vimarsana.com

Latest Breaking News On - பெர்கன் கவுண்டி உயர்ந்தது நீதிமன்றம் - Page 2 : vimarsana.com

N J to keep doing AC

POLITICO Get the New Jersey Playbook newsletter Email Sign Up By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or updates from POLITICO and you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service. You can unsubscribe at any time and you can contact us here. This sign-up form is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Presented by Ørsted Good Thursday morning! Remember how controversial the state takeover of Atlantic City was back during Gov. Chris Christie’s second term? Well, that’s scheduled to end this year. But a bill that has started advancing in the Assembly would extend it another four years while restoring Civil Service and interest arbitration rights to the city’s public workers.

Phil Murphy supports Trenton NJ tradition: senatorial courtesy

Gov. Phil Murphy praise the process at a coronavirus briefing earlier this month. Murphy described the unwritten rule, which allows Senators to block gubernatorial nominees who hail from their home county, as an occasionally annoying but necessary evil. I think it s been largely a good thing over time, Murphy said. Defenders of the courtesy tradition have long argued that it lets individual senators serve as a check on one of the most powerful governors in the nation. But for Statehouse veterans, like Golden, courtesy simply gives senators the leverage to horse trade with the governor s office. Senators will often threaten to hold nominees hostage in exchange for some unrelated matter, like funding for a port project or a patronage post for an ally. Senators can block or delay nominees from Senate confirmation without ever having to explain why.

Notorious N J Torso Killer pleads guilty to 2 murders from 1974

Notorious N.J. ‘Torso Killer’ pleads guilty to 2 murders from 1974 Updated 5:14 PM; Richard Cottingham, the notorious serial killer dubbed the “Torso Killer” for his gruesome modus operandi, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to two murders from 1974, authorities announced. Cottingham, 74, who is currently serving a life sentence in New Jersey State Prison after admitting to six killings in New York and New Jersey, pleaded guilty to killing Mary Ann Pryor, 17, and Lorraine Kelly, 16, back in August 1974, Bergen County Prosecutor Mark Musella said in a statement. Early January 2020, it was discovered that Cottingham had previously confessed to the murders of three Bergen County teenagers in the late 1960s - each a cold case for over 50 years. Although he was not charged with the teens’ murders, the prosecutor’s office said the cases were “exceptionally cleared.”

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.