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Stage II water restrictions are currently in place for Ridgewood, Glen Rock, Midland Park, and Wyckoff

ridgewood water
July 10,2016
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood is currently in Stage ll water restrictions ,until further notice, Ridgewood Water is not accepting applications or granting any exceptions. All pre-approved waivers are now void.

Stage II  (Severe) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to Tuesdays and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses.  No irrigation shall be allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays except for the use of a hand held hose. Irrigation using a hand held hose shall be allowed at any time.

Stage II water restrictions are currently in place for Ridgewood, Glen Rock, Midland Park, and Wyckoff, New Jersey are in effect beginning June 23, 2016 until further notice.

Residents, businesses, governmental agencies, and all other water users must adhere to Stage II of the restrictions shown on our website,water.ridgewoodnj.net.

If your address is an odd number, you may irrigate on Tuesdays and Saturdays only. If your address is an even number, you may irrigate on Wednesdays and Sundays only. A handheld hose may be used at any time including Mondays. No irrigation is allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays except the use of a hand held hose.

The restriction level had to be increased to Stage II because water is being consumed at a greater rate than the supply system can sustain, thus reducing the amount of water in reserve for fire fighting and other emergencies.

Compliance with the Stage II restrictions will reduce the likelihood that more severe controls will be needed. Your cooperation is appreciated. Violators will be subject to a fine and court appearance

Leak Detection

A leak can waste large amounts of water; up to 20 gallons a day for slow drips and hundreds of gallons a day for both toilet and faucet leaks. Some leaks are easily detected while others are not so obvious. Any leak, big or small, can be very costly and wasteful and should be repaired as soon as possible.

Water meters are equipped to assist you in leak detection. Turn off all faucets, water-demanding appliances, and outdoor hoses, etc. Be sure no one is using any water. The water meters feature a “leak detector”. To check if the meter detects a leak, shine a light on the top of the meter next to the flashlight icon to activate the display. After a startup sequence, the screen will cycle between the current reading and the current flow rate. As shown in the photo below, the word RATE appears with 3 digits below it. These digits represent the current rate in gallons per minute of water going through the meter. If the leak has been ongoing, the meter will also display a small faucet icon.

If the meter indicates that you have a leak, inspect all fixtures, appliances, and pipes to locate it, keeping in mind that there may be more than one source of leakage. Sometimes a leak may be hidden in the underground piping. If you believe this to be the case, call a plumber for advice. The meter can also provide further assistance in understanding your consumption. By request, Ridgewood Water will download a detailed log of your consumption for the past 96 days. Ridgewood Water needs physical access to the meter to perform this service. Please call our Customer Service department to schedule an appointment.

Summer Water Restrictions

Stage I will be in effect each year starting on June 1st and will continue through August 31st.  If conditions warrant, irrigation will be prohibited on additional days of the week up to and including a total ban on irrigation.

Compliance with the initial restrictions will reduce the likelihood that more severe controls will be needed.  Your cooperation is appreciated.

Stage I  (Moderate) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses.  Irrigation using a hand-held hose shall be allowed at any time. No irrigation shall be allowed on Mondays except for the use of a hand held hose.

Stage II  (Severe) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to Tuesdays and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses.  No irrigation shall be allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays except for the use of a hand held hose. Irrigation using a hand held hose shall be allowed at any time.

Stage III  (Pending/Critical) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to the use of a hand held hose on Tuesdays and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses.  No irrigation of any kind shall be allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays.

Stage IV  (Critical) – Irrigation is prohibited at any time. Exceptions for irrigation using a hand held hose may be allowed under conditions prescribed by the Village Manager of the Village of Ridgewood.

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Wyckoff police chief suspended over racial profiling email

wyckoffpolicecarboyd1

By Anthony G. Attrino | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on May 04, 2016 at 7:25 AM, updated May 04, 2016 at 9:02 AM

WYCKOFF – The Township Committee voted unanimously Tuesday to suspend police Chief Benjamin Fox as the state investigates an email he sent in 2014 appearing to condone racial profiling, according to Township Mayor Kevin Rooney.

Rooney said in a statement the suspension was necessary “to allow for the investigation by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office and their appointed monitor to continue without any chance for interruption.”

The Township Committee met in closed session April 19 to discuss issues related to the suspension. Fox was notified of the meeting but declined to attend, the mayor said.

Fox’s attorney, Arthur G. Margeotes, did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment Wednesday.

In the Dec. 2014 email to the police department, Fox stated he was concerned that misguided complaints about police would cause officers to react slowly in threatening situations.

https://www.nj.com/bergen/index.ssf/2016/05/wyckoff_police_chief_suspended_over_racial_profili.html?ath=9c46bfc08d76232bb5a5e00eeaf0bfa2#cmpid=nsltr_stryheadline

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Wyckoff chief agrees to step down while N.J. investigates his email defending profiling

wyckoff township committe ridgewood blog

from Facebook, Left to Right: Mayor Douglas J. Christie, Township Committeeman Kevin J. Rooney, Officer Christopher, Township Committeemen Brian D. Scanlan, Haakon Jepsen, Rudy Boonstra and Benjamin C. Fox, Chief of Police.

BY STEFANIE DAZIO, STEVE JANOSKI AND JIM NORMAN
STAFF WRITERS |
THE RECORD

The Wyckoff police chief agreed to temporarily step aside Tuesday night while the state Attorney General’s Office conducts an investigation into a complaint that an email he wrote to his officers in 2014 condones racial profiling.

The email, written by Chief Benjamin C. Fox, was anonymously sent to the New Jersey branch of the American Civil Liberties Union last week, according to a statement from the organization.

The ACLU said that, if the email was found to be genuine, authorities should “fire Fox, retrain officers, and conduct audits for both racially biased policing and use of force.”

Document:   Copy of the email provided by the ACLU (PDF)

Wyckoff officials were made aware of the email on Tuesday, a township press release said, and engaged in a “series of discussions” on the matter with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office.

The Township Committee convened an emergency meeting Tuesday night to address it.

Fox, who was present at the meeting, asked to go on immediate administrative leave while the investigation was pending, the release said, because he felt it was in the “best interest of the department since it would avoid unnecessary distractions.” It would also give Fox the opportunity to meet with representatives from the Prosecutor’s Office and “explain the contents of his email and demonstrate that neither he nor our police department has ever condoned or engaged in profiling.”

The committee unanimously agreed to the request.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/wyckoff-police-chief-to-step-aside-in-racial-inquiry-1.1531382

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Ridgewood and Wyckoff Police Intercept Fraud Suspect at Bank of America

bank-of-america_theridgewoodblog
Ridgewood and Wyckoff Police Intercept Fraud Suspect at Bank of America
February 18,2016
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood Police report that on Thursday February 11th patrol responded to Bank of America on North Maple Ave for the report of a suspicious person who fit the description of a person who attempted a fraud at the Wyckoff Bank of America branch earlier in the day.

Patrol identified the person as Ajee Jones 21 of Newark and confirmed she was at the Wyckoff branch earlier in the day. Wyckoff police had issued a complaint for her and requested Ridgewood take her into custody. Prior to transporting her to Wyckoff Officer Knapp discovered she was in possession of a stun gun. Ms. Jones was charged with unlawful possession of a weapon and turned over to the Wyckoff police department. All defendants are considered innocent until found guilty in a court of law
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Wyckoff Democrat launches campaign against Scott Garrett, Bailouts ,Bailouts and More Bailouts

Joshua S

February 8,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Wyckoff NJ, Former White House speechwriter  officially will seek to oust U.S. Rep. Scott Garrett (R-5th Dist.) with an announcement Monday afternoon in Northvale. U.S. Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) is scheduled to be there as well.

The Wyckoff Democrat Gottheimer is a former speech writer for President Bill Clinton and worked in corporate strategy for Microsoft. He grew up in North Caldwell and has lived for the past four years in Wyckoff with his wife and two children.

“Scott Garrett isn’t pro-family,” Gottheimer said. “He’s not pro-business. He’s Dr. No. Dr. No to everything, and that hurts families here in New Jersey.”

So what is Josh Gottheimer for ? In one word BAILOUTS!

At a September possible Democratic candidate Gottheimer fundraiser that came less than a week after James Cicconi, the RINO Republican head of external affairs at AT&T Inc., and JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Peter Scher hosted another one for the Democrat.Attendees included executives from Blackstone, Comcast, Verizon, McGraw Hill, U.S. Telecom Association, Tribune Media, United Health, Ogilvy & Mather, Raben Group and Akin Group. The invitation for the event had said it was “an excellent opportunity to oust one of the most conservative members of the House of Representatives.”

Bloomberg News, which was the first to report plans for the Cicconi fundraiser, said some business executives had already been growing tired of Garrett. They were apparently bothered by his vote against big spending former Speaker John Boehner,and were troubled that he has opposed the crony driven , taxpayer funded corporate welfare,  Export-Import Bank.

Garret also strongly opposes bailouts and in 2010 said , “The American people are tired of the safety net that has been provided to Wall Street. They want to put an end to the continued bailouts, and the bill currently under consideration in the Senate fails to accomplish this task. Wall Street is not afraid of this bill – as a matter of fact, Goldman Sachs, the same bank that has been charged by the SEC with fraud — and which also happens to have been President Obama’s single largest corporate donor in 2008 — has endorsed much of it. Goldman supports the bill because they know that it gives them and others an advantage in the marketplace by allowing their shareholders and creditors to be bailed out if they get into trouble because of the risks they take. …. We must end the era of bailouts and stop rewarding banks like Goldman Sachs with regulation that fails to protect American taxpayers.”

This stand against corporate bailouts and industry sponsored Dodd Frank has made Garrett unpopular in certian parts of the business community . In 2011 Garrett issued a strongly worded statement on Dodd Frank and the institutionalized “too big to fail policy”  , “In the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, Democrats insisted that more regulation was the answer to our problems and that they had the right prescription to address the ailments of our financial system.  As it turns out, the 2,000 page bill they produced was not the right solution.  One year after it was signed into law, Dodd-Frank has done little to prevent another financial collapse, it has failed to streamline and simplify regulation, and it has actually codified ‘too big to fail’ and taxpayer bailouts into statute.  When the American people asked for limited government, less burdensome regulation, debt reduction and, most importantly, job creation, this was hardly the solution they had in mind.”

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Wyckoff teen aims to help vets find peace in fly fishing

fly fishing

JANUARY 20, 2016    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY TODD SOUTH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

The Iraq war veteran carefully looped a thread around a steel hook secured in a vice to make a fly-fishing lure as his 15-year-old guide, Will Percy, quietly offered words of advice.

It was an exercise in patience that in some way embodies the challenging task that Will, a Wyckoff resident, has embarked upon: bringing fly-fishing into the lives of disabled veterans.

Nearly a year ago, Will saw a promotion for a non-profit fishing group, Project Healing Waters, that teaches fly-fishing skills to disabled veterans. He contacted the New York chapter and asked if he could get involved. A short time later, the call came back, asking if he would guide a disabled veteran on an outing on the Musconetcong River in northwest New Jersey.

That’s when he realized that the peace he always got from fly-fishing might help someone else. It inspired him to found a North Jersey chapter of the group, whose mission began in therapy classes at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 2005. Since then, the program has expanded to 209 locations across the 50 states and in Germany.

The organization assisted 6,572 disabled veterans last year, said Daniel Morgan, the spokesman for Project Healing Waters. The non-profit aims to keep disabled veterans involved in fly-fishing for the long term and will outfit a participant with $500 worth of gear

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/clubs-and-service-organizations/fly-fishing-as-a-way-vets-can-focus-and-reconnect-1.1495238

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Wyckoff police: Hackensack man accused of recording female co-worker in bathroom

wyckoffpolicecarboyd1

 

DECEMBER 31, 2015, 9:50 AM    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2015, 9:57 AM

WYCKOFF — A 39-year-old Hackensack man who allegedly recorded a co-worker using the bathroom at a Wyckoff business for up to two years was arrested Wednesday.

German G. Gonzales, 39, of Hackensack

LAW ENFORCEMENT PHOTO
German G. Gonzales, 39, of Hackensack

German G. Gonzales is charged with invasion of privacy, Chief Benjamin C. Fox said in a statement.

His co-worker, a 56-year-old woman, saw Gonzales bend down near the bathroom sink, Fox said. While Gonzales said he was just picking something up off the floor, the woman later found a cellphone taped to a water supply line under the sink.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/wyckoff-police-hackensack-man-accused-of-recording-female-co-worker-in-bathroom-1.1483297

 

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Garrett tells Wyckoff crowd stopping Iran deal will be tough

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AUGUST 26, 2015    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Rep. Scott Garrett told a Tea Party audience in Wyckoff on Tuesday that he opposes the proposed nuclear arms agreement with Iran but said stopping the deal will be difficult under the rules that the Senate has adopted.

Garrett, R-Wantage, said he considers the agreement reached by the Obama administration to be a treaty that ought to require two-thirds approval by the Senate.

But he said a majority of his colleagues still consider it an executive action by the president.

Under the rules adopted, it would require a two-thirds majority of both the Senate and the House to disapprove the deal after a 60-day review period.

“The burden of proof has shifted from them to us,” Garrett said of the rules.

As an executive action, the agreement could be undone by the next president, Garrett said.

“But the problem with that is that the next president will not be here for another 16 or 17 months,” Garrett told a crowd of about 70 people gathered at a forum hosted by the West Bergen Tea Party.

While talk of the Iran deal dominated most of the evening, the mostly receptive audience also peppered Garrett with other questions on topics ranging from the GOP leadership in the House to trade agreements and housing discrimination legislation.

None of the questions dealt with presidential politics or the race for the Republican nomination.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/politics/garrett-says-stopping-iran-deal-will-be-tough-1.1398254

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Report: Former ‘American Idol’ contestant arrested in Wyckoff

10422348_10153611118580712_950071546674319760_n

AUGUST 18, 2015, 12:32 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 2015, 5:40 PM
BY STEFANIE DAZIO
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

WYCKOFF —  Former “American Idol” contestant Constantine Maroulis will face charges in court next week that he allegedly attacked his girlfriend in their township home and then violated a restraining order, according to the woman’s attorney and and an Us Weekly report.

Maroulis, a Ramapo High School graduate who grew up in Wyckoff, is accused of beating up Angelina Reed on Aug. 11 after she confronted him about an affair, her attorney, Steven J. Mandel, said in a statement. The couple, who met while performing in the musical “Rock of Ages,” have a 4-year-old daughter.

Reed called 911 and police, seeing her injuries, arrested Maroulis, Mandel said. She was granted a temporary restraining order that prohibited Maroulis from contacting her or their daughter, and barred him from their home, he said. Mandel also claimed that Maroulis has failed to pay child support for 15 months.

Maroulis, the sixth-place finalist in the fourth season of “American Idol,” broadcast in 2005, allegedly violated the restraining order with an email, which his representative told Us Weekly was sent to Reed by accident.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/report-former-american-idol-contestant-arrested-in-wyckoff-1.1394084

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Paterson Man found in woman’s car in Wyckoff said Allah sent him

wyckoffpolicecarboyd1

JUNE 3, 2015, 6:59 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 2015, 7:05 PM
BY STEVE JANOSKI
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

WYCKOFF — Police arrested a Paterson man Tuesday night after he was found lying in a car that wasn’t his in the parking lot of the Wyckoff YMCA on Wyckoff Avenue.

Paterson resident Zakiy I. Muhammad, 20, allegedly climbed into the car sometime after it was left there by a 68-year-old woman going on a tour-bus daytrip, Police Chief Benjamin C. Fox said in a statement. When the bus returned from the trip and dropped the woman off, she “found a man lying inside with the seat reclined.”

She yelled at him to get out, but Muhammad allegedly replied that “God told him to be here,” Fox said. The bus driver and others came to the woman’s aid, and the bus driver managed to get the man out of the car and into the bus, where they waited for the police.

Sgt. Michael Ragucci, Sgt. Thomas Tully and Officers Kevin Pinches and William Christopher responded at 11:04 p.m.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/man-found-in-woman-s-car-in-wyckoff-said-god-sent-him-1.1348114

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Officer in fatal shooting of Wyckoff dog was distraught, eyewitnesses say

otto

Otto, the 5-year-old German shepherd that was shot and killed by a Wyckoff police officer, is shown in this photo provided by the family.

MAY 20, 2015, 12:57 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 2015, 8:06 PM
BY STEVE JANOSKI
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

WYCKOFF — A police internal report has been released showing the chain of events that ended with an officer’s fatal shooting of a family’s dog on April 29.

The report released Tuesday by the Police Department includes a description by Lt. David Murphy, who had been on traffic duty near Lawlins Road, of the shooting’s immediate aftermath.

Murphy found Patrolman Kyle Ferreira “very distraught” and “pacing back and forth” after he’d responded to the wrong address on a possible burglary call and shot Otto, the Vukobratovic family’s 5-year-old German shepherd.

“He was shaking his head and several times, he put both hands on top of his head. To me, he appeared to be visibly upset by whatever events had transpired prior to my arrival,” Murphy said.

Algis Setikas, who lives across the street at 621 Lawlins Road, had reported the possible burglary after finding damage to a window screen and exterior light bulb. The report said he had gone to the Police Department in person so as to not disturb his wife, recovering from surgery, or his newborn.

Minutes later, a police car pulled up in front of his house, but the officer never came to the door. As Setikas walked towards the car, the report said, he heard “four or five consecutive loud bangs,” and looked across the street to see Ferreira in what he described as a “shooting stance.” Setikas checked on his family, then ran to the Vukobratovics, yelling to Ferreira that he had the wrong house.

“He observed that the officer was standing on the driveway outside of the gate with his hands on his head, looking upset and distraught,” the report said.

 

https://www.northjersey.com/news/officer-in-fatal-shooting-of-wyckoff-dog-was-distraught-eyewitnesses-say-1.1338573

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Wyckoff Police Chief Benjamin C. Fox Statement on the Dog Shooting

otto

“Although this was a family pet, those images of a family dog are not the same image the officer had when he was attacked by an animal that has been described by the owner as a guard dog,” Fox wrote in a public letter disclosing details from the fatal shooting.

“As a result, I have exonerated him from any claim questioning his truthfulness in this incident,” the chief concluded.

Presenting such a detailed, lengthy statement is a rare move for a local police chief.

“Many facts have been misrepresented and it is my intention for this report to provide a level of transparency to the investigation that the dog’s owner deserves,” Fox’s 4½-page public letter begins.

“Additionally, due to the widespread media coverage and social media statements, I believe that it is in the public interest to provide an understanding of how this investigation has been handledby this police agency,” it says. “The integrity of any police department is fundamental to the community it serves.”

A Bergen County Communications Center dispatcher sent Officer Kyle Ferreira to the correct address at 621 Lawlins Road after the homeowner went to headquarters to report a burglary but the officer heard it wrong, Fox said. When he repeated back the wrong address, the dispatcher didn’t correct him, the chief said.

The dispatcher also incorrectly referred to the burglary as days old but was never told that by anyone, he emphasized.

The officer knocked on the door, didn’t get a response, then entered an unlocked gate to check the property.

“There was no sign to indicate the possible presence of a dog,” Fox wrote.

In back, Ferreira found an open ground-floor window.

With no cars in the driveway, nobody answering and “his observation of what he believed to be the point of entry in a burglary,” the chief wrote, “his concerns about what exactly was taking place caused him to unholster his firearm.

“Attorney General guidelines allow for such action when the circumstances create a reasonable belief that it may be necessary to use the firearm,” Fox said.

He then emphasized: “Even though the dispatcher incorrectly informed the officer that the event was days old, a police officer is going to evaluate a situation based on their personal observations at that precise moment in time.

“Those personal observations and the requirement to protect oneself from potential harm are why a police officer should not be guided solely by the words of a radio transmission,” the chief added. “The dispatcher stated it happened quite awhile in the past, like days. What does that mean? Was the homeowner on vacation for days and just discovered this? Why would a window be left standing open for days? Is a burglar still in the home.

“The officer did not know the full details of this situation. For his personal protection while he was there, alone; he chose to unholster his firearm.”

Ferreira then heard “what he described as aggressive barking of a dog coming from the inside of the home,” Fox wrote. “A full grown German Shepherd jumped of the window and charged at the officer in an aggressive manner.”

Ferreira then “began running towards the gate that he entered in an effort to escape,” the chief added.

“Near the edge of the patio area that he had been standing on, the dog bit him on his right boot[,] latching on to him.”

The AG’s guidelines allow officers to use deadly force to protect themselves when faced with “imminent danger of death or serious body harm.”

Given the Shepherd’s size and aggressiveness, Fox wrote, the officer felt “that if the dog took him down it could have mauled him[,] causing serious bodily injury.”

Ferriera fired four rounds, which were heard in rapid successor by a police lieutenant who went to the scene, the chief said.

“Officer Ferreira stated that he believes that the dog let him go after the first shot but it continued to come at him,” Fox wrote. “He stopped firing after the dog turned and went back towards the house.

“The officer then exited the fenced area through the gate he entered an radioed for assistance.”

Although people claimed on social media the next day that police were lying, Fox said no one came forward, so he sent officers out to try and find witnesses.

Canvassing the neighboring homes, they found a woman who lives across the street who said she watched from a first-floor window that Fox said “provided a limited partial view of the rear yard[,] as much of the rear yard area was blocked by the house itself.”

Fox emphasized that he was not discrediting the woman but simply confirming “what, exactly, she did observe.”

During her interview with detectives, he said, “she stated that she was only about 90% certain that she observed the
entire incident. She further stated that she was pre-occupied with a grandchild and may have turned away at some point.

“She also stated that she never saw the officer unholster his firearm, and she did not see the dog biting the officer,” the chief added.

“The detectives concluded that as the officer ran from the rear portion of the home to a point that the witness could see, she likely did observe the officer after the dog let him go and observed one or more gunshots.

“This was an event that unfolded in only seconds.”

Given the nature of the comments made by citizens, Fox sid he enlisted oversight assistance from Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli to “elminate any concerns or allegations of a bias[ed] investigation.”

They advised him to conduct an internal affairs investigaiton, which he said he did.

The investigators confirmed that Fereira went to the wrong house, which “admittedly…makes the shooting of the dog more difficult to accept,” Fox wrote.

The “focused on the issue of whether the officer was being truthful” and “uncovered nothing to suggest otherwise,” the chief said.

The account he immediately gave while clearly distraught about what just happened was consistent with his written report and his responses to investigators, Fox said.

The chief also noted that he “personally reached out to the family” and was prepared to visit them with Mayor Kevin Rooney to “sit down with them face to face, look themin the eye and tell them what we knew at that point had happened.

“They declined that request,” he wrote — adding that he contacted them again in an attempt to have that discussion.

An attorney for the family then contacted the township, after which Fox said he was directed by the township attorney and insurance carrier that “all communications must be limited to attorneys.”

“[W]e are saddened that this incident ever took place,” he wrote. “We are mindful that the family has lost a pet dog that they loved. We are upset that an error in hearing an incorrect house number put us on that property[,] which allowed the successive events to unfold.”

Fox said he is “responsible for the actions of my officers each and every day.”

He said he has spoke with former Fairview police chief Frank DelVecchio, the director of the Bergen County Communications Center, and “agreed to a dispatch protocol change that will minimize the possibility of an officer going to an incorrect street address.

“The Wyckoff Police Department is not defined by this incident,” Fox concluded. “The officers of this agency serve this community proudly and with integrity. As with every police officer in this state and nation, police face many challenges on a daily basis.

“We’ll continue to serve with pride and integrity”

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Readers say Wyckoff investigation of Dog Shooting leaves many unanswered questions

otto
“Exonerated by a township internal affairs investigation”…. Nobody believes this crap anymore, and yet they just keep expecting tax paying citizens to accept their schtick.

Unanswered questions: why when going to take a report of a “Burglary IN THE PAST” does supercop show up with weapon drawn? (If it was burglary in progress the protocol is to wait for a backup officer)
If the dog owner’s allegation that spent shell casings were found at a location other than reported by the officer, why was this not investigated/clarified?
A simple investigation would determine who is telling the truth here.
I guess wyckoff can save money on billy clubs, pepper spray and flashlights since the non-lethal methods are no longer accepted practice here. Shoot first and no questions will be asked.

 

Perhaps its time to reevaluate the rules for the use of deadly force ?

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Cop who shot dog is cleared, Wyckoff police chief says

otto

MAY 15, 2015, 10:18 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, MAY 16, 2015, 12:17 AM
BY ABBOTT KOLOFF
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

The Wyckoff police officer who fatally shot a German shepherd after going to the wrong address to investigate a burglary report last month has been exonerated by a township internal affairs investigation after the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office declined to look into the matter, authorities said in a news release Friday night.

Township Police Chief Ben Fox issued a five-page statement saying that an investigation by his department had “exonerated” the officer, Kyle Ferreira, “from any claim questioning his truthfulness in this incident.” Fox said the officer believed the dog could “cause serious bodily harm” after it bit him in the foot and latched onto his right boot. And Ferreira followed state Attorney General’s Office guidelines for the use of deadly force, the chief said.

Fox said that he was taking an “unusual step” by releasing details of the investigation because “many facts have been misrepresented.”

He said the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office had declined to investigate the matter, citing state regulations, and sent it back to his department’s internal affairs unit. The chief had asked the Prosecutor’s Office to investigate because “allegations were being made that the police department was not being truthful,” he said in the statement.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/cop-who-shot-dog-is-cleared-wyckoff-police-chief-says-1.1335901

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Readers not buying Ridgewood Police officer’s defense of Wyckoff dog Shooting

otto
Reader says , There is so much wrong with your editorial I don’t know where to begin.

It was a fenced in yard and the policeman was a stranger. He had a choice: run. Get the hell out of the yard. Or would that be too detrimental to the tough guy image?

Are you saying that people should not allow their dogs to roam their fenced in yards now? The dogs should be confined to the house? Is there a particular room inside the house where the dog should be sequestered?

Your fantasy about the cop saving a child from a fierce beast holds no water. If the kid was from the neighborhood, the dog would have known him. If there was a trespasser in the yard, then good.

I only hope, officer Elwood, that when you find a group of kids smoking a joint behind starbucks some night, and they all scatter, you realize that you do have a choice other than to shoot the slower ones.