Tax collector for 3 Warren County towns accused of stealing $824K in residents’ payments
Updated Mar 11, 2021;
Rachellyn (nee Edinger) Mosher was the tax collector for Harmony, White and Lopatcong townships.
She was arrested in 2018 by New Jersey State Police on accusations she stole more than $75,000 in residents’ property tax payments. Municipal officials at that point had already moved to fire her.
That arrest led to a two-year investigation by a Hunterdon County Grand Jury, which generated the indictment handed up Thursday, Warren County Prosecutor James Pfeiffer said.
Forensic audits by each township revealed Mosher misappropriated residents’ property tax payments between 2013 and 2018 in the amounts of approximately $124,000 in Harmony, $166,000 in White and $534,000 from Lopatcong, according to the prosecutor’s office.
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A convicted murder from New Jersey has been sentenced to 48 months in prison for unlawfully possessing a semi-automatic rifle while attempting to sell it to another person.
Frank Rubacky
It really is way too easy to criticize the School district. Almost unfair, but…
I love the school district’s transparency choices. Page 2 of their budget is an increase of $31,023 in a $136MM budget…because it is for Charter School Tuition. Meanwhile, they file a brief with the court about the substantial legal cost damages they are facing and the COVID related expenses of $1.2MM.
But, they chose to highlight Charter School Tuition. You might was well have the BoE members sign the petition for an elected school board.
You truly can not make this stuff up.
Frank Rubacky
Feb 24, 2021 contributor
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y., is seen celebrating Mass Nov. 7, 2020, at St. Joseph s Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. (Credit: Gregory A. Shemitz/CNS.)
Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio said Feb. 22 a lawsuit filed against him in New Jersey Superior Court over a claim of abuse that allegedly occurred decades ago is defamatory.
BROOKLYN, New York Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio said Feb. 22 a lawsuit filed against him in New Jersey Superior Court over a claim of abuse that allegedly occurred decades ago “is defamatory.”
“I did not abuse the accuser or anyone else in my 50-year ministry as a priest,” he said, adding: “False claims do real damage to victims of sexual abuse.”