MEC&F Expert Engineers : 09/12/15

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Police: Troy Saucier, 24, was on heroin when he fatally hit pedestrian in sidewalk in Elmwood Park, New Jersey




Police: Driver on heroin fatally strikes pedestrian in Elmwood Park




Authorities say a man was under the influence of heroin when his vehicle struck and killed a pedestrian in New Jersey.

Prosecutors say 24-year-old Troy Saucier drove his Jeep Liberty onto a sidewalk in front of a Walgreens in Elmwood Park where he hit 65-year-old Rasim Hida.

Police say they found drugs and drug paraphernalia in Saucier's car.

NJ Transit train hits, kills woman trespasser on tracks in Glen Rock


NJ Transit train hits, kills woman on tracks
(Kyle Mazza)
A New Jersey Transit train struck and killed a person on the tracks Saturday morning.

At 8 a.m., the train hit a woman trespassing on the tracks in Glen Rock, N.J., just east of the Ridgewood Interlocking.

Train No. 1857, which was on the Bergen County Line, left Hoboken at 7:19 a.m. and was due to arrive in Walkwick at 8:09 a.m. It was carrying 13 passengers and three crew members at the time of the accident. None of them was injured.

Service was temporarily suspended between Ridgewood and Secaucus, but was restored shortly before 10 a.m.

The victim has not been identified. The case is under investigation. 


This is most likely a suicide by train, an easy way out of someone's mental problems.

1 Worker Dies, 1 Injured After Becoming Stuck 90 Feet in the Air at the Tulsa Fair Skyride





 




 Posted: September 12, 2015 11:32
Dee Duren, NewsOn6.com

Erin Conrad, News On 6

TULSA, Oklahoma -

One man died and another was injured while working on the Tulsa Fairgrounds Skyride Saturday. It happened just after 10 a.m. when something malfunctioned with the safety basket the workers were in, causing it to fall to the ground.

The men were doing routine maintenance on the ride, according to the Tulsa Fire Department.

The workers were wearing harnesses and were dangling from the cables when rescue crews arrived. Tulsa firefighters and medical personnel used a ladder truck to bring the men down.

District Chief Lee Horst said they sent a firefighter and a paramedic up in the ladder truck to bring the men down and free them from the safety harnesses.

One of the men was able to walk after being brought down from the cables, but first responders were doing chest compressions on the second man - all the way to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

A crowd from the gun show being hosted inside the Exchange Center gathered outside as firefighters and first responders worked.

"We heard a little bit of the racket and then a friend of mine had said he'd seen the guy hanging, and just - he had no movement at all," said witness George Hopkins.

Witnesses said the whole thing happened suddenly and out of nowhere. One minute the men were working, the next - dangling dangerously from above.

Chief Horst said the safety basket fell onto transformers below the Skyride.

"Apparently the platform they were working from, when it fell, it fell into an electrical area on the ground, and PSO is here to make sure there's no damage to the electrical system," Horst said.

Both men were taken to the hospital, but one did not survive. The other man is in fair condition.

Their names have not yet been released.

Expo Square issued the following statement:

An accident occurred on Saturday morning during routine maintenance of the Sky Ride. The incident involved the work platform, which is utilized to service and inspect the ride components. The Sky Ride was not in operation during the time of the incident, and did not involve any patrons or Ride Gondolas. The accident involved two workers employed by DMC Tulsa, LLC (DMC), an Oklahoma limited liability company with its business offices located in Wisconsin, and is the current Sky Ride Lessee and Operator. Tulsa County Public Facilities Authority (TCPFA) and DMC, are working in full cooperation with public safety officials.

Our thoughts and prayers are with the families at this time.





 


 ///////////////------------------------/////////////////

by Erik Ortiz and Chris Essner


One of two workers rescued Saturday morning after becoming stuck about 90 feet in the air on an elevated ride at an Oklahoma fair has died, Tulsa fire officials said.

The man suffered cardiac arrest and was unconscious as he was being taken down, and was later pronounced dead at the hospital, officials said.
Two men have been rescued after their equipment fails on the Tulsa Fairgrounds Skyride. The Tulsa Fire Department says workers were replacing wheels on the Skyride when an equipment failure caused both men to fall and become trapped. Ross Hannaford via KJRH-TV

The two maintenance workers at the Tulsa Fairgrounds were inside a bucket and replacing wheels on the Skyride, which carries riders on wires high above the fairgrounds. But the bucket broke and fell to the ground, officials said.

The workers, however, were strapped in harnesses, preventing them from falling to the ground as well.

Firefighters had to use a ladder truck to get the pair down about a half-hour after the first call came in. They performed CPR on the man who went into cardiac arrest, reported NBC affiliate KJRH. He also had severe injuries to his head.

The other worker did not have serious injuries and was alert when he was taken to the hospital, officials said.

The workers' identities were not immediately released.





Pilot killed after a 1983 AERO L-39 ALBATROS plane crashed while performing an aerial maneuver during the Wings Over Big South Fork in Tennessee.







Jet crashes during Scott County air show






ONEIDA, Tenn. (WVLT)- 

Several witnesses at the Wings Over Big South Fork Air Show say one of the planes crashed during the show. 

The Federal Aviation Administration says the crash happened at about 4:30 Saturday. 

It was an L-39 Albatros, fixed wing, single-engine aircraft. 

Jay Gordon, a pilot from Louisville, Ky. was killed in the crash according to a family member. 

Witnesses say they saw his plane take a dive to do a trick and never came back up. 

The NTSB will investigate what caused the crash.



Date:12-SEP-2015
Time:16:30
Type:Vodochody L-39 Albatros
Owner/operator:Float Dancer Inc
Registration: N139RT
C/n / msn: 332505
Fatalities:Fatalities: 1 / Occupants: 1
Other fatalities:0
Airplane damage: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Location:Scott Municipal Airport (KSCX), Oneida, TN -   United States of America
Phase: Manoeuvring (airshow, firefighting, ag.ops.)
Nature:Demo/Airshow/Display
Departure airport:Scott Co (KSCX)
Destination airport:Scott Co (KSCX)
Narrative:
The aircraft, an experimental Aero (Vodochody) L-39 Albatros, impacted wooded terrain while performing an aerial maneuver during the Wings Over Big South Fork at Scott Municipal Airport (KSCX), Oneida, Tennessee. The airplane was destroyed and the sole pilot onboard received fatal injuries.
Sources
http://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=179512 http://wate.com/2015/09/12/scott-county-air-show-crash/
http://www.local8now.com/news/headlines/Reports-of-an-aircraft-crashing-during-Scott-County-air-show--327121021.html?device=tablet&c=y
http://registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry/NNum_Results.aspx?NNumbertxt=139RT

http://www.flickriver.com/photos/silenus81/6157039145/
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=D83fwr0A_uM


Aircraft Registration (N139RT)


Aircraft Summary
Summary Owner Airworthiness Serial Number
1983 AERO L-39 ALBATROS
Fixed wing single engine
(2 seats / 1 engine)
FLOAT DANCER INC
WILMINGTON, DE
(Corporation)
Experimental 332505
Engine Weight Speed Mode S Code
AMA/EXPR UNKNOWN ENG
(Turbo-jet)
Less than 12,500lbs Not defined 50117051 / A09E29



Registration Details
Status Certificate Issue Date Airworthiness Date Last Action Date Expiration
Assigned 1999-11-17 2008-03-27 2015-05-15 2018-10-31



Registration History
Date Owner Location
02-Jun-2006 FLOAT DANCER INC WILMINGTON DE

JUSTICE AT LAST: The chronically-drunk New Jersey police officer Pedro Abad, 27, was indicted on manslaughter charges Thursday for killing his friends and colleague


 


 

 

SEPTEMBER 10, 2015

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- 


The Linden, N.J., police officer who crashed head-on into a tractor-trailer on the West Shore Expressway in March, killing two of his passengers, will face criminal charges, a source familiar with the investigation told the Advance on Thursday.

Pedro Abad, 27, was indicted on manslaughter charges Thursday, according to multiple reports.

Abad, whose blood-alcohol level was allegedly three times New York's legal limit when he crashed March 20, had been recovering at a New Jersey hospital while prosectors prepared a case.

The gruesome wreck killed two of Abad's passengers, Joseph Rodriguez, 28, and Linden Police Officer Frank Viggiano, 28. A third passenger, Linden Police Officer Patrik Kudlac, 23, was critically injured in the crash, but was later released from the hospital.

Kudlac has since filed a notice of intent to sue the city of Linden over its handling of Abad's 2011 arrest on drunken-driving charges, according to a previous report.

Abad had been involved in nine crashes prior to the fatal wrong-way collision and had twice been charged with drunken driving, first in 2011 and again in 2013, records show.

Abad, who had left Charleston strip club Curves shortly before the fatal crash in March, was driving the wrong-way on the expressway near the Arthur Kill Road exit when he slammed head-on into a tractor-trailer.

Abad, who has made several references to drinking and drug use on his Twitter and Instagram accounts, posted a photo of three shot glasses on Instagram the night before the crash along with the caption:

Jack Daniels Fire on the house. I'm not allowed to make any tags, but my toast was as follows; "The 3 of us, are decent people. There's a decent woman out there for each of us. Sure it's cool to be single every now and then, but I don't give a damn what ANYONE says. At the end of the day, I want a family. I want to settle down. We all do. So here's to finding that which we all hope for."

Officials said tests showed Abad's blood-alcohol content was .24 percent when he crashed.

Linden Police Captain James Sarnicki told NJ.com that he could not confirm that Abad was indicted, but said that if he were to be indicted he would be suspended from the department.

A spokesman for the district attorney's office declined comment Thursday night, saying only that the investigation is ongoing.

An NYPD spokesman also declined comment.



///-----------------------////


"This destroys the image of the police department for years," said Maria Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of of Criminal Justice and chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at the college.



"It's incomprehensible to me that he's still on the force. It taints the whole department," she added.












LINDEN, NEW JERSEY



More than two months after he crashed head-on into a tractor-trailer in Staten Island in a suspected drunk-driving accident that killed two people, Linden Officer Pedro Abad remains on the city payroll. Abad, 27, had blood-alcohol level of .24 -- three times the legal limit -- at the time of the head-on crash, officials have said. He also has previously been charged with drunk driving after two separate accidents. 


He pleaded guilty to one of those incidents in 2013."This destroys the image of the police department for years," said Maria Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of of Criminal Justice and chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at the college.



"It's incomprehensible to me that he's still on the force. It taints the whole department," she added. She has used reports about Abad in her police ethics class.



Linden police say they are still reviewing the case, and awaiting results of the New York investigation, and have not taken any disciplinary action. New York authorities have not filed any charges against anyone involved in the crash.



Under the state Attorney General's Office guidelines, a police officer can be suspended for several reasons, including if he is charged with a first-, second- or third-degree crime, or even a disorderly person's offense if that offense was committed while on duty. 



An officer can also be suspended if he is a hazard to another person, or if his or her suspension is necessary to maintain safety or to maintain effective direction of public services.



Police can also suspend an officer found to be "unfit for duty," but exactly what that means is not spelled out.



Thomas O'Reilly, of the Rutgers University Police Institute in Newark, recalls the case of an officer in another state who was suspended for repeatedly being late for work. Each police chief of director makes their own decision about appropriate discipline. 



 





"It's a discretion issue," O'Reilly said. 



After a judge suspended his license on Oct. 16, 2013 following a guilty plea on a DUI charge in Rahway, Abad was assigned to write red-light camera violations, according to records NJ Advance Media obtained through an OPRA request.
 

 



Dashcam footage of Officer Pedro Abad's 2013 stop on suspicion of DUI This Rahway police dashcam footage of Pedro Abad's sobriety test during his Feb. 26, 2013 arrest for drunk driving was obtained by NJ Advance Media in response to an OPRA request. 

 

Between Oct. 17, 2013 and December 2014, Abad signed-off on 13,105 summons for red-light violations issued to drivers caught by the city's automated cameras, according to those municipal records. That is more than one-third of the 35,833 red-light tickets that the department issued during that time period. 



Reviewing red-light camera reports is a legitimate assignment for an officer assigned to desk duty, law enforcement experts say. However, at least one of those experts said the irony of an officer reviewing traffic violations when he can't drive himself is bad for public perceptions.



If people knew an officer with a suspended license was sending out tickets, "it would leave a bad taste in your mouth," said Thomas O'Reilly, director of the Police Institute at Rutgers University in Newark. 



Haberfeld said having Abad sign the red-light camera tickets was an option.

"It's not like he's stopping violators," Haberfeld said.



On March 20, Abad took a wrong turn while driving, after a night a drinking with three friends, and drove north in the southbound lanes of the West Shore Expressway in Staten Island. He crashed head-on into a truck, killing two passengers, fellow Officer Frank Viggiano, and Linden resident Joseph Rodriguez, both 28. 



Abad, 27, and another officer, Patrik Kudlac, 23, were critically injured. Late last month, both were released from the hospital.



The state ordered all towns to stop using red-light cameras as of Dec. 16, 2014, after critics said the five-year pilot program had not proven the value of the systems and claimed it was a money-making effort by municipalities. 





///-----------------/////







CHRONICALLY DRUNK NEW JERSEY COP, PEDRO ABAD, DRIVING IN DEADLY WRONG-WAY HEAD-ON STATEN ISLAND CRASH HAD BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION THREE TIMES LEGAL LIMIT



FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 2015



As we expected, the drunk NJ cop who killed his two friends and injured himself and another friend of his, was blind drunk when he crashed head-on driving the wrong way in Staten Island.



The New Jersey police officer, who hit a tractor-trailer head-on driving the wrong-way on a Staten Island highway last month, killing a fellow officer and a friend and critically injuring a third cop, had a blood alcohol content of .24 percent, three times the legal limit, law enforcement sources say. 



Authorities had obtained a warrant to test Pedro Abad Jr.'s blood-alcohol content following the March 20 wrong-way crash on the West Shore Expressway. 



The NYPD, who's investigating the crash, had no comment on the toxicology results. A message was left with the Linden police officers' union, and Abad's lawyer had no comment, saying only his client was in the process of hiring a new attorney. 



Abad, 27, was driving his fellow officers and friend on the wrong side of the expressway on the way back from a strip club when his vehicle slammed into the tractor-trailer, authorities said. 



Hours before the crash, Abad had posted a photo on his Instagram page of three shot glasses filled with what he identified as "Jack Daniels Fire on the house." Authorities said at the time it was "too premature" to speculate on what caused the accident. 



Public records show Abad has been involved in eight accidents since 2005 and has two arrests for drunken driving in the last four years.



Cop in Fatal Crash Had Been Arrested for DUI, Records Show

Abad was hospitalized in critical condition following the crash, which killed fellow Linden officer Frank Viggiano and friend Joseph Rodriguez.



Patrik Kudlac, another Linden cop riding in Abad's Honda, was also hospitalized in critical condition after the crash. 



The Union County prosecutor's office has said it would hand off the probe into the driving record and employment history of Abad to avoid the perception of any conflicts of interest. The state attorney general's office said the investigation will be handled by the Middlesex County prosecutor's office.

Comments from citizens:



"Abad has been involved in eight accidents since 2005 and has two arrests for drunken driving in the last four years"



How is this clown still a cop?  Good question:  Answer:  This is New Jersey, the most corrupt and cop-friendly state government.  They pretty much do as they please: lie, kill, violate traffic laws, extort, steal, double dip, etc.



If it was a black man facing marihuana charges, he would have been in prison for several years prior to even get a substantive hearing.  



The two that were killed have just as much culpability as the driver. Three of the people in the vehicle were police officers that "know" better. The fourth passenger knew better, just like everyone knows the dangers of drunk driving. Cops do not have to obey the law when they are working and it has a bleeding effect on their personal lives.



I have a big problem that this guy had two drunken driving arrests prior to this incident and he was still a police officer. Two people are dead because of this guy who should know better. He should have been weeded out with those two arrests. Police Officers like him ruin it for the 35+% that are good officers and take their job seriously. I hope that they throw the book at this guy.



On the morning of this crash, there were 4 idiots in that car. The super drunk driving Pedro, and the three stooges that got real drunk with him and still got into the car. Pedro or at least what is left of him needs decades in jail. Hopefully he never drives again. .240 blood alcohol level that is super wasted. What a Jerk!

Source: http://www.nbcnewyork.com









The Corrupt State of New Jersey: Pedro Abad, Jr., the drunken cop who killed two people in blindly drunk wrong-way crash still on city payroll. 



//---------------------///























































LINDEN NEW JERSEY NEEDS A NEW POLICE CHIEF ASAP!







“We do not want the memory of Officer Viggiano tarnished by negative publicity as we seek to comfort his family and loved ones,” Linden police Capt. James Sarnicki said in a statement.







RIDE WITH AN IMPAIRED DRIVER, BUY A TICKET TO YOUR OWN FUNERAL…







COMMENTARY from http://www.dwihitparade.com/2015/03/26/new-york-linden-nj-police-officer-pedro-abad-had-prior-dui-before-crash-in-staten-island-that-killed-officer-frank-viggiano-and-friend-joe-rodriguez/:







These idiots are worried about negative publicity! Amazing!







AMERICA: Feel sorry for the poor citizens and taxpayers of Linden, New Jersey, who have possibly the biggest set of nitwits in the country working in their police department. And now the Mayor says he is going to “investigate”…ditto for the Prosecutor…ATTENTION GOMER PYLE: They will give you a job in Linden, New Jersey!







//---------------------///





















Friday, June 19, 2015












The Corrupt State of New Jersey: Pedro Abad, Jr., the drunken cop who killed two people in a blindly drunk wrong-way crash still on city payroll.

































"This destroys the image of the police department for years," said Maria Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of of Criminal Justice and chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at the college.






































"It's incomprehensible to me that he's still on the force. It taints the whole department," she added.







































































































































































LINDEN, NEW JERSEY






































More than four months after he crashed head-on into a tractor-trailer in Staten Island in a suspected drunk-driving accident that killed two people, Linden Officer Pedro Abad remains on the city payroll. Abad, 27, had blood-alcohol level of .24 -- three times the legal limit -- at the time of the head-on crash, officials have said. He also has previously been charged with drunk driving after two separate accidents.

































He pleaded guilty to one of those incidents in 2013."This destroys the image of the police department for years," said Maria Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of of Criminal Justice and chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at the college.






































"It's incomprehensible to me that he's still on the force. It taints the whole department," she added. She has used reports about Abad in her police ethics class.






































Linden police say they are still reviewing the case, and awaiting results of the New York investigation, and have not taken any disciplinary action. New York authorities have not filed any charges against anyone involved in the crash.



































Under the state Attorney General's Office guidelines, a police officer can be suspended for several reasons, including if he is charged with a first-, second- or third-degree crime, or even a disorderly person's offense if that offense was committed while on duty.






































An officer can also be suspended if he is a hazard to another person, or if his or her suspension is necessary to maintain safety or to maintain effective direction of public services.






































Police can also suspend an officer found to be "unfit for duty," but exactly what that means is not spelled out.



































Thomas O'Reilly, of the Rutgers University Police Institute in Newark, recalls the case of an officer in another state who was suspended for repeatedly being late for work. Each police chief of director makes their own decision about appropriate discipline.














































































































"It's a discretion issue," O'Reilly said.



































After a judge suspended his license on Oct. 16, 2013 following a guilty plea on a DUI charge in Rahway, Abad was assigned to write red-light camera violations, according to records NJ Advance Media obtained through an OPRA request.























































Dashcam footage of Officer Pedro Abad's 2013 stop on suspicion of DUI This Rahway police dashcam footage of Pedro Abad's sobriety test during his Feb. 26, 2013 arrest for drunk driving was obtained by NJ Advance Media in response to an OPRA request.






































Between Oct. 17, 2013 and December 2014, Abad signed-off on 13,105 summons for red-light violations issued to drivers caught by the city's automated cameras, according to those municipal records. That is more than one-third of the 35,833 red-light tickets that the department issued during that time period.






































Reviewing red-light camera reports is a legitimate assignment for an officer assigned to desk duty, law enforcement experts say. However, at least one of those experts said the irony of an officer reviewing traffic violations when he can't drive himself is bad for public perceptions.






































If people knew an officer with a suspended license was sending out tickets, "it would leave a bad taste in your mouth," said Thomas O'Reilly, director of the Police Institute at Rutgers University in Newark.



































Haberfeld said having Abad sign the red-light camera tickets was an option.

















"It's not like he's stopping violators," Haberfeld said.






































On March 20, Abad took a wrong turn while driving, after a night a drinking with three friends, and drove north in the southbound lanes of the West Shore Expressway in Staten Island. He crashed head-on into a truck, killing two passengers, fellow Officer Frank Viggiano, and Linden resident Joseph Rodriguez, both 28.






































Abad, 27, and another officer, Patrik Kudlac, 23, were critically injured. Late last month, both were released from the hospital.






































The state ordered all towns to stop using red-light cameras as of Dec. 16, 2014, after critics said the five-year pilot program had not proven the value of the systems and claimed it was a money-making effort by municipalities.



























































///-----------------/////






























































































CHRONICALLY DRUNK NEW JERSEY COP, PEDRO ABAD, DRIVING IN DEADLY WRONG-WAY HEAD-ON STATEN ISLAND CRASH HAD BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION THREE TIMES LEGAL LIMIT






































FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 2015






































As we expected, the drunk NJ cop who killed his two friends and injured himself and another friend of his, was blind drunk when he crashed head-on driving the wrong way in Staten Island.






































The New Jersey police officer, who hit a tractor-trailer head-on driving the wrong-way on a Staten Island highway last month, killing a fellow officer and a friend and critically injuring a third cop, had a blood alcohol content of .24 percent, three times the legal limit, law enforcement sources say.






































Authorities had obtained a warrant to test Pedro Abad Jr.'s blood-alcohol content following the March 20 wrong-way crash on the West Shore Expressway.



































The NYPD, who's investigating the crash, had no comment on the toxicology results. A message was left with the Linden police officers' union, and Abad's lawyer had no comment, saying only his client was in the process of hiring a new attorney.






































Abad, 27, was driving his fellow officers and friend on the wrong side of the expressway on the way back from a strip club when his vehicle slammed into the tractor-trailer, authorities said.






































Hours before the crash, Abad had posted a photo on his Instagram page of three shot glasses filled with what he identified as "Jack Daniels Fire on the house." Authorities said at the time it was "too premature" to speculate on what caused the accident.






































Public records show Abad has been involved in eight accidents since 2005 and has two arrests for drunken driving in the last four years.



































Cop in Fatal Crash Had Been Arrested for DUI, Records Show

















Abad was hospitalized in critical condition following the crash, which killed fellow Linden officer Frank Viggiano and friend Joseph Rodriguez.



































Patrik Kudlac, another Linden cop riding in Abad's Honda, was also hospitalized in critical condition after the crash.






































The Union County prosecutor's office has said it would hand off the probe into the driving record and employment history of Abad to avoid the perception of any conflicts of interest. The state attorney general's office said the investigation will be handled by the Middlesex County prosecutor's office.




















Comments from citizens:






































"Abad has been involved in eight accidents since 2005 and has two arrests for drunken driving in the last four years"



































How is this clown still a cop? Good question: Answer: This is New Jersey, the most corrupt and cop-friendly state government. They pretty much do as they please: lie, kill, violate traffic laws, extort, steal, double dip, etc.



































If it was a black man facing marihuana charges, he would have been in prison for several years prior to even get a substantive hearing.






































The two that were killed have just as much culpability as the driver. Three of the people in the vehicle were police officers that "know" better. The fourth passenger knew better, just like everyone knows the dangers of drunk driving. Cops do not have to obey the law when they are working and it has a bleeding effect on their personal lives.






































I have a big problem that this guy had two drunken driving arrests prior to this incident and he was still a police officer. Two people are dead because of this guy who should know better. He should have been weeded out with those two arrests. Police Officers like him ruin it for the 35+% that are good officers and take their job seriously. I hope that they throw the book at this guy.



































On the morning of this crash, there were 4 idiots in that car. The super drunk driving Pedro, and the three stooges that got real drunk with him and still got into the car. Pedro or at least what is left of him needs decades in jail. Hopefully he never drives again. .240 blood alcohol level that is super wasted. What a Jerk!

















Source: http://www.nbcnewyork.com

























































































The Corrupt State of New Jersey: Pedro Abad, Jr., the drunken cop who killed two people in blindly drunk wrong-way crash still on city payroll.