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Howell Man Faces New Pedophile Charges

rittman

Gregory Rittman

A Howell man who was arrested two weeks ago for masturbating in front of a juvenile in the public bathroom at a fast food restaurant on Route 35 in Wall Township is facing a dozen new charges after additional victims were identified, announced Acting Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni.

Gregory S. Rittman, 49, of Howell Township, was arrested on Friday, Oct. 24, 2014, after authorities received a report from an employee at a McDonald’s that described lewd behavior witnessed by an 8-year-old juvenile, near the sink in the men’s bathroom of the restaurant. Rittman was charged with one count each of second degree Sexual Assault, third degree Endangering the Welfare of a Child, fourth degree Lewdness and a disorderly persons charge of Harassment. He was released after posting $73,000 bail with no 10-percent option, as set by Monmouth County Superior Court Judge Teresa A. Kondrup-Coyle, J.S.C.

News of Rittman’s October arrest, which included his picture, prompted three additional victims to come forward.

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Posted: November 10th, 2014 | Author: | Filed under: Crime, Crime and Punishment, Howell, Monmouth County, Monmouth County Prosecutor, Wall Township | Tags: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

19,314 Still Without Power In Monmouth County

It was nice to wake up in air conditioning and not have to head off to Starbucks or McDonalds for power and Wifi.

I spent more time inside McDonalds this week since, well since ever.  I would have had to work at a McDonalds to have spent more time inside one than I did this week.  Perhaps it is an indication of the state of the economy.  Perhaps it is a indication of McDonalds’ recruitment and training. Perhaps it is an indication of my prejudices. Perhaps all of the above.  It seems to me that the people working at the McDonalds on Route 35 in Middletown and the one on Route 36 in Leonardo are decidedly more middle class than I expected.   They are friendly, articulate, accommodating and industrious.  No one asked me, “Would you like fries with that?”  I learned what a McFlurry is.

Governor’s Conference Call

Last night I was invited to listen into a conference call Governor Christie held with his cabinet and elected officials throughout the State.  Christie has been holding these calls at least daily since the days before Irene hit.

Despite the mixed reviews I had heard about these calls from several elected officials who had been on them during the week, I was impressed.

I am impressed with the quality of the team that Governor Christie has assembled to manage our State government.  Over the course of my career I have participated in or been privy too several executive level conferences in both the private and public sector. In very large enterprises and small.  Christie’s team stands out. They are extraordinarily competent and focused on getting the job done.

There was quite a bit of conversation about JCP&L.  Monmouth County is not the only place suffering with JCP&L’s inadequate and disingenuous response to the storm.  Mayor Timothy McDonough of Warren County’s Hope Township reported frustrations with JCP&L that are very similar to what we’ve experienced in Monmouth County. 

BPU President Lee Solomon recounted a conversation with JCP&L executives who asked him what more he thought they should be doing. “Tell your people to tell the truth,” Soloman said, “if your people are talking to a mayor or councilman, tell them the truth.  Don’t tell them what you think they want to hear or what you think will make them go away.”    Imagine that.

Christie and Solomon said they’d be talking further about JCP&L after the call last night.  Solomon said BPU was focused on getting all the power up and that JCP&L was on his radar for further work after the crisis has past.

Christie said that since Sunday the utilities have been restoring power at a rate of 8900 customers per hour.  JCP&L has obviously been dragging down that average.  Overnight last night they restored power at a rate of little over 1000 customers per hour just in Monmouth County.

The contrast between PSEG’s response to Irene and JCP&L’s response is like comparing the Yankees to the Mets.  Sorry Governor.

PSEG vs. JCPL

As of early this morning, PSEG has 15,000 customerswithout power in their entire service area.  There service area includes Bergen, Hudson, Essex, Union, Passaic, Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, Mercer, Middlesex and Somerset Counties.

JCP&Lhas 19,314 customers without power just in Monmouth County. They have 13,834 customers without power in Morris County, 9934 in Sussex County, 5941 in Hunterdon County, 6732 in Somerset County, 3643 in Union County, 3324 in Essex, and 3124 in Warren.  If I missed any…so did JCP&L.

A loyal MMM reader provided an antedotal contrast between PSEG and JCP&L:

My father was a construction super for PSE&G for 40 years.  I am literally first person in my family who came to this country who not to work for PSE&G— great grandfather when it was a trolly car company, my grandfather, my father and uncles, etc. all worked for PSE&G.  Every time there were events like this my father would be living in portable trailers at job sites for months at a time.  He always said JCPL sucked and never invested in infrastructure since they were bought by First Energy out of Ohio.  PSE&G would have to bail them out all the time.  PSE&G is a New Jersey company with more than 100 year history here.  Most of its employees all live here too. Note where First Energy’s executive’s live:  https://www.firstenergycorp.com/about/leadership_team.html.

That story is consistent with the graphic that greets visitors to PSEG’s website:

pseg-hurricaneirene

Contrast that to the lunatic who says he’s a JCP&L lineman that has been harassing me and Mike Halfacre in the comments here and on facebook.  I hope that rectum crater is not really a JCP&L lineman blogging during this crisis, but given the JCP&L response and the info he has given me to contact his union office, I wonder.  I’ll be contacting his union and continuing to delete is his comments here.

Estimated Customers Out For
MONMOUTH County
As of Sep 1, 2011 6:29 AM

 

City

67

ABERDEEN

51

ALLENHURST

161

ALLENTOWN

9

ALLENWOOD

271

ASBURY PARK

2344

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

9

AVON BY THE SEA

60

BELFORD

324

BELMAR

17

BRADLEY BEACH

50

BRIELLE

156

CLARKSBURG

8

CLIFFWOOD

22

CLIFFWOOD BEACH

235

COLTS NECK

74

CREAM RIDGE

162

DEAL

408

EATONTOWN

21

ELBERON

950

ENGLISHTOWN

44

FAIR HAVEN

27

FARMINGDALE

1995

FREEHOLD

 

 

City

78

HAZLET

275

HIGHLANDS

20

HIGHTSTOWN

1001

HOLMDEL

114

HOWELL

7

INTERLAKEN

103

KEANSBURG

10

KEYPORT

136

LEONARDO

598

LINCROFT

290

LITTLE SILVER

24

LOCUST

183

LONG BRANCH

19

MANALAPAN

831

MANASQUAN

2624

MARLBORO

372

MATAWAN

795

MIDDLETOWN

97

MILLSTONE TOWNSHIP

35

MONMOUTH BEACH

403

MORGANVILLE

87

NAVESINK

272

NEPTUNE

 

 

City

56

NEW MONMOUTH

48

OAKHURST

159

OCEAN

26

OCEAN GROVE

13

OCEANPORT

213

PERRINEVILLE

63

PORT MONMOUTH

1047

RED BANK

110

ROBBINSVILLE

372

ROOSEVELT

318

RUMSON

65

SEA BRIGHT

24

SEA GIRT

153

SHREWSBURY

27

SPRING LAKE

52

SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS

539

TINTON FALLS

18

UNION BEACH

120

WALL

3

WALL TOWNSHIP

6

WEST END

19

WEST KEANSBURG

24

WEST LONG BRANCH

 

Total Out = 19314

Posted: September 1st, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Hurricane Irene, JCP&L | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

McDonald’s Accounts For Up To 30,000 Of 54,000 New Jobs In May

By Art Gallagher

McDonald’s may have accounted for over half of the job growth in the U.S. economy in May, according to a Morgan Stanley estimate.

One has to wonder what the jobs report would have been had McDonald’s not been granted an Obamacare waiver last October.

Posted: June 6th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Economy | Tags: , , | 1 Comment »