings occurred, has maintained his innocence

carranza.jpgJose Carranza, center, goes on trial this morning in Newark. He is charged with murder, robbery and sexual assault in the 2007 attack on four college-age friends in a Newark schoolyard.

NEWARK — Opening arguments are scheduled this morning in the trial of one of the defendants in the vicious 2007 attack on four college-age friends in a Newark schoolyard.

Jose Carranza, 32, is one of six defendants charged with murder, robbery and other offenses in connection with the attack at Mount Vernon School that left three people dead. Carranza is also charged with sexually assaulting the only survivor of the attack, Natasha Aeriel.

Four other defendants have already been tried or pleaded guilty in the case. Rodolfo Godinez, Alexander Alfaro and Melvin Jovel are all serving life sentences. Last month, another defendant, Shahid Baskerville, pleaded guilty to reduced charges in exchange for his testimony against Carranza and Gerardo Gomez, who is awaiting trial.

Baskerville, who will be sentenced in March, told Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin at a hearing last month that Carranza slashed Aeriel’s neck with a steak knife during the attack; three other victims, Aeriel’s brother, Terrance Aeriel, 18, Iofemi Hightower and Dashon Harvey, both 20, all died from gunshot wounds to the head. Investigators say that fingerprint evidence places Carranza in the schoolyard and Aeriel has identified him as one of the attackers. Carranza, who is serving an eight-year prison sentence in an unrelated case and was free on bail when the schoolyard killings occurred, has maintained his innocence.

Related coverage:

Newark schoolyard killings: Jury selection begins for latest defendant in 2007 shootings

Chilling details emerge in Newark schoolyard murders, as suspect pleads guilty

Casey Anthony reveals new theory for Caylee's death

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The depositions of Dr. Jeffrey Danziger and Weitz vividly describe what Anthony told her doctors about alleged sexual abuse by her father and the alleged drowning death of her 2-year-old daughter in the summer of 2008

c-anthony.JPGCasey Anthony, left, talks with her attorney during her sentencing hearing on charges of lying to a law enforcement officer.

ORLANDO, Fla. — Casey Anthony said her daughter Caylee may have been conceived during a "date rape" in the fall of 2004, according to the blockbuster depositions of two doctors released Wednesday.

Anthony said she was not romantically involved with anyone when she attended a party in October or November 2004, but added that she may have had a "spiked" drink because she "blacked out," according to one of the depositions.

"She believes ... that's when that she was impregnated," Dr. William Weitz said during his deposition.

Anthony also said she suspected her father, George, might be the father, Weitz said, but DNA testing later disproved that, so Casey Anthony said she thought Caylee was likely conceived during the party when she passed out.

Despite the possible cause of her pregnancy, Weitz also said Anthony "never considered, once she was pregnant, having an abortion or having the baby put up for adoption. She wanted the child."

"She said, 'I loved her at first sight,' and 'that child was the most meaningful part of my life for three years,'" Weitz said under questioning from prosecutors.

"That, to me, is important," he added. Weitz said her statements challenged the belief that "the child would be a piece of luggage, a carry-on bag that would be unimportant, would interfere with social relationships, boyfriend relationships, possible job opportunities, travel, that having that child was some way limiting to Casey in her life."

Explosive accounts of Casey Anthony's life and her version of what happened to her daughter Caylee Marie almost four years ago were revealed Wednesday when a judge unsealed the two never-before-seen depositions from doctors who conducted psychological evaluations on the mother before her murder trial.

The depositions of Dr. Jeffrey Danziger and Weitz vividly describe what Anthony told her doctors about alleged sexual abuse by her father and the alleged drowning death of her 2-year-old daughter in the summer of 2008.

"It is the perception of Casey that her father had something to do with the death of her daughter," Weitz said. "It's clear that she believes that George either harmed and/or took the life of (Caylee)."

Weitz recounts how Casey described her father with the child. Caylee was wearing a T-shirt and shorts. She was wet and appeared lifeless. She said, "Dad took her from me, said all's going to be OK. Daddy will take care of it," according to the Weitz deposition. He then left the room.

"Although she believed the child was deceased, part of her wanted her daughter to be alive," Weitz told the prosecutors.

Attempts to reach George Anthony's attorney for response and comments Wednesday have gone unanswered.

Weitz also said that Casey Anthony did not suffer from a mental illness or disorders, like anti-social personality disorder, despite her history of lying. Her lying he attributes to "suppression and denial in the way she deals with trauma."

"None of the prevailing personality disorders did she fit the criteria that would allow her to be diagnosed currently," Weitz said during his deposition last year.

At one point during the deposition, when Weitz described what Casey Anthony told him about seeing her daughter's wet, limp body held by her father, Anthony's defense attorney Jose Baez raised an objection.

"I'm going o object to Mr. (Jeff) Ashton's behavior of laughing," Baez said.

Ashton and fellow prosecutor Linda Drane Burdick denied Ashton was laughing, but Baez continued, "He was clearly laughing. How he can laugh as someone is describing the death of a child is not only disgusting, it's reprehensible."

Baez threatened to stop the deposition "if this type of behavior continues." But the question and answer session did go on. This part of the Weitz deposition took 157 pages to transcribe.

The experts' statements, which the Orlando Sentinel requested be unsealed, are significant because they represent the most recent version of Anthony's story about what happened to her daughter.

Related coverage:

Fingerprint evidence key point in opening statements of latest Newark schoolyard killings trial

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Prosecutors in the opening of trial of Jose Carranza, one of the six defendants in the 2007 Newark schoolyard killing, outlined their case this morning focusing on the most compelling piece of evidence against him

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NEWARK — Prosecutors in the opening of trial of Jose Carranza, one of the six defendants in the 2007 Newark schoolyard killing, outlined their case this morning focusing on the most compelling piece of evidence against him: his fingerprint on still-cold bottle of beer at the crime scene.

Carranza, is charged with murder, robbery and other offenses in connection with the attack at Mount Vernon School that left three people dead. Carranza, 32, is also charged with sexually assaulting the only survivor of the attack, Natasha Aeriel.

In his opening statement, Assistant Prosecutor Romesh Sukhdeo said the fingerprint was found after investigators processed the crime scene and is one of several pieces of evidence, that he plans to introduce.

“His fingerprint was on a beer bottle right next to a pool of Natasha Aeriel’s blood,” he said, pointing to Carranza.

But in his opening statement, Carranza’s lawyer John Dell'Italia, said a fingerprint is limited evidence.

“A fingerpint does not testify,” he said. “It does not tell you when that individual touched that bottle” or how long that person was there. He added: “Fingerprints do not talk.
Four other defendants have already been tried or pleaded guilty in the case. Rodolfo Godinez, Alexander Alfaro and Melvin Jovel are all serving life sentences. Last month, another defendant, Shahid Baskerville, pleaded guilty to reduced charges in exchange for his testimony against Carranza and Gerardo Gomez, who is awaiting trial.

Baskerville, who will be sentenced in March, told Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin at a hearing last month that Carranza slashed Aeriel’s neck with a steak knife during the attack; three other victims, Aeriel’s brother, Terrance Aeriel, 18, Iofemi Hightower and Dashon Harvey, both 20, all died from gunshot wounds to the head.

Investigators say that fingerprint evidence places Carranza in the schoolyard and Aeriel has identified him as one of the attackers. Carranza, who is serving an eight-year prison sentence in an unrelated case and was free on bail when the schoolyard killings occurred, has maintained his innocence.

The first witness is expected to testify this afternoon.

Related coverage:

Trial of 5th defendant in Newark schoolyard killings to begin

Newark schoolyard killings: Jury selection begins for latest defendant in 2007 shootings

Chilling details emerge in Newark schoolyard murders, as suspect pleads guilty

State Police conduct helicopter search in Edison for third robbery suspect

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Officers apprehended two suspects, but a third was still being sought early this afternoon, Lt. Salvatore Filanino said

menlo-park-mall.JPGState Police in a helicopter were flying over the area of Menlo Park Mall in Edison today, searching for a third robbery suspect.

EDISON — State Police in a helicopter were flying over the area of Menlo Park Mall in Edison today, assisting in the search for a third suspect wanted for a robbery this morning of a cellular telephone store on Parsonage Road, across the street from the mall.

Police said the bandits held up the T-Mobile store at 32 Parsonage Road at 10:56 a.m.

Officers apprehended two suspects, but a third was still being sought early this afternoon, Lt. Salvatore Filanino said.

He said a weapon may have been displayed during the robbery.

Nobody was injured in the robbery, Filannino said.

More Edison news

Former Delbarton headmaster removed from Va. abbey over sexual misconduct allegations in N.J.

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The Rev. Luke Travers was replaced Wednesday after a letter was sent to church officials outlining sexual misconduct claims at New Jersey's Delbarton School

travers-2.jpegThe Rev. Luke Travers was replaced Wednesday after a letter was sent to church officials outlining sexual misconduct claims by two male former students at New Jersey's Delbarton School.

RICHMOND, Va. — A monk who headed a Virginia abbey has been removed from his position over allegations in New Jersey of sexual misconduct.

The Rev. Luke Travers was replaced Wednesday after a letter was sent to church officials outlining sexual misconduct claims by two male former students at New Jersey's Delbarton School.

Travers is the former headmaster of Delbarton School, an elite prep school in Morris Township attended by Gov. Chris Christie's son.

He had served as non-residential administrator of Mary Mother of the Church Abbey in Virginia since 2010, visiting a few days each month. The school owns and operates Benedictine College Preparatory school, but officials say he had no personal contact with students.

Abbey officials said Travers had returned to his New Jersey monastery.

Messages to the abbey were not immediately returned.

UPDATE: Victims advocate: Ex-Delbarton headmaster accused of sexual misconduct was a predator


Alabama judge declares missing teen Natalee Holloway legally dead

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The order comes more than six years after Holloway, an American teenager, disappeared on the Caribbean island of Aruba during a high school graduation trip

natalee-holloway-declared-dead.JPGNatalee Holloway of Mountain Brook, Ala., in this undated family photo. Holloway had been missing since May 30, 2005 when she vanished in Aruba while on a trip with classmates celebrating their high school graduation. An Alabama judge declared Holloway dead today.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — An Alabama judge signed an order today declaring Natalee Holloway dead, more than six years after the American teenager vanished on the Caribbean island of Aruba during a high school graduation trip.

Judge Alan King signed the order at the close of a hearing in a Birmingham courtroom that was attended by the missing woman's divorced parents, Dave and Beth Holloway.

Dave Holloway told the judge in September he believed his daughter had died and he wanted to stop payments on her medical insurance and use her $2,000 college fund to help her younger brother. Today's hearing was scheduled long before a suspect questioned in Holloway's disappearance, Dutchman Joran van der Sloot, pleaded guilty Wednesday in Peru to the 2010 murder of a woman in Lima.

Natalee Holloway disappeared in Aruba on May 30, 2005. The 18-year-old was last seen leaving a bar early that morning with van der Sloot. Her body was never found and the ensuing searches for the young woman garnered intense media scrutiny and worldwide attention.

King acted on a petition by the father to have the missing 18-year-old declared dead.

The teen's mother originally objected, but her lawyer, Charlie DeBardeleben, said she subsequently changed her mind once she understood her husband's intentions.

Natalee Holloway's parents were divorced in 1993 and Beth Holloway sat in the back row of the courtroom, mostly staring at her hands in her lap during the hearing this afternoon. She declined comment, but her attorney signaled it was a tough moment for her to see a judge sign an order declaring her daughter dead.

"She's ready to move on from this," DeBardeleben added.

Mark White, an attorney for Dave Holoway, told the judge just before he announced his decision, that there was no evidence that Holloway was alive.

"Despite all that no evidence has been found Natalee Holloway is alive," he told the judge, noting that exhaustive searches, blanket international media coverage and even the offer of rewards had turned up nothing new.

King had ruled in September that Dave Holloway had met the legal presumption of death for his daughter and it was up to someone to prove she didn't die on a high school graduation trip. He had set the hearing now to allow some months for anyone to come forward.

Dave Holloway said he had expected to hear the judge would declare his daughter dead because he had no doubt about that.

"We've been dealing with her death for the last six and a half years," he said.

He added that the judge's order closes one chapter in a long story, but added: "We've still got a long way to go to get justice.

Authorities have long worked from the assumption that the young woman was dead in Aruba, where the case was officially classified as a homicide investigation.

That investigation remains open, though there has been no recent activity, said Solicitor General Taco Stein, an official with the prosecutor's office on the Dutch Caribbean island.

"The team that was acting in that investigation still is functioning as a team and they get together whenever there is information or things are needed in the case or a new tip arrives," Stein said in a phone interview today.

In Peru, Van der Sloot, 24, pleaded guilty this week to the murder of a 21-year-old woman he met at a Lima casino. Stephany Flores was killed five years to the day after Natalee Holloway, an 18-year-old from the wealthy Birmingham suburb of Mountain Brook, disappeared.

Shortly after Flores' death on May 30, 2010, van der Sloot told police he killed the woman in Peru in a fit of rage after she discovered on his laptop his connection to the disappearance of Holloway. Police forensic experts disputed the claim.

Dave Holloway said he hopes van der Sloot, who is awaiting sentencing, gets a 30-year prison term sought by Peruvian prosecutors.

"Everybody knows his personality. I believe he is beyond rehabilitation," Holloway said.

Attorneys said both parents expressed hope that van der Sloot's next stop is Birmingham, where he faces federal charges accusing him of extorting $25,000 from Beth Holloway to reveal the location of her daughter's body. Prosecutors said the money was paid, but nothing was disclosed about the missing woman's whereabouts.

"I expect to see him in Birmingham," Dave Holloway said today.

Monroe residents assaulted in home robbery

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The suspect forced his way inside the home on Belluscio Street, where he assaulted both residents and demanded cash

monroe-middlesex-home-robbery.jpgBelluscio Street in Monroe Township, where two residents were assaulted in a home invasion.

MONROE — A robber forced his way into a Monroe home and assaulted both residents early this morning, authorities said.

The homeowners woke up shortly after 1 a.m. to the sound of their doorbell ringing and a man banging on the front door of the Belluscio Street house, according to police spokesman Lt. Marc Jimenez.

The victims opened the door when the man claimed to be a neighbor in need of help. But the man then forced his way inside, where he assaulted both residents and demanded cash, Jimenez said.

The residents handed over an undetermined amount of money and the robber then disappeared down the dark street in the township’s Mill Lake Manor section, the spokesman said.

Officials ask that anyone with information to call detectives at (732) 521-0222.

More Middlesex County news

Victims advocate: Ex-Delbarton headmaster accused of sexual misconduct was a predator

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Rev. Luke Travers has been removed from his position as a non-residential administrator of the Mary Mother of Church Abbey in Richmond, where he has been since 2010

travers-2.jpegThe Rev. Luke Travers was replaced Wednesday after a letter was sent to church officials outlining sexual misconduct claims by two male former students at New Jersey's Delbarton School.

MORRIS TOWNSHIP — In 1999, when he was asked to become headmaster at the exclusive Delbarton School, the Rev. Luke Travers said he responded with "one loud ‘Yes!’" because he was "thrilled and honored."

But several years earlier, according to a victims advocate, Travers was ready to chuck it all and run away with a former Delbarton student, who is now alleging sexual misconduct by Travers in the early 1990s.

A letter Tuesday from Patrick Marker, the advocate, to the Catholic Diocese of Richmond, Va., detailed the allegations and described Travers as a predator who groomed his alleged victim.

As a result of the accusations and an ongoing investigation, Travers has been removed from his position as a non-residential administrator of the Mary Mother of Church Abbey in Richmond, where he has been since 2010. He is prohibited from having contact with juveniles or young adults. He has not been charged with any crime.

Travers, 55, was headmaster at Delbarton from 1999 to 2007 and taught at the school before and after that.

According to Marker, the alleged victim, now in his late 30s, said Travers consoled him while his father was dying, offering him alcohol and hugging and kissing him on the neck and ears while he was a student at the all-boys school in Morris Township.

When he protested the affection, he told Marker, Travers told him there was "nothing wrong with what he was doing because he loved me." When the accuser returned for a visit as a college freshman, Travers asked the adult teen to run away with him, Marker said.

Travers "crossed boundaries which betrayed the inherent trust which is sacred to his position as a teacher and a priest," the man said, according to Marker.

In a letter to the Delbarton community Thursday, the Rev. Giles P. Hayes, abbot of St. Mary’s Abbey, which runs the school, called the allegation "a minor boundary violation with an adult." Giles, who said "the conduct is not criminal," said the allegations have been reported to the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office.

Capt. Jeff Paul, a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office, said "pursuant to our policy, it would be inappropriate for us to comment on whether or not we have an active investigation."

AD 1 SPDELBAR SCIARRINOThe Delbarton School, a private school located in Morris Township.

Hayes, in an email, said his abbey’s review board hired an independent investigator to look into a single complaint of sexual misconduct against Travers — which is consistent of guidelines established by the Religious Communities of Men.

Marker’s letter, however, contained the story of a second alleged victim, who says his crotch and butt were grabbed by Travers, who also asked him whether he was having sex with his girlfriend.Those incidents occurred in the early 1980s, while the student was about 14 years old, Marker said.

"A second victim? That’s news to us," Hayes said in his email.

Marker, who says he has been in touch with both alleged victims, said Travers was so trusted by the family of one of the alleged victims that the father, in a deathbed plea, asked the monk "to take care of my son."

Victims advocates criticized Hayes for "minimizing" the incident.

"While it might not be criminal, I’m sure it’s against the vows Travers took," Marker said.

Mark Serrano, a national advocate for sex abuse victims, questioned why Delbarton didn’t notify the community of the allegations when school administrators became aware of them in June and hired the investigator.

"I wouldn’t trust the school’s characterization of the incidents as ‘minor’ until we know all the facts," Serrano said. "In the meantime, we must make sure Travers has no contact with children."

As part of the investigation, Travers is restricted from contact with anyone under 25, prohibited from having contact with students and banned from saying mass for anyone other than fellow monks.

But the Richmond abbey knew nothing of the restrictions, said the Rev. Adrian Harmening, who replaced Travers as administrator. Harmening told the Richmond Times-Dispatch that Travers had been allowed to say Mass for students in recent months.

An abbey official said Travers returned to New Jersey, but he could not be reached for comment.

According to the Paterson Diocese website, Travers, a native of New York City, was ordained in 1986 at St. Mary’s Abbey in Morris Township. He received a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University in 1979, a master’s degree in theology from The Catholic University of America in 1984 and a master’s of education degree from Harvard in 1999.

In parish ministry, he served at Notre Dame of Mount Carmel Church in Cedar Knolls and Corpus Christi Church in Chatham Township.

By Kevin Manahan and Bob Considine/The Star-Ledger

Related coverage:

Former Delbarton headmaster removed from Va. abbey over sexual misconduct allegations in N.J.

Prosecutor: Fingerprint on liquor bottle provides evidence against accused schoolyard killer

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Fingerprint on bottle of Colt 45 matches print of defendant Jose Carranza, prosecutor says in opening statements

schoolyard killings trialJose Carranza sits in Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin's Newark courtroom during the case against him, the latest defendant in the Newark schoolyard triple killing. Carranza, 32, is the oldest of the six defendants charged in the Aug. 4, 2007 killing behind Mount Vernon School.

NEWARK — The 40-ounce bottle of malt liquor found on the ground was still cold, beaded with condensation in the warm August night. Next to it lay 19-year-old Natasha Aeriel, a gunshot wound to her head. A few yards away, her brother and two friends lay dead, shot execution-style at the base of the skull.

For investigators who swarmed the scene behind Mount Vernon School in Newark, that bottle of malt liquor — innocuous and unnoticed at first amid the brutality — would soon become a crucial piece of evidence. The bottle contained a fingerprint, and a search of a law enforcement database turned up a name: Jose Carranza.

"His fingerprint was on a beer bottle right next to a pool of Natasha Aeriel’s blood," Essex County Assistant Prosecutor Romesh Sukhdeo said day at the opening of Carranza’s murder trial in Newark. Carranza and five other young men were charged with the Aug. 4, 2007, attack that left three college-age friends dead and Aeriel seriously injured. The crime shocked the city and drew national attention. All four victims were either enrolled in or planned to attend college that fall. Prosecutors said the six defendants had ties to a violent Central American gang, and called the killings gang-related.

Carranza, now 32 and the oldest man charged, was the first to surrender to authorities in the days after the slayings. Four others, including the gunman, have either been convicted or pleaded guilty to their roles in the killing.

In court Thursday, Carranza sat impassively at the defense table. An illegal immigrant from Peru, he listened to the proceeding through a Spanish translation.

While Carranza has long maintained his innocence and is the only defendant who never gave a statement to police about the killing, he was also the first defendant Aeriel identified. Prosecutors say the fingerprint on the bottle of Colt 45 provides solid evidence placing him at the scene.

His attorney, John Dell’Italia said a single fingerprint does not prove a case. "A fingerprint does not testify," Dell’Italia said in his opening statement. "It does not tell you when that individual touched that bottle" or how long that person was there."

schoolyard killings trialAssistant Essex County Prosecutor Romesh Sukhdeo points out a photo of Jose Carranza among the six co-defendants in Superior Court Judge Michael L. Ravin's Newark courtroom during the case against Carranza, the latest defendant in the Newark schoolyard triple killing. Carranza, 32, is the oldest of the six defendants charged in the Aug. 4, 2007 killing behind Mount Vernon School.

Carranza is the third defendant to be tried and Thursday’s proceedings began the same way as the others, including testimony from first responders and a 911 caller who heard four gunshots from behind the school.

Like the others, Carranza is charged with murder, attempted murder, robbery and other offenses.

He and another defendant, Shahid Baskerville, are also charged with sexually assaulting Aeriel.

But Carranza’s trial, which resumes Tuesday, will diverge in one important way. Baskerville, now 20, pleaded guilty last month to reduced charges in exchange for his planned testimony against Carranza.

At his plea, Baskerville said Carranza slashed Natasha Aeriel’s neck with a steak knife; the knife was never found. He also recalled hearing the three gunshots that killed Aeriel’s brother, Terrance Aeriel, 18, along with Iofemi Hightower and Dashon Harvey, both 20.

Sukhdeo told jurors they will hear testimony from Natasha Aeriel, now 23, who will "tell you of that horrific night."

All six cases are being handled separately. Three of Carranza’s co-defendants — Rodolfo Godinez, 28, Alexander Alfaro, 21, and Melvin Jovel, 22 — are serving life sentences. The youngest, Gerardo Gomez, 19, is awaiting trial, with Baskerville expected to testify against him, too.

Dell’Italia spent part of his opening pounding away at Baskerville’s credibility. "When you cast this play in hell," he said, "you don’t let the Devil’s disciple write the script."

And as they have at every court hearing, the families of the victims listened quietly but intently. When Sukhdeo introduced crime scene photos, Shalga Hightower, Iofemi’s mother, blinked back tears and shook her head. Outside the courtroom, she said she hoped 2012 would see the end of the criminal cases.

"This is our year," she said.

Staff writer Alexi Friedman contributed to this report.

Related coverage:

Trial of 5th defendant in Newark schoolyard killings to begin

Newark schoolyard killings: Jury selection begins for latest defendant in 2007 shootings

Chilling details emerge in Newark schoolyard murders, as suspect pleads guilty

Glassboro man is arrested in beating of N.J. police officer following Rangers-Flyers game

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Three people identified the suspect from police photos Watch video

veteri.jpgA 2006 mug shot of Dennis Veteri, the man charged in connection with the beating of a Woodbridge police officer

PHILADELPHIA — A Glassboro man has been arrested in connection with the beating of a Woodbridge police officer following the NHL Winter Classic earlier this month, according to a report on NBCPhiladelphia.com.

Dennis Veteri, 32, turned himself in at 2 p.m. Thursday, the report said. He is believed to have thrown the first punch in an attack that injured Neal Auricchio, a 30-year-old veteran of the Iraq war.

Veteri posted $50,000 bail this morning and was released. He is charged with two counts each of aggravated assault, conspiracy aggravated assault, simple assault and reckless endangerment, according to Philly.com.

The brawl at Geno's Steaks in South Philadelphia about an hour after the New York-Rangers Philadelphia Flyers game at the Wells Fargo Center was caught on video and posted on YouTube.com.

Three people, including Auricchio and the friend he was with, identified the suspect from police photos, the report said. The suspect and his friends had rung up a $225 bill that was paid about 15 minutes before the first punch in the brawl was allegedly thrown. Veteri has been arrested in Philadelphia previously for aggravated assault and drug possession and in Florida for probation violation, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Earlier this week, the Rangers announced that Auricchio has been invited to their game against the Devils at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 27.

Related coverage:

N.J. cop beaten in Philadelphia hockey brawl identified

Video: Woodbridge cop is allegedly beaten while wearing a Rangers jersey in Philadelphia

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