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This is a breaking story. Please check back for updates . This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: Teaneck NJ fatal shooting under investigation by Bergen County
The scene where two people were reportedly killed after a vehicle crashed into a tree on Teaneck Road near Hamilton Road in Teaneck, NJ around 2:45 a.m. on October 21, 2023.
The footage, captured by a New Jersey mom and shared on X, shows blinking lights buzzing over Bergen County Sunday night. “They’re just pacing back and forth going very slow,” the mom said ...
On April 10, 1990, a group of black teenagers, including 16-year-old Phillip Pannell, were playing in Tryon Park in Teaneck, NJ. The teenagers reported that a pair of them were having a 'play fight' when, in what they described as "routine harassment," a police car drove onto the basketball court where they had been playing and the officer asked if there was a problem.
The Record (also called The North Jersey Record, The Bergen Record, The Sunday Record (Sunday edition) and formerly The Bergen Evening Record) is a newspaper in New Jersey, United States. Serving Bergen , Essex , Hudson and Passaic counties in northern New Jersey , it has the second-largest circulation of the state's daily newspapers, behind ...
Teaneck (/ ˈ t iː n ɛ k /) is a township in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.It is a bedroom community in the New York metropolitan area. [21] As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 41,246, [11] [12] an increase of 1,470 (+3.7%) from the 2010 census count of 39,776, [22] [23] which in turn reflected an increase of 516 (+1.3%) from the 39,260 counted ...
The 302-foot-long East Anderson Street/Cedar Lane Bridge connects Bergen County's two most-populated municipalities, Hackensack on the west (left), and Teaneck on the east (right).
He is the author of Color Lines: The Troubled Dreams of Racial Harmony in an American Town, a book about the 1990 shooting in Teaneck, New Jersey of Phillip Pannell, an African-American teenager, by Gary Spath, a white Teaneck police officer. [2] He is also the author of the 2000 book Fresh Jersey Stories from an Altered State. [3]