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Rutgers is hiking tuition again. Here's how much students will pay

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Students will be digging deeper into their pockets to cover tuition next school year.

Rutgers University is raising tuition and fees for undergraduates on its New Brunswick campus by 2.3 percent, a price hike of about $337, the university announced Wednesday. 

The average in-state undergraduate student will pay about $14,975 for tuition and fees next school year based on the rate approved by the Board of Governors. 

Students will also pay about 1.9 percent more for housing and 2.25 percent more for dining services, bringing the total bill for a typical first-year student living on campus to roughly $27,680, about $590 more than last school year. 

Tuition for most other types of students, including undergraduates at Rutgers-Newark and Rutgers-Camden, will also rise 2.3 percent. 

The new rates were approved as part of a $4.3 billion budget. 

Rutgers officials attributed the tuition hike to salary increases for current employees and expansion of programs. They said most students receive some type of financial aid and won't pay the full sticker price for tuition. 

Adam Clark may be reached at adam_clark@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on twitter at @realAdamClarkFind NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Murphy orders that players on the pro soccer club he owns be treated like pros

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Gov. Phil Murphy released a statement a day after a pair of published reports described bleak living and working conditions at the professional women's soccer team he owns.

A day after a pair of published reports described bleak living and working conditions at the New Jersey professional women's soccer team he owns, Gov. Phil Murphy released a statement Wednesday night saying the players "deserve better" and that he's requiring management to "improve" the situation.

"I don't find the status quo tolerable -- and these players deserve better," Murphy said of his team, Sky Blue FC, in his first public comments since the reports. 

"They deserve to operate in a professional and supportive environment so they can do what they do best -- play the game, inspire fans, and build community through the power of the world's most popular sport," he added.

Two soccer news websites -- The Equalizer and Once A Metro -- published reports Tuesday in which former players and others affiliated with Sky Blue say players have been set up to live in shack-like homes, play in facilities without showers, and practice in dirty clothes because of a lack of laundry service, among other complaints. 

Murphy is the majority owner of the team, which is based in Tinton Falls and plays its home games at Yurcak Field at Rutgers University in Piscataway. 

Life on soccer club owned by Gov. Murphy is allegedly sad and bleak

The governor is the majority owner, though he says he does not manage the day-to-day operations of the club. 

A former player who asked to remain anonymous confirmed the conditions to NJ Advance Media on Wednesday.

"Phil Murphy will claim that he's the governor and that's what he's focused on, but he's the owner," the ex-player said in an interview. "This is simple stuff. Be more involved or sell it to somebody that wants to do something with it."

Murphy, a die-hard soccer fan and former Goldman Sachs banking executive, said in his statement Wednesday that he and his wife, First Lady Tammy Murphy, invested in the team years ago because it "bothered us to our core that little girls who played soccer in the U.S., unlike other countries, did not have a professional league to aspire to as they grew up and developed a love for the game."

Murphy said they wanted to "promote the advancement of women's soccer and harness its potential to inspire fans, especially young girls, to reach for the stars."

"The past decade has been challenging, to say the least," he continued. "The team has not been remotely financially successful and the league has struggled to stay afloat. But our commitment to women's soccer has not wavered and our sole motivation -- ensuring women had an opportunity to play professionally in the U.S. -- remains to this day. Sky Blue FC is now the longest-running professional women's soccer team in the United States."

Murphy added that "like male athletes, women athletes deserve a first-rate experience, both in the workplace and off the field."

"It is clear that the players on Sky Blue FC have not consistently received such treatment," he continued. "That is simply not acceptable."

Thus, Murphy said, he and fellow owner Steve Temares -- the CEO of Bed, Bath & Beyond -- have "required accountability from team management to improve working conditions for players."

"Although our staff is dedicated and hardworking and some progress has already been made, more work remains to be done," Murphy added.

A spokesman for Murphy -- who became New Jersey's governor in January -- initially declined comment Tuesday and deferred to Sky Blue.

"We take any concerns from our players seriously and are actively engaged in discussions with players and team leadership to ensure their voices are heard and their concerns are addressed," team spokesman Mary Smoot said Tuesday.

A source with the club told NJ Advance Media that many of the housing complaints from the players were from previous years and that the situation has improved. 

Tax returns show Murphy has lost about $5 million on the team over the years, including about $523,000 in 2016.

NJ Advance Media staff writer Steve Politi contributed to this report.

Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @johnsb01. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Vintage photos: Going 'down the shore' in N.J.

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A phrase as 'New Jersey' as 'What exit?"

If you've ever wondered about the etymology of the phrase 'down the shore,' english.stackexchange.com weighs in with an answer:

"In New Jersey, you invariably go "down the shore." Baltimore natives, meanwhile, say they're going "down the ocean" -- but in Baltimorese (make that Bawlmerese), the phrase sounds more like "downy eaushin." The down of "down the shore" and "down the ocean" doesn't necessarily imply a southward journey. As in many dialects along the Eastern Seaboard, 'down' can be used as a preposition indicating movement from the inland toward the shoreline."

MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey

Here's a gallery of folks who participated in movement from the inland toward the shoreline in New Jersey, as well as these links to other galleries you may enjoy.

Vintage photos of N.J. folks going 'Down the Shore'

Vintage photos of going down the Shore in N.J.

Vintage photos of the lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer in N.J.

Greg Hatala may be reached at greghatalagalleries@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.

Rutgers tuition going up again. Here's how much it will cost next school year

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Rutgers just raised tuition and fees again. Here's what it means for your wallet.

Rutgers University on Wednesday announced another increase in tuition and fees that will force families to dig deeper into their pockets to pay for college. 

The 2.3 percent increase will bring the price of tuition and fees to about $14,975 for the typical in-state undergraduate student at the New Brunswick campus. 

Throw in room and board, and the average first-year student from New Jersey will pay nearly $28,000 for their first year on campus. 

Here's what else students should know about the 2018-19 tuition hike. 

Undergraduate tuition and fees

Rutgers' tuition and fees vary by campus and school, so there are dozens of rates. The university releases an average tuition and fee rate for the typical student on each campus.

At Rutgers-New Brunswick, the average in-state undergraduate will pay $14,975 in annual tuition and fees, or about $337 more. 

Students at Rutgers-Newark will also see a 2.3 percent increase in tuition and fees. The cost will rise to $14,410 for the average undergraduate, about $325 more than last year. 

For Rutgers-Camden students, the cost will rise 2.3 percent as well. The average undergraduate will pay $14,836, an increase of $335.

Room and board

The cost of housing for the average student living on campus will go up 1.9 percent in New Brunswick, Newark and Camden. 

Rutgers is raising the cost of the typical meal plan by 2.25 percent. 

In New Brunswick, that means the cost of room and board (based on a standard double-occupancy room) will jump $590 to $12,706. 

Out-of-state students 

The university is also hiking tuition for out-of-state students by 2.3 percent, and they'll pay $31,282 for tuition and fees.

Add room and board to that, and out-of-state students are paying a total bill of about $43,988. 

Part-time students 

On the New Brunswick campus, part-time undergraduates from New Jersey will pay between $383 and $486 per credit, depending on their school. Most classes are three credits.

Part-time students will also be charged between $646 and $822 in annual fees.

Graduate students

Graduate students from New Jersey will pay between $718 and $1,005 per credit for programs on the New Brunswick campus, including education, the arts, communications and social work. Annual fees for full-time students will range from $1,851 to $2,515.

Law school

The Rutgers School of Law will charge $25,077 in tuition for in-state students, plus $2,715 in annual fees.

Medical school

New Jersey Medical School in Newark will charge new in-state students $40,274 in tuition and $2,735 in fees. Robert Wood Johnson Medical School on the New Brunswick-Piscataway campus will charge incoming students $40,274 in tuition and $1,770 in fees.

Adam Clark may be reached at adam_clark@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on twitter at @realAdamClarkFind NJ.com on Facebook.

 

Mt. Rushmore: VOTE for Monroe's 4 best athletes of all time

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Vote to pick the four-best athletes in the history of Monroe.

Curfews still controversial, but they can pack big fines

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One of the main finding from the Center on Juvenile Criminal Justice is that juvenile curfew laws overwhelmingly targets African-American and Latino youth

Cardinal McCarrick accused of sexually abusing N.J. boy, report says

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McCarrick, the former head of the Newark and Metuchen dioceses, was removed from public ministry last month after an accusation he sexually abused a New York teenager.

A man whose family was close to Cardinal Theodore McCarrick says the church leader sexually abused him for 20 years beginning when the boy was 11 years old in New Jersey, according to a report in the New York Times.

The man, identified only as James, said he was baptized at Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Tenafly by McCarrick when the future cardinal was a newly-ordained Catholic priest. James and his six siblings referred to McCarrick, who frequently spent time with the family, as "Uncle Teddy."

Years later, McCarrick allegedly pulled his pants down in front of the then 11-year-old boy in his bedroom, the report said. When the boy was 13, McCarrick began touching him sexually, James said.

Here's what N.J. church paid McCarrick's alleged victims

The alleged sexual abuse included incidents in San Francisco and at a fishing camp in New York, the report said.

The alleged abuse continued when James was an adult and he occasionally stayed overnight with then-Bishop McCarrick when the rising church leader lived in the rectory in the Diocese of Metuchen, the report said. James also said he stayed overnight with McCarrick after he became head of the Archdiocese of Newark in 1986.

Last month, McCarrick was removed from public ministry after he was accused of sexually abusing a teenage altar boy in New York nearly 50 years ago. A church panel found that allegation credible.

McCarrick, 88, is one of the highest-ranking American church leaders removed from ministry over sex abuse allegations. He has said he does not remember the New York incident 50 years ago and believes he is innocent.

James said that news of McCarrick's removal last month prompted him to begin talking publicly about his alleged abuse. 

"I got down on my knees and I thanked God that I am not alone and it is going to be O.K.," James told the New York Times. "And I can tell somebody and someone is going to believe me."

McCarrick's spokeswoman, Susan Gibbs, said he had not been notified of James' accusation, the report said. The cardinal will follow the church's procedure for investigating alleged abuse, she said.

James' account of his alleged abuse will be sent to police in San Francisco, New Jersey and possibly New York, his attorney said. The alleged victim plans to seek a financial settlement from the church, which has compensation funds for victims of priest sexual abuse.

Earlier this week, the New York Times reported the dioceses in New Jersey has previously reached financial settlements with alleged adult victims of McCarrick's sexual misconduct.

They included an $80,000 settlement in 2005 and a $100,000 settlement in 2007. Both involved former priests who said McCarrick inappropriately touched them.

Kelly Heyboer may be reached at kheyboer@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KellyHeyboer. Find her at KellyHeyboerReporter on Facebook.

 

An arsonist may be on the loose because investigators didn't return phone calls

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Why a breakdown in communication between county and federal investigators caused an arson investigation to close prematurely.


FBI agent creeped on woman in dressing room, took cell-phone photos, cops say

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Danuel Brown, an FBI agent out of the New York office, was arrested Thursday

A federal agent is being accused of using his cell phone to take pictures of a woman while in a dressing room at an Edison clothing store.

Danuel Brown, an FBI agent out of the New York office, was arrested Thursday and charged with one count of invasion of privacy, Middlesex County Prosecutor Andrew Carey said in a press release.

The woman called 911 on the 30-year-old Piscataway man, telling police Brown had put his cell phone under the dressing room door and took multiple photos of her, the release said. 

When police arrived at the store, the name of which was not disclosed, Brown identified himself as law enforcement. 

He is currently jailed at the Middlesex County Adult Corrections Center awaiting a court appearance. 

The FBI could not immediately be reached for comment Friday regarding Brown.

Craig McCarthy may be reached at 732-372-2078 or at CMcCarthy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @createcraig and on Facebook here. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Murphy says 'the buck stops with me' on bleak conditions with his women's soccer team

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Gov. Phil Murphy on Friday discussed allegations made by former players about dismal living and working conditions on Sky Blue FC. Watch video

The "buck stops with me" and changes are underway. 

That was the message Gov. Phil Murphy delivered Friday as he discussed for the first time allegations made by former players about dismal living and working conditions on the New Jersey professional women's soccer team he owns.

The situation at Sky Blue FC came to light this week in a pair of reports by soccer news websites, and Murphy called the conditions "unacceptable."

"At the end of the day, the buck stops with me and my fellow owner," said Murphy, who co-owns the team with Steven Temares, the CEO of Bed, Bath & Beyond.

"We take this very seriously. It's not tolerable. It will not go on."

Life on soccer club owned by Gov. Murphy is allegedly sad and bleak

The reports by The Equalizer and Once A Metro, published Tuesday, cite interviews with former players and a former coach who described how Sky Blue players have been set up to live in shack-like homes, play in facilities without showers, and practice in dirty clothes because of a lack of laundry service, among other complaints. 

A former player who spoke on the condition of anonymity confirmed the club's conditions to NJ Advance Media on Wednesday.

Murphy said Friday that in some of those cases, the issues are "in the past" and have already been "corrected."

"In other cases, it's in the process of being corrected and was already," the governor said after an unrelated news conference in Long Branch. "In some cases, we still have wood to chop."

"I'm proud of our intentions," added Murphy, an avid soccer fan and multimillionaire former Wall Street executive who has owned the team since its inception in 2009. "I'm proud of why we're doing this and why we continue to do it. But I'm not proud of those stories."

Murphy said Temares already has held a "very constructive meeting" with representatives of the players.

"We've clearly had very explicit, specific conversations with our management team, both on and off the field," the governor said. "We're having a miserable year on the field, which I hope we'll get better at. But there's no excuse whatsoever to not correct the things off the field."

Murphy has said he is not involved with the day-to-day operations of Sky Blue, which is winless so far this season. That falls to Temares. 

But Murphy is the majority owner of the club, which is based in Tinton Falls and plays its home games at Yurcak Field at Rutgers University in Piscataway. 

Murphy released a statement Wednesday night saying the players "deserve better" and that he's requiring management to "improve" the conditions. But Friday was the first time he answered questions about the issue.

Murphy explained that he and his wife, First Lady Tammy Murphy, bought the team because there was no "top-flight" professional women's soccer league in the U.S., despite successful national team.

"We got in there early because we didn't think that was right," he said. "We knew we wouldn't make any money ever. In fact, we've lost a ton of money on this. But that was never the reason we were in this. It was to create the best women's professional league in the world."

Tax returns show Murphy has lost about $5 million on the club over the years, including about $523,000 in 2016.

Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @johnsb01. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Firefighter whose line of duty death came 35 years after he was burned to get hero's farewell

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In 1983, volunteer firefighter Douglas Ambrozewycz fell through the floor of a burning New Jersey bakery, landing him in a burn center. The blood he received killed him 35 years later.

In 1983, volunteer firefighter Douglas Ambrozewycz fell through the floor of a burning New Jersey bakery, landing him in a burn center for six weeks. But hidden inside his life-saving blood transfusions was hepatitis C, lying dormant for almost 30 years until it ultimately took his life last month.

On Saturday, the Perth Amboy and Dunellen fire departments will give the volunteer the highest honor possible for what is considered a death in the line of duty, according to Perth Amboy Fire Chief Edward Mullen.

The memorial mass will be at the Ukrainian Assumption Church in Perth Amboy at 9 a.m., complete with bagpipers, firefighters from around the state in uniform and firetrucks displaying the American flag, Mullen said.

Ambrozewycz had just gotten home from dinner with his bride-to-be when he got a call to respond to a fire at the Perth Amboy bakery on a December day in 1983.

"As we were leaving the bakery, I lost my grip on my buddy's boot and started yelling, but no one heard me. I tried to follow a hose line but I ran into a wall and fell into some bakery carts," Ambrozewycz said in a 1990 Burn Center at St. Barnabas publication. "The timer went off on my air tank. I thought it was all over. I tore off my mask and yelled. (My teammates) reached me as I collapsed."

A friend rushed Ambrozewycz to the hospital and MaryJane Ambrozewycz, then his fiancee, received a calm 3 a.m. call. The friend told her that Ambrozewycz had burned his hand. Not too bad the ICE nurse thought.

But when she arrived at the hospital, she knew immediately it was much, much worse. She took Ambrozewycz to the Burn Center at St. Barnabas.

More than 23 percent of his body was burned, mainly his upper legs and hands, the publication said. Ambrozewycz received several skin grafts and about forty blood transfusions, according to his son, Adam.

Ambrozewycz recovered, wearing a garment that pushed his skin grafts to his body at his delayed wedding, and soon reassumed his role as volunteer lieutenant at the Perth Amboy Fire Department.

Years later, Ambrozewycz, an accountant, and his wife moved to Dunellen into an old Victorian home that Ambrozewycz and his son, Adam, fixed up to its former glory. 

"He always knew all the neighbors better than I did," MaryJane Ambrozewycz said.

The young family regularly visited a Ukrainian retreat center in the Catskill mountains and 16-year-old Adam worked alongside his dad at the Dunellen Fire Station as a junior volunteer.

Meanwhile, the Hepatitis C virus silently attacked Ambrozewycz's liver.

Hepatitis C wasn't discovered until 1989, six years after Ambrozewycz received the tainted blood, according to the CDC. In 1992, the virus was virtually eliminated from the United States' donated blood supply -- nine years too late for Ambrozewycz.

"We had no idea there was a problem," MaryJane Ambrozewycz said.

In 2011, as the Ambrozewyczes prepared to retire to North Carolina, MaryJane Ambrozewycz noticed her husband's deteriorating state. It was Hepatitis C and end-stage liver disease, doctors told them.

A new medicine and Ambrozewycz's persistence bought the family more time, but he died June 10, 2018, leaving family in North Carolina, New Jersey, and his Ukrainian community memories of a man who sacrificed for his fellow man.

The Perth Amboy and Dunellen fire departments are inviting the community to attend the memorial service tomorrow for the volunteer of 41 years. Mullen requests that firefighters interested in joining the memorial be at the church in Class A Uniform by 8:30 a.m. on Saturday.

Cassidy Grom may be reached at cgrom@njadvancemedia.com Follow her at @cassidygrom. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Coyote possibly to blame for deaths of 2 baby deer at high school

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An alert from Metuchen police said the dead young deer were found on the grounds of Metuchen High School and near the school.

A coyote is "possibly" to blame for the death of two young deer at North Jersey high school, authorities say.

The Metuchen Police Department sent out a community alert about the incident on Friday.

"Earlier this week, two deer fawn were killed near the (Metuchen) High School by what appears to have been at least one coyote," the statement said.

Metuchen Lt. Arthur Flaherty on Friday said it has not been confirmed, but a coyote may have "possibly" been involved.

The dead deer were reported to police by school officials on Tuesday, who said they believed a coyote may have caused the deaths. The alert was based on information from school officials.

Flaherty said police were told one of the dead fawns was on school property and one nearby. Wounds on the animals appeared consistent with a possible coyote attack.

According to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, coyotes has been documented in every county in the state. An Eastern coyote is larger than its Western cousins and can weigh anywhere from 20 to 50 pounds.

While coyotes may look like a wolf, they are distinguished by their large, bushy tails.

They prey on rabbits, mice, birds and other small animals, as well as young and even weakened deer and will pick through garbage for food, according to the DEP.

"Coyotes can be aggressive and generally avoid contact with people but, under some circumstances, are dangerous for animals," the alert said.

"... please make sure to keep an eye on your pets at all times and always keep them leashed outside of your home."

The school grounds on Grove Avenue, which include athletic fields, are surrounded by homes and the neighboring JFK Medical Center.

Flaherty said Metuchen patrol officers have been made aware of the coyote report and will be "keeping an eye out."

Metuchen School District officials didn't immediately return a call for comment.

Bill Gallo Jr. may be reached at bgallo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow Bill Gallo Jr. on Twitter @bgallojr. Find NJ.com on Facebook. Have a tip? Tell us. nj.com/tips

 

Judge hands Crips gang member 50 year sentence for 'cold blooded' murder

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Gregory Torres, was convicted of killing a Woodbridge man following a three-month trial

An Elizabeth gang member was sentenced to another 50 years - he's already serving an unrelated four-year term - for fatally shooting a 25-year-old man in 2014. 

During sentencing, Judge William Daniel described Gregory Torres' shooting of Bilal Fullman, of Woodbridge, as "premeditated" and "cold blooded," the Union County Prosecutor's Office announced.

Screen Shot 2018-07-20 at 5.07.17 PM.pngGregory Torres. Courtesy of  Union County Prosecutor's Office.
 

In April, Torres was convicted of murder and two weapons charges.

Police arriving to an Elizabeth housing complex near the 200 block of Parker Road in December 2014  found Fullman shot eight times. 

Two months later, Torres was arrested by members of the the U.S. Marshals Service in Richmond, Virginia.

Torres is serving a four-year sentence for a racketeering conviction from an investigation into Elizabeth's 111 N.H.C. (Neighborhood Crips) street gang in 2015.

Taylor Tiamoyo Harris may be reached at tharris@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @ladytiamoyoFind NJ.com on Facebook.  

Here are all the inmates serving a life sentence in New Jersey (and some are eligible for parole)

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Some of the lifers are eligible for parole. Here what got them locked up

Could 'culture of cover-up' force Pope Francis to defrock McCarrick?

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If the accusations against Cardinal Theodore McCarrick bear out -- including a new case reported Friday involving an 11-year-old boy -- will Francis revoke his title as cardinal?

Revelations that one of the most respected U.S. cardinals allegedly sexually abused both boys and adult seminarians have raised questions about who in the Catholic Church hierarchy knew -- and what Pope Francis is going to do about it.

If the accusations against Cardinal Theodore McCarrick bear out -- including a new case reported Friday involving an 11-year-old boy -- will Francis revoke his title as cardinal? Sanction him to a lifetime of penance and prayer? Or even defrock him, the expected sanction if McCarrick were a mere priest?

And will Francis, who has already denounced a "culture of cover-up" in the church, take the investigation all the way to the top, where it will inevitably lead? McCarrick's alleged sexual misdeeds with adults were reportedly brought to the Vatican's attention years ago.

The matter is now on the desk of the pope, who has already spent the better part of 2018 dealing with a spiraling child sex abuse, adult gay priest sex and cover-up scandal in Chile that was so vast the entire bishops' conference offered to resign in May.

And on Friday, Francis accepted the resignation of the Honduran deputy to Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, who is one of Francis' top advisers. Auxiliary Bishop Juan Jose Pineda Fasquelle, 57, was accused of sexual misconduct with seminarians and lavish spending on his lovers that was so obvious to Honduras' poverty-wracked faithful that Maradiaga is now under pressure to reveal what he knew of Pineda's misdeeds and why he tolerated a sexually active gay bishop in his ranks.

The McCarrick scandal poses the same questions. It was apparently an open secret in some U.S. church circles that "Uncle Ted" invited seminarians to his beach house, and into his bed.

While such an abuse of power may have been quietly tolerated for decades, it doesn't fly in the #MeToo era. And there has been a deafening silence from McCarrick's brother bishops about what they might have known and when.

Ask Alexa

Fraternal solidarity is common among clerics, but some observers point to it as possible evidence of the so-called "gay lobby" or "lavender mafia" at work. These euphemisms -- frequently denounced as politically incorrect displays of homophobia in the church -- are used by some to describe a perceived protection and promotion network of gay Catholic clergy.

"There is going to be so much clamor for the Holy Father to remove the red hat, to formally un-cardinalize him," said the Rev. Thomas Berg, vice rector and director of admissions at St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, the seminary of the archdiocese of New York.

Berg said the church needs to ensure that men with deep-seated same-sex attraction simply don't enter seminaries -- a position recently reinforced by the Vatican at large and by Francis in comments to Chilean and Italian bishops.

Berg said the church also needs to take action when celibacy vows are violated.

"We can't effectively prevent the sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable adults by clergy while habitual and widespread failures in celibacy are quietly tolerated," he said.

McCarrick, the 88-year-old retired archbishop of Washington and confidante to three popes, was ultimately undone when the U.S. church announced June 20 that Francis had ordered him removed from public ministry. The sanction was issued pending a full investigation into a "credible" allegation that he fondled a teenager more than 40 years ago in New York City.

The dioceses of Newark and Metuchen, New Jersey, simultaneously revealed that they had received three complaints of misconduct by McCarrick against adults and had settled two of them.

Another alleged victim, the son of a McCarrick family friend identified as James, came forward in a report in The New York Times and subsequently in an interview with The Associated Press. James said he was 11 when McCarrick first exposed himself to him. From there, McCarrick began a sexually abusive relationship that continued for another two decades, James told AP.

"I was the first guy he baptized," James told AP. "I was his little boy. I was his special kid."

McCarrick has denied the initial allegation of abuse against a minor and accepted the pope's decision to remove him from public ministry.

Asked Friday about James, a spokeswoman said McCarrick hadn't received formal notice of any new allegation but would follow the civil and church processes in place to investigate them.

Even now, Francis could take immediate action to remove McCarrick from the College of Cardinals, said Kurt Martens, a canon lawyer at the Catholic University of America.

He recalled the case of the late Scottish Cardinal Keith O'Brien, who recused himself from the 2013 conclave that elected Francis pope after unidentified priests alleged in newspapers that he engaged in sexual misconduct. In 2015, after a Vatican investigation, Francis accepted O'Brien's resignation after he relinquished the rights and privileges of being a cardinal.

O'Brien was, however, allowed to retain the cardinal's title and he died a member of the college.

"I think that is totally unsatisfactory," Martens said, noting that just as the pope can grant the title of cardinal, he can also take it away. "O'Brien resigned, the pope accepted it. Isn't that the world upside down that someone picks his own penalty?"

O'Brien was never accused of sexually abusing a minor, however, as McCarrick now stands.

The stiffest punishment that an ordinary priest would face if such an accusation is proven would be dismissal from the clerical state, or laicization.

The Vatican rarely if ever, however, imposes such a penalty on elderly prelates. It also is loath to do so for bishops, because theologically speaking, defrocked bishops can still validly ordain priests and bishops.

Not even the serial rapist Rev. Marcial Maciel was defrocked after the Vatican finally convicted him of abusing Legion of Christ seminarians. Maciel was sentenced to a lifetime of penance and prayer -- the likely canonical sanction for McCarrick if he is found guilty of abusing a minor in a church trial.

 

Community honors firefighter 35 years after blaze that led to his death

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Douglas Ambrozewycz recovered from the burns he received while trapped in a flaming New Jersey bakery in 1983, but hidden inside his life-saving blood transfusions was hepatitis C. The virus laid dormant for almost 30 years until it ultimately took his life last month.

MaryJane Ambrozewycz held back tears on the steps a historic Ukrainian church Saturday morning as her daughter, Katherine, put her arm around her, consoling her. 

As they descended the steps, Ambrozewycz's son, Adam, grabbed his mother's hand with one hand and clutched his father's volunteer firefighter uniform in the other. 

MaryJane's husband, Douglas Ambrozewycz, had worn a similar uniform 35 years ago when he became trapped by flames inside a New Jersey bakery. Several blood transfusions saved his life in 1983, but a virus in the blood that laid dormant for almost 30 years ultimately took his life last month.

Fire trucks from the Perth Amboy and Dunellen departments hoisted a large American Flag in the air to honor the volunteer of 41 years as the family left the service in the city.

Bagpipers played "Going Home" and Perth Amboy firefighters stood, lining the walkway and saluting the grieving family. 

The Perth Amboy Fire Chief Edward Mullen called the family's loss the highest honor for a firefighter: a ceremony for paying the ultimate price in the line of duty.

In 1983, a then-24-year-old Ambrozewycz had just gotten home from dinner with his bride-to-be when he got a call to respond to a fire at a Perth Amboy bakery on a December day.

"As we were leaving the bakery, I lost my grip on my buddy's boot and started yelling, but no one heard me. I tried to follow a hose line but I ran into a wall and fell into some bakery carts," Ambrozewycz said in a 1990 Burn Center at St. Barnabas publication. "The timer went off on my air tank. I thought it was all over. I tore off my mask and yelled. (My teammates) reached me as I collapsed."

More than 23 percent of his body was burned, mainly his upper legs and hands, the publication said. Ambrozewycz received several skin grafts and about forty blood transfusions, according to his son, Adam.

After Ambrozewycz recovered, MaryJane was hesitant about his return to the department. But the man who wooed her back after a bad first blind date with a dozen roses was just as persistent about returning to his firefighting passion.

Years later, the young family moved towns and 16-year-old Adam worked alongside his dad as a junior firefighter at the Dunellen department.

Over the decades since the incident, as Ambrozewycz worked as an accountant, fixed up their old Victorian home, volunteered with the Burn Center at St. Barnabas and was actively involved in the Ukrainian community -- and Hepatitis C went unnoticed in his blood.

The virus wasn't discovered until 1989, six years after Ambrozewycz was burned, according to the CDC. In 1992 it was virtually eliminated from the United State's donated blood supply -- nine years too late for Ambrozewycz.

In 2011, doctors told Ambrozewycz he had the virus and end-stage liver disease. He died on June 10, 2018.

Cassidy Grom may be reached at cgrom@njadvancemedia.com Follow her at @cassidygrom. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Top N.J. celebrity arrests, and what happened after they were handcuffed

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From tax evasion charges to a fake bomb threat, celebrities from the Garden State and those passing through it have wound up in all types of trouble with the law

These 13 men are charged with luring kids for sex - but were actually chatting with cops

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It takes special training -- and a mental toughness -- to impersonate children or child traffickers in these online stings, investigators say

Feline fanciers gather for NJ's biggest cat expo (PHOTOS)

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The Garden State Cat Club's annual fundraiser features competitions, vendors and adoptable cats, and raises thousands of dollars for local shelters and research efforts.

The 82nd Annual Garden State Cat Show, the biggest cat expo in New Jersey, is happening this weekend in Edison and has attracted cats, cat lovers, vendors and animal shelter volunteers from all over the state.

The expo features a show of purebred cats, breed and agility competitions, as well as an adopt-a-thon.

The Garden State Cat Club is a nonprofit organization that supports local humane societies, no-kill shelters, pet visitation programs for nursing homes, and the Winn Feline Foundation, which provides funding for cat health studies all over the world. 

BombayThis Bombay purebred is a hybrid created by breeding a sable Burmese with a black American Shorthair. 

About 50 percent of dogs in the U.S. are pedigreed, while about 5 percent of cats are. Only about 2 percent are registered pedigreed breeds, but more are expected to be bred but unregistered.

The Cat Fanciers' Association recognizes 39 pedigreed breeds, many of which were represented in the competitions at the expo as well as shown to the public during a "meet the breeds" demonstration.

In the middle of the New Jersey Convention and Exposition Center, various rescue groups from around the state brought cats available for adoption as well as volunteers who are as passionate about cats as the attendees of the expo. 

Many of the groups along with fostering cats provide Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) programs for feral, unadoptable cats. Neutered cats are returned to their colonies, as they have not been socialized and are fearful of people, without posing a threat. Kittens and sociable cats are taken to foster programs to be paired with loving families. 

"We run with a military like aspect in which we don't leave friendly cats behind," said Lynn Spencer, of Purrfect Cat Catchers, which operates out of Cliffwood Beach.

All cats are tested for feline AIDS, leukemia, and other diseases before being adopted out. The TNR programs also vaccinate free-roaming cats against rabies and keep the population of feral cats stable by not allowing new kittens to enter the community.

"We mostly rescue from people's backyards and as long as we have space we try to take as many as we can," said Christine Wagner, of Cause 4 Paws in Westfield.

Competitive KittyA cat being judged as part of a competition in The Cat Fanciers' Association, Inc. 

"I lost two cats earlier this year, so I wanted to start fostering. It was a duty of love and a show of respect to my cats ... fostering helps the betterment of society," said Kim De Los Reyes, of The Lucky Cat Rescue in Union and Jersey City.

This expo is the main fundraiser of the year for The Garden State Cat Club.

Over the years they have raised more than $30,000 for local feline welfare groups, $69,000 for the Winn Feline Foundation, and more than $33,000 for other research efforts.

The cat show continues today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Delaney Dryfoos may be reached at ddryfoos@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @delaneydryfoos. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

What are you paying your county freeholders? (Some gave themselves raises for 2018)

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Each of New Jersey's 21 counties is governed by a board of chosen freeholders. The number of members on the boards vary from three to nine.

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