CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — A New Jersey politician whose 2012 drunken-driving traffic stop led to a law requiring police to mount video cameras in their cars has had his lawsuit tossed out.
Live from the Jim Gearhart Broadcast Facility somewhere in the wilds of the Garden State, it’s me Jersey Guy Ray Rossi – “el rey de la noche” – merely a guy with a microphone, transmitter, and internet connection – filling in for Steve tonight...
A New Jersey lawmaker who was arrested for DWI and other charges last summer, but was later found to be completely innocent and had all the charges dropped because of a police cruiser video recording, will introduce legislation to make it mandatory for all police cars used in traffic stops to have video recorders mounted on the dashboard.
A Washington Township police officer is suspended after a judge filed a complaint alleging the officer filed false reports and harassed a state assemblyman during a traffic stop.
A South Jersey municipal court judge has issued 13 complaints against a Washington Township police officer who stopped a New Jersey Assemblyman in July and charged him with drunken driving.
In the ongoing saga of the assemblyman and the cop, the assemblyman (one Paul Moriarty of Gloucester County) alleges he 'didn't realize the consequences' of refusing to taking a breatholizer test when he was suspected by a Washington Township cop of driving while under the influence the other day...