Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
State v. Palendrano, 120 N.J. Super. 336, 293 A.2d 747 (Law Div. 1972), was a legal case decided by the New Jersey Superior Court, Law Division, holding that the common law offense of being a common scold was no longer a crime despite the presence of reception statutes in the state.
The Criminal Part also hears appeals from the New Jersey municipal courts for convictions for disorderly persons offenses and petty disorderly persons offenses (what New Jersey terms offenses called misdemeanors in other jurisdictions, which do not require a grand jury indictment), as well as traffic offenses (including driving while ...
New Jersey statutes allow expungement of conviction of many indictable offenses, disorderly persons offenses, municipal ordinances, and juvenile adjudications. With the exception of applicants who have graduated from a "special drug probation," the statutes disallow expungement for convictions if the applicant has been convicted of two or more ...
Anyone with information on his whereabouts is urged to contact the New Jersey State Police Fugitive Unit tip line at 1-800-437-7839 or at fugitiveinformation@njsp.gov. Show comments Advertisement
New Jersey first established drunk driving laws in 1909, making it a disorderly persons offense (misdemeanor). [ 180 ] [ 181 ] In 1921, DUI was converted to a traffic violation with a 1-year license suspension for the first violation, and a 5-year suspension for repeat violations. [ 182 ]
The straphanger who was burned to death on a Brooklyn F train in a horrific attack has been identified as a 57-year-old New Jersey woman, police announced Tuesday. ... a 2010 disorderly conduct ...
Jersey Shore star Angelina Pivarnick pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct charge, Us Weekly can confirm. Pivarnick, 38, appeared in the Freehold Township Municipal Court on Tuesday, October 1 ...
A basic definition of disorderly conduct defines the offense as: A person who recklessly, knowingly, or intentionally: (1) engages in fighting or in tumultuous conduct; (2) makes unreasonable noise and continues to do so after being asked to stop; or (3) disrupts a lawful assembly of persons; commits disorderly conduct. . . [2]