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Former NJ judge sues judiciary for back pay during suspension

MyCentralJersey.com NEW BRUNSWICK – A former Superior Court judge is suing the state s judiciary for back pay during a five-year suspension while criminal and ethics charges against her were resolved. Carlia Brady, who is described in the federal lawsuit as the quintessential American success story and was the first Filipino-American to become a New Jersey Superior Court judge, claims in the suit she is owed the pay from June 12, 2013, to March 5, 2018, which would be more than $700,000. Brady s seven-year nightmare through the criminal justice system began when she, who was living in Woodbridge at the time, learned that Jason Prontnicki. her live-in boyfriend and father of her unborn child, was wanted for the robbery of an Old Bridge drugstore on April 29, 2013. 

SI man, 36, falsely claimed in dozens of emergency calls that he sexually abused kids, authorities say

SI man, 36, falsely claimed in dozens of emergency calls that he sexually abused kids, authorities say Updated Mar 16, 2021; Posted Mar 15, 2021 John LaForgia, 36, of Ebbitts Street in New Dorp, was charged with false public alarm following an investigation by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office. Facebook Share STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. Authorities have charged a Staten Island man in connection with 130 phone calls to law enforcement and crisis hotlines, during which he claimed he was abusing or planning to abuse children. John LaForgia, 36, of New Dorp, was charged in New Jersey with false public alarm following an investigation by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, according to a statement released Monday by prosecutor Mark Musella.

Security guard charged with falsely claiming he was sexually assaulting child in 130 phony calls to cops

Security guard charged with falsely claiming he was sexually assaulting child in 130 phony calls to cops Updated Mar 15, 2021; A security guard was charged Friday with placing false calls to several police departments in New Jersey and New York, falsely claiming that he was sexually assaulting a child, authorities said. John P. Laforgia, 36, of Staten Island, New York, was served with a summons for creating a false public alarm, according to Bergen County Prosecutor Mark Musella. “(The) caller was using technology to anonymize his caller ID and was placing repeated telephone calls to them,” Musella said in a statement. “During these phone calls, the caller told operators that he was currently sexually assaulting a child or was about to while on the phone with them,” Musella said.

Maryland Thought Deregulating Utilities Would Lower Rates It s Cost the State s Residents Hundreds of Millions of Dollars

Maryland Thought Deregulating Utilities Would Lower Rates. It’s Cost the State’s Residents Hundreds of Millions of Dollars. Unscrupulous retail energy companies in Maryland and numerous other states often prey on the poor by offering special low rates, only to quickly raise them. Related Share this article Last year, on the day before Memorial Day, Bill Fields received a phone call around half-past noon from a caller who said he represented the verification department of Baltimore Gas & Electric, Maryland’s primary energy utility.  Fields is from Baltimore and a longtime BG&E customer. Because he’d paid his last six bills on time, the caller said, he was eligible for a $50 rebate. Not only that, he’d get shopping credits and monthly savings of $30 to $40, too. And if he gave the ID for his gas account, those benefits would double. But the ID for his electric account wasn’t needed curiously, the caller already had it.

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