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Jersey City Police Chief Michael Kelly will retire in February. Here’s a look back at his 34-year career. Updated Jan 10, 2021; Facebook Share Michael Kelly said he remembers his first day at the Jersey City Police Academy like it was yesterday. Kelly and his classmates were lined up outside of a building at Caven Point, where the academy used to be. A drill sergeant marched from the distance and appeared before them wearing high leather boots, a leather strap across his chest and a big hat. The man began yelling at them to get in line and Kelly, for the first time, said to himself, “What the hell am I doing?” ....
In Jersey City, A Remarkable Kindness Owners of four kosher markets come together to rebuild Moshe Ferencz’s grocery store. I was reading an article the other day and I couldn’t stop crying. It was so moving. You’re probably imagining what it was about – children in trouble or battling a potentially fatal disease or addiction or abuse or all of the above, a Holocaust survivor’s tale or a similar tale of tragedy. But I was actually reading about a grocery store – and it wasn’t the current price of paper towels (exorbitant due to the run on them) that had me in tears. In fairness the story begins with last year’s terrorist attack in Jersey City. And certainly that horrific event is enough to provoke an intense response, but it was the tale of the actual grocery store that captured my imagination and my emotions. In the aftermath of the attack, Moshe Ferencz, the owner of the kosher grocery store, was mourning his wife, Leah Mindel, and his cousin, Mos ....
Widow of Jersey City shooting victim says city promised her help that never came Updated Dec 22, 2020; Posted Dec 19, 2020 Miguel Douglas Rodriguez s widow, Martha Freire, of Harrison, holds pictures of her late husband who was fatally shot while working at the JC Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City on Dec. 10, 2019. Photo taken on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2019.(Reena Rose Sibayan | The Jersey Journal) Reena Rose Sibayan | The Jersey JournalReena Rose Sibayan | The Jersey Journal Facebook Share A year after her husband was killed in the Jersey City shooting that left six dead and the whole of New Jersey shaken, a Harrison woman is claiming her family has yet to receive the help promised by city officials. ....
Jersey City, a Year Later By Debra Rubin | December 16, 2020 A year after what New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal called “the worst act of domestic terrorism in New Jersey history,” he and other leaders of the Jewish and secular communities came together to mourn the four victims killed in the attack on a Jersey City kosher supermarket. Grewal was one of many speakers who appeared December 10 during a virtual memorial program sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey in partnership with Congregation B’nai Jacob, which is located in the Greenville neighborhood where the hours-long shootout with police, in which the two attackers were also killed, took place. ....
At State of the City, Fulop talks Dec. 10th shooting, COVID-19, defund the police movement During his first virtual State of the City address, Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop discussed a number of topics including the Greenville massacre that occurred last year, the COVID-19 pandemic, the defunding the police movement – among other things. “That was the most difficult day I’ve ever experienced as mayor. I take solace in the fact that our police officers and police leadership did an outstanding job in keeping a terrible situation from becoming much worse,” Fulop said during the taped, 25-minute speech which has been uploaded to YouTube. ....