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45Doll

Green Township EMS Guy Builds Private Arsenal

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3 hours ago, 45Doll said:

Here is an update on this story today. No bail for the time being.

 

11 minutes ago, ogfarmer said:

behind paywall , can somone copy paste text?

 

You guys should really make these links cold so the site you are linking too (which is likely anti-gun, and anti-giving-their-content-away-for-free) can’t track back to NJGF.

  • Agree 1

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1 hour ago, High Exposure said:

You guys should really make these links cold so the site you are linking too (which is likely anti-gun, and anti-giving-their-content-away-for-free) can’t track back to NJGF.

Not sure what you mean by cold. The link is just to our local NJ Herald newspaper. Nothing nefarious. And the first five stories you view are free. When I reach the limit, if there's something I want to read, I just delete their tracking cookies.

1 hour ago, ogfarmer said:

behind paywall , can somone copy paste text?

Sure: 

By Jennifer Jean Miller New Jersey Herald

Posted: Jun. 30, 2019 12:01 am
 

SUPERIOR COURT -- The possession of what Judge Thomas Critchley called "very lethal weapons" in conjunction with embracing an ideology known for its hate were two of several reasons Critchley decided to grant a motion on Friday to detain a 25-year-old Green Township man pending his trial.

Sussex County Assistant Prosecutor Jerome Neidhardt presented evidence that convinced Critchley that Michael V. Zaremski would present an acute danger to the community at large if he were to be released following his arrest on June 25. Critchley described Zaremski's current mental state as "unstable" and "highly stressed," based on information he received during Zaremski's detention hearing. Critchley also complimented law enforcement for obstructing a situation that he said, "could have been disastrous."

In addition to six counts of second-degree possession of an assault firearm, six counts of third-degree manufacturing of an assault firearm and 18 counts of fourth-degree knowingly possessing large-capacity ammunition magazines, Critchley also took into consideration other police findings from the investigation, which reportedly included hundreds of images on Zaremski's phone of assault weapons and Nazi-era imagery. One image showed Zaremski stomping on and burning a yarmulke -- a skullcap worn by Orthodox Jewish men -- with a cigarette butt. In other photos, Zaremski was seen making a "Heil Hitler" Nazi salute. He also had Nazi memorabilia and Nazi leader Adolf Hitler's anti-Semitic autobiography, "Mein Kampf."

According to Neidhardt, Zaremski's ex-girlfriend, who initially contacted police on June 24 with cyber-harassment allegations, said Zaremski had an obsession with Hitler, watching and reciting his speeches. She claimed Zaremski was violent toward her, would push and choke her during arguments and threatened to blackmail her with photos. In his work as an emergency medical technician, the unidentified ex-girlfriend told police, Zaremski disliked older-aged individuals and discussed committing a mass shooting in a hospital-type setting. Part of Zaremski's obsession, she told police, was with the mass shooting on Oct. 28 at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Neidhardt said.

Critchley considered that at the time of Zaremski's initial interview with Franklin Borough Police on June 24, where the initial complaint was taken, he was carrying a 9mm handgun with a bullet in its chamber in his EMT jacket.

"At the time of his (Zaremski's) arrest, he was armed and lethally dangerous," Critchley said Friday. "The nature and seriousness of the harm he could cause to the community could be extensive and potentially catastrophic. No amount of monetary bail would reasonably protect the community from the risk he (Zaremski) has presented."

Zaremski, who had a final restraining order issued against him in 2013, was in violation of his restraining order and the Graves Act, Neidhardt said, by his unlawful possession of firearms. The Graves Act charges carry a mandatory state prison sentence, Neidhardt said.

Zaremski's attorney, Daniel Palazzo, countered that while the Graves Act violation was very serious, Zaremski has a stable family connection, is a high school graduate and is about six credits shy of earning his associate's degree from Sussex County Community College. Palazzo said his client has been stably employed as an EMT with the Hackettstown First Aid Squad and a volunteer with the Allamuchy-Green First Aid Squad. While Zaremski had the restraining order from 2013, Palazzo said he has never been in contempt with that order.

Palazzo proposed that Zaremski be released with ankle monitoring and have no contact with the victim, his ex-girlfriend, who was granted a temporary restraining order last week.

But Neidhardt said Zaremski reportedly continued to contact the woman, despite her requests to stop, after their relationship ended in April.

Neidhardt asserted although Zaremski was cooperative with Franklin Borough Police when they first interviewed him on June 24 for his ex-girlfriend's cyber-harassment claims, Zaremski presented a flight risk and an acute risk to others.

The police inquest sparked after Zaremski's ex-girlfriend told police that he had created a fake Instagram account with photos of her wearing an SS hat -- the hat for the "Schutzstaffel" or Hitler's protective squadron. Zaremski reportedly followed her employers, who were of the Jewish faith, which prompted them to see the anti-Semitic images, resulting in her termination from her job.

Palazzo told Critchley he should not give consideration to her statements that Zaremski was violent against his ex, as there had been no police reports filed against him for violence. Additionally, Palazzo said, the ex-girlfriend willingly posed in the hat.

"While sensational and a despicable part of history, his (Zaremski's) beliefs are not on trial," Palazzo said of Zaremski's interest in Nazism and Hitler.

Following the Franklin Police interview, Franklin Police and the New Jersey State Police were granted a search warrant to enter Zaremski's Green Township home on June 25, where they found six assault rifles, one loaded handgun in his car, 18 high-capacity magazines, two plastic jigs used in weapons manufacturing, marijuana and other drug paraphernalia.

Among his 36 charges, Zaremski, a 2012 Newton High School graduate and a member of the Green Volunteer Fire Department, is facing weapons charges, drug charges, cyber-harassment charges and charges of assuming a false identity.

Zaremski's next court date has been scheduled for Monday, July 29.

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Replace the . with DOT 

ex:

Hotlink - www.website.com

Coldlink - wwwDOTwebsite.com

Then the link doesn’t come back here when they see traffic. Just one more way to keep a low profile.

Also, sites can come after NJGF for copyright stuff if you copy and paste paid content owned by another site/author and they get a hair up their ass.

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5 hours ago, High Exposure said:

Replace the . with DOT 

ex:

Hotlink - www.website.com

Coldlink - wwwDOTwebsite.com

Then the link doesn’t come back here when they see traffic. Just one more way to keep a low profile.

Also, sites can come after NJGF for copyright stuff if you copy and paste paid content owned by another site/author and they get a hair up their ass.

So noted. Thanks.

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