MICHAEL O. ALLEN

TWO DRIVERS HOSPITALIZED AFTER COLLISION

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By MICHAEL O. ALLEN | Thursday, April 23, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B05

The drivers of two cars that collided head-on in Mahwah were hospitalized in stable condition Wednesday.

Edward Blust of Garrison Court, Mahwah, was being treated at Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern, N.Y., and Robert Scotto, 36, of Brooklyn was at the University Hospital in Newark, spokesmen for the hospitals said.

Scotto’s car crossed the center lines on Route 202 at 5:35 p.m. Tuesday and crashed into Blust’s auto, according to a statement from Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

Blust, 29, and Scotto suffered head injuries. Scotto also suffered severe leg injuries.
No summons was issued and the investigation was continuing.

ID: 17375166 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

3RD TEEN TIED TO SHOOTING; Joins Bergen Pair Arrested Last Week

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, April 22, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B03

A 17-year-old Closter boy on Tuesday became the third Bergen County youth charged in connection with last week’s robbery of a Queens doctor and the shooting of two of his patients, police said.

Hyun Kim of 82 Legion Place was the driver of the getaway car in the robbery, said New York City Police Sgt. Don Costello.

Kim, arrested on a complaint of excessive noise in Fort Lee on Sunday, was charged in a Queens courtroom on Tuesday with first-degree robbery and assault, Costello said. Further details on the Fort Lee incident could not be obtained Tuesday.

James Jhang, 17, of Englewood Cliffs was arrested a week ago across the street from the office of Dr. Moo Young Jun on Sanford Avenue in Queens, moments after he and Seung Kim, 16, of Closter went into the office pretending to be patients, then robbed the doctor, police said.

As the suspects were leaving, a retired police officer and his 20-year-old son were walking in. They crossed paths and the son, Steven Barberisi, was shot by Jhang in the stomach as he opened the office door, police said.

Robert Barberisi, who retired from the police force in 1989, then struggled with Jhang and was shot in the arm, police said. He bit Jhang in the arm, forcing him to drop the gun, which Barberisi picked up and fired, Hardiman said. Seung Kim was hit in the left shoulder and was arrested at the scene.

The third suspect, who was waiting in the car and who police now say is Hyun Kim, fled. Costello said the youths were being held Tuesday in the Queens House of Detention.

ID: 17375023 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

TWO MEN HELD IN ROBBERY OF JEWELER; Join 3rd Suspect in Bergen Jail

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, April 22, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B03

Two Newark men were being held in lieu of $50,000 bail each at Bergen County Jail on Tuesday in connection with the armed robbery of a Rutherford jewelry store in February, police said.

Alan Adams and Marvin Lowery are the second and third suspects arrested in the Feb. 7 robbery of Corbo Jewelers at 58 Park Ave., Police Lt. Steven Nienstedt said. A third suspect, Caasi Selby, was arrested a month ago and remained in the Bergen County Jail on Tuesday in lieu of $15,000 bail.

The three were among a group of seven who entered the jewelry store, ordered employees to the floor, smashed showcases with hammers, a sawed-off shotgun, and automatic handguns, and made off with $18,000 worth of jewelry, including rings, bracelets, and Rolex and Movado watches, Nienstedt said.

Nienstedt said his department is holding two more arrest warrants in the case.

In a series of raids that began about 11 p.m. Friday in Newark, Rutherford police worked with the Newark Police Department to execute search warrants at five residences.

Adams, 20, was arrested at his Schley Street apartment. He was charged with illegal possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, armed robbery, and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Lowery, 28, of 226 Richelieu Terrace was arrested Sunday about 2:30 a.m. at the Harmon Cove Towers in Secaucus on armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery charges, Nienstedt said.

The investigation was continuing, he added.

ID: 17375024 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

HEROIN PROBE RESULTS IN 38 ARRESTS; Most Suspects are From Bergen or Passaic

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, April 15, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B01

A state police task force investigating heroin trafficking in North Jersey has arrested 38 people, most of them from Bergen and Passaic counties, and seized more than $600,000 worth of uncut heroin.

Law enforcement authorities used undercover drug purchases and surveillance to penetrate a ring of traffickers stretching from North Jersey through New York City to Yugoslavia, state Attorney General Robert Del Tufo said Tuesday.

Dubbed “Operation Big Apple” because the drugs came into the country through Kennedy International Airport, the investigation began a year ago and started bearing fruit with the Feb. 7 arrest of Nicholas Lore, also known as Aniello Moschillo. The Hasbrouck Heights resident was charged with cocaine possession.

Lore is suspected of being one of the network’s linchpins, authorities said.

Police seized five ounces of cocaine and $11,000 in that arrest.

The case broke open March 20 when agents executing search warrants at Xhemil Zhuta’s Elmwood Park residence seized 2 kilograms of heroin, a .38-caliber pistol loaded with hollow-point bullets, and about $2,000, officials said.

Arrested with Zhuta, the alleged leader of the network, were his wife, Qibaret, son, Mendi, and daughter, Teuta.

Arrested at other North Jersey locations that day were Saban Adili, 41, of Dallas; Esref Ismaili, 40, of Fairfield, Conn.; Esat Sulesjmanoski, 41, of Lincoln Park; and Bajram Ibrahimi, 56, of Paterson, who allegedly is the courier who brought the heroin from Yugoslavia to the United States.

Further arrests occurred later in March and in early April.

In all, 38 people were charged, including 32 from Bergen and Passaic counties.

Authorities said the Cambridge Club Tavern in Garfield was the principal distribution point of heroin and cocaine in the Garfield-Lodi area.

Zimbret Mahmudi, a 28-year-old Garfield resident who authorities say is the owner of the club, was among those arrested.

He is being held at the Bergen County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bail.

The elder Zhuta and his wife were being held in the jail in lieu of $500,000 and $250,000 bail, respectively.

The investigation is continuing and authorities expect to make more arrests, said Col. Justin J. Dintino, state police superintendent.

ID: 17374483 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

POLICE ISSUE HIGH-RISE CRIME WARNING

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer |Wednesday, April 15, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B01

Following a rash of cat burglaries over the past two months, police have issued a second warning to managers and residents of Hackensack’s mid- and high-rise apartment buildings.

On six evenings between Jan. 30 and March 30, cat burglars entered 30 apartments by popping open sliding doors on terraces and patios and stole jewelry and cash, Police Chief William Iurato said Tuesday.

Similar burglaries have been reported by nearby communities, including Fort Lee, Cliffside Park, Edgewater, and North Bergen, Iurato said.

The chief said a loose-knit group of burglars appears to be at work. They strike at dusk, climbing onto roofs and jumping from balcony to balcony, entering several apartments in a building, he said.

On Jan. 30 and 31, Feb. 20, 25, and 28, and March 30, apartment buildings on Prospect, Clinton, and Euclid avenues and Anderson Street were entered.

Tenants at Quail Heights II, a mid-rise apartment building on Prospect Avenue, reported that burglars, working their way from the roof, broke into at least four apartments on the night of Feb. 20. As in the other burglaries, no injuries were reported.

Residents returning home realized something was amiss when they found their doors chain-locked from the inside, tenants said.

Police first sent letters to the tenants and managers of the apartments on Feb. 26.

In Cliffside Park, 12 apartments have been entered during the same period, Police Chief Daniel Derito said. The burglars seem to have no fear of climbing onto roofs and can jump from balcony to balcony, Derito said.

Residents of high- or mid-rise apartments with balconies should put objects in the tracks of the sliding doors to make break-ins more difficult, he advised.

In Edgewater, a couple of burglaries fitting the Hackensack pattern have been reported, Police Capt. David Hanna said. Fort Lee Police John Orso also acknowledged a few burglaries.

ID: 17374485 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

FAMILY ID’S SON’S BODY, THEN LEARNS HE’S ALIVE

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, April 12, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A03

Members of John Howe’s family thought he had died in a train accident Thursday night. On Friday, they found out he hadn’t.

His boss, his brother, and his parents on Friday identified a body taken to the Rockland County, N.Y., morgue as that of Howe, Suffern Village Police Chief Leo Costa said Saturday.

“Each one positively said that it was him,” Costa said. “No doubt about it.”

But then Howe, 22, was later spotted walking along a Spring Valley, N.Y., street with his girlfriend.

The body in the morgue was subsequently identified as that of Charles Horton, 24, of Wayne Avenue, Suffern. He was struck and killed near Suffern by an NJ Transit train Thursday night. Police said no identification was found on the body.

Dr. Frederick Zugibe, Rockland County chief medical examiner, said Saturday that Howe’s mother, father, and brother came to the morgue in Pomona five hours after the body was discovered and identified it as Howe’s. They were called shortly after Howe’s boss was summoned to the morgue and made the initial identification.

In a followup investigation to determine Howe’s whereabouts before the accident, police tracked down his girlfriend and found the two in Spring Valley.

Police did not identify Howe’s relatives, boss, or girlfriend.

Costa said the two men bore a strong facial resemblance. Authorities were able to identify Horton through his fingerprints.

A woman described by Costa as Horton’s common-law wife had called police to ask if they knew where he was.

ID: 17374130 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

MOTHER JAILED ON DRUG, ENDANGERMENT CHARGES

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Thursday, April 9, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B03

A 29-year-old woman has been jailed on charges that she ran a crack house and endangered her 9-year-old daughter’s welfare, police said.

Bretna Roberts, who was being held in the Bergen County Jail on Wednesday on $27,000 bail, was arrested at her 460 Orchard St. home Sunday by officers responding to an anonymous tip, said Police Capt. C. Kenneth Tinsley.

Officer Timothy Torell, assisted by Detective Ernest Cunningham and Lt. John Delarosa, discovered when he arrived at the house that Roberts was also wanted on an outstanding warrant for failure to appear in Englewood Municipal Court on Jan. 29.

After a crack vial, a crack pipe, and a butane lighter fell out of Roberts pants pocket as she dressed to follow the officers, they searched the house and found several vials containing what police suspect to be crack. Some of the substances in the vials are suspected of being soap or some other form of imitation crack, police said.

They also found a plastic bag with a white, powdery substance that they suspect is cocaine; a jar and spoon used to cook cocaine powder until it crystallizes into rock cocaine, and marijuana cigarettes.

Tinsley said the materials were sent to the state police laboratory for testing.

Roberts also is charged with possession of drugs with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of the Cleveland Elementary School.

In an incident on the same street five hours later, a motorist fired two shots into the front window of a house. Police said the two incidents may be related and are investigating.

ID: 17373887 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

BLEAK ASSESSMENT OF WAR ON DRUGS; Torricelli Issues Report

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, April 5, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A34

Although winnable, the war on drugs is now being lost, at least on the international front.

That was the conclusion of Rep. Robert G. Torricelli, D-Englewood, in a status report he gave to Bergen County law enforcement officials in Hackensack on Friday. In a 30-minute briefing that had little good news, he offered a bleak assessment of the struggle.

“The battle against the growers is largely lost,” said Torricelli, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Western Hemisphere affairs. “While we’ve dramatically increased federal spending, the actual coca production rate has increased 400 percent.”

The U.S. government has spent almost $12 billion since 1982 to fight drugs, he said.

However, much of that ended up in the pockets of narcotics traffickers, who then used the money to buy protection from Andean nations law enforcement agencies charged with halting their illegal trade, Torricelli added.

He called for a renewed effort against drugs on the home front, in “our families, schools, and communities, and not in the jungle of Peru.”

“We’ve lost battles, but there is no reason not win the war,” he said.

Fort Lee Police Chief John Orso, one of about 70 police chiefs, narcotics officers, and county officials present, cited the success of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program in the borough’s public schools. He said that effort should be intensified as a way to cut down on the demand for drugs.

Paramus Police Chief Joseph Delaney recalled testifying before a U.S. Senate committee in 1975, when the war on drugs was focused on the heroin trade in Turkey. The problem then, as now, was that communities and local law enforcement agencies were starved of resources to wage a credible war.

Echoing the sentiment of many in the audience, Delaney asked Torricelli what he had to offer them in terms of additional resources.

A crime bill passed recently by the House of Representatives and now being considered by the Senate contains $3 billion for local programs, Torricelli said. However, he said, it contains a provision calling for a seven-day waiting period to purchase guns.

President Bush has promised to veto legislation containing gun-control measures, he said.

Englewood Police Capt. C. Kenneth Tinsley asked Torricelli about incentives to encourage law enforcement officers and other public employees to live in the communities in which they work. City neighborhoods could be stabilized by the presence of these officers, he said.

One of the reasons many give for not living in the community is the high cost of housing, Tinsley added. Bergen County Executive William “Pat” Schuber answered that the county Housing Authority is considering a proposal to aid public employees, especially law enforcement workers, with low-interest loans and mortgages.

Caption: PHOTO – Rep. Robert G. Torricelli, D-Englewood, speaking Friday in Hackensack at a briefing on the war on drugs. AL PAGLIONE / THE RECORD –

ID: 17373429 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

DEATH BEHIND BARS: 4 INMATES HAVE COMMITTED SUICIDE IN THE PAST YEAR; Pate of Hangings Rocks County Jail

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By Bill Sanderson and Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writers | Sunday, April 5, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A01

Cristian F. Slane’s last letter to his mother and brother arrived the day after he committed suicide in the Bergen County Jail Annex.

“Life here is hell,” wrote Slane, 20. “I am in a cell that is 9 feet by 4 feet. We are only allowed out two hours a day.” Inch-high letters took up most of the second page: “I Want to Come Home.”

Elisabeth Slane, who works with troubled teenagers for a private social service agency in New York City, still weeps when she recalls her son’s death. His varied problems including a sexual assault charge stemming from a relationship with a 15-year-old girl did not diminish her love.

She says she’s not angry at jail employees for failing to prevent his suicide last year. But she wonders about the ability of the Bergen County Sheriff’s Department to ensure the safety of inmates: Christian Slane, who died May 20, was one of four men in sheriff’s custody to kill themselves in the past year.

“They’re not doing the job,” complained Millie Irving, whose son, Robert Lee, also 20, hanged himself in the main jail on Feb. 26, hours after his arrest on a charge of murdering his girlfriend’s grandmother in Lodi. “They forgot to do something. To me, the system is wrong.”

Christian Slane and Robert Irving came from different backgrounds. Slane grew up in Teaneck, the adopted child of professional parents, while Irving was raised in a working-class family in a gritty City of Passaic neighborhood.

At the end of their lives they shared the despair of being charged with a crime and jailed in Bergen County. It was a despair that may have led Slane, Irving, and two other inmates Patrick Carley, 38, of Oradell and John A. Russell, 30, of Paramus to kill themselves in the past year, and an undisclosed number of others to try unsuccessfully.

The suicide rate among the 1,000 inmates in Bergen’s overcrowded jails far exceeds that of jails in neighboring counties and the state’s prisons.

State corrections officials say that in 1990 and 1991, no suicides were reported in jails in Passaic, Essex, Hudson, and Morris counties, which together house more than 5,000 inmates. In the state’s 12 adult prisons and three juvenile institutions with a total of 24,500 inmates two suicides were reported in 1990, and one in 1991.

Bergen County Sheriff Jack Terhune said he and his officers aren’t to blame for the high number of suicides, which include an inmate who died while in officers custody at Bergen Pines County Hospital. Medical and psychiatric screening rules meet state standards, Terhune said, adding that Bergen’s jail officers get better training than those elsewhere in the state.

Terhune said that whatever his officers do, an inmate determined to commit suicide is bound to succeed.

“We have safeguards in place to make every effort to prevent this type of event from occurring,” he said. “You can’t blame the sheriff for the ills of society that are sent to his front door.”

Last month, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy began an investigation into the high number of suicides. Fahy’s probe will help little, said Terhune, who partly blames limited funding.

“I’m sure if we were given carte blanche, in terms of building and staff, sure we could do more,” he said.

Conditions in the Bergen County Jail and its annex have been the subject of litigation for years. In 1988, the state Office of Inmate Advocacy filed a suit in federal court alleging serious deficiencies in conditions, policies, and procedures in the jails, which are so overcrowded that many inmates sleep on mattresses on a gymnasium floor.

Hoping to win freeholder support and money for improved conditions, Terhune has asked consultants to study the main jail, which opened in 1912 and houses about 100 inmates next to the Bergen County Courthouse in Hackensack, and the larger annex across River Street, which opened in 1967 and houses about 900 inmates. Their population far exceeds their rated total capacity of 423 inmates.

Terhune says overcrowding is probably a factor in the suicides. “Certainly decreased space has an impact on mental outlook,” he said.

None of which comforts the families of Christian Slane, Robert Irving, Patrick Carley, and John A. Russell who were accused of crimes ranging from shoplifting to murder.

A college graduate who worked as a landscaper, Russell pleaded guilty of burglary and assaulting a police officer, and was sentenced to probation in March 1991. But he violated the terms of his probation by refusing to enter a drug treatment program, records show. In August, he was given a four-year sentence.

Several days after he was sentenced, Russell tried to hang himself in the Bergen County Jail.

On Aug. 27, he was admitted to Bergen Pines County Hospital, where he was kept under constant observation until Sept. 20. Russell was discharged from the hospital 10 days later, and moved to Post 9 of the Bergen County Jail Annex where inmates with psychiatric problems are are kept under closer observation, and get more counseling, than those elsewhere in the jail.

On Oct. 4, at about 5:15 p.m., jail records show, a Post 9 inmate identified as Rex Dearborn apparently tried to kill himself. Investigators aren’t sure, but they think it may have been a diversion: Fifty minutes later, Russell was found hanging from a shoelace in a Post 9 shower stall. Efforts to save his life failed.

Carley, who committed suicide April 28, had a long history of brushes with the law. He gave his mother’s Oradell address when he was arrested April 25 by Wood-Ridge police on charges of shoplifting and disorderly conduct for stealing a bottle of rum from a delicatessen. Carley was held on $250 bail and sent to Bergen Pines for observation.

Three days later, at 4:28 p.m., he was found dead in the hospital’s prison ward under guard of sheriff’s officers with his pajama bottoms tied tightly around his neck.

Russell and Carley had long histories of substance abuse. Slane and Irving, who died just as they were emerging into adulthood, did not. They are described by those who knew them as outgoing and friendly.

Neither seemed particularly depressed in the days before they died.

Elisabeth Slane tells how, as a child g 842198rowing up in Teaneck, her son once brought home a 95-year-old woman from the nursing home next door. “He wanted her to see his room,” she said. Noticing that the woman was tired as she walked back to the nursing home, Christian said earnestly: “I ought to teach you how to ride a bike.”

It was clear to Mrs. Slane, a former teacher, that her son faced a difficult time in life.

Christian was late to start talking, and was eventually diagnosed as having a learning disability. After a time, he got along fairly well in school and had a normal childhood.

“He loved sports,” Mrs. Slane said. “Chris was a lousy team player he couldn’t stay on any team because he was hyperactive. But in individual sports, like skiing, he was excellent.”

When he was 14, as his parents marriage broke up, Slane quit school, and took up a series of unskilled jobs. At the Ground Round Restaurant in Hackensack, he dressed up as a clown for children’s birthday parties.

At age 18, Slane moved to Florida and got married. He had a a daughter, now 15 months old.

He and his wife separated, and Slane returned to New Jersey. He rented a room in Fair Lawn and got a job as a waiter at the Red Lobster in Paramus.

Slane tended to borrow more money from friends than he could repay. “He had all the middle-class tastes, but he didn’t have the education to get the jobs that go with it,” said his mother.

Elisabeth Slane said that hoping to make some money, her son offered to refinish the basement in the home where he was renting a room. He botched the job, and, apparently trying to make amends, wrote the owner a check for $4,401.50. It bounced. The landlord called the Fair Lawn police and also told them that Slane had been having a sexual relationship with his 15-year-old daughter.

Slane was arrested May 10. Because he was charged with sexual assault for having a relationship with a minor more than four years younger than himself he was placed in an isolation cell for his own protection. His bail was set at $7,500 cash, more than his parents could raise.

He was found at 5:52 p.m. on May 20, after he hanged himself with a bedsheet.

“I frankly hoped there would be more supervision in a smaller jail,” said his mother, who has worked with youths sent to New York City’s Rikers Island.

That hope was shared by Millie Irving, whose son an accused murderer also died alone in a Bergen County Jail cell.

Robert Lee Irving’s family remembers him as an outgoing youth, a good basketball player. In school he was interested in black history, auto mechanics, and electronics. He liked listening to gospel and rap music.

He had some legitimate jobs and one illegitimate one.

On Aug. 30, 1990, a Passaic police officer arrested Irving on a charge of carrying 28 vials of crack within 1,000 feet of a school. He pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of illegal drugs with intent to distribute, and served a year behind bars before he was paroled in October.

While visiting her son in the Passaic County Jail, Millie Irving first met her son’s girlfriend, Dawn LiGregni, 16, who lived with her grandmother in Lodi. Members of her family say Irving sometimes spent the night with Dawn, sneaking in the window so her grandmother wouldn’t see him. They say Mrs. LiGregni, 68, had never met him.

On Feb. 20, Ann LiGregni was found strangled, her body left in a closet of her home. Her 1987 Honda Civic was missing from the driveway. The next day, a Passaic police officer saw the car parked in a vacant lot. A fingerprint on the gearshift was identified as Robert Irving’s.

Five days later, he was arrested.

Irving admitted the killing to investigators. But his mother says it wasn’t intentional: Ann LiGregni returned home, and he hid under the bed. “She saw him. . . . That’s when they had a tussle. She spooked him.”

Robert Irving was found dead in his jail cell at 7:05 a.m. Feb. 26, barely 12 hours after his arrest. He had strangled himself with his shoelaces; officers also found a sock stuffed in his mouth.

Terhune said that like other inmates in the main jail, Irving was checked once every hour.

Millie Irving says that because her son had just been charged with murder, the Sheriff’s Department should have watched him more closely. “You can’t just tell somebody they killed someone, and leave them open like that,” she said.

Terhune said “health professionals” at the jail had determined that Irving was not suicidal.

What had been one tragedy the murder and her son’s arrest turned into a double tragedy for the Irving family. If her son was tried and convicted, Millie Irving said, at least she could have visited him in prison.

“I would have loved him more, because I would have figured he had a problem,” Mrs. Irving said. “I would have never given him up. No way.”

Caption: 1 – COLOR PHOTO – Millie Irving of the City of Passaic holding photo of her son, Robert Lee, who as found hanged Feb. 26 in jail. DANIELLE P. RICHARDS / THE RECORD –

2 – PHOTO – Elisabeth Slane with photo of her son, Christian, 20, whose last letter arrived a day after he committed suicide in Bergen County Jail Annex. ROBERT S. TOWNSEND / THE RECORD –

ID: 17373489 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

MOURNING FRIENDS RECALL YOUNG BIKER’S LOVE OF LIFE; Train Killed  Bergenfield Boy in `Freak Accident’

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, April 5, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A01

At a most difficult hour in his grief Saturday, Bob Gruber embraced a tearful Mike Vitacco, his son’s best friend, consoling him, as he did some 100 boys and girls who had come to bid their friend goodbye.

His wife, Patricia, was at his side, and they were seeing their son for the first time since he was killed in an accident Thursday night.

Patricia Gruber, adjusting one boy’s jacket, exhorted him to “remember Bobby as he was.”

She said she was saddened at seeing her son’s body Saturday and that the family agonized over whether the casket should be open whether the children should see him like that. The youngsters, between 11 and 15 years old, from the Roy W. Brown Middle School in Bergenfield, cried inconsolably.

“I will miss all his friends that he grew up with,” the 44-year-old Bergenfield woman said. “He lived life, every minute, to the fullest. He was looking forward to the summer, to the nice weather, because he was born in June.”

Robert R. Gruber, 13, was killed Thursday in what his father called “a freak accident.” The eighth-grader was struck and killed by an NJ Transit commuter train in East Rutherford as he returned from training for a dirt-bike race.

Saturday and Sunday were for his friends, Mrs. Gruber said. The first wave of about 25 Bergenfield middle school students arrived and filled up the room at the Riewerts Memorial Home. Michael Restrepo, 11, Jerit Sciorra, 13, Anthony Christiano, 12, Michael Lopez, 11, and Danielle Wilson, 13, were there. Toula Psathas, 11, remembered sitting a table away from Bobby at lunch one day and how kind and friendly he was. They became friends.

Jen Heffernan, 15, met Bobby Gruber through a friend and hung out, listening to music, with him.

“I will miss being with him,” she said. “He was caring. If you had a problem, he would talk to you, anytime. He was fun to be with.”

Mike Vitacco said his best friend since first grade had a puckish sense of humor and loved to make people laugh. They called him Urkel after a character on a television sitcom because he wore funny, colorful clothes. Bobby Gruber would do anything for anyone, especially girls.

He loved girls.

So his parents, who had grown accustomed to hearing adults and children alike tell them what a joy it was to be around their son, consoled and were consoled by his friends, their parents, and teachers from the school on Saturday. The children had gone to the Grubers home the night before. They had sat in Bobby’s room, talked with his parents, and talked about what he meant to them. Each one left with a photograph of their friend.

A smile played across Patricia Gruber’s face as she recalled how her son first became enamored of dirt bikes and motocross racing. He watched motocross racing on television as a young boy.

“When he was 7, he said, `Mom, when can I get one? I said maybe when he turned 12. He never forgot I said that,” and asked again as soon as he turned 12, Mrs. Gruber said.

The family lives on a dead-end with a field and woods in the back. They found out that Bobby, who switched from football to basketball about a year ago, had been borrowing a dirt bike and riding it in the field in back of the house, without all the proper equipment. His mother and father decided to buy him the bike and all the right gear. Under the watchful eyes of his father, he trained, which was the way his mother wanted it.

Bobby took part in his first competitive race a week ago, and was to have competed Saturday in a motocross race in Walden, N.Y. He usually trained in Jersey City with a group from Bergenfield. But on the day he died, the group’s plans changed and they went instead to the meadowlands in East Rutherford.

They parked in the street, walked about a half-mile into the meadow, then rode alongside the raised railroad tracks. About 6 p.m., Gruber told his son it was windy and cold, that he would head back to the trucks, that the others could join him later.

He was a good distance ahead when Bobby came up, wanting to take his father to the trucks.

“Dad, let me ride you on my bike, let me take you partway,” he told his father.

“I never let him ride me on his bike. It’s a small bike and it’s a race bike. It wasn’t good for the bike,” Gruber said. He told his son to go back and join the others, that he would see him later.

Bobby, following two other bikes, would pass his father twice as he rode around practicing.
“He was doing great moves, happy as a lark,” his father said.

Gruber would not see his son alive again. The next time he saw him was in a casket at the Bergenfield funeral home.

Most of the ride alongside the railroad track was dirt, wobbly but safe, he said but at one point, to cross over a culvert on railroad property between the Hackensack River bridge and the Route 3 overpass, he would have to ride close to the tracks. The train, returning to the Hoboken station carrying no passengers, apparently sideswiped the boy.

“It was an extreme coincidence to be in that corner at that time,” Gruber said. “He ended being on top of the culvert at the time, such a brief instant that he was exposed to danger and it happened.”

When asked what they would miss most about Bobby Gruber, one of his friends said they would miss “just being with him.”

Visiting continues today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Services will be Monday at 10 a.m. at the Teaneck United Methodist Church, with burial in George Washington Memorial Park.

Caption: PHOTO – Bobby Gruber posing proudly with his dirt bike in a family photograph.

Notes: Bergen page only

ID: 17373490 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

FEDERAL LIMIT ON INMATES ASSAILED; Del Tufo Weighs Legal Challenge

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, April 1, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B01

New Jersey Attorney General Robert J. Del Tufo said Tuesday that he is considering challenging federal court orders that limit the number of state prisoners in some county jails.

“I would prefer not to have a federal judge telling the state what it can and cannot do,” he said.

Del Tufo said he talked Monday with U.S. Attorney General William P. Barr about a new U.S. Justice Department policy to provide legal help to states that are trying to lift court-ordered limits on prison populations.

He said he wants to review the current consent decrees restricting the number of state inmates in the Essex, Atlantic, Burlington, Monmouth, and Union county jails, with an eye toward challenging those limits.

Bergen County Sheriff Jack Terhune said lifting the cap on state inmates at other jails might help the Bergen County Jail because some state prisoners could be removed, but that the problem would remain with the state.

“If the state realizes it has an overcrowding problem, then it must address it at the state level, not at the expense of the county jail system,” Terhune said.

The new Justice Department policy was first put forth by Barr in a Jan. 14 speech in which he said the ability of states in recent years to manage their own prisons has been hampered by lower federal court rulings that came out of lawsuits filed by inmates.

“Many courts went far beyond what the Constitution requires in remedying purported Eighth Amendment violations,” Barr said in the speech. “Caps, in particular, have wrought havoc with the states efforts to get criminals off the street.”

But on Jan. 15, the day after Barr’s speech, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling that undercut his position, said Elizabeth Alexander, deputy director of the National Prison Project of the American Civil Liberties Union.

The ruling, in a case originating in Boston, made reopening consent decrees easier, but put limits on how much they could be rewritten, Alexander said.

“I’m really surprised that Barr is continuing to make this argument,” she said. “In the face of the decision, I would have thought that he would stop, because it was so soundly rejected by the Supreme Court.”

The Bergen County Jail operates at an average of 235 percent of its rated capacity of 423 inmates, with its population hovering around 1,000 during the week and exceeding that on weekends. The county and state are co-defendants in a 1988 lawsuit filed by inmates who charged that their constitutional rights were being violated by conditions at the jail.

James Stabile, a spokesman for the state Department of Corrections, said the state prison system currently runs at 135 percent capacity. Although the department removed 1,559 inmates from county jails in February, the caps in the five counties prevented the state from spreading that number out, he said.

For instance, the department removed 348 prisoners from the Essex County Jail, one of the jails under consent decrees, but only 72 inmates from Bergen County. The number could have been divided more evenly among the counties if the state could be flexible with the cap, Stabile said.

ID: 17373081 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

FIVE INJURED WHEN DRIVER CRASHES CAR INTO TREE

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, March 29, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A05

Authorities are trying to determine what caused a 20-year-old borough man to lose control of a car he was driving and crash into a tree, injuring himself and his four passengers, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said Saturday.

Doug Brino of 702 Shawnee Drive, the driver, was being treated for unspecified injuries Saturday at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood. A 16-year-old girl sitting behind him and a 17-year-old girl next to her were also being treated at the hospital, Fahy said.

The front-seat passenger, a 15-year-old girl, and Brian Matos of 1173 Valley Road, Wayne, the owner of the car, were taken to University Hospital in Newark by helicopter.

A University Hospital spokeswoman said Matos was released Saturday but declined to release information on his companion because of her age.

A Valley Hospital supervisor said Brino and one girl were treated and released, but that the other girl was admitted in serious condition. She declined to say which girl it was.

The crash occurred about 9:40 p.m. Friday on a darkened bend of McCoy Road, Fahy said.

Fahy said none of the car occupants wore their seat belts and that investigators found a half-empty bottle of vodka underneath the front seat of the car. No charges had been filed in the case.

ID: 17372794 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)