A recent article in the Star-Ledger has said that there were eleven murders in Newark in May, and around fourteen in June so far. Strangely, my list only records seven in May, and a further three in June for Newark. The Star-Ledger doesn’t report all murders in Newark, which I found somewhat shocking, due to the gravity of the crime. If this omission was anywhere but Newark, there would be outrage. Murders of suburban middle-class people not being covered is apparently unthinkable, and ignoring the impoverished dead on urban streets is the norm.
If anyone has information on these missing Newark murders, as well as any other crime, please contact me. The crime data for Newark on my map is artificially low, due to the Star-Ledger neglecting to report on most major Newark crimes, even murder.
The crimes of Newark are not the crimes of the suburbs, and a shocking attack like the one on June 12 would be unlikely in Millburn or Paramus. Only a block away from where a 19-year-old was murdered weeks before, a man pulled up in an SUV by the Stratford-Aspen apartments and began to argue with a 23-year-old man. The assailant pulled out a silver handgun and fired eight shots, striking his target in the back. However, stray bullets hit a 12-year-old boy who had been standing nearby in the stomach, buttocks, and arm, severely wounding him. The shooter escaped, leaving the boy clinging to life.
Early Saturday morning in Hoboken, another young life was ruined, but in a far different way. An 18-year-old junior in Hoboken High School and all-star of the basketball team was arrested after two vicious crimes. Around 1 AM a New York man was punched unconscious and robbed of his wallet; while police were investigating this robbery, the young man and friends were beating another man in Church Square Park for trespassing in their territory at night. The teen was arrested for robbery and assault, and his promising athletic career presumably ended.
On June 14, a sickening crime was discovered in East Orange. A family-owned grocery store was burglarized, and a citizen called the police to investigate. The police arrived at the store early in the morning before the owners got there, and discovered illegal fighting roosters bred for cockfights, and steroids used to bulk them up. The roosters were scarred, some covered in fresh wounds that suggested they had been battled within the previous few days. The owner, and his wife and teenage son, were arrested for animal cruelty, and the roosters were euthanized.
One notoriously bad area that I’ve discovered through my plotting of crimes on the map is the southern part of Montclair, especially in the vicinity of Mission Street. A hub of assaults, drug dealings, and occasional exchange of gunfire, this neighborhood was in uproar again Sunday night when a 33-year-old East Orange man was attacked by a gang of people on Mission Street. He was struck in the head with a pipe and stabbed, requiring evacuation to Newark Medical; several of his assailants were arrested, but the motive is still unclear.
As well as the Muddy Banks of the Hackensack crime blog and the New Jersey Murder Map, I’ve also been working on a study of organized crime in New Jersey. Any contributions to this would be welcome.
Murder Map
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