Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The New Jersey Juvenile Justice Commission is a state agency of New Jersey, headquartered in Ewing Township, near Trenton. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The commission, under the office of the Attorney General of New Jersey , provides youth correctional services.
This is a list of law enforcement agencies in the state of New Jersey.. According to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics' 2018 Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, the state had 507 law enforcement agencies employing 30,261 sworn police officers, about 341 for each 100,000 residents.
The Adult Diagnostic and Treatment Center (ADTC) is a secure correctional facility operated by the New Jersey Department of Corrections.Its purpose is to provide treatment and incarceration for certain criteria meeting repetitive and compulsive male sex offenders who have been sentenced under the New Jersey Sex Offender Act.
New Jersey's embattled corrections commissioner announced his resignation Tuesday, a day after Gov. Phil Murphy said the state would shutter its long-troubled and only women’s prison.
The New Jersey Juvenile Justice Commission operates the New Jersey Training School, a juvenile detention center for boys, in the township. [104] In 2018, the state approved funding to close the two Civil War-era youth prisons in New Jersey. It has not been decided yet what will be done with the property after its closure. [105]
Middlesex County constitutes Vicinage 8 of the New Jersey Superior Court; the vicinage is seated at the Middlesex County Courthouse, at 56 Paterson Street in New Brunswick. [65] The Middlesex Vicinage also has facilities for the Family Part at the Middlesex County Family Courthouse at 120 New Street, also in New Brunswick; there are also other ...
An 82-year-old Monroe man who filed hundreds of income tax returns for residents in Middlesex County has been sentenced to a five-year suspended prison term after pleading guilty to failure to ...
A man and a woman from Middlesex County pleaded guilty in federal court to wire fraud for their roles in a $444,738 COVID-19 unemployment benefits scam, U.S. Attorney Philip Sellinger said.