Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 19

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASBURY PARK PRESS I A A 2 0 2 0 0 6 TTTiN rV XT II i i I r4 PLUS Police Report LACEY DAY Celebration gives back to the community, for free. 8 IS1AGE OF THE WEEK Robert O. Marshall is resentenced to life in prison with no parole for 30 years for his role in the murder of his wife, Maria. 4 Joe on the Go Questions or comments about Local Front may be directed to Sanne Young, section editor, at the Asbury Park Press, 3601 Highway 66, Box 1550, Neptune, N.J. 01154, by e-mail at syoungapp.com, or by calling (132) 643-4035.

Regional Week in Review 4 Obituaries 5 Food Outlet Inspections 8 Prosecutor: if-, Pom suspect hid cameras Clients, their families were taped, Valentin says From left: The auditorium at Jackson Liberty High School. Daniel McDevitt (left), assistant principal of Jackson Liberty High School, and Linda Lackay, Jackson Board of Education president, check the light coming through the many windows of the building. The gymnasium at the high school. lm Mm school to open Clement Bilski Jr. seeing information Anyone with information about the case or possible victims is asked to contact Detective Jeffrey Wilbert of the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office at (732) 577-8768 or Detective Cy Bleistineofthe State Police at (609) 584-5051, ext.

5624. By KAREN SUDOL FREEHOLD BUREAU Clement Bilski depravity had no boundaries, according to Monmouth County Prosecutor Luis A. Valentin. In addition to sexually assaulting 11 children of clients whose homes he repaired and videotaping those attacks, he also hid video cameras in nine homes to record clients and their children while they undressed, Valentin said. Bilski, 43, of Ocean Township, invaded the privacy of 31 people 12 girls, seven boys, eight women and four men by secretly videotaping the victims' actions, Valentin said.

The 19 children on those videos are not the same children he is accused of sexually assaulting and videotaping. The Prosecutor's Office on Friday announced Bilski's 429-count indictment on charges of sexually assaulting 11 children from Monmouth and Ocean counties, ranging in age from 23 months to 8 years. From 1998 to 2005, Bilski amassed a voluminous library of homemade child pornography, which was recovered during an April raid of Bilski's Maple Avenue residence by the Prosecutor's Office and New Jersey State Police, authorities said. He was arrested then on child pornography charges. He also had been charged with driving while intoxicated in Long Branch on Feb.

Court records i 1 r-jw 1 1 1 iiBfr 1 1' ''-I: Vfsft ew Web site md cficfc on this story fartjnktoBw indictment of CJenwit Bilski Jr. and look under Today's Spotlight (or i video of the prosocutot's mwi The exterior at the front of Jackson Liberty High School, which will open to ninth- and lOth-graders in September, (staff photos: mary frank) Liberty High School gets ready for the coming academic year DV TUC By JOE ZEDALIS i -v" t. I Dl Ink TOMS RIVER BUREAU NUMBERS JACKSON It rises from the floor of fS Jtt what used to be a gravel pit, a show Bilski previously had been charged with passing bad checks in 1995 but the case was remanded to municipal court. Valentin said the victims' families need to focus on seeking professional medical and psychological help necessary for their children. He encouraged anyone who might have hired Bilski to contact authorities.

He also said Bilski's case emphasizes the need for a child advocacy center in the county. I li l.lr I 1 -z I 1 Li H5 JACKSON LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL OPENS IN SEPTEMBER. COST: $70 million. BUILDING SIZE: 288,500 square feet. CAMPUS: 154 acres.

GYMNASIUM BLEACHER SEATS: 2,308. FINE ARTS CENTER SEATS: 799. FIRST-FLOOR CLASSROOMS: 50. SECOND-FLOOR CLASSROOMS: 35. megastructure of sand-colored brick, white-painted block, walls and ceilings of glass.

Stained oak doors, terrazzo floors, recessed lighting, a patio and corridors as wide as 40 feet await the 800 students who will attend the $70 million Jackson Liberty High School starting next month. The school, located on Hope-Chapel Road near the Lakewood boundary, will welcome ninth- and lOth-graders in its first year. The school is expected to enroll about 1,700 students two years from now, when grades nine through 12 attend. "It is something the entire community should be proud of," Jackson Superintendent Thomas Gialanella said. The school will have a ribbon-cutting ceremony and reception Thursday and will welcome its students for the first time for orientation on Friday.

UJ i r. TT i "It is something the entire community should be proud of." Thomas Gialanella, Jackson schools superintendent ON THE WEB; Visit our Web "It's an adventure," said Maureen Butler, the school principal, who has been in the building since January. "The kids have watched this building go up for the last 2 years. I'm sure they are excited." Jackson Liberty was built with money approved by taxpayers as part of a $103 million referendum in January 2002. The school is located on 154 acres with 17 athletic fields, a field house and enough room for either an See School, Page AA2 stte, www.app.

com, and click on Photo Gallery Spotlight for more photographs of Jacksorf Liberty High School. The media center at Jackson Liberty High School resembles one found at a university. The Smithereens, with guest guitarist Carlos Vazquez, perform Saturday at the 31st annual Clearwater Festival at Sunset Park in Asbury Park. (STAFF PHOTO: JEANNIE CLAUDIO) Environment on display at Clearwater Festival Hot dog vendor issue still simmering in Brick ft I 4Vi I By NICHOLAS CLUNN STAFF WRITER ASBURY PARK Exhibits on endangered butterflies, wind power and other environmental topics were really the main attractions at Saturday's Clearwater Festival musical acts were recruited simply to lure people past activists' tables. That's how Ed Dlugosz explained the focus behind this annual event, now in its 31st year.

He's president of the Monmouth County Friends of Clearwater, the group throwing the weekend-long festival in Sunset Park. "We use the music to draw the people, to deliver them a message," he said. If the music was meant to attract visitors, then Clearwater used high-quality bait The Smithereens, which had several FM rock radio hits in the 1980s and early '90s, most famously "Blood and Roses," headlined Saturday's line up. More music and activism is scheduled for today with folk duo Magpie and the rock band, Days Awake, which has strong ties to Monmouth County. Like Saturday, performers will supply 15 hours of music on three See Festival, Page AA2 mobile food vendors, township attorney Scott Kenneally said, hot dog carts are not mobile vendors because they return to the same site every day.

Vendors who want to remain in one place must receive a variance from the township Planning Board; The uncertainty has left several of the hot dog vendors on edge. Both Paul Russo, who owns Jo-Jo's Italian Style Hot Dogs and Sausage, and Sean Halligan, owner of Hooley's Hot Dogs, said they recently purchased See Hot dog, Page AA2 By NAOMI MUELLER TOMS RIVER BUREAU BRICK All Township Clerk Virginia Lampman had to do to get the members of the Township Council to groan was mention two words: hot dog. The collective sigh was not a sign that the council members don't like hot dogs. In fact, several members have said a hot dog from one of Brick's vendors is one of their favorite choices for a quick lunch. Instead, the sigh was the result of nearly three years of discussion on how this council could le Left: Sean Halligan of Brick, owner of Hooley's Hot Dogs, prepares an order Friday inside his trailer.

Right: Frank Cicero of Brick stops for a hot dog at the stand on Cedar Bridge Avenue in Brick, (staff photos: jeannie claudio) selling hot dogs in Brick, and that he now wants to buy a new license. The problem is that while the township has an ordinance regulating six vendors with a legal license. Lampman said that vendor told her that he had sold his business, along with his license, to. someone interested inJ galize the sale of hot dogs from trucks. This time, Lampman led the discussion, saying she had received a telephone call from one of the.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Asbury Park Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Asbury Park Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,394,454
Years Available:
1887-2024