Posted on

Lawsuit involving contaminated drinking water in E. Orange, S. Orange to be settled soon

16689529-mmmain

East Orange officials and William Mowell, former assistant executive director of the East Orange Water Commission, pictured right, have been facing a lawsuit by a former commission employee. (File photo/New Jersey Department of Corrections) (File photo/New Jersey Department of Corrections)

Lawsuit involving contaminated drinking water in E. Orange, S. Orange to be settled soon

EAST ORANGE — A tentative settlement has been reached in a lawsuit over an effort to hide elevated levels of an industrial solvent in drinking water pumped to residents in the city and neighboring South Orange.

The agreement would resolve a lawsuit filed by former East Orange Water Commission employee Thomas Valenza involving claims that the commission’s former executive director, Harry Mansmann, and former assistant executive director William Mowell schemed to hide the water contamination.

Mansmann and Mowell were both indicted in February 2013 on criminal charges related to the alleged scheme. Mansmann later died and Mowell was sentenced on Dec. 12 to three years in state prison after pleading guilty.

In the lawsuit, which was initially filed in April 2013 in New Jersey Superior Court, Valenza alleges he was directed to turn off contaminated wells before collecting samples, but he refused to do so. Valenza was later “forced to retire,” after learning about illegal activity at the agency, the lawsuit states.

https://www.nj.com/essex/index.ssf/2015/01/settlement_pending_in_lawsuit_over_east_orange_water_commission.html#incart_river

Posted on

Former Ridgewood Water Exec Gets 3 years prison for Falsifying Reports

waterheader2

Ex-top official of East Orange water agency gets 3 years in prison

Formerly the chief engineer for Ridgewood Water.

TRENTON — A former top official of the East Orange Water Commission was sentenced to three years in prison today for hiding elevated levels of an industrial solvent in drinking water pumped to more than 80,000 residents in the city and neighboring South Orange.

William Mowell, 52, of Wyckoff, pleaded guilty in July to conspiring with the agency’s former executive director, Harry Mansmann, to falsify levels of tetrachloroethene to show the water was safe to drink, the state Attorney General’s Office said.

As part of his sentence, handed down by state Superior Court Judge Carolyn Wright, Mowell will be permanently banned form public office and public employment in the state.

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2014/12/ex-top_official_of_east_orange_water_agency_gets_3_years_in_prison.html#incart_river

Posted on

Former Ridgewood Water employee pleads guilty to bogus water test results

nj-attorney-general-east-orange-water-supplyjpg-918f08906e777901

Acting N.J. Attorney General John Hoffman (left) today announced that a former top executive of the East Orange Water Commission, William Mowell, admitted to conspiring to conceal high levels of an industrial solvent in the water supply. (File photo / N.J. Attorney General’s Office)

Former Ridgewood Water employee pleads guilty to bogus water test results

Ex-top official of East Orange water agency admits concealing chemical in drinking water
By Christopher Baxter | The Star-Ledger 

He was the chief engineer for Ridgewood Water before Gabbert laid him off in 2010.

TRENTON — A former top official of the East Orange Water Commission admitted today to conspiring to hide elevated levels of an industrial solvent in drinking water pumped to more than 80,000 residents in the city and neighboring South Orange, state authorities said.

William Mowell, 52, of Wyckoff, the former assistant executive director and engineer, pleaded guilty to conspiring with the agency’s former executive director, Harry Mansmann, to falsify levels of tetrachloroethene to show the water was safe to drink, the state Attorney General’s Office said.

Exposure to the chemical, used for dry cleaning and other purposes, over a prolonged period of time is a potential cancer risk, according to the federal health department. But state Department of Environmental Protection officials said their own testing showed residents were not at risk and the water was safe.

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2014/07/ex-top_official_of_east_orange_water_agency_admits_hiding_chemical_in_drinking_water.html#incart_river