In Piscataway, the owner of a Nissan Nismo 270R said his ultra rare sports car would cost thousands to repair, after a bucket of mud and gravel was dumped onto it.
A coalition of New Jersey chamber of commerce groups are pushing back against proposals in Gov. Phil Murphy's budget plan they say would hurt employers and the state's economy.
Rutgers University president Jonathan Holloway is getting questions from both Trenton and Washington legislators about the agreement to end a pro-Palestinian encampment and now faces a lawsuit.
Police said they were notified by the Joint Base after they had received a signal from an Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT) originating from a wooded area in the western end of Barnegat Township.
A lot of shore towns that have seen a rebirth have changed their unique character. But Bradley Beach is different because it has never fallen into blight so it never needed a revitalization.
Princeton High School students will be held accountable under the school's code of conduct for chanting anti-Semitic phrases as they left the school to join an encampment at Princeton University.
"Think about the consequences of your actions. If you can't do that, we'll be more than willing to help," said North Brunswick Police Capt. Brian Hoiberg.
Internet casino gambling is legal in only a handful of states, but the industry is convinced it is the future of betting, even as some worry about cannibalizing physical casinos. Industry executives spoke Wednesday at a gambling industry conference in New Jersey. They acknowledged the difficulty they’ve had in expanding the legalization of online casino games. Yet they remain certain that the future of gambling is online. That's particularly true as federal post-pandemic budget aid dries up. Internet betting also faces claims from some gambling companies that online betting is cannibalizing revenue from physical casinos. But others just call that competition.
New Jersey lawmakers pushed ahead Thursday with legislation overhauling the state's public records access law, reigniting debate over the revisions that stalled earlier this year amid vocal opposition from civil rights and other groups.
A video of the meeting shows Teaneck Mayor Mike Pagan repeatedly asking Layla Graham, 32, to stop playing an alarm so the township council could conduct the "township's business."