MICHAEL O. ALLEN

DENTIST WITH NO LICENSE ARRESTED AFTER COMPLAINT

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Friday, March 13, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | D02

The state Consumer Affairs Division and police say Miguel Gonzalez was the dentist of choice for a Hispanic clientele in the township. The problem, officials said, was that Gonzalez did not have a license.

Police this week arrested Gonzalez at his apartment at 304 72nd St., where he practiced, Lt. Timothy Kelly said Thursday.

Nancy Erickson, director of communications for the division, said the arrest followed an anonymous complaint. The agency’s enforcement bureau, which acts on complaints to the New Jersey Dentistry Board as well as all other professional boards in the state, inspected Gonzalez’s apartment on Tuesday.

The investigator found syringes and anesthetic drugs and concluded that Gonzalez, 40, was practicing without a license, Erickson said.

Sgt. Joseph Bode executed a search warrant at the apartment about 4 p.m. Wednesday and seized bottles of Novocain, syringes, patients records, and dental equipment. Gonzalez, a dental technician at a Union City laboratory, was arrested.

However, Gonzalez could not be charged with practicing medicine without a license because there is no state law that penalizes failure to have a dentistry license, Kelly said.

Gonzalez is scheduled to appear in Municipal Court next week on charges of illegal possession of the Novocain, unlawful possession of hypodermic needles, and wrongful impersonation. Erickson said the Consumer Affairs Division could fine Gonzalez for practicing without a license and issue a cease and desist order.

Kelly said Gonzalez may have been a dentist in Cuba, but did not have a license to practice in this country. Working mostly at night, Gonzalez treated about four patients a day, he said.

ID: 17371290 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

BERGEN OFFICIAL DEFENDS JAIL STATE; Testifies More Work is Needed

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Thursday, March 12, 1992

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

Bergen County officials on Wednesday opened their defense in a lawsuit charging that conditions in the crowded jail rob inmates of their constitutional rights, while acknowledging that improvements are needed.

Undersheriff Gary R. Buriello, who oversees operation of the jail, testified that the freeholders last year approved a $5.3 million bond to pay for extensive repairs and renovations throughout the Bergen County Jail Annex.

However, Buriello said he worried that the overcrowding could hold back that work.

“We have to have significant [state] inmate population reduction so that we won’t have to worry where to put the inmates while we are doing the work,” he said. He added that he was discussing such moves with state officials.

In testimony elicited by Deputy County Counsel Murshell Johnson, Buriello said 372 of 992 prisoners in the main jail and the annex Wednesday were state-sentenced inmates. He was the first witness called by the county.

The state Inmate Advocacy Office, on behalf of jail inmates, filed suit in 1988 against the county and state. The lawsuit charged that serious deficiencies exist in conditions, policies, and procedures at the jail, including in the areas of housing, health services, sanitation, food service, lighting, plumbing, ventilation, recreation, and security. The net effect of the deficiencies is to deny inmates their constitutional rights, the suit contends.

Buriello’s testimony Wednesday at the hearing in Newark was intended to counter those charges and testimony by witnesses called by the Inmate Advocacy Office, Johnson said. He also described the jail, how the Sheriff’s Department runs it, and the rules that govern inmate life.

Johnson said a measure of Bergen County’s seriousness in managing its jail is that it has increased the jail’s capacity every few years. A 72-cell, 144-bed addition to the jail was opened Wednesday, she said, and filling the addition will allow the county to move 135 inmates who slept on mattresses on the floor of the jail gymnasium out into other parts of the jail. The gymnasium has been used to house inmates for about three years.

“We are providing adequate level of services to the inmates,” she said. “We are actively trying to manage the population in the jail by instituting different programs, specifically the wristlet program,” which allows some people to serve their sentence at home.

Buriello testified that the county two weeks ago asked contractors for bids on the renovations and repairs at the annex. To begin this fall, the work will include expansion of the jail’s medical services section, complete renovations of several of the jail annex housing areas, and new electrical wiring, plumbing, a fire protection system, and a boiler.

He also said the jail is soliciting proposals on a new administrative building so that large areas of the annex could be used for the original purposes for which they were constructed.

If administrative functions are moved out of secured areas of the jail, opened areas may be used as intake housing, where new inmates would be observed as they adjust to jail life, he said.

Deputy Attorney-General Catherine M. Brown, who is handling the case for the state, declined to comment on any aspect of the case. Contending that the Inmate Advocacy Office failed to prove its case, Brown last week filed motions in U.S. District Court asking that it be dismissed. A hearing on her motion has been scheduled for April 13.

Buriello is expected to return to the stand Friday.

Caption: 1 – At the Bergen County Jail, inmates sleeping on mattresses on the gymnasium floor. COLOR PHOTO – CARMINE GALASSO/THE RECORD – 2 – (4s) Bergen County Sheriff Jack Terhune demonstrating a modular cell at the county jail annex on Wednesday. PHOTO – AL PAGLIONE/THE RECORD

ID: 17371248 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

INMATE SUIT CHALLENGED; Case Against Bergen Jail Unproved, N.J. Says

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, March 11, 1992

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

The state has asked the federal judge presiding over a lawsuit by Bergen County Jail inmates to reduce overcrowding at the jail to dismiss the suit, arguing that the inmates failed to prove their case.

When the state Inmate Advocacy Office, which represents the prisoners, finished presenting its case on Feb. 24, it did not prove that “deliberate indifference” by the state and county led to cruel living conditions in the jail, Deputy Attorney General Catherine M. Brown said in her motion.

Brown cited a July 1990 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that made it tougher for inmates to sue to improve living conditions in prisons. Inmates must show not only inhumane conditions, but “deliberate indifference” by prison officials, the court said in a 5-4 decision.

Assistant Deputy Public Advocate Audrey Bomse said the state’s arguments in the motion for dismissal were without foundation.

“They are misreading the law,” Bomse said. “To show deliberate indifference, you don’t have to get inside a person’s mind. All you have to do is show knowledge for a long period of time, and failure to act.”

Moreover, her office has shown that conditions in the jail have worsened, she said.

The state is a co-defendant with the county in the 1988 lawsuit. Bergen County’s two jails house about 1,000 inmates in space meant for 423. About 400 of the inmates are state prisoners.

Overcrowding exacerbates violations of the inmates constitutional rights, the lawsuit maintains. The rights are eroded through conditions and policies affecting housing, health services, sanitation, and other areas.

Jerrold Binney, assistant to County Executive William “Pat” Schuber, said the county continues to defend itself in the suit. But he added that the state is still responsible for a significant part of the jail’s overcrowding.

“Regardless of the outcome of the case,” Binney said, “we will continue to push for relief from the state financially.”

When the three parties in the case failed to reach an out-of-court settlement, Ackerman appointed James A. Zazzali as special master to conduct fact-finding hearings and to make recommendations. A yearlong break in hearings so the parties could negotiate a settlement last year ended in failure, and the hearings resumed.

Ackerman is scheduled to hear Brown’s motions on April 13.

ID: 17371091 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

CRASH KILLS ONE, INJURES THREE; Teen in Stolen Car Dies Fleeing Police

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By David Gibson and Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writers | Wednesday, March 11, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | B01

A car theft in Paterson ended tragically in Elmwood Park near midnight Monday when the stolen car, driven by an unlicensed driver who had arrived from Puerto Rico four months ago, tried to elude pursuing police and slammed head-on into a car driven by a Garfield woman.

The driver of the stolen car, 19-year-old Manuel Cardona, was killed on the spot, and his two teenage passengers were badly injured. The Garfield woman, Sophie Soltys, 45, of Summit Avenue, also was seriously injured, authorities said.

Soltys suffered head injuries and bruised ribs and was listed in stable condition in the intensive care unit of St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Paterson, where the two other survivors were taken.

A 14-year-old passenger in the stolen car was in stable condition in the pediatric intensive care unit with multiple trauma. A 16-year-old passenger was on life-support, said Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

Cardona, who was driving the steel-gray 1986 Hyundai, was pronounced dead at 12:06 a.m. at the River Drive and Summit Avenue accident scene, Fahy said.

Fahy, whose office is investigating the crash along with the Clifton and Elmwood Park police departments, said the Clifton and Elmwood Park police officers who chased the teenagers followed state guidelines regarding pursuits.

Police said Cardona had arrived in Paterson from Puerto Rico with his family two months ago and was not licensed to drive in New Jersey. He was living with relatives at 163 Redwood Ave. His family said Cardona had never been in trouble before.

The chase, which covered about two miles at speeds approaching 60 mph, came after a surveillance that began in Clifton about 11:40 p.m. Monday, said city Detective Capt. James Territo. He gave the following account:

Patrolmen Warren Lee and Pat Ciser, who was behind the wheel of their squad car, were parked at Randolph and Knapp avenues when the Hyundai passed them on Randolph Avenue moving toward Passaic. The officers began to follow. Noticing that the passengers were behaving nervously, they decided to check the police computer to see if the Hyundai was stolen.

The officers continued to follow as the car proceeded at the speed limit to Parker and Ackerman avenues. There, it abruptly made an illegal left-hand turn from the right-hand lane and headed over the bridge above the Passaic River, and into Garfield.

The car went north on River Road toward Elmwood Park, with the Clifton officers still following. At that moment, the officers were able to confirm that the car had been stolen in Paterson.

The officers then decided to pull the car over and issue a summons for the illegal turn made earlier.

“They activated their lights and, `Boom, the car takes off,” recounted Territo. The Clifton car gave chase and put out a bulletin for area departments to watch for the vehicle.

As the cars passed into Elmwood Park at Market Street and River Road, Elmwood Park Patrolwoman Debra Lysiak joined the pursuit. Two blocks later the car Cardona was driving sped up, police reports said, and went airborne as it hit a rise at a railroad crossing by River Drive and Summit Avenue. It was 11:53 p.m.

“As it came down on the pavement, the driver seemed to lose control,” said Elmwood Park Police Chief Byron Morgan II. “He veered into the oncoming traffic and hit a car in the southbound lane.” The car was a 1986 Oldsmobile driven by Soltys.

The fire department had to use the “jaws of life” to extricate the drivers of both the Oldsmobile and the Hyundai.”

Police said the Clifton patrol car was about 150 feet behind the Hyundai, followed immediatley by the the Elmwood Park police car, when the crash occurred.

No charges have been filed in the case.

Territo said the two Clifton patrolmen remained on duty and said they acted properly: “At this point we’re not looking at it as if anything was done wrong. We’re really looking into it as a matter of course.”

“It wasn’t like a high-speed, lengthy chase,” he added. “It was almost over before it started.”

Fahy called the pursuit a “proper chase,” and said the police did not exceed the speed limit.

Anna Cardona, the victim’s mother, was leaving late Tuesday for Puerto Rico, said Cesar Adorno, with whom she has lived for several years. Adorno said he would follow today with Cardona’s body, which will be buried in Puerto Rico.

“If this hadn’t happened we would have stayed here,” Adorno said. “Maybe to make a life.”

The dead man was a “real good guy” who had “never been in trouble with the police anytime or anywhere,” said Cesar Adorno, who has lived with the victim’s mother, Anna Cardona, for several years.

Cardona’s family, including his younger brother, came to Newark in November to be with an ailing cousin, Adorno said. They moved in with relatives in Paterson in December.

Adorno said Manuel Cardona, who was born and raised in the Bronx until his family went to Puerto Rico when was 4 years old, was studying for his high school equivalency diploma and was working part-time in construction. Adorno said the family did not know the juveniles

involved in the crash, or how Cardona came to be behind the wheel of a stolen car.
They last saw Cardona early Monday evening before he went to “hang out” with friends.

Police arrived at the home about 2 a.m. Tuesday with the news of his death.

Caption: The wreckage of the 1986 Hyundai whose teenage driver was killed Monday in a crash while reportedly fleeing police. Police said the car was stolen in Paterson. 2 – Below, police investigating the scene of the accident Tuesday. 3 – (4s, 3s, 2s, 1s) PHOTO – Manuel Cardona and his family moved to New Jersey in November. 2 COLOR PHOTOS – PETER MONSEES / THE RECORD

ID: 17371116 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

SAMARITAN TURNED ROBBER, COPS SAY

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, March 8, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A07

A 25-year-old man who was stranded when his car broke down Saturday fought off an attacker who reluctantly gave him a ride, then drove him to a secluded spot, put a hunting knife to his throat, and demanded his money, police said.

Although both men are New Milford residents, chance threw them together for the first time Saturday, Teaneck Detective Dean Kazinci said.

After his late-model car broke down on New Milford Avenue in Bergenfield shortly before 4 a.m., the victim walked to Teaneck Road and crossed paths with David Wohllenben.

Wohllenben, 20, at first refused to give the victim a ride but he “circled the block, then came back and offered to give him a ride,” Kazinci said.

Wohllenben allegedly drove to the rear of Jobber Auto Parts at 1555 Teaneck Road. He opened the passenger door, produced a hunting knife that he put to the victim’s throat, and demanded his money, Kazinci said.

The victim used his right hand to fend off knife, sustaining a slight cut in the palm, police said. The victim then fled into a back yard and onto Teaneck Road, where he hailed Teaneck Police Officer Dennis Kleiber.

When Bergenfield Police Officer John Casper stopped Wohllenben about 4:20 a.m. at West Main Street and Franklin Avenue, he saw the hunting knife under the driver’s seat, Kazinci said.

After the victim identified Wohllenben as the attacker, Bergenfield police charged him with unlawful possession of a weapon and possession of a small amount of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, and bail was set at $2,500. Teaneck police charged him with armed robbery, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, and aggravated assault, Kazinci said.
Wohllenben was remanded to the Bergen County Jail on $75,000 bail.

Notes: Bergen page

ID: 17370883 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

COCAINE PROFITS AID CRIME FIGHT

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Friday, March 6, 1992

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

Leonidas Paula’s ill-gotten gains from the cocaine sales he made from his Little Ferry apartment until he was arrested 16 months ago will go to good use helping local law enforcement fight crime.

The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office and the Little Ferry Police Department recently were on the receiving end of a check for $135,000, which was split 50-50. It was their share of $169,000 that Paula forfeited as part of a 15-year prison sentence for three counts of cocaine distribution and one count of maintaining a drug-production facility.

“This is just a great way to hurt drug dealers because you are hitting them where it hurts in the pocketbook,” said Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

The 1986 Crime Control Act provides for law enforcement agencies to share in the proceeds from criminal investigations in which they were involved. Robert Van Etten, U.S. Customs special agent-in-charge, presented the check in Fahy’s office.

“It’s like Christmas in March,” Little Ferry Police Chief Donald Fleming said. “We are going to be frugal with the money. . . . We are going to update the narcotics division in the detective bureau, buy some new equipment, and send people to courses.”

Paula was charged in November 1990 after five men who had bought cocaine from him were arrested coming out of his North Village apartment, which was under surveillance by Little Ferry police and the Bergen County Narcotics Task Force. Among other things, authorities seized $9,282 and bank accounts in New York City and numbers to safe-deposit boxes that later yielded $169,000.

ID: 17370686 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

PROSECUTOR TO INVESTIGATE JAIL SUICIDES; Rate of Death `Out of Kilter,’ Fahy Says

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Thursday, March 5, 1992

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

Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy announced Wednesday that he would investigate the deaths of seven county jail inmates including four suicides during the past 11 months.

Fahy said the investigation was sparked by the death last week of Robert Irving, who killed himself in his cell about eight hours after he was jailed on a charge of murdering his girlfriend’s grandmother.

“I see an inordinate number of deaths in the jail, including four suicides in less than a year,” Fahy said. “That is a very high number as compared to other county jails. I don’t know what the problem is, but I see that the numbers are way out of kilter, and it’s my duty to investigate and make sure that the procedures are working.

“The Bergen County Jail is overcrowded, but every jail in the state is overcrowded. I suspect that is a factor, but the other jails are not having the same problem with suicides.”

Fahy said he would hire an expert in jail management to look at the jail’s policies and procedures, the training of corrections officers, intake screening, and supervision of inmates once they’ve been processed. He said he wants to see if someone routinely keeps an eye on each inmate, if only to make sure the inmate is all right. A report should be completed in about six weeks, Fahy added.

“In fairness to the sheriff, he may be running a very good jail, and just as a matter of bad luck, there’s a lot of misfortune there. That’s a possibility,” the prosecutor said. “But it’s an inordinate number of deaths, and we want to take a look at that.”

Patricia Mulcahy, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections, said the Passaic, Essex, Hudson, and Morris county jails reported no suicides during 1990 and 1991. In the state’s 12 adult prisons and three juvenile institutions, two suicides were reported in 1990 and one in 1991, she said.

Bergen County Sheriff Jack Terhune said Wednesday, his first day back to work after a vacation, that he had talked at length with Fahy and would cooperate fully.

“I welcome his investigation of the department’s policies and procedures,” Terhune said. “Since I’ve become sheriff, we have amended a number of procedures relating to our intake policies and our mental health unit.”

In all of the suicides, the jail staff followed established procedures, Terhune said. One other death was an accident, he said, and the other two resulted from preexisting medical conditions.

The changes made by Terhune included adding a second officer in the mental health unit at the jail annex. He said he is considering hiring a part-time, on-site psychiatrist to supplement the services provided by Bergen Pines County Hospital, along with renovation and possibly expansion of the mental health unit.

Assistant Deputy Public Advocate Audrey Bomse, who represents Bergen County Jail inmates in an ongoing lawsuit to reduce overcrowding there, also said she welcomes Fahy’s probe.

The number of suicides “obviously is evidence of desperation,” Bomse said. “I really don’t know what specifically causes that state of despair, why it should be so different from other jails.”

Bomse was critical in particular of the way the jail handled John Russell, a Fair Lawn resident who hanged himself with a shoelace in a shower in the mental health unit on Oct. 4. Russell had been admitted to Bergen Pines County Hospital on Aug. 27 and was released Sept. 30.

“His medical intake screening at Bergen Pines indicated that he had four previous suicide attempts,” Bomse said. “The day he was sent to the hospital, he had attempted suicide in the shower, in the exact same situation that he would later kill himself. They couldn’t have been alerted any more to the need for this one man to be watched.”

Terhune said Russell was put on suicide watch upon his return to the jail, and killed himself while corrections officers were distracted by another inmate’s suicide attempt.

“At the time, we did not take shoelaces from everyone committed to the Bergen County Jail or everyone in the mental unit. The policy has since been reviewed, and we now provide slip-on shoes to everyone in the mental unit,” the sheriff said.

Caption: COLOR PHOTO – “I see an inordinate number of deaths in the jail, including four suicides in less than a year. . . . It’s my duty to investigate.” Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy

ID: 17370627 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

COPS GET LESSONS ON AIDING THE AGED

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, March 4, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 2 Star | PASCACK VALLEY-YOUR TOWN RECORD | 1

A patrol officer stopped an 80-year-old woman driving 5 mph on the highway, then wondered what to do when she told him she was driving so slowly because she was hungry and needed to find a place to get a slice of pizza.

“What is the captain going to say? What is the judge going to say?” John Pescatore, director of the Bergen County Highway Safety Office, said in recalling an incident early in his 25 years as a law enforcement officer.

To avoid citing the woman for driving too slowly, then having to answer to his captain or a judge, Pescatore said he would have delivered pizza to the woman’s house every day of his career.

“Our primary responsibility is no longer just enforcing the law, but to assist the people in our community to live a safer life,” he said.

Pescatore spoke about the incident to about 55 police officers attending a training program last week in Mahwah on older-adult behavior.

The half-day session, sponsored by the northern New Jersey chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association and Hackensack Medical Center’s Geriatric Assessment Program, looked at ways police should handle older adults, who appear to be committing crimes but may in fact be confused or suffering dementia.

Police officers often notice confusion and dementia in an older adult before family members do, Janet Reynolds of the Geriatric Assessment Program said. The center is an outpatient program for families and other health-care professionals on how to keep older adults healthy and independent.

“There are many reasons why an older adult can be confused,” Reynolds said. “They include everything from Alzheimer’s disease, to reaction to medication, to depression from being alone and isolated.”

Bergen County was selected as the first place to hold the police training seminar, because it has the state’s largest population of adults over 60 years old about 174,000 said Marcia F. Mohl, executive director of the Northern New Jersey Alzheimer’s Association. The chance that a person will get Alzheimer’s, a progressive degenerative brain disease that often results in irreversible dementia, increases with age.

It also often results in a loss of memory, erratic driving, fear, and confusion. About 150,000 New Jersey residents have Alzheimer’s, Mohl said.

Because victims of Alzheimer’s might sometime lash out in frustration at their loved ones, Englewood Police Detective Barry Johnson pointed out that the state’s new Domestic Violence Prevention Act mandates police make an arrest when they see evidence of abuse.

Reynolds of the Geriatric Assessment Program advised that it may be better to leave the person in that situation because, often, they would have forgotten what they did before police arrived at the scene. Arresting them might only increase their confusion, she said. But officers told her the mandate of the law does not leave them room for discretion.

Both Rochelle Park Police Chief William Betten and Hackensack Sgt. John Elefante said the seminar was useful, if only to amplify the care officers need to use in certain situations.

Rochelle Park, with a nursing home and a huge residential development for the elderly, has Bergen County’s largest percentage of adults over 60, Betten said. “Police, sometimes, are the only friends and contact some elderly people who live alone have,” he said.

Hackensack is a special case because, as the seat of county government and criminal justice and a nexus of commerce and transportation, it has a mix of population rivaled, perhaps, only by Paramus, Elefante said. The study material would be used by the department to raise officers awareness, he said.

SOUTH CENTRAL BERGEN YOUR TOWN RECORD SOUTH BERGEN YOUR TOWN RECORD SOUTHWEST BERGEN YOUR TOWN RECORD NORTH CENTRAL BERGEN YOUR TOWN RECORD SOUTHEAST BERGEN/NORTH HUDSON YOUR TOWN RECORD NORTHERN VALLEY YOUR TOWN RECORD

ID: 17370391 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

2 BROTHERS SHOT, THIRD IS CHARGED; Family Argument Erupts Into Gunfire

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, March 1, 1992

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

A feud between brothers spilled onto a front lawn, where an Oakland man fired nine shots at his two brothers, striking each once in the back, police said. The victims were spared serious injury because the bullets were slowed by the doors of the Jeep in which they were attempting to escape.

Anthony Rucereto and his brother John drove themselves to Englewood Hospital immediately after they were shot, Police Chief Michael Affrunti said. A spokeswoman at Englewood Hospital said they were treated and released.

Vincent Rucereto was arrested without incident on numerous charges among them attempted murder after the shooting Friday night on the lawn of his mother’s home at 248 Lexington Ave., the chief added.

“They were trying to get away from him and that’s when he started shooting at them,” Affrunti said. “It’s an argument over money. I don’t have details yet because we haven’t had a chance to interview these people.”

The brothers 70-year-old mother with whom Anthony, 50, and John, 31, live injured her hands when she fell trying to separate her sons, the police chief said. The woman, whose name was not given, was also treated at Englewood Hospital.

The argument among the Ruceretos began somewhere outside of Dumont, then continued when they arrived at their mother’s house about 10:40 p.m. Friday.

When his brothers tried to drive away, Vincent, armed with a .22-caliber automatic handgun, fired nine shots into the vehicle, the police chief said.

“John Rucereto was struck in the back,” Affrunti said. “It penetrated the door of the car first so it didn’t go that deep into him. The other brother, Anthony, was also hit in the back but it didn’t penetrate him because that bullet also went through the car first.”

Two stray bullets also hit the house, the chief said.

Vincent Rucereto, 48, of Rutgers Drive, Oakland, was being held in Bergen County Jail on $90,000 bail. He was charged with two counts of attempted murder, three counts of aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm for an unlawful purpose, Affrunti said.

ID: 17370170 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

JAIL SITUATION IS DECRIED; Suicide is Linked to Poor Conditions

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Friday, February 28, 1992

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

A state deputy public advocate on Thursday criticized procedures at the Bergen County Jail after a Passaic man accused of murder committed suicide in his cell.

Robert Irving, 20, accused of killing Ann Roma Li Gregni of Lodi last week, should have been monitored better, said Assistant Deputy Public Advocate Audrey Bomse. She is overseeing a 1988 lawsuit challenging overcrowded conditions at the jail.

Irving was arrested Tuesday and was found in his cell 7:05 a.m. Wednesday by a corrections officer who came to serve him breakfast. He choked himself with his shoelaces, and his socks were stuffed in his mouth, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said.

“Here you have a young person, he’s hit with a serious charge, high bail, had not had contact with an attorney, probably distraught,” Bomse said. “It would seem to me there should be better monitoring within the first few days of admission to the jail.

“It also raises the question whether there is adequate training of officers, adequate intake procedure, and suicide prevention.”

Fahy had said that Irving appeared calm at the time of his arrest.

Irving’s mother, Millie, 39, also said Thursday that her son should have been watched.

“I feel like if he was arrested for murder he should have been watched,” she said. “A 20-year-old boy accused of murder, and he wasn’t watched? I don’t care, even if he was in his right mind.”

Irving said her son denied he was involved in the killing after he was questioned by authorities who visited their home.

“I asked him, `Did you do it? He said, `No, Mama. I won’t do something like that,” she said.

Fahy said the number of inmate suicides three in the jail since May, with a fourth by an inmate at Bergen Pines County Hospital a month earlier seems higher than in other jails around the state and could indicate a serious problem. He said he would investigate.

Bomse, saying “the level of security is definitely a factor in deciding whether the conditions are constitutional,” added that the suicides will be offered as proof that overcrowding and inadequate staffing inhibit the jail administration’s ability to protect the inmates from themselves as well as from other inmates and security officers.

But Bergen County Undersheriff Mary Ellen Bolton reiterated Thursday her earlier statement that Irving had physical and psychological screening “and did not demonstrate any signs or symptoms” of suicide.

Irving was charged in the strangling death of Li Gregni in her home at Avenue C on Feb. 20.

Her body was found wrapped in a blanket in a basement closet. Fahy said Irving was the boyfriend of Li Gregni’s granddaughter and that she disapproved of the relationship.

Hearings in the public advocate’s suit, filed in 1988 to relieve overcrowding and the problems it creates, are under way before a special master who will make a recommendation to a federal judge.

ID: 17370050 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

SLAYING SUSPECT KILLS SELF IN JAIL; Charged in Death of Lodi Woman

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Thursday, February 27, 1992

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

A Passaic man who was charged Tuesday with killing a Lodi grandmother committed suicide in the Bergen County Jail early Wednesday.

Robert Irving, 20, the boyfriend of the victim’s 16-year-old granddaughter, was found in his cell by a corrections officer who had come to deliver breakfast, said Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

“He choked himself with the shoelace, and there was a sock that was found in his mouth also, but I haven’t received all the details at this time,” he said.

The prosecutor said his office will investigate the suicide, the third since May and the fifth death in the jail since March. “It’s something that I’m going to be looking at,” Fahy said. “I am disturbed that people are committing suicide in the jail, and it does not appear as if, perhaps, the proper procedures are in place to make sure that this does not happen.

“I am familiar with the 20 or so other county jails in the state, and I don’t know of this happening with this kind of frequency at the other jails.”

Irving had been accused of strangling Ann Roma Li Gregni in her home at Avenue C last Thursday. Her body was found wrapped in a blanket in a basement closet.

At 3 a.m. of the day of the killing, Irving climbed into the bedroom window of Li Gregni’s granddaughter, Dawn, who lived with her, and spent about two hours there, Fahy said. Dawn is not suspected of involvement in the crime.

Irving, who was in the house without Li Gregni’s knowledge, returned after she left 7:30 a.m. to take her granddaughter to Immaculate Conception High School in Lodi.

“We believe that he didn’t know she would be there,” he said. “The grandmother’s pattern was to get up, drop the granddaughter off at school, go to work, then come back home.”

But Li Gregni, who disapproved of her granddaughter’s relationship with Irving, had been ill and had not reported to her job as a billing clerk at Gibraltar Plastics in Lodi for a few days. She was seen dropping off Dawn at the school 7:45 a.m., then bought bread at a Lodi bakery.

The loaves later were found on her kitchen counter.

Meanwhile, Irving let himself into the house with a key Dawn had given him two years ago, Fahy said.

“Irving probably assumed the grandmother would not be home, and he was just hanging out at the house. Then she surprised him by coming into the house. From there, we ended up with a murder,” the prosecutor said.

Li Gregni’s daughter, Elaine Tufaro of Garfield, became concerned when she could not reach her mother, Fahy said. The woman had not called in sick to work. Tufaro then called Lodi police, who found her body at 11:10 a.m. Thursday.

An autopsy performed Friday revealed that she had been strangled, Fahy said.

Investigators discovered that her pocketbook, keys, and 1987 Honda Civic were missing, the prosecutor said. A neighbor saw the car leave the house about 8:25 a.m. but did not see who was driving, he said.

“He was a suspect from the beginning. He was always our suspect,” Fahy said.

He added that Li Gregni family members knew Irving often entered the house through Dawn’s bedroom window and left through a basement window to avoid Li Gregni.

On Friday evening, a Passaic patrolman saw the car in an unpaved parking lot adjacent to an apartment building at 75 Hope St.

Authorities then watched the car during the weekend, but removed it when no one came for it. The Bergen County Sheriff’s Department’s Bureau of Criminal Identification processed it for fingerprints, and a positive identification of Irving’s fingerprint was found on the shift handle, Fahy said.

Irving was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Passaic apartment he shared with his mother and siblings. He was charged with murder and theft, and bail was set at $1 million.

Bergen County Undersheriff Mary Ellen Bolton said Irving did not appear to be a suicide risk when he was brought to the jail at 10:55 p.m. Tuesday. “The inmate was brought to the booking area, and a general assessment was conducted by the medical staff and determined that he was acceptable for general population,” she said.

“Had this gentleman been identified as a risk for suicide, he would have been put in a separate unit in the jail annex and put under suicide watch.
“At 5, he was identified as awake and alert. At 6 a.m., he appeared to be sleeping when an officer made his rounds. And at 7:05, the officer attempted to wake him to serve him his breakfast, and he was identified as deceased.”

Bolton said the Sheriff’s Department’s Detective Bureau was conducting an investigation into the death. Irving was alone in the cell.

Sheriff Jack Terhune was on vacation and unavailable for comment.

Irving’s mother, Millie, did not wish to comment. John Bethea, who said he is a family friend and next-door neighbor, said Irving was “one of the quietest kids.”

“I’ve never seen him do anything,” he said. “To me, he was one of the perfect kids didn’t drink, didn’t do nothing.”

Fahy said Irving had a “substantial criminal record,” including serving a one-year term on a narcotics charge and an arrest last month on an arson charge.

A spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections said Irving was paroled in October. He had been in the state prison system since November 1990 on a narcotics charge, she said.

Two other suicides occurred in the jail in the past year.

In May, Christian F. Shane, 21, of Fair Lawn hanged himself in his cell with a sheet tied to a bar above his door.

John Russell of Fair Lawn, who was jailed Aug. 23 for violating probation, hanged himself in a shower with his shoelaces. He had spent about a month in Bergen Pines County Hospital for psychiatric treatment.

The two suicides led to staffing changes in the jail, including the addition of a second officer in its psychiatric ward.

ID: 17369970 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

SMOKY BLAZE GUTS 3 BUILDINGS; North Bergen Fire Being Investigated

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, February 26, 1992

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

A fire that raged through a perfume warehouse on Paterson Plank Road on Tuesday destroyed two adjacent residential buildings and forced the evacuation of about 15 buildings on the block.

No one was injured, and authorities were investigating the cause of the fire, which was reported about 3:20 p.m., North Bergen Detective William Solan said. Apartment buildings on the 1100 block of Paterson Plank Road and buildings on 11th Street, downwind from the fire, were evacuated immediately, North Bergen police Sgt. Boze Bozicevic said.

Tears streaked down Virgin Minna’s cheeks as firefighters pumped water through her bedroom window, trying to put out the stubborn fire. Minna, 33, lived in an upstairs apartment at 1108 Paterson Plank Road with her husband and two children. The fire spread to her home from La Cibeles Inc., a warehouse at 1110 Paterson Plank Road.

Kathy Vargas, 29, of 1102 Paterson Plank Road, said she went into her neighbors house when her daughter told her she smelled smoke.

“I walked out and the street was filled with smoke,” Vargas said. “The flames were shooting above the roof of the building next to us.”

She went next door and got Luz Guzman and her three young daughters and Minna’s 13-year-old son, Hilton, out of the house. Hilton said he smelled the smoke and was checking around the apartment when Vargas came knocking and told him of the fire next door.

Four employees were working in the warehouse at the time the fire started, but they were not injured, he said.

North Bergen firefighters were assisted by the Union City, Jersey City, and Weehawken fire departments.

People who were evacuated from dwellings because of dense smoke near the warehouse were sent to the nearby John F. Kennedy School. By Tuesday evening, they still had not been allowed to return home, and Red Cross representatives were working to arrange temporary shelter.

Caption: Firefighters dousing buildings ignited by a fire in a perfume warehouse on Paterson Plank Road in North Bergen on Tuesday. PHOTO – ED HILL/THE RECORD

ID: 17369768 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)