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Tag: New Jersey

  • Two New Jersey lottery players win $1 million as Powerball jackpot hits $1.3 billion

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    Two Powerball tickets sold in New Jersey were among a dozen tickets nationwide that just missed a billion-dollar jackpot in Monday night’s drawing.

    In all, 12 tickets matched all five white balls to win million-dollar prizes, but no one hit the jackpot.

    The Powerball will now climb to an estimated $1.3 billion with a cash option of $589 million for the next drawing on Wednesday, Sept. 3, according to the Powerball website.

    The jackpot will be the fifth largest Powerball ever and the ninth largest in U.S. lottery history (see the lists below).

    The jackpot was last won on May 31 when a California lottery player won $204.5 million Powerball jackpot.

    Here’s a look at where the million-dollar winning tickets were sold and how much they won:

    • California – $1,378,451 (non-jackpot prizes are based on sales in state)

    • Massachusetts – $1 million

    • Montana – $2 million with Powerplay

    • New Jersey (2) – $1 million

    • North Carolina – $2 million with Powerplay

    • Pennslyvania – $1 million

    Winner: Man battling cancer won $1.3 billion Powerball jackpot; splitting money with wife, friend

    What are the 9/1/25 winning Powerball numbers?

    Here are the Powerball winning numbers for Monday, Sept. 1, 2025:

    8 – 23 – 25 – 40 – 53 and Powerball 5

    Powerplay was 3x

    Looking for an edge? What are the luckiest Powerball numbers? These balls are drawn most often

    When is the next Powerball drawing?

    Powerball drawings are held three times a week – Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at 10:59 p.m. Monday drawings were added in 2021.

    How late can I buy Powerball tickets?

    The deadline for purchasing Powerball ticket varies by state so don’t wait until the last minute. The deadline in New Jersey is 9:59 p.m. on the day of the drawing, while New York’s deadline is 10 p.m.

    Click here is a complete list of Powerball ticket deadline times by state or jurisdiction.

    Location, location, location: These are the states with the most Powerball jackpot winners

    How do I play Powerball?

    The cost is $2 per ticket, but you can add the Power Play for $1, which will increase the amount of your potential prize up to five times the original prize (except for the jackpot and Match 5). There is also a 10x Power Play possibility when the jackpot is less than $150 million.

    Each player selects five numbers from 1 to 69 for the white balls and one number from 1 to 26 for the red Powerball. However, you can also have the lottery machine generate a quick pick ticket with random numbers for you.

    Prizes vary from $4 for the matching the Powerball to $1 million for matching all five white balls (except in California) to the jackpot for matching all six balls. You can check all the prize payouts on the Powerball website here.

    Beware: No, a lottery jackpot winner isn’t giving you money. How to spot a scammer

    Where is the Powerball available?

    You can play the game in 45 states plus the Washington DC, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    More: What would you do if you won the Powerball lottery? Survey answers might surprise you

    Where can you buy lottery tickets?

    Tickets can be purchased in-person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

    You can also order tickets online through Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network, in these U.S. states: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Washington D.C. and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app allows you to pick your lottery game and numbers, place your order, see your ticket and collect your winnings all using your phone or home computer.

    Winner: New Jersey grandmother of 10 planning Disney trip after winning $1 million in Powerball

    How can I watch Powerball drawing?

    The Powerball drawing is broadcast live on the lottery website at 10:59 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday. You can watch the drawing by clicking here.

    The drawing may be broadcast on a local television station in your market as well.

    What are my odds of winning?

    Playing the Powerball can be exciting, but just don’t go spending those millions before you win.

    The odds of winning the jackpot are 292,201,338-to-1.

    The odds to match all five white balls are 11,688,053-to-1.

    Unlucky? Here are 13 crazy things more likely to happen than winning the lottery

    Lump sum or annuity?

    The major lotteries in the United States offer two jackpot payout options: annuity and cash.

    The annuity option is paid out over time. There is an immediate payment and then 29 annual payments after that, increasing by 5% each year.

    The cash option is significantly lower than the advertised jackpot, but it is paid in a lump sum. You don’t have to wait decades for all the money.

    Can I win jackpot and remain anonymous?

    In some states, like New Jersey, you can win a lottery anonymously. That wasn’t always the case, but now winners are able to stay anonymous under a law that was signed by Gov. Phil Murphy.

    In other states, a winner’s name and hometown are a matter of public record. Check with your state lottery for more information.

    Top 10 largest Powerball jackpots

    Here are the Top 10 jackpots since the Powerball lottery began in 1992:

    1. $1.586 billion, Jan. 13, 2016: Three winners in California, Florida, Tennessee

    2. $1.3 billion, Sept. 3, 2025:

    3. $758.7 million, Aug. 23, 2017: Won in Massachusetts

    What was largest U.S. lottery jackpot ever?

    Here’s a look at the top jackpots won in the United States, between the Powerball and the Mega Millions lotteries:

    1. $1.586 billion, Powerball, Jan. 13, 2016: Three winners in California, Florida, Tennessee

    2. $1.3 billion, Powerball, Sept. 3, 2025:

    3. $758.7 million, Powerball, Aug. 23, 2017: Won in Massachusetts

    Gambling problem?

    If you need help with a gambling problem, you can get help by calling 1800-GAMBLER or clicking on www.800gambler.org

    Jackpocket is the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network. Gannett may earn revenue for audience referrals to Jackpocket services. Must be 18+, 21+ in AZ and 19+ in NE. Not affiliated with any State Lottery. Gambling Problem? Call 1-877-8-HOPE-NY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY); 1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-MYLIMIT (OR); 1-800-GAMBLER (all others). Visit jackpocket.com/tos for full terms and conditions.

    This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: 2 NJ tickets win $1 million as Powerball jackpot hits $1.3 billion

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  • States begin to see job losses from Trump’s cuts, housing and spending slowdowns

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    Cars are flooded in Petersburg, Va., in July. Many of the canceled federal contracts that have contributed to job losses in the state involved flooding control. (Photo courtesy of Petersburg Fire Rescue & Emergency Services)

    Virginia and New Jersey may be among the states most affected by the hiring slowdown that enraged President Donald Trump when it appeared in an Aug. 1 jobs report showing the United States had 258,000 fewer jobs than initially reported in May and June.

    Such revisions to earlier reports are based on more up-to-date payroll data and are routine. But the scale in this case was shocking — showing the smallest monthly job gains since pandemic-era December 2020 and the largest jobs revision, outside recessions, since 1968.

    In response, Trump declared the numbers were wrong, fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics chief, and offered as a replacement E.J. Antoni, a loyalist who has proposed suspending the jobs report. Trump falsely said in a Truth Social post that the revised jobs numbers were “RIGGED in order to make the Republicans, and ME, look bad.”

    Beyond those attention-grabbing actions, though, the numbers demonstrate the real effects of Trump’s work slashing the federal government.

    A Stateline analysis of the data shows how several states, especially Virginia and New Jersey, shed jobs in the second quarter of this year, which includes May and June.

    In Virginia, there were job losses blamed on canceled federal contracts in Northern Virginia as part of cuts made by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, known as DOGE. Meanwhile, a slow housing market shuttered a plywood factory in the southern part of the state, and DOGE efforts canceled flooding control contracts on the coast.

    Jay Ford, Virginia policy manager at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, told a state legislative committee in June that $50 million in contracts were slashed in the Hampton Roads area near the coast, causing a spike in unemployment claims.

    That included $20 million to address flooding in Hampton, where almost a quarter of homes are in flood zones, and $24 million to repair a Portsmouth dam that could fail in a major storm, he said.

    “This is work that you desperately needed,” Ford said at the committee hearing. “There was a real focus on certain buzzwords like ‘climate’ or ‘resilience,’ and I think people conflated some of these projects as somehow unnecessary.”

    For instance, the American Institutes for Research announced 233 layoffs in Virginia in May and 50 in Maryland since the beginning of the year. The not-for-profit organization’s projects include working with school districts to solve achievement gaps and absenteeism, creating AI-driven workforce training, and addressing health care issues such as improving kidney disease care while reducing Medicare costs and strengthening access to health care by keeping rural hospitals open.

    “The changes occurring in the federal government have brought significant challenges for many federal contractors, including AIR,” said Dana Tofig, the company’s spokesperson.

    Other recent layoffs in Virginia: 442 workers at Northern Virginia’s Mitre, which manages federally funded defense research centers and faced $28 million in canceled federal contracts; and 554 workers at a shuttered plywood factory in Southern Virginia.

    “Housing affordability challenges and a 30-year low in existing home sales are impacting our plywood business, as many of our plywood products are used in repair and remodel projects, which often occur when homes change ownership,” Georgia-Pacific said in a May news release.

    Stateline looked at two state jobs surveys for the second quarter that sometimes have quite different results: the so-called payroll survey of businesses that the Bureau of Labor Statistics uses for its monthly report, which has yet to be revised at the state level, and the BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics program, which estimates job changes based on monthly household surveys.

    The LAUS estimates are often called the “household” survey because they rely mostly on surveys of households, asking how many people are employed. They include jobs the payroll survey can’t get, such as contract and agricultural jobs, and capture jobs where people live rather than states where employers are located.

    In a state like Virginia with a high number of federal employees and contract workers, lost jobs may show up sooner in the household survey since many federal jobs are not reflected on state-level payrolls if they are done by subcontractors, if the agency or contractor is based in another state, or if DOGE cuts allowed people to stop work but stay on the payroll until September. Those people might report being unemployed in the household survey but wouldn’t show up in other surveys until October.

    The household survey shows about the same number of slowing job gains as the revised national payroll report, so it may be a window into the trends, many caused by Trump administration cuts in government, health care and foreign aid, and also by slowing sales in stores and housing markets.

    Both surveys rely on small samples and are often revised later, said Charles Gascon, an economist and research officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The more definitive Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, set for release Dec. 3 for the second quarter, will show state patterns more conclusively, he said.

    The household surveys show Virginia with the largest job losses in the country for the second quarter, down about 43,000, and job losses every month since February. Before that, the state gained jobs every month since the height of pandemic job losses in April 2020.

    New Jersey, which had the most job losses — 15,400 — in the separate second-quarter payroll survey, has suffered layoffs in retail stores hit by a slowdown in consumer spending, increased shoplifting and, among drugstores, lawsuits for their role in the opioid epidemic.

    Walmart announced 481 layoffs at its Hoboken, New Jersey, corporate office, and Rite Aid drugstores laid off 1,122 amid Chapter 11 bankruptcy affected by opioid crisis lawsuits that also hit Walmart and other pharmacy chains. Pharma firms Bristol Myers Squibb and Novartis also have announced hundreds of layoffs in New Jersey, citing patent expirations on popular drugs.

    Wobbly state finances

    Rising unemployment combined with weak revenue growth suggests “economic fragility” for state finances, said Lucy Dadayan, a principal research associate for the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center who tracks state tax revenue.

    Nationally, unemployment was at 4.2% in July, the same as July 2024 but up from recent lows of 3.4% in April 2023, with the largest increases in Mississippi, Virginia and Oregon.

    Unemployment has dropped the most compared with July 2024 in Indiana, Illinois, New York and West Virginia.

    The states with the highest unemployment rates in July were California (5.5%), Nevada (5.4%) and Michigan (5.3%), while the lowest were in South Dakota (1.9%), North Dakota (2.5%) and Vermont (2.6%).

    “I think the dramatic May and June jobs revision signals economic fragility. State-level warning signs suggest the impacts will show gradually,” Dadayan said. “And of course states are facing fiscal challenges caused by One Big Beautiful Bill Act tax and spending decisions.”

    State finances are a mixed picture, with income tax collections rising because of a strong stock market and sales tax growth weak as consumers retreat on spending, Dadayan said.

    State layoff figures are giving us an early read.

    – Amanda Goodall, a workforce analyst known as ‘The Job Chick’ on social media

    In Virginia, the economically distressed area around Emporia will suffer aftershocks from the plywood plant closing, said Del. Otto Wachsmann, a Republican who represents the area in the state House of Delegates. The area is already reeling from the indefinite closure of a nearby Boar’s Head lunch meat plant that employed 600 people after a listeria outbreak there last year.

    The community, part of the southern “Wood Basket” region, has a large logging industry that will now struggle to find new markets farther away with higher costs for trucking, Wachsmann said. “We’re working hard to find new industries to come here.”

    Layoff rates in April, as calculated by the online human resources platform Techr, showed New Jersey, Vermont and Virginia with the highest rates.

    Amanda Goodall, a workforce analyst who calls herself “The Job Chick” on social media, said the layoffs reflect restructuring in major corporations as well as federal cutbacks. She wrote about the layoff rates in a recent post.

    “These are not statistical flukes. They reflect real corporate moves, in New Jersey and Virginia especially,” Goodall wrote in an emailed statement to Stateline. “The bigger issue is that nobody on the ground cares what the unemployment rate says if they can’t find an interview for a job they’re qualified for. State layoff figures are giving us an early read.”

    California and Texas

    California and Texas saw the biggest jobs gains in both surveys in the second quarter.

    Texas added 42,700 jobs in the payroll survey, with the largest increase coming in the category of private educational services, 14,400 jobs, as the state approved a plan for school vouchers to start next year, according to a statement to Stateline from the Texas Workforce Commission.

    California added 25,300 jobs. But the household survey showed an increase of almost 111,000 jobs, the highest in the country.

    A Public Policy Institute of California blog post in July called the state’s labor market “at best, in a hold-steady pattern this year,” citing the state’s stubbornly elevated unemployment rate of 5.4% but also its jobs improvement over last year.

    “A hold-steady pattern is a welcome change from a year ago,” said the post, written by Sarah Bohn, a senior fellow at the institute.

    Stateline reporter Tim Henderson can be reached at thenderson@stateline.org.

    Stateline is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Stateline maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Scott S. Greenberger for questions: info@stateline.org.

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  • Suspended New Jersey Little Leaguer’s bat sells for nearly $10,000 at auction

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    CBS News Live



    CBS News Philadelphia

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    The bat tossed in the air by a New Jersey Little Leaguer to celebrate a home run that earned him a suspension later lifted by a judge sold Friday for nearly $10,000 at auction.

    All proceeds from the sale of 12-year-old Marco Rocco’s signed bat will be donated to the program he plays for, Haddonfield Little League.

    “Marco loves Little League and is happy that he is able to give back to an organization that he is very fond of,” his father, Joe Rocco, said in a text. “Little League was such a big part of Marco’s life for a long time.”

    The auction by Goldin Auctions drew 68 bids. The winning bid was $9,882, and the name of the winning bidder was not announced.

    Marco’s bat flip on July 16 in the final of the Little League sectional tournament resulted in an ejection, a one-game suspension and a legal fight.

    The suspension would have kept him out of the first game of the state tournament.

    Joe Rocco took Little League to court and won an emergency temporary restraining order that allowed Marco to play in the double-elimination tournament.

    The incident was also commemorated with a pin available at the Little League World Series.

    The bat flip also drew attention from major leaguers, who sided with the boy.

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  • Suspended NJ Little Leaguer’s bat sells for nearly $10,000 at auction

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    What to Know

    • The bat tossed in the air by a New Jersey Little Leaguer to celebrate a home run that earned him a suspension later lifted by a judge has sold for nearly $10,000 at auction. 
    • All proceeds from the sale of 12-year-old Marco Rocco’s signed bat will be donated to the program he plays for, Haddonfield Little League. The auction drew 68 bids.
    • Marco’s bat flip on July 16 in the final of the Little League sectional tournament resulted in an ejection, a one-game suspension and a legal fight. But his father took Little League to court and won an emergency temporary restraining order that allowed Marco to play.

    The bat tossed in the air by a New Jersey Little Leaguer to celebrate a home run that earned him a suspension later lifted by a judge sold Friday for nearly $10,000 at auction.

    All proceeds from the sale of 12-year-old Marco Rocco’s signed bat will be donated to the program he plays for, Haddonfield Little League.

    “Marco loves Little League and is happy that he is able to give back to an organization that he is very fond of,” his father, Joe Rocco, said in a text message. “Little League was such a big part of Marco’s life for a long time.”

    The auction by Goldin Auctions drew 68 bids. The winning bid was $9,882, and the name of the winning bidder was not announced.

    Marco’s bat flip on July 16 in the final of the Little League sectional tournament resulted in an ejection, a one-game suspension and a legal fight.

    The suspension would have kept him out of the first game of the state tournament.

    Joe Rocco took Little League to court and won an emergency temporary restraining order that allowed Marco to play in the double-elimination tournament.

    The incident was also commemorated with a pin available at the Little League World Series.

    The bat flip also drew attention from major leaguers, who sided with the boy.

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    The Associated Press and NBC Philadelphia Staff

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  • Philly woman arrested for fleeing NJ police, blowing through stop sign, crashing

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    A Philadelphia woman was arrested in New Jersey after she allegedly fled from police in a stolen car and crashed on Thursday, according to officials in Gloucester Township.

    Officers from the Gloucester Township Police Department were at the Howard Jonson Hotel for a different investigation around 2:30 p.m. on Aug. 28 when an automated license plate reader flagged that a stolen vehicle had entered the parking lot, officials explained.

    The vehicle was allegedly being driven by Aleesa McIver, of Philadelphia, and had a passenger, officials said.

    When the officers at the hotel tried to stop the two people in the car, the passenger jumped out and ran into a hotel room before being taken into custody, police said.

    Meanwhile, McIver sped off out of the parking lot and went southbound on the Black Horse Pike, according to police.

    A little while later, another officer saw the suspected stolen car driving recklessly over a roadway median, police explained. When McIver saw the marked police car she turned around and went northbound on the pike.

    Less than 15 minutes later, officers said they were called to the intersection of Station and Roosevelt avenue in the Glendora section of Gloucester Township for a reported car crash.

    Investigators said that McIver did not stop at a stop sign and crashed head-on into another car in an active construction zone.

    McIver reportedly tried to run away from the crash scene with a duffle bag but was captured by police, officials said.

    Police said that they found a handgun, magazines, ammunition and prescription narcotics on McIver.

    Inside the stolen car, investigators reported finding open containers of alcohol.

    McIver is charged with receiving stolen property a motor vehicle, assault by auto during crash, eluding and other related charges.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Woman drives into Planet Fitness in New Jersey, killing gym-goer and hurting 3

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    A woman drove into a Planet Fitness in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Tuesday afternoon, killing a man who had been inside working out and sending at least three other people to the hospital with injuries.

    The gym has been closed by buildings officials until further notice.

    The incident is under investigation.

    Chopper footage showed a sprawling emergency response at the scene.

    No other details on the woman or victims were immediately available.


    News 4

    News 4

    This was the scene outside the Planet Fitness in New Jersey.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • ‘Recognize the trauma’: Nadine Menendez attorneys, jailed husband ask for leniency in gold bar case

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    Lawyers for Nadine Menendez are requesting 12 months and one day of imprisonment when she is sentenced on September 11, having been found guilty on all counts in the bribery and fraud trial that also landed her husband behind bars. 

    In their 25-page letter to Judge Sidney Stein, Menendez’s lawyers detailed the hardships she’s encountered throughout her life, writing, “Nadine is not her husband, or her co-defendants. Despite all of the government’s efforts to present her as a vixen, the reality is far from that. She is a deeply traumatized woman.”   

    They added, “Her entire life has been marked by men who have taken advantage of her, and harmed her, in myriad ways.”

    Other letters from friends, family and her husband, Bob, also pleaded for leniency.  

    Prosecutors said Nadine Menendez was a partner in her husband’s crimes, helping to collect payoffs from three New Jersey businessmen in a wide-ranging scheme. The defense argued some of the gold she received was not bribes, but rather were passed down from her family or were gifts from businessmen who were longtime friends. NBC New York’s Jonathan Dienst reports.

    Bob Menendez, who wrote his letter from prison at FCI Alletown in Pennsylvania, stated that his wife of five years has been punished enough and has lost everything she cared about.  

    “Your Honor, you gave me a tough sentence that surely serves the deterrent value you said was needed. To imprison Nadine, would not recognize the trauma she has suffered, how it has affected her and her judgment, and I would respectfully say would not have any greater deterrent effect,”  wrote the 71-year-old.

    Bob Menendez went on to say he regrets that she was painted as money-hungry during his trial. 

    “I regret that I didn’t fully preview what my defense attorney said about Nadine during my trial and in his summation. To suggest that Nadine was money-hungry or in financial need, and therefore would solicit others for help, is simply wrong,” he wrote.

    Bob Menendez added that Nadine Menendez had money of her own from a previous divorce, and that any discussions about mortgage or car payments that were referred to in the trial were the result of fears of a lawsuit following the fatal car accident she was involved in.  

    Several medical professionals also wrote letters on Nadine Menendez’s behalf.  A former BOP physician wrote that she would not be able to get the medial attention needed for her breast cancer treatments and that home confinement would be the better option for her.  

    In April, Nadine Menendez was convicted of the same corruption charges that sent Bob Menendez to prison for 11 years. 

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    Courtney Copenhagen

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  • This city in Illinois was just named America’s richest and safest…and many have never heard of it

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    U.S. 2025’s top 50 wealthiest and safest cities—New Jersey shines, New York misses out

    A newly released ranking by GOBankingRates reveals the 50 most affluent and secure cities in the U.S. for 2025. The methodology factors in elements such as average household income, home values, living costs, and both property and violent crime statistics. Western Springs, Illinois, emerges as the top performer, while New York cities don’t make the cut despite their reputation. Meanwhile, New Jersey earns an impressive seven entries on the list.

    Top three overall:

    • Western Springs, Illinois – Leading the list with a mean household income near $295,000, a reasonable average home price of about $837,000, and remarkably low crime figures.

    • Lexington, Massachusetts – Ranks second, paired with high incomes and low crime, but the average home value is steep—around $1.69 million.

    • Winchester, Massachusetts – Comes in third with similarly robust wealth and safety metrics.

    Lexington, Massachusetts ranks second, paired with high incomes and low crime.

    New Jersey highlights:

    7 New Jersey municipalities secure places in the ranking:

    • Ridgewood (#11) – Most notable of the state’s entries, with a mean income of about $288,861, strong safety indicators, and average home prices around $1.18 million.

    • Additional towns include: Westfield (#13), Madison (#21), Haddonfield (#22), Glen Ridge (#23), Summit (#31), and Metuchen (#50).

    Interestingly, despite its economic prominence, New York state doesn’t have a single city in the top 50 list.

    America’s 50 safest and richest cities revealed

    Top 10 safest and richest cities in the USA

    What readers are saying

    • Many readers are expressing disbelief that New York cities were absent, given the state’s economic powerhouses.

    • A few speculate this omission highlights shifting suburban dynamics where affluence and safety are increasingly concentrated outside urban centers.

    • A number of people seem intrigued by Western Springs topping the list, noting its blend of prosperity and manageable housing costs sounds enviable.

    • Some comparisons to similarly sized suburban enclaves around major cities are being drawn.

    Methodology discussions

    • A few people question the metrics, especially around how “cities” are defined. Some assumed a broader urban center, so listing commuter towns and suburbs has sparked debate.

    • Crime rate versus cost of living balances also come up in discussions, with readers curious how trade-offs were evaluated.

    Ridgewood sign on entrance to train station platform train track in bergen county new jersey (nj transit stop on commuter rail) street light roof

    Ridgewood, NJ has a mean income of about $288,861, strong safety indicators, and average home prices around $1.18 million.

    Final thoughts

    The list shines a spotlight on smaller, wealthier, safe communities—many of which are suburbs or commuter towns—rather than the major urban centers one might expect. New Jersey’s strong representation and the lack of New York entries are particularly striking. The ranking appears to strike a chord with readers intrigued by shifts in wealth distribution and livability preferences.

    Hi there! I’m Brenda. A thirty something year old millennial who loves all things travel and fashion. Happy to share my tips and tricks when it comes to booking flights as well as dressing up.


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  • Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi welcome first child via adoption

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    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi adopted a daughter, the first child for the married couple, this summer, they announced Thursday.

    “We are beyond excited to embark on this beautiful next chapter of parenthood in both peace and privacy,” the couple wrote in a social media statement. No further details were released.

    Brown, 21, and Bongiovi, 23, were married in a private ceremony in May 2024. Representatives for Brown and Bongiovi did not immediately respond to The Associated Press’ request for comment.

    Brown gained recognition for her starring role as Eleven in the Duffer brothers’ sci-fi series “Stranger Things.” The fifth and final season will air this November and December, a culmination of nine years of the show’s production. The British actor has pursued other acting and business ventures in that time, including the Netflix original “Enola Holmes” films and a “Godzilla” film. She even released a romance book in 2023.

    Bongiovi is the son of Jon Bon Jovi, founder and frontman of the rock band Bon Jovi. Bongiovi debuted his own acting career as the star in “Rockbottom,” which released last year.

    Brown stressed the importance of family during the 2024 premiere of her Netflix film “Damsel,” where Bongiovi and his parents were in attendance.

    “I’m just so lucky that they’re here tonight and it just means so much to me,” Brown told The Associated Press then. “Family is everything and just to have my second family here means everything.”

    The couple lives in Georgia. She recently told the AP she enjoys living on a farm, largely disconnected from social media, while promoting her 2025 Netflix film “The Electric State.”

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  • Owner to sell Wonderland Pier after plans denied by Ocean City council

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    The fate of the part of the Ocean City, New Jersey, boardwalk that housed the Wonderland Pier remains up in the air after the city council voted “no” to a developer’s plan.

    Members of the city council considered a resolution that would have designated the former Gillian’s Wonderland Pier as an “area in need of rehabilitation,” on Thursday.

    ICONA Resorts owns the property and was looking to build a 252-room hotel on the site.

    “It’s a sad outcome,” pier property owner and developer Eustace Mita told NBC10 in a statement.

    Opponents to the hotel plans said that re-zoning could lead to high rises taking over Ocean City.

    Mita also confirmed to NBC10 that he is planning to sell the property after Thursday’s vote.

    Iconic Ocean City landmark closes

    Gillian’s Wonderland Pier closed on Oct. 13, 2024, after entertaining generations of children on the Ocean City Boardwalk since 1929.

    The pier former owner and Ocean City Mayor Jay Gillian said back in 2024 that he park that’s been in his family for 94 years was no longer good business.

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    Emily Rose Grassi and NBC10 Staff

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  • Hurricane Erin moves away, but residual effects at the coast continue into the weekend

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    Hurricane Erin made its closest approach to the tristate late on Thursday, delivering dangerous rip currents, rough surf, and coastal flooding along our shores. Conditions will improve as we head toward the weekend, but we’ll continue to see residual impacts from Erin at the coast, so swimming at the beach will remain dangerous due to the high rip current threat. Fortunately, though, skies will be brighter and temperatures will be warmer for those of you who want to dig your toes in the sand.

    The rip current risk has been high all week, even leading to the closure of some area beaches. And we’ll see that high risk persist through at least Friday, if not Saturday. The rip currents are strong enough to carry out even the most experienced swimmers. Stay out of the water as long as we continue to face a high threat for dangerous rip currents, even if there is a lifeguard on duty.

    We saw surf zone wave heights peak on Thursday, where eastern Long Island beaches saw waves up to 16 feet. Surf won’t quite reach the same heights on Friday, but we’ll continue to face high surf conditions across both New Jersey and Long Island, where waves could still reach heights upwards of 10 feet. Surf heights will continue to go down day by day, but even by Saturday, we could still see waves well above what is usual for our coastal spots. It won’t be until Sunday into Monday that we’ll really see the sea settling.

    On top of impacts within the ocean, Erin also kicked up some brisk easterly winds contributing to moderate levels of coastal flooding Thursday night, where we saw inundations in low-lying areas up to 2 ½ feet. As Erin continues to move further north and east, away from our area, its influence on the strength of our onshore winds will diminish, but we’ll continue to see the effects through Friday, though not quite to the same degree. Thursday’s coastal flood warnings will go down a level of an advisory on Friday, though flooding in especially vulnerable areas could still reach up to 2 feet.

    But even as we continue to see lingering effects from Hurricane Erin, making it difficult to enjoy time in the ocean, weather conditions will grow increasingly favorable as the weekend goes on for a day spent out on the sand. High temperatures will be back up into the 80s for most of us as we enjoy a run of days with low humidity, light winds, and sunny skies. Even the upcoming rain chances we are watching for Sunday won’t bring much impact to our coastal areas. And the areas that do see rain won’t get any until late Sunday night.

    So we may still be in the throes of Erin’s influence for now, but the worst is behind us. Coastal conditions will slowly start to improve and just in time for a gorgeous weekend. You’ll want to get outside and enjoy it while you can; summer days are fleeting… and Labor Day is a little over a week away.

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    Lauren Maroney, NBC New York and Storm Team 4

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  • Energy prices could be election issue as voters see jump in utility bills

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    A July 11 post in a Hoboken, New Jersey, parenting group on Facebook pointed to a frustrating trend: “Our utility bill is more than double what it was last month. … Anything we can do about it?” The post had several dozen replies and most of the commenters said their home utility bills had also risen dramatically. 

    On the campaign trail a year ago, President Trump vowed, “Under my administration, we will be slashing energy and electricity prices by half within 12 months — at a maximum, 18 months,” but this year has seen energy prices rising in several states. Residents and governors in five East Coast states are blaming electric supplier, PJM Interconnection. The company is the largest grid operator in the U.S., serving 13 states and 65 million customers. 

    In New Jersey, energy prices increased on June 1, causing a 17-20% jump in residential customers’utility bills. The utility company PSE&G told its New Jersey customers they should expect to see a higher monthly bill of about $183 for the average customer, an increase of $27. 

    PSE&G attributed the price hike to “an increase in energy demand combined with the need for new power generation,” which it said “has driven higher supply prices.” As a utility, PSE&G pointed out that it doesn’t earn a profit on the electric supply, so “these costs are passed through directly to customers.”

    PJM says it is experiencing a rapid increase in energy demand, driven by the power requirements of artificial intelligence, data centers, electrification and a resurgence in U.S. manufacturing. In its latest forecast, PJM forecast a growth in energy demand of 5% over the next 10 years.

    “We don’t have enough newer, more reliable energy sources,” said Alex Ambrose, a policy analyst at New Jersey Policy Perspective, a nonpartisan think tank. 

    Ambrose says that renewable sources like wind, solar, and battery are the cheapest and fastest forms of energy to bring online and faults PJM for its reluctance to bring clean energy into the grid: “PJM is also keeping older coal gas plants running, even if they are uneconomical and more expensive.”

    But in an op-ed in NJ Spotlight News, the company blamed a shortfall of energy on “state and federal decarbonization policies and some economic pressures” for closing fossil fuel-based power plants in New Jersey. PJM also said it has a queue of 63 gigawatts of projects — enough to power more than 47 million homes — waiting to be connected by 2026, and an “overwhelming majority” of those projects are renewables.

    Rising utility bills likely an issue in New Jersey governor’s race 

    Energy Secretary Chris Wright is starting to worry that high energy prices could hurt Republicans at the ballot box. In a recent interview with Politico, he blamed Democratic policies for “pushing prices up right now,” but conceded the political reality that Republicans may suffer in the next elections. 

    “Who’s going to get blamed for it? We’re going to get blamed because we’re in office,” he said. 

    New Jersey is poised to be among the first to test the issue in the governor’s race this November. 

    “Affordability is the number one issue in this race, and rising energy prices are also at the top of everyone’s mind,” Ambrose told CBS News.

    Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic nominee for governor, in July released a statement accusing PJM of “mismanagement” of the grid: “PJM has refused to plug clean, cheap power like solar into the grid, while giving preference to coal and oil.” 

    And earlier this month, her opponent, Republican nominee Jack Ciattarelli, wrote in a post on X about “Rebecca in Highland Park,” whose electric bill he said had tripled, “to more than $1000.” 

    “Why? Because Trenton Democrats, with the approval of my opponent Mikie Sherrill, shut down six electricity generation plants around the state, stopped burning natural gas, and didn’t expand our nuclear capabilities in South Jersey,” Ciattarelli said.

    “We can look at how folks are going to vote in this upcoming election, as a reflection on how they’re feeling about the country at large,” says Ambrose, “This affordability problem is not going away.”

    A Fairleigh Dickinson University poll earlier this month found that 26% of voters blame the utility companies for price hikes, 19% blame Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, and 10% say that energy producers are at fault. Murphy is not running for reelection due to term limits.

    “Utility bills directly impact elections,” says Rob Gramlich, president of Grid Strategies, a D.C.-based energy consultancy firm. Gramlich pointed to the most infamous example of this, the California recall election in 2003, prompted in large part by the state’s energy crisis. It cost Democrat Gray Davis the governorship and handed it to Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger. 

    Gramlich indicated he expects energy prices to remain high for the foreseeable future, predicting that “two years from now, we’re going to see a lot more policy discussion about it.”

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  • At least 2 hurt in fiery crash in Gloucester Township, NJ

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    At least two people were injured in a fiery crash involving an SUV and a car in the Sicklerville section of Gloucester Township, New Jersey.

    The crash occurred Wednesday, Aug. 20, around 10:30 p.m. along the 600 block of Hickstown Road. Police said a car was traveling westbound on Hickstown when the driver lost control, entered the eastbound lane and crashed into an SUV.


    Gloucester Township Police

    Gloucester Township Police

    A picture of the crash.

    The crash caused at least one of the vehicles to catch fire. A nearby resident used a fire extinguisher to place the flames under control until police, firefighters and medics arrive.

    The drivers of both vehicles were taken to local hospitals. Police said the driver of the car suffered serious injuries. They have not yet revealed that person’s condition or the condition of the driver of the SUV. While police said there were multiple injuries, they have not yet revealed if there were others inside the vehicles besides the two drivers.

    Police continue to investigate. If you have any information on the crash, please call Gloucester Township Police at 856-228-4500.

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    David Chang

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  • Immigration raid in New Jersey results in dozens of warehouse workers detained

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    Dozens of immigrant workers were detained at a warehouse in New Jersey on Wednesday, in the latest federal raid as part of Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

    Agents from Customs and Border Protection (CBP) descended on the warehouse, in Edison, New Jersey, at 9am on Wednesday, the New York Times reported. Officers led some workers away in zip ties, employees told the Times, while people they deemed to have legal status in the US were given yellow wristbands.

    Univision reported that the agents spent hours at the facility, during what CBP said was a “surprise inspection”. CBP told Univision the operation had begun as part of “routine efforts” to verify customs, employment and safety regulations.

    Related: Community rallies around LA teen detained by Ice while walking dog

    CBP did not immediately respond to questions from the Guardian.

    Videos taken by New Labor, a New Jersey-based labor and immigration reform organization, showed CBP vehicles at the site, along with unmarked SUVs. New Labor said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents were also at the raid.

    “We have customs and border patrol holding the door open for their Ice counterparts to say they’re allowed in with us, and then they start doing immigration-related actions,” Amanda Dominguez, an organizer at New Labor, told News 12 New York.

    “That is illegal. Ice still needs their own judicial warrant signed by a judge.”

    Relatives of the workers gathered at the facility throughout the day, the Times reported, waiting for news about people inside.

    “People were very upset and crying and angry, completely understandably,” said Ellen Whit, who works at Deportation & Immigrant Response Equipo (Dire), a New Jersey hotline that responds to calls about raids and from relatives of immigrants who have been detained, told the Times. “One girl’s father was taken. She was very, very upset.”

    Workers described a chaotic scene as federal agents arrived. About 20 agents entered through the front door of the warehouse, witnesses told the Times, while other agents blocked alternative exits. Some people were injured amid the chaos, while others hid in the rafters of the warehouse for hours in an attempt to avoid the officers.

    The raid comes weeks after 20 people were taken into custody by Ice at the Alba Wine and Spirits warehouse in Edison. Activists told Fox 5 NY that masked Ice agents arrived that the warehouse in 30 cars, with K-9 dogs.

    Phil Murphy, the Democratic governor of New Jersey, said after the Alba raid, according to NJ Spotlight News: “We don’t stand in the way of federal authorities doing their work and [we are] cooperating with them all the time. But beyond that, I have no insight into the Edison situation.”

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  • Errani and Vavassori win revamped US Open mixed doubles to defend their title

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori weren’t even sure they would get to defend their U.S. Open mixed doubles title. Organizers revamped the tournament because they wanted singles superstars, not doubles specialists.

    They not only made it back to New York, they made it back to the top.

    The Italians beat No. 3 seeds Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud 6-3, 5-7 (10-6) on Wednesday night, winning four matches over two days to earn $1 million— a huge raise over their earnings in New York last year in a format that looked nothing like this one.

    Errani and Vavassori were among the many critics of the changes to the event that shut out every other traditional doubles pairing, but had nothing but smiles — and plenty of hugs — after building a quick lead in the match tiebreaker and holding on in front of a large crowd inside Arthur Ashe Stadium.

    “I think it was important for us to play,” Vavassori said. “Like, I have to say the initiative was also important because it was really a statement that doubles can become something better. The stadium was packed. The people were enjoying it. If something doesn’t work — like, we showed today that it’s working. Like, the people were going crazy.”

    It was a setting rarely enjoyed by doubles players and what U.S. Open organizers sought when they overhauled their tournament, moving it to well before singles play starts Sunday in hopes that tennis’ best-known players would play.

    Many of them did. But in the end, the event belonged to the doubles duo.

    Eight teams in the 16-team field qualified by their players’ combined singles rankings, with the remaining teams given wild cards. Errani doubted the Italians were going to get one.

    They eventually did and became the first repeat mixed doubles champions in Flushing Meadows since Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Jamie Murray in 2018-19. Both repeatedly said they were representing the many doubles players who never had the chance to come to New York with them this year.

    “I think this one is also for them,” Errani said.

    The event drew past U.S. Open singles champions Carlos Alcaraz, Emma Raducanu, Novak Djokovic, Naomi Osaka and Daniil Medvedev, all of whom lost on the first day. Even without them, almost all the seats were full for the three matches Wednesday night in Arthur Ashe Stadium, with the roof closed after it rained most of the afternoon.

    Ruud acknowledged that the U.S. Tennis Association took a bold risk with its changes, with critics saying it turned the championship, with shortened sets to 4 games in the first three rounds, into a glorified exhibition, rather than the two-week, 32-event of the past. But even players who specialize in doubles agreed that the event got way more attention than they are accustomed to.

    “Any time you get a full crowd like this, how can we keep that going?” Christian Harrison said after he and Danielle Collins lost 4-2, 4-2 to Errani and Vavassori in the semis. “I mean, unreal night. I won’t forget this night.”

    Swiatek and Ruud edged the top-seeded team of Jessica Pegula and Jack Draper 3-5, 5-3 (10-8) in the other semifinal, battling back from an 8-4 deficit in the match tiebreaker.

    The No. 2-ranked Swiatek, a six-time Grand Slam singles champion, and Ruud, who has reached three major singles finals, then played well in the final.

    But they couldn’t match the doubles prowess of the Italians, who won a second major title together at this year’s French Open. Vavassori, with his height and constant movement around the net, was a hard target to pass even for Swiatek and Ruud, two accurate ball strikers from the baseline.

    “I think in doubles we showed it’s very important know how to play doubles,” Errani said. “In doubles it’s not just serving good, hitting good, returning good. There are many other things that are not easy.”

    Errani is one of the most accomplished women’s doubles players ever, having won a career Grand Slam with former partner Roberta Vinci, along with the 2024 Olympic gold medal with Jasmine Paolini — who was in the crowd cheering after pulling out of this event after losing to Swiatek on Monday night in the Cincinnati final.

    Swiatek opted to stay in and shared $400,000 with Ruud — double what Errani and Vavassori earned for winning last year.

    ___

    More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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  • Man who shot NJ councilwoman to death outside her home sentenced to life in prison

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    The man was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of a New Jersey city councilwoman right outside her home as her family waited inside.

    Rashid Bynum was convicted in June of first-degree murder and second-degree weapon possession in the 2023 shooting death of Sayreville Councilwoman Eunice Dwumfour, whose family sat weeping in court on Monday. Her sister urged the judge the impose the maximum sentence on the man who carefully planned the murder of her sister.

    “You drove how long to kill a woman? What kind of a man are you?” asked Priscilla Dwumfour.

    A Middlesex county assistant prosecutor read a letter from the victim’s teenage daughter, who was just 11 when her mother was killed.

    “I still have not recovered from what happened to her, so why did you kill my mom?” the letter read.

    Bynum did not speak in court, and has never taken responsibility for the murder. He got a life sentence, with the judge saying the killing “was committed in an especially cruel and depraved manner,” and cited Bynum’s lack of remorse. He won’t be eligible for parole until 2088, when he is 94 years old.

    Dwumfour, who served on the Sayreville Borough Council for about a year, was gunned down on Feb. 1, 2023. Bynum wasn’t tracked down until May 30, nearly four months after the deadly shooting.

    Investigators said Bynum had known Dwumfour, but it was not clear how well the two knew each other. The only connection between the two police have is that the suspect was linked to the church Dwumfour attended.

    Investigators traced Bynum’s travels from his cellphone and vehicle location data from the night of the killing, Middlesex County Prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone said after the arrest was made, citing surveillance video and E-ZPass records. He also matched the description of the gunman given by neighbors in Sayreville.

    Bynum, 29, was taken into custody outside a residence in Chesapeake, Virginia, without incident.

    According to a family attorney, neither Dwumfour’s parents nor sibling recognized the name or picture of the suspect. Dwumfour, who grew up in Newark, did live in Virginia at one point, and family lawyer John Wisniewski said Bynum had previously lived in Sayreville. But beyond that, he did not know the nature of their relationship and the prosecutor declined to discuss a possible motive.

    Dwumfour was a pastor in a prosperity gospel church, Champions Royal Assembly, that is based in Nigeria, and she got married there in Nov. 2022 to a fellow pastor from Abuja. She was also an officer of a related entity, the Fire Congress Fellowship, that has a branch in Virginia. Bynum was listed in her cellphone contacts under that group’s acronym.

    “A search of the victim’s phone revealed Bynum as a contact with the acronym FCF,” said Ciccone.

    Court records and tax filings suggest that church finances in the U.S. were tight. Dwumfour had been named in a series of landlord-tenant disputes in Newark dating from 2017 to 2020 involving the fellowship, which had seen its income drop from about $250,000 in 2017 to just $350 in 2020.

    Through the months before the arrest was made, the councilwomen’s family members expressed their frustration. Dwumfour’s daughter described what she heard just outside her window the night of the shooting, as the family was waiting inside for the mother to finish parking her vehicle.

    “We’re waiting for my mom to look for a parking space, and then she was taking a lot of time so we started calling her over and over again, but it wouldn’t pick up. And then we heard gunshots and we started calling the police,” Nicole Teliano previously told the AP.

    Dwumfour, a Republican, was elected to her first three-year term in 2021, when she ousted a Democratic incumbent. Colleagues recalled her as a soft-spoken devout Christian who could maintain her composure in contentious situations.

    A heart-felt plea for justice from the family of the councilwoman killed in New Jersey. Brian Thompson reports.

    Associated Press reporter Maryclaire Dale contributed to this report.

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    Jen Maxfield and NBC New York Staff

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  • FACT FOCUS: Trump claims cashless bail increases crime, but data is inconclusive

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    As his administration faces mounting pressure to release Justice Department files related the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking case, President Donald Trump is highlighting a different criminal justice issue — cashless bail.

    He suggested in a Truth Social post this week that eliminating cash bail as a condition of pretrial release from jail has led to rising crime in U.S. cities that have enacted these reforms. However, studies have shown no clear link.

    Here’s a closer look at the facts.

    TRUMP: “Crime in American Cities started to significantly rise when they went to CASHLESS BAIL. The WORST criminals are flooding our streets and endangering even our great law enforcement officers. It is a complete disaster, and must be ended, IMMEDIATELY!”

    THE FACTS: Data has not determined the impact of cashless bail on crime rates. But experts say it is incorrect to claim that there is an adverse connection.

    “I don’t know of any valid studies corroborating the President’s claim and would love to know what the Administration offers in support,” said Kellen Funk, a professor at Columbia Law School who studies pretrial procedure and bail bonding. “In my professional judgment I’d call the claim demonstrably false and inflammatory.”

    Jeff Clayton, executive director of the American Bail Coalition, the main lobbying arm of the cash bail industry, also pointed to a lack of evidence.

    “Studies are inconclusive in terms of whether bail reforms have had an impact on overall crime numbers,” he said. “This is due to pretrial crime being a small subset of overall crime. It is also difficult to categorize reforms as being ‘cashless’ or not, i.e., policies where preventative detention is introduced as an alternative to being held on bail.”

    Different jurisdictions, different laws

    In 2023, Illinois became the first state to completely eliminate cash bail when the state Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the law abolishing it. The move was part of an expansive criminal justice overhaul adopted in 2021 known as the SAFE-T Act. Under the change, a judge decides whether to release the defendant prior to their trial, weighing factors such as their criminal charges, if they could pose any danger to others and if they are considered a flight risk.

    Loyola University of Chicago’s Center for Criminal Justice published a 2024 report on Illinois’ new cashless bail policy, one year after it went into effect. It acknowledges that there is not yet enough data to know what impact the law has had on crime, but that crime in Illinois did not increase after its implementation. Violent and property crime declined in some counties.

    A number of other jurisdictions, including New Jersey, New Mexico and Washington, D.C., have nearly eliminated cash bail or limited its use. Many include exceptions for high-level crimes.

    Proponents of eliminating cash bail describe it as a penalty on poverty, suggesting that the wealthy can pay their way out of jail to await trial while those with fewer financial resources have to sit it out behind bars. Critics have argued that bail is a time-honored way to ensure defendants released from jail show up for court proceedings. They warn that violent criminals will be released pending trial, giving them license to commit other crimes.

    A lack of consensus

    Studies have shown mixed results regarding the impact of cashless bail on crime. Many focus on the recidivism of individual defendants rather than overall crime rates.

    A 2024 report published by the Brennan Center for Justice saw “no statistically significant relationship” between bail reform and crime rates. It looked at crime rate data from 2015 through 2021 for 33 cities across the U.S., 22 of which had instituted some type of bail reform. Researchers used a statistical method to determine if crime rates had diverged in those with reforms and those without.

    Ames Grawert, the report’s co-author and senior counsel in the Brennan Center’s Justice Program, said this conclusion “holds true for trends in crime overall or specifically violent crime.”

    Similarly, a 2023 paper published in the American Economic Journal found no evidence that cash bail helps ensure defendants will show up in court or prevents crime among those who are released while awaiting trial. The paper evaluated the impact of a 2018 policy instituted by the Philadelphia’s district attorney that instructed prosecutors not to set bail for certain offenses.

    A 2019 court decree in Harris County, Texas, requires most people charged with a misdemeanor to be released without bail while awaiting trial. The latest report from the monitoring team responsible for tracking the impact of this decision, released in 2024, notes that the number of people arrested for misdemeanors has declined by more than 15% since 2015. The number of those rearrested within one year has similarly declined, with rearrest rates remaining stable in recent years.

    Asked what data Trump was using to support his claim, the White House pointed to a 2022 report from the district attorney’s office in Yolo County, California, that looked at how a temporary cashless bail system implemented across the state to prevent COVID-19 outbreaks in courts and jails impacted recidivism. It found that out of 595 individuals released between April 2020 and May 2021 under this system, 70.6% were arrested again after they were released. A little more than half were rearrested more than once.

    A more recent paper, published in February by the IZA Institute of Labor Economics, also explored the effects of California’s decision to suspend most bail during the COVID-19 pandemic. It reports that implementation of this policy “caused notable increases in both the likelihood and number of rearrests within 30 days.” However, a return to cash bail did not impact the number of rearrests for any type of offense. The paper acknowledges that other factors, such as societal disruption from the pandemic, could have contributed to the initial increase.

    Many contributing factors

    It is difficult to pinpoint specific explanations for why crime rises and falls.

    The American Bail Coalition’s Clayton noted that other policies that have had a negative impact on crime, implemented concurrently with bail reforms, make it “difficult to isolate or elevate one or more causes over the others.”

    Paul Heaton, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania who studies criminal justice interventions, had a similar outlook.

    “Certainly there are some policy levers that people look at — the size of the police force and certain policies around sentencing,” he said. “But there’s a lot of variation in crime that I think even criminologists don’t necessarily fully understand.”

    ___

    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

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  • From Stephen King to New Jersey diners, History Press books cover local lore around the US

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    NEW YORK (AP) — With deep knowledge of Stephen King’s books and curiosity about their inspirations, writer Sharon Kitchens began a journey around Maine. As she learned about the real-life settings and people behind such fiction as “IT” and “Salem’s Lot,” she arranged them into an online map and story she called “Stephen King’s Maine.”

    “It was amateur hour, in a way,” she says. “But after around 27,000 people visited the site one of my friends said to me, ‘You should do something more with this.’”

    Published in 2024, the resulting book-length edition of “Stephen King’s Maine” is among hundreds released each year by The History Press. Now part of Arcadia Publishing, the 20-year-old imprint is dedicated to regional, statewide and locally focused works, found for sale in bookstores, museums, hotels and other tourist destinations. The mission of The History Press is to explore and unearth “the story of America, one town or community at a time.”

    The King book stands out if only for its focus on an international celebrity. Most History Press releases arise out of more obscure passions and expertise, whether Michael C. Gabriele’s “The History of Diners in New Jersey,” Thomas Dresser’s “African Americans of Martha’s Vineyard” or Clem C. Pellett’s “Murder on Montana’s Hi-Line,” the author’s probe into the fatal shooting of his grandfather.

    A home for history buffs

    Like Kitchens, History Press authors tend to be regional or local specialists — history lovers, academics, retirees and hobbyists. Kitchens’ background includes writing movie press releases, blogging for the Portland Press Herald and contributing to the Huffington Post. Pellett is a onetime surgeon who was so compelled by his grandfather’s murder that he switched careers and became a private investigator. In Boulder, Colorado, Nancy K. Williams is a self-described “Western history writer” whose books include “Buffalo Soldiers on the Colorado Frontier” and “Haunted Hotels of Southern Colorado.”

    The History Press publishes highly specific works such as Jerry Harrington’s tribute to a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor from the 1930s, “Crusading Iowa Journalist Verne Marshall.” It also issues various series, notably “Haunted” guides that publishing director Kate Jenkins calls a “highly localized version” of the ghost story genre. History Press has long recruited potential authors through a team of field representatives, but now writers such as Kitchens are as likely to be brought to the publisher’s attention through a national network of writers who have worked with it before.

    “Our ideal author isn’t someone with national reach,” Jenkins says, “but someone who’s a member of their community, whether that’s an ethnic community or a local community, and is passionate about preserving that community’s history. We’re the partners who help make that history accessible to a wide audience.”

    The History Press is a prolific, low-cost operation. The books tend to be brief — under 200 pages — and illustrated with photos drawn from local archives or taken by the authors themselves. The print runs are small, and authors are usually paid through royalties from sales rather than advances up front. History Press books rarely are major hits, but they can still attract substantial attention for works tailored to specific areas, and they tend to keep selling over time. Editions selling 15,000 copies or more include “Long-Ago Stories of the Eastern Cherokee,” by Lloyd Arneach, Alphonso Brown’s “A Gullah Guide to Charleston” and Gayle Soucek’s “Marshall Field’s,” a tribute to the Chicago department store.

    The King guide, which has sold around 8,500 copies so far, received an unexpected lift — an endorsement by its subject, who was shown the book at Maine’s Bridgton Books and posted an Instagram of himself giving it a thumbs-up.

    “I was genuinely shocked in the best possible way,” Kitchens says, adding that she saw the book as a kind of thank-you note to King. “Every choice I made while writing the book, I made with him in mind.”

    Getting the story right

    History Press authors say they like the chance to tell stories that they believe haven’t been heard, or were told incorrectly.

    Rory O’Neill Schmitt is an Arizona-based researcher, lecturer and writer who feels her native New Orleans is often “portrayed in way that feels false or highlights a touristy element,” like a “caricature.” She has responded with such books as “The Haunted Guide to New Orleans” and “Kate Chopin in New Orleans.”

    Brianne Turczynski is a freelance writer and self-described “perpetual seeker of the human condition” who lives outside of Detroit and has an acknowledged obsession with “Poletown,” a Polish ethnic community uprooted and dismantled in the 1980s after General Motors decided to build a new plant there and successfully asserted eminent domain. In 2021, The History Press released Turczynski’s “Detroit’s Lost Poletown: The Little Neighborhood That Touched a Nation.”

    “All of the journalist work that followed the story seemed to lack a sense of closure for the people who suffered,” she said. “So my book is a love letter to that community, an attempt for closure.”

    Kitchens has followed her King book with the story of an unsolved homicide, “The Murder of Dorothy Milliken, Cold Case in Maine.” One of her early boosters, Michelle Souliere, is the owner of the Green Hand Bookstore in Portland and herself a History Press writer. A lifelong aficionado of Maine history, her publishing career, like Kitchens’, began with an online posting. She had been maintaining a blog of local lore, “Strange Maine,” when The History Press contacted her and suggested she expand her writing into a book.

    “Strange Maine: True Tales from the Pine Tree State” was published in 2010.

    “My blog had been going for about 4 years, and had grown from brief speculative and expressive posts to longer original research articles,” she wrote in an email. “I often wonder how I did it at all — I wrote the book just as I was opening up the Green Hand Bookshop. Madness!!! Or a lot of coffee. Or both!!!”

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  • New Jersey man pleads guilty in smuggling scheme intended to aid Russia’s war effort

    New Jersey man pleads guilty in smuggling scheme intended to aid Russia’s war effort

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    NEW YORK (AP) — A New Jersey man who was among seven people charged with smuggling electronic components to aid Russia’s war effort pleaded guilty Friday to conspiracy to commit bank fraud and other charges, authorities said.

    Vadim Yermolenko, 43, faces up to 30 years in prison for his role in a transnational procurement and money laundering network that sought to acquire sensitive electronics for Russian military and intelligence services, Breon Peace, the U.S. attorney in Brooklyn, said in a statement.

    Yermolenko, who lives in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey and has dual U.S. and Russian citizenship, was indicted along with six other people in December 2022.

    Prosecutors said the conspirators worked with two Moscow-based companies controlled by Russian intelligence services to acquire electronic components in the U.S. that have civilian uses but can also be used to make nuclear and hypersonic weapons and in quantum computing.

    The exporting of the technology violated U.S. sanctions, prosecutors said.

    The prosecution was coordinated through the Justice Department’s Task Force KleptoCapture, an interagency entity dedicated to enforcing sanctions imposed after Russian invaded Ukraine.

    Attorney General Merrick Garland said in statement that Yermolenko “joins the nearly two dozen other criminals that our Task Force KleptoCapture has brought to justice in American courtrooms over the past two and a half years for enabling Russia’s military aggression.”

    A message seeking comment was sent to Yermolenko’s attorney with the federal public defender’s office.

    Prosecutors said Yermolenko helped set up shell companies and U.S. bank accounts to move money and export-controlled goods. Money from one of his accounts was used to purchase export-controlled sniper bullets that were intercepted in Estonia before they could be smuggled into Russia, they said.

    One of Yermolenko’s co-defendants, Alexey Brayman of Merrimack, New Hampshire, pleaded guilty previously to conspiracy to defraud the United States and is awaiting sentencing.

    Another, Vadim Konoshchenok, a suspected officer with Russia’s Federal Security Service, was arrested in Estonia and extradited to the United States. He was later released from U.S. custody as part of a prisoner exchange that included Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and other individuals.

    The four others named in the indictment are Russian nationals who remain at large, prosecutors said.

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  • How TV news viewing habits can influence voters’ perceptions

    How TV news viewing habits can influence voters’ perceptions

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    How TV news viewing habits can influence voters’ perceptions – CBS News


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    In an effort to understand the political divide in the U.S., Trump and Harris supporters in New Jersey were invited to watch the other side’s favorite cable news channels. Tony Dokoupil reports on how it went.

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