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Page 4 - மர்ஸர் கவுண்டி உயர்ந்தது நீதிமன்றம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

LAWSUIT: NJ Nursing Home Chef Says Boss Tried Making Himself Her Sex Slave

“I would like to be your slave, and you can be my master. Those were the words 51-year-old AnnaMarie Ferrara says her new boss Howard Lawton said to her on her very first day of work, the New York Post reports citing a lawsuit filed in Mercer County Superior Court. The grandmother was just hours into her new job as the chef for Healthcare Services Group, Inc., at its Phillipsburg location on Aug. 22, when Lawton expressed his own desires, The Post reports. “Lawton made clear that he hired [Ferrara] specifically because he desired to enter into some sort of sado-masochistic sexual relationship with her where [Ferrara] would sexually dominate him in some sort of imaginary dungeon,” the outlet said citing the suit.

New Jersey same-sex marriage bill could pass into state law

LGBTQ couples in New Jersey can legally marry because of a 2013 court ruling. But if the state Legislature passes a bill introduced on Feb. 9, it would cement same-sex marriage into New Jersey law.  The state Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2013 despite appeal efforts by then-Gov. Chris Christie. The recent bill would take same-sex marriage rights out of the court s hands.  I think we would like to not make [same-sex marriage] so much at the whim of the courts, said Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg, D-Bergen, who co-sponsored the bill along with Senate President Stephen Sweeney, D-Gloucester.  People fear that another court could reverse the earlier decision unless the Legislature codifies it in the law, Weinberg said. Concern grew after the U.S. Supreme Court added two conservative justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett  in the past four years, said Christian Fuscarino. He s the executive director of Garden State Equality, New Jersey s la

New Jersey bill would provide protection and security for same-sex marriages

New Jersey bill would provide protection and security for same-sex marriages Replay Video UP NEXT LGBTQ couples in New Jersey can legally marry because of a 2013 court ruling. But if the state Legislature passes a bill introduced on Feb. 9, it would cement same-sex marriage into New Jersey law.  The state Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2013 despite appeal efforts by then-Gov. Chris Christie. The recent bill would take same-sex marriage rights out of the court s hands.  I think we would like to not make [same-sex marriage] so much at the whim of the courts, said Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg, D-Bergen, who co-sponsored the bill along with Senate President Stephen Sweeney, D-Gloucester. 

Man who killed another at Applebee s pleads guilty to manslaughter

Noel Powell III, a former Lawrence Township resident, has pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter for shooting another man in the head as the victim sat at the bar at Appleebee’s restaurant on Route 1 in Lawrence in 2017. Powell’s plea to second-degree manslaughter was made during a Feb. 3 hearing before Mercer County Superior Court Judge Darlene Pereksta. He was represented by defense attorney Robin Lord. Powell will be sentenced by Pereksta on March 11. Powell had been indicted on a charge of first-degree murder for killing Devin Smith, who also lived in Lawrence, but he was allowed to plead to the lesser charge of second-degree manslaughter in a plea bargain reached between the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office and his attorney.

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