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N.J. music school director accused of sexually assaulting student

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The 65-year-old man is accused of assaulting a former student.

The founder and director of a prestigious music school in Bergen County has been charged with sexually assaulting a former student at the school on multiple occasions, authorities said. 

Michael_Thomopoulos-mugshot.jpgMichael Thomopoulos, 65. 

Michael Thomopoulos, 65, of Englewood, was arrested Friday on second-degree sexual assault charges, according to the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office.

The sexual assaults occurred at Palisades School of Music in Fort Lee, where Thomopoulos is a piano teacher and the director of the school, authorities said.

The alleged sexual assaults were reported in January to the Fort Lee Police Department, authorities said.

The school's website said it caters to "gifted children at the pre-college level," according to the site. 

Thomopoulos has won numerous awards for both music education and performance. 

A request for comment sent to the school was not immediately returned Tuesday morning. 

Amanda Hoover can be reached at ahoover@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @amandahoovernj. Find NJ.com on Facebook

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Woman was abducted and killed at N.J. motel in murder-suicide, authorities say

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Authorities say the man abducted the woman in Paterson and and killed her at the the Knights Inn in South Hackensack.

Authorities say that a man abducted a woman in Patterson yesterday and drove her to a South Hackensack motel room where he shot and killed her and then turned the weapon on himself. 

Police found Jose Segura-Montero, 45, and Marcia Fererra, 41, both of Paterson, in room 103 at the Knights Inn Motel on Route 46 West Monday morning, the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office said.

Paterson police received a call around 5 a.m. Monday that a domestic violence incident and kidnapping had occured on the 100 block of 16th avenue. They investigated the incident and eventually followed Segura-Montero to the Knights Inn in South Hackensack. 

Around 8:30 a.m., Patterson and South Hackensack officers approached room 130 at the Inn and announced their presence. The officers then heard gunshots, and immediately tried to force entry into the room. 

One officer fired a single round into the room's window to gain entry, the prosecutor's office said. Officers were then able to enter through the window, and discovered the bodies of Segura-Montero and Fererra. 

The shot fired into the window by the officer did not strike anyone, the prosecutor's office said. 

Officers discovered a revolver, and it appeared the Segura-Montero first shot Fererra, and then himself. 

The South Hackensack Police Department, Bergen County Sheriff's Department, Passaic County Prosecutor's Office and the Bergen County Prosecutor's office are investigating. 

Paige Gross may be reached at pgross@njadvancemedia.comFollow her on Twitter @By_paigegross. Find NJ.com on Facebook. 

How the Watchung Mountains won the Revolution | Di Ionno

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New Jersey hill underappreciated as Washington's hiding place

I grew up in the Watchung Mountains, in Summit to be exact.

Despite the name, the town is not the highest elevation in the Watchungs; that distinction belongs to Preakness Mountain in Wayne. The mountains run from Campgaw Mountain in Mahwah, to Pill Hill in Far Hills.

If you take your arm and "make a muscle" it mimics the shape of the range, with the Ramapo Mountains at the fist and the Somerset Hills at the bicep. Summit is at the elbow, so neighborhoods on the northeast side of town look out to New York City and all in between, and on the southwest side, the view takes in Central New Jersey, down to New Brunswick.

Tomorrow is July 4th. Independence Day.

And this column is an ode to those mountains, underappreciated by historians -- overlooked for their critical role in the revolution. They were George Washington's favorite hiding place, and gave him quick access to iron forges that fueled his army. Their high points allowed him to monitor British troop movements from New York to New Brunswick, and respond by moving men toward conflict behind the safety of the mountains.

MORE: Recent Mark Di Ionno columns 

George Washington spent approximately 3 1/2 years of the eight-year war in and around these mountains, as he moved between the Hudson and Delaware rivers.

The Watchungs were also a place of great anguish for the Colonial Army: the horrible winter of 1779-80 at Jockey Hollow, when food was so scarce Washington ordered the horses be taken off the camp, so the men wouldn't butcher them; the smallpox epidemic, which left graveyards of soldiers at churches in Mendham, Succasunna and Basking Ridge; a mutiny in Pompton, which led to the execution of soldiers.

The mountains provided a sanctuary for Continental Army strategy. The nation's first West Point, an artillery officers' school, was tucked behind the mountains in Pluckemin, where The Hills development is today. At Morristown, Washington enlisted the French to send him Rochambeau and 6,000 troops. From Somerville, he planned Sullivan's March, a war against Native 

Americans in Pennsylvania and New York State. The iron in the western hills beyond the Watchungs was forged into weapons and ammunition, safe from British capture.

Of course, the New Jersey, as a whole, was the site of inspirational victories. Trenton and Princeton, which turned the losing tide. Monmouth, the battle that involved the most number of men.

But three lesser known battles revolved around the Watchungs. First was the Battle of Bound Brook, on April 13, 1777, when the British came up from New Brunswick, to attempt to control the upper Raritan River at the base of the mountains. The British were somewhat successful, but not enough to hold the position.

The British again tried to penetrate the mountains during the Battle of Short Hills, in what is today Scotch Plains, on June 6, 1777, after Washington moved his troops from behind the second ridge of the mountains in Morristown, to behind the first ridge at Middlebrook. His headquarters was in the Nathaniel Drake House in Plainfield.

The final British push into the Watchungs came during the Battle of Springfield, in early June of 1780. Under the command of Prussian General Baron Von Knyphausen, 6,000 British, Hessian and Loyalist soldiers maneuvered up what is today Morris Avenue and Vauxhall Road in an attempt to climb the Hobart Gap and attack Washington in Morristown.

The Gap was a convenient escape/ambush route through the first Watchung Ridge, which Route 24 now climbs as a three-lane highway between Summit and Short Hills and descends into Chatham.

They were beaten back, but not before the wife of Rev. James Caldwell, the mother of 10 children, was shot and killed at the parsonage at Connecticut Farms, now Union. The incident is depicted on the Union County seal.

The Battle of Springfield was the last British attempt to conquer New Jersey. Had it been successful, they could have cut the Colonies in half and controlled the new country. After the defeat at Springfield, the British headed south. Washington and the French followed, and the war was coming to an end.

Washington followed the battle from Briant's Tavern on what is today the Summit-Springfield border.

When I was a boy, we lived near Briant's Pond. There was a Newberry's 5 & 10 in Springfield, where a mural show Caldwell standing on the steps of a church in front of a line of American soldiers saying, "Give 'em Watts, boys!" Hymnals containing the works of Isaac Watts were to be torn up and used for packing paper in the soldiers' muskets.

My father explained that George Washington had been here. This was augmented by unrelated trips to Washington Rock in the South Mountain Reservation and the one at Green Brook to look at the views. Both were lookouts for the general on the first ridge of the Watchung Mountains.

In our town, there was a Beacon Hill Club and a Beacon Hill Road. They overlooked the Hobart Gap. I learned much later - not in school, but as a writer for this paper - that this high outcrop of Watchung rock was the site of one of 23 beacons along the high points of the Watchungs to be lit when "the British were coming."

The point of all this is education and New Jersey pride.

As I reporter, I learned much more about this history, enough to write "A Guide to New Jersey's Revolutionary War Trail" (Rutgers Press), a book detailing over 350 war sites by exact address.

As a proud New Jerseyan, I've tried to spread the word, through many columns like this. I urged the state to adopt this slogan, "Do Something Revolutionary, Visit New Jersey." That was in 1999.

Educating ourselves about this history is as simple as following the geographic lexicon. Many of the Washington streets, sections and schools through the region reflect his presence. 

Historic markers from in Bergen, Passaic, Essex, Union, Middlesex, and Somerset counties tell the story of individual places, but nowhere is the whole story of the mountains explained.

So here it is. In our Watchung Mountains, George Washington won the war of attrition. The protection of the hills, and the great swamps that lie between them, kept the British at a long arm's length for almost half of the war's duration.

Our mountains, which can be seen from all our northern cities and envelopes a great swath of suburbs where at least one-quarter of New Jersey's population lives, made the war expensive for the British. They were impenetrable.

They are something for us to celebrate today.

Mark Di Ionno may be reached at mdiionno@starledger.com. Follow The Star-Ledger on Twitter @StarLedger and find us on Facebook. 

N.J. strip mall facade collapses on parked cars

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There are currently no reported injuries but some exits were blocked by the approximately 150 feet long facade

The facade of a Bergen County strip mall collapsed Tuesday morning on several parked vehicles and blocked the entrances to several buildings, though no injuries were immediately reported.

The collapse of roughly 150 feet of the facade occurred at Kress Plaza on Kinderkmack Road in River Edge. Helicopter video shows firefighters using a ladder truck to inspect the roof, where the signs and awning for the stores separated from strip mall.

The facade was laying across the hoods and windshields of at least six vehicles.

Kress Plaza includes a Chinese restaurant, bagel shop, pizzeria, a hair salon, jeweler, music shop, nail salon and hair salon.

Cassidy Grom may be reached at cgrom@njadvancemedia.com Follow her at @cassidygrom. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Congressman Bill Pascrell Jr. overcome by heat at event in N.J.

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Pascrell briefly sat down during the event and then was ushered from the Englewood Fire Department headquarters with his arms over the shoulders of two firefighters

U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr. was overcome by the heat at an event in Bergen County Tuesday morning and is being kept for observation at a local hospital.

Pascrell, D-9th Dist., briefly sat down during the event at the Englewood Fire Department headquartersand and then was ushered out with his arms over the shoulders of two firefighters, according to reports. 

Pascrell, 81, was brought to an air conditioned room and given water. He later was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital in Paterson.

"Congressman Pascrell is doing fine and resting comfortably," Pascrell spokesman Stephen Tighe said. "He is being kept for observation after suffering from heat exhaustion." 

The event was held to celebrate the Firefighter Cancer Registry Act, which recently received approval in Congress was joined by several other officials at the event including U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., and Bergen County Executive James Tedesco.

The Firefighter Cancer Registry Act would monitor and study long-term exposure to dangerous fumes and toxins and the incidence of cancer in firefighters.

Photos from the event showed Pascrell wearing a suit and tie in the crowded firehouse. It was about 93 degrees at the time of the press conference with a heat index that made it feel above 100.

 

Second person dies after wreck that killed motorcycle rider

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The late night crash involved a Harley-Davidson and a Jeep.

A motorcycle passenger died early Tuesday from injuries she suffered in a crash that also claimed the life of the Harley-Davidson rider in Hawthorne three days ago, officials said.

Kimberly Stoll died after being hospitalized in critical condition at St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center, according to the Passaic County Prosecutor's Office.

The 57-year-old Hawthorne resident was riding on a motorcycle operated by Kasey Checke when they were involved in a crash with a Jeep Wrangler around 9:45 p.m. Saturday on Lafayette Avenue, authorities said. Checke, 49, of Ramsey, was pronounced dead the same night.

Authorities did not immediately release more details on how the crash occurred.

In a statement, the prosecutor's office said an investigation was continuing and asked anyone with information to contact call 1-877-370-PCPO (7276) or email tips@passaiccountynj.org.

Noah Cohen may be reached at ncohen@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @noahycFind NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Need proof local politics is the worst? Councilman blames foes for flood

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Mahwah Council President Rob Hermansen says he came home to a flooded basement Saturday night -- and he blames the township's ongoing political fighting for it. Watch video

Mahwah Council President Rob Hermansen says he came home to a flooded basement Saturday night -- and he blames the township's ongoing political fighting for it.

Hermansen said he arrived home at about 12:45a.m. Sunday and found water covering the floor in part of his basement. He thought it was from a broken hose spout.

But in the light of day, he said during a press conference at Town Hall Tuesday, he realized someone had intentionally buried the end of his garden hose in the ground next to the foundation of his house and turned the water on "full blast," causing it to leak into his house.

He called police, an officer came out and took a report, Hermansen said. 

Mahwah Police Chief James Batelli could not be reached immediately for comment. 

"This wasn't a kid," Hermansen said. "This was someone who legitimately knew what they were doing. And they made sure they came at a time that they felt we were going to be in bed."

Hermansen said he estimates that someone turned the water on between 11:45 p.m. and midnight. He arrived home about an hour later and discovered the mess.

"This was absolutely me targeted, council president, my family, because of some of the things I've said in the past," Hermansen said.

Asked who he thinks is targeting him, Hermansen said, "I have an idea ... but I think if I say publicly right now what I truly believe in this moment without having more information that someone is going to tell me that I'm just doing this because of a disagreement between individuals."

Later, Hermansen got closer to pointing the finger at Mahwah Mayor Bill Laforet, with whom Hermansen has publicly butted heads many times.

"I got a pretty good idea that if it's not potentially him, that it's someone who is very close to him that is looking to try to get me out of the way or move me on," Hermansen said.

The council president grew emotional when discussing a "very difficult" conversation he had with his family after the incident. 

Reached by phone, Laforet said he was unaware of the vandalism at Hermansen's home. "This is the first I'm hearing of it," he said.

The council president said he plans to seek reelection this November -- and that a council seat is the only office he intends to run for. 

Laforet, meanwhile, is the subject of a recall campaign. If the signatures submitted to the Township Clerk last week are verified there would be a question on the November ballot asking if Laforet should finish out his term, which ends in 2020. Mayoral candidates would also be on the ballot to replace Laforet in case the recall is successful.

Mahwah is no stranger to political infighting. Over the past several years, there have been squabbles over recycling, a mobile phone app, police overtime pay, and a former DPW director's suspension. Fights between local politicians have included a game of hot potato over blame for a parks ban that drew ire from the Attorney General, and a former councilwoman flipping the mayor a double bird during a public meeting.

Allison Pries may be reached at apries@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @AllisonPries. Find NJ.com on Facebook

Murphy signs 'Bring Back Snooki' law to revive N.J. film tax credits

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The move comes three years after then-Gov. Chris Christie allowed the previous program to expire.

Lights, camera ... tax credits.

Film and digital media companies can once again take advantage of million of dollars in tax credits if they shoot in New Jersey, under a law Gov. Phil Murphy signed Tuesday. 

The move comes three years after then-Gov. Chris Christie allowed the previous program to expire and then vetoed bills to revive it several times.

The Republican governor called it expensive and was also critical of tax credits given to "Jersey Shore," the reality TV show starring Snooki and the Situation that Christie said relied on stereotypes of the Garden State. 

But Murphy said the new law -- dubbed the "Garden State Film and Digital Media Jobs Act"  -- will spur economic growth and industry development in New Jersey. 

"The film and digital media industry is poised to become a dynamic part of New Jersey's economy, one that will create good-paying union jobs and countless residual benefits to the economy," Murphy said in a statement. "By signing this legislation, we are allowing these companies to take advantage of New Jersey's unique culture, location, and geography."

Christie kills 'Jersey Shore' tax credit

The law (S122) -- which takes effect immediately -- allows film companies to apply for savings of 30 percent on their expenses from 2019 to 2023 if they film in the upper half of the state. It allows them up to 35 percent if they choose to film in the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Mercer, or Salem.

Digital companies could apply for 20 percent, or 25 percent if they choose south Jersey.

The program will cap the credits at $75 million a year for film productions between 2019 and 2023. That's up from $10 million under the previous program, which expired in 2015. 

Digital productions are capped at $10 million a year.

The nonpartisan state Office of Legislative Services estimates the program will cost New Jersey $85 million a year -- or $425 million over five years -- in lost tax revenue. 

But the office said it "might accrue an indeterminate revenue gain to affected local governments if the bill results in digital media content or film production activity that would not be undertaken absent the assistance."

State Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg, D-Bergen, noted that the film industry has "deep roots" in New Jersey, with Fort Lee serving as the precursor to Hollywood at the turn of the 20th century. 

"These credits will ensure that New Jersey remains a player in this constantly evolving industry," Weinberg, a main sponsor of the bill, added.

State Assemblyman Gordon Johnson, D-Bergen said not only will the law "bring more jobs and revenue" to New Jersey, but "crew members will then eat, sleep, and do countless other things in our great state."

Both houses of the Democrat-controlled state Legislature passed the bill in April -- the state Senate 31-3 and the Assembly 59-14.

Murphy, a Democrat, signed the bill even though he repeatedly criticized Christie during last year's campaign for giving out too many tax credits to corporations in the state. 

Murphy actually conditionally vetoed the measure in May to make sure reality shows would be included.

"Cake Boss" star Buddy Valastro, whose bakery is based in Hoboken, and Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop lobbied for the change, according to a report by Politico. The law Murphy signed Tuesday includes reality shows. 

The issue dates to 2011, when the previous film tax credit program gave $420,000 to MTV's "Jersey Shore" for production of its first season. But Christie killed it.

"I have no interest in policing the content of such projects," he said at the time. "However, as chief executive I am duty-bound to ensure that taxpayers are not footing a $420,000 bill for a project which does nothing more than perpetuate misconceptions about the state and its citizens."  

The new law would not benefit the new version of "Jersey Shore" on the air. That is set in Miami.

NJ Advance Media staff writer Samantha Marcus contributed to this report.

Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @johnsb01. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.


Mount Rushmore project: VOTE to pick Paramus Catholic's 4 best athletes of all time

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Read bios and then pick your top four

1 dead after fiery crash into trees on Palisades Parkway

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A man died Thursday when their car hit a tree and caught on fire on the Palisades Interstate Parkway.

A man died Thursday when their car hit a tree and caught on fire on the Palisades Interstate Parkway, police said.

The single car accident happened around 5 p.m. south of exit 3 on the south side of the highway in Alpine, according to Palisades Interstate Parkway Police Chief Michael Coppola.

Coppola said the driver of the car, later identified as Albert Stanczyk, 69, of Fort Lee was the only occupant and was pulled out by a passing motorist. Officers tried to revive him using CPR, but Stanczyk was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police said in a release that Stanczyk may have been unconscious prior to the collision but that his cause of death will not be determined until an autopsy is performed by the Bergen County Medical Examiner's Office.

Police said on Twitter that fire the accident caused was knocked down and that the left lane of the southbound highway was closed while the scene was cleared.

Chris Sheldon may be reached at csheldon@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @chrisrsheldon Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Queens man goes home a winner after buying $1M lottery ticket in Bergen County

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Pardeep Kumar of Astoria, New York bought the "Spectacular" game ticket from a 7-Eleven store on Washington Avenue in Bergenfield

A Queens man visiting his family in Bergen County went home a millionaire after he purchased a scratch-off lottery ticket worth $1 million, according to the New Jersey Lottery.

Pardeep Kumar of Astoria, New York, bought the "Spectacular" game ticket from a 7-Eleven store on Washington Avenue in Bergenfield, lottery officials said this week.

After scratching off the ticket and realizing he'd won $1 million, Kumar kept his enthusiasm to himself while in the store, lottery officials said.

"He wasn't ready for everyone around him to know he had just won $1 million," an official said in a statement. "He needed time to process the fortune that this ticket would bring him and his family."

Kumar later turned up at lottery headquarters in Trenton with his two brothers to claim his prize.

He told officials he plans to buy a new home with his winnings.

Anthony G. Attrino may be reached at tattrino@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @TonyAttrino. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Kitten and her sister need a home

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Aisha with her two siblings from a backyard.

bg0708pet.jpgAisha 

BERGEN COUNTY -- Aisha is a female silver/gray tabby kitten in the care of Chance at Life Cat Rescue.

She was rescued with her two siblings from a backyard; her sister, Kamilah, is also available for adoption and the rescue would like the two to be adopted together.

Volunteers describe them both as "sweet, but shy as they had not been handled as strays." Both are FIV/FeLV negative and up-to-date on shots.

For more information, call 201-982-2219, email chanceatlifecatrescue@gmail.com or go to chanceatlifecatrescue.com. Chance at Life is a nonprofit rescue group serving Bergen County.

Shelters interested in placing a pet in the Paw Print adoption column or submitting news should call 973-836-4922 or email ghatala@starledger.com.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.

Glimpse of History: Tea time in Hackensack

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HACKENSACK -- Joanne Wilson patiently waits for a customer at her iced tea stand in Hackensack in this photo taken in 1976. MORE: Glimpses of history from around New Jersey MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey If you would like to share a photo that provides a glimpse of history in your community, please call 973-836-4922 or send an email...

HACKENSACK -- Joanne Wilson patiently waits for a customer at her iced tea stand in Hackensack in this photo taken in 1976.

MORE: Glimpses of history from around New Jersey

MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey

If you would like to share a photo that provides a glimpse of history in your community, please call 973-836-4922 or send an email to ghatala@starledger.com. And, check out more glimpses of history in our online galleries on nj.com.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.

Motorists from N.J. and N.Y. busted with heroin in Pennsylvania get hefty prison terms

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The men took their case to trial and lost, and now will spend years behind bars

Two men who had 78 grams of heroin and fentanyl when police pulled over their van on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in Bucks County, Pa. last year were each sentenced to up to a decade in prison Thursday.

Nelson Saldana, 52, of Englewood and Santos Castro-Mota, 38, of Brooklyn, N.Y. took their case to trial last week and lost.

Their attorneys blamed the other for being the experienced criminal and cast their clients as as naive dupes who were taking the fall, the Bucks County District Attorney's Office said.

"He's not someone who is a career criminal; he is a house painter," attorney Noa Laver said of her client, Saldana. She said he had cooperated with police and was Castro-Mota's "patsy."

Saldana, though, was convicted and sentenced in absentia, the district attorney's office said. He disappeared on the eve of a separate trial date last September and his whereabouts are currently unknown.

Castro-Mota's attorney, Keith Williams, described his client as the owner of an outboard motor business in New York who was giving Saldana a ride home after a business trip to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the office reported.

"Who's holding the money? Who's holding the drugs? It's Mr. Saldana," Williams argued. He also said his client was "just the patsy driver who gets lost driving home."

Although neither had a criminal record, Judge Diane E. Gibbons wasn't swayed.

"Nobody wakes up one day and has instant access to 78 grams of heroin," the judge said. The amount of cash police found them with - Saldana had $2,800 and Castro-Mota had $540 - suggested they had just sold a large quantity of drugs or were en route to make a large purchase, Gibbons said.

She then sentenced Saldana to six to 12 years in state prison for possession with intent to deliver the drugs and conspiracy, and Castro-Mota to five to 10 years for the same convictions.

Castro-Mota was driving when Bensalem police pulled over their Ford Econoline van for having an expired registration in January 2017. An officer found they discarded the bag of heroin near the the passenger side door.

Deputy District Attorney Thomas C. Gannon said the 78 grams would have made 2,496 individual bags of heroin.

Kevin Shea may be reached at kshea@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter@kevintshea. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Bergen County father and his 4 daughters die in Delaware crash, police say

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The 53-year-old Teaneck mother remains hospitalized with serious injuries, Delaware State Police said Saturday morning in an updated press release.

A father and his four daughters from Teaneck were killed in a horrific crash Friday in Delaware, according to police. 

The 53-year-old mother remains hospitalized with serious but non-life threatening injuries, Delaware State Police said Saturday morning in an updated press release

Police said the crash occurred just after 3:45 p.m. when a pickup driven by a 44-year-old man from East New Market, Maryland, crossed over the grassy center median on Route 1 in Townsend, Delaware, sideswiped a car and plowed into the Bergen County family's Toyota Sienna.  

The minivan and truck ended up in a ditch on the side of the highway, according to police. 

The four daughters, ages 20, 17, and two 13-year-olds, were not wearing seatbelts and died at the scene, according to police. The 61-year-old father was also pronounced dead at the scene.

Authorities have not released the names of those who were killed.

"It's certainly heartbreaking," Master Cpl. Melissa Jaffe, a spokeswoman with Delaware State Police, said during a press conference Friday. "As you can imagine, those of us who have children, I feel so bad for this family. I cannot imagine what they're going through. To lose four children in a crash, it's just something that is unheard of."

Police are investigating why the pickup crossed over into the northbound lanes and, as of Saturday morning, authorities said it was unknown if the Maryland man was impaired. He has since been treated and released for minor injuries. 

A first responder, interviewed by the Delaware News Journal, described the crash scene as the "worst one I've seen."

A passenger in the truck, a 30-year-old from Hurlock, Maryland, was treated for minor injuries and released from an area hospital. 

The first car hit by the F-350 spun out of control and ended up in an embankment. Its driver, a 24-year-old man from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, only suffered minor injuries as well. 

Craig McCarthy may be reached at 732-372-2078 or at CMcCarthy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @createcraig and on Facebook here. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Tears and remembrances for 5 members of N.J. family killed in violent Delaware crash

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The mother of a Teaneck family is recovering following an accident that claimed the lives of her four daughters and husband, as grieving friends and family remembered the five.

'All I have is just memories.' Vigil mourns dad, 4 daughters killed in crash

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Only the mother survived the crash, caused when a truck crossed the median and drove into oncoming traffic. Watch video

UPDATE: Police name truck driver in fatal Delaware crash that killed 4 daughters, father

Not long after people started sharing memories and laments at a vigil in a dark Teaneck park Saturday night, the sound of sobbing mourners -- many teenagers or young adults -- became a constant.

"We were literally talking before about planning her trip to Japan after we graduated in two years," said Steven Ang, who identified himself as the boyfriend of one of the daughters, Danna Trinidad, 17. "And it just hurts. All I have is just the memories. The great times she was there for me... I lost her forever."

The mourners prayed, hugged, sang and listened, while a cluster of candles lit the night, spelling out the victims' last name, Trinidad.

The family of six was driving back from a vacation in Virginia when a truck crossed the grassy median of Route 1 in Delaware and collided with their vehicle. Only the mother, Mary Rose, survived, but she lost the rest of her immediate family: husband Audie Trinidad, 61, and their four daughters, Kaitlyn, 20, (who also goes by Nikki), Danna, 17, and twins Allison and Melissa, 13.

Delaware State Police are investigating the crash and no charges have been filed against the driver of the truck, a Maryland man who was treated and released from the hospital. Police said the four daughters were not wearing seat belts.

A crowd of more than 200 crowded in for the vigil Saturday night, listening as speakers described the family as religious and extremely close. Several mentioned seeing the girls driving around in their recognizable white van.

Earlier Saturday, relatives and friends told NJ Advance Media that Audie Trinidad was a "yes man to his wife" and cared about his family above all else. At Tea Neck High School, Kaitlyn and Danna had both been on the volleyball team, and the twins were looking forward to joining since they just graduated from Thomas Jefferson Middle School in June.

Wrapped in the arms of a loved one and clutching her cane, Lydia Agas, an aunt of Mary Rose, recalled the four daughters as good, loving kids. She said they would run up to her, take her hand and say "God bless" her.

"Thank you for all your support. All I ask is please pray for the whole family," she said.

Brent Lewis said he dated Kaitlyn for two years and got to know her family well during that time. "I wish I was able to see her again. I wish I was able to see everyone. Danna, Kaitlyn, Audie, Melissa and Allison. I'm at a loss for words," he said. 

One young woman pressed a tissue to her face, struggling to speak as she recalled her best friend, Danna, and her sisters.

"I'm sad I couldn't see her one more time," she said. "This is the time that I question God."

A teenage girl described the twins as her best friends since age 3. "To see them leave without me saying goodbye is the worst experience of my life," she said.

One of the first speakers who took the stage said she felt simultaneously devastated and numb. "They were a good family. You guys knew Nikki and Danna, they always had a hug and a kiss for you always. They were always a hardworking, loving family," she said.

"We gotta love each other and hug our families," she said. "Love and appreciate each other because it's important. Here today, gone tomorrow."

A family friend, Linda Douglas, has started a GoFundMe page for Mary Rose.

Cassidy Grom may be reached at cgrom@njadvancemedia.com Follow her at @cassidygrom. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Hot Pockets, IHOP and iced tea. Here's what's on the menu if you're arrested in N.J.

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While detained, police are responsible for your well being, which can include a meal

Police name truck driver in fatal Delaware crash that killed 4 daughters, father

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A father and his four daughters from Teaneck were killed in a crash Friday in Delaware, according to police.

Delaware State Police have released the names of the other two drivers involved in the multi-car collision in Delaware that killed a Teaneck father and his four daughters.

The girls' mother survived and is recovering in the hospital. 

Alvin S. Hubbard Jr., 44, of East New Market, Maryland, was driving a Ford F-350 when he crossed over a grassy median on Route 1 in Delaware, side-swiped another car and plowed into the Toyota Sienna carrying the Bergen County family of six on Friday, state police said in an updated press release Sunday.  

Police also confirmed Audie Trinidad, 61, and his eldest daughter, 20-year-old Kaitlyn, who also goes by Nikki, were killed in the crash. Friends and family have identified the other three daughters as 17-year-old Danna and 13-year-old twins Allison and Melissa.

The mother, who friends identified as Mary Rose, 53, remains hospitalized but with non-life-threatening injuries. 

Brian C. Kern, 24, of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania was driving a Mercury Sable and was struck by the Ford pick-up truck first, spinning out of control and ending up in an embankment. Police said Kern suffered minor injuries. 

It's still not clear why the Ford truck swerved across a grassy median in Townsend, Delaware. The crash remains under investigation and no charges have been filed, police said. 

Hubbard and Kern could not be immediately reached for comment on Sunday. 

On Saturday, friends and family mourned the loss of the girls and their father, described as close-knit. 

"My brother was a family man, a God-fearing man and a yes man to his wife," Audie's brother, Danny Trinidad, of Miami, Florida, said outside of his brother's house on Saturday. "Nothing was more important to him than family."

Steven Ang identified himself as the boyfriend of one of the daughters, Danna Trinidad, 17, during a vigil Saturday night. 

"It just hurts. All I have is just the memories," he said. "The great times she was there for me... I lost her forever."

The family was driving back from a vacation in Virginia. Police said the father and the girls were pronounced dead at the scene; the daughters were not wearing seatbelts.

Paige Gross contributed to this report. 

Karen Yi may be reached at kyi@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at @karen_yi or on Facebook

Family member in custody after stabbing death in Bergen County

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The victim, whose name was not released, died at a local hospital and a person who lived with her was taken into police custody

A 911 hang-up call on Sunday led police to a home in Fair Lawn, where they discovered a female resident had been fatally stabbed.

The victim, whose name was not released, died at a local hospital.

A family member who lived with the victim was taken into custody, according to Bergen County Acting Prosecutor Dennis Calo.

Calo said 911 dispatchers received a hang-up call about 3 p.m. from the home on Halstead Terrace.

"Upon entering the house, police discovered a female resident had been stabbed," Calo said in a statement.

The victim was taken to St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead, according to the prosecutor.

The name of the family member was not released and Calo did not say if the person had been charged in the victim's death.

"The investigation is ongoing and more information will be released at a later time," Calo said.

The death is the second homicide in Fair Lawn in less than two weeks.

On June 26, Roosevelt Rene, 25, was found dead in a home belonging to Giants cornerback Janoris Jenkins.

Jenkins' brother, William, has been charged with aggravated manslaughter in that crime.

Anthony G. Attrino may be reached at tattrino@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @TonyAttrino. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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