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For
Immediate Release: |
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For
Further Information Contact: |
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March
8, 2005 |
Office
of The Attorney General
-
Peter C. Harvey,
Attorney General
Division
of Criminal Justice
Environmental Crimes Bureau
- Vaughn L. McKoy, Director
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John
R. Hagerty
609-984-1936
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Attorney
General’s Office and Division of Criminal
Justice Continue to Investigate and Prosecute
Urban Environmental Crime |
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Urban
Environmental Initiative Targets Illegal
Dumping in Urban, Suburban and Rural Communities |
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Criminal
Indictment Charges Passaic County Businessman
and Corporate Vice-President with Abandoning
Asbestos on Urban Street... |
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Additional
Prosecutions Charge Director of UMDNJ’s
Power Plant with Discharging Contaminated
Waste Water into Newark Public Sewer System... |
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...Essex
County Business Owner Pleads Guilty to Abandoning
Trailers Filled with Waste Oil and Construction
Debris in Elizabeth... |
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Worker
Jailed for Stealing Trailers and Abandoning
Debris in Essex County... |
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TRENTON
— New Jersey Attorney General Peter
C. Harvey announced that the Attorney
General’s Urban Environmental Initiative
continues to successfully investigate
and prosecute urban environmental crimes
with the indictment of a Passaic County
businessman on charges of abandoning hazardous
asbestos construction debris on the streets
of Paterson.
The Attorney General noted that recent
prosecutions by the Urban Environmental
Initiative include the criminal indictment
of the operator/supervisor of the University
of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey’s
(UMDNJ) Newark power plant for illegally
discharging untreated acidic wastewater
directly into the Newark sewer system;
a guilty plea from an Essex County businessman
on charges of abandoning waste oil and
debris on an Elizabeth street; and the
sentencing of a Newark truck driver to
three years in state prison for stealing
tractor trailers, filling them with construction
debris, and then leaving the vehicles
at various locations in Essex County.
-more-
“The
Urban Environmental Initiative is committed
to protecting urban communities from the
illegal, unscrupulous, and often dangerous
practice of dumping debris and hazardous
materials in or near residential communities
and neighborhoods,” Attorney General
Harvey said. “As our cities and
urban areas undergo renovation and rebuilding,
there will be those who try to cut corners
and improperly dispose of demolition debris,
solid waste, and hazardous and toxic chemicals
in back lots and alleyways. The Attorney
General’s Office is determined that
New Jersey’s communities will not
be dumping grounds and that the residents
living in urban settings are not the forgotten
New Jerseyans.”
Vaughn L. McKoy, Director, Division of
Criminal Justice, said a State Grand Jury
indictment charged Branko Rovcanin, 40,
Hollowbrook Court, Wayne, Passaic County,
and his corporation, Betal Environmental,
Inc. (d/b/a Betal Environmental and/or
Betal Enterprises), located at 250 Vreeland
Ave., Paterson, Passaic County, with the
abandonment of toxic pollutants, unlawful
collection of solid waste, criminal mischief,
the unlicenced removal of asbestos, uttering
a forged document, and tampering with
public records. If convicted on all counts,
Rovcanin faces more than 20 years incarceration
and fines of up to $120,000. The corporation
is liable for substantial criminal penalties.
Rovcanin was arrested at his Paterson
office on March 7 by State Investigators
from the Division of Criminal Justice
- Environmental Crimes Bureau and officers
from the Passaic County Sheriff’s
Office. Rovcanin will appear in Passaic
County Superior Court for arraignment
and bail.
The indictment charged that Rovcanin,
as the owner and Vice-President of Betal
Environmental, obtained at least four
separate contracts to remove asbestos
and other construction debris from various
construction sites in four separate counties
even though the company was not licensed
to perform such work. The indictment alleges
that Rovcanin collected the debris, placed
33 bags of asbestos material in a trailer,
and then abandoned the container on East
38th Street in Paterson. The abandoned
trailer, recovered by Paterson Police
on July 23, 2004, also contained construction
debris, soil, wood, metal, carpet, and
pieces of fiberglass boat hulls. The indictment
alleges that Rovcanin forged documents
and submitted false letters in order to
obtain contracts to remove asbestos from
construction sites and falsified manifests
required to transport asbestos and construction
debris to an Ohio landfill.
The Rovcanin/Betal Environmental investigation
was coordinated by State Investigator
Steven Ogulin and Supervising Deputy Attorney
General Edward Bonanno of the Division
of Criminal Justice - Environmental Crimes
Bureau. The New Jersey Department of Labor
& Workforce Development initiated
and assisted in the investigation. Representatives
of the Passaic County Sheriff’s
Office assisted in the arrest of Rovcanin.
The State Grand Jury indictment was handed-up
to Mercer County Superior Court Judge
Linda Feinberg on March 4.
Director McKoy noted that in recent weeks,
the Environmental Crimes Bureau has obtained
a separate criminal indictment, guilty
plea, and sentencing of a convicted defendant
charged with various environmental crimes,
including:
- State
Grand Jury indictment charging Gerald
Portee, 51, Lilac Lane, Franklin, with
violating the Water Pollution Control
Act by unlawfully discharging untreated
wastewater directly into the Newark
sewer system. The indictment charges
Portee with two counts of third degree
water pollution, tampering with public
records, and tampering with a witness.
The indictment charges that on two separate
dates in August, 2003, Portee, the Director
of the Newark power plant for the University
of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
(UMDNJ), directed subordinates to discharge
nearly 10,000 gallons of untreated,
highly acidic wastewater from the power
plant into the municipal sewer system.
The UMDNJ power plant is located at
295 Norfolk Ave. in Newark. The indictment
also charges that Portee attempted to
cover-up the alleged illegal activity
by instructing plant workers to ignore
operating procedures and to enter false
information into required log books
to make it appear that the waste water
had been drained into a sump pit, rather
than discharged into the sewer system.
If convicted on all counts, Portee faces
up to 20 years in state prison and a
fine of up to $180,000. Portee has been
suspended from his position at UMDNJ
and will be ordered to appear in Essex
County Superior Court for arraignment
and bail. The indictment was handed-up
to Mercer County Superior Court Judge
Linda R. Feinberg on Feb. 7;
- On
Feb. 22, the owner of a Roselle, Union
County, trucking company pleaded guilty
to using stolen trailers to abandon
drums of toxic waste on the streets
of Elizabeth. In pleading guilty before
Union County Superior Court Judge Scott
J. Moynihan to a charge of abandonment
of toxic pollutants, Joseph Armstrong,
45, Thompson Street, Roselle, Union
County, the owner/President of Dock
Bumpers, Inc., 1120 Walnut Street, Roselle,
admitted that he stole a tractor trailer,
loaded the trailer with twelve 55-gallon
drums of waste oil and other substances,
including toxic pollutants such as lead,
zinc and copper, and abandoned the trailer
on Julia Street in Elizabeth. Armstrong
is scheduled to be sentenced on May
20;
- On
Feb. 18, a driver/employee of a Newark-based
demolition company was sentenced by
Essex County Superior Court Judge Michael
A. Petrolle to three years in state
prison for stealing tractor-trailers,
filling them with construction debris,
and then abandoning the trailers at
various sites in Essex County. On Nov.
8, 2004, Henry E. Pettaway, 42, Summer
Avenue, Newark, Essex County, pleaded
guilty to multiple counts of receiving
stolen property and criminal mischief.
The indictment alleged that Pettaway,
purportedly employed by the owner/operator
of a Newark-based demolition business,
stole at least five tractor trailers
which were then filled with construction
debris and abandoned at various locations
in Essex County. The stolen trailers,
filled with demolition debris, were
recovered at Magazine and Paris Streets,
Newark; Nye Avenue and 21st Street,
Irvington; and 263 16th Ave., Newark.
The Urban Environmental Initiative represents
a partnership between the Department of
Environmental Protection’s (DEP)
Compliance and Enforcement Bureau and
the Division of Criminal Justice - Environmental
Crimes Bureau. The initiative is geared
to response, investigation and prosecution
of environmental crimes in urban, suburban
and rural communities and industrial areas
and targets criminal activity such as
the illegal dumping of construction debris
and other solid waste, illegal discharges
of pollutants into waterways and the air,
and other activities which negatively
impact the quality of life for residents
in urban neighborhoods and communities.
Attorney General Harvey said that in 2004,
the Division of Criminal Justice - Environmental
Crimes Bureau obtained 17 criminal indictments,
guilty pleas and/or Accusations charging
24 individuals or corporations with illegal
acts ranging from the intentional discharge
of hazardous and potentially toxic wastewater
into public waterways, to the illegal
dumping of thousands of tires in environmentally
sensitive areas, to discharging contaminated
wastes near residential communities, to
abandoning trailers full of solid waste
and construction debris in urban neighborhoods.
The Environmental Crimes Bureau has also
collected more than $600,000 in fines
and restitution.
The investigations and prosecutions were
coordinated by Supervising Deputy Attorney
General Edward Bonanno and Deputy Attorney’s
General Bruce Kmosko, Robert Donovan,
Betty Rodriquez, Phillip Leahy, and John
Higgins. Acting Supervising State Investigator
Jeffrey Gross and State Investigators,
Stephen Politowski, Dawn Ryan, Steven
Ogulin, Jeffrey Hill, and Stephen Coraggio
conducted the investigations. All are
assigned to the Division of Criminal Justice
- Environmental Crimes Bureau.
Attorney General Harvey said that the
key to a successful enforcement initiative
against illegal dumpers must include the
“eyes and ears” of neighborhood
residents and community watch groups reporting
suspicious activities. The DEP maintains
a 24-Hour Environmental Hot Line
-- 609- 292-7172 -- to
receive reports of environmental crimes.
Information regarding environmental enforcement
activities can be obtained by logging
on to the Division of Criminal Justice
web page at www.njdcj.org
or the Department of Environmental Protection
web page at www.nj.gov/dep.
# # #
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