The criminal coercion case between Hoboken411 and local Hoboken businessman Rory Chadwick is scheduled for March 6th, 1:00 pm in Jersey City.
It’s unclear if Perry Klaussen has a defense lawyer and if he will also find himself represented by the Office of Elise DiNardo. That law office is believed to provide representation for Mason political operatives past and present. One currently involves a paid political operative for harassment against an elected BoE official with a young daughter.
People seem downright ornery after last night’s special City Council meeting. Da Horsey wonders if some of it rubbed off on us here at the stable. After watching almost an hour of Councilman Michael Russo question every comma on dozens of legal cases, a carrot with hemlock washed down with a vodka chaser looked like a better option.
It was that bad.
So in honor of another useless obstructionist MORTe performance, an ingenious idea has been hatched by MSV reader Furey with a suggestion everyone change their WIFI name to this:
City of Hoboken announces:
=&0=&Mayor Dawn Zimmer has designated Health and Human Services Director Leo Pellegrini as Acting Mayor through Sunday, February 26, 2012 while Mayor Zimmer is away visiting family out of town. Mayor Zimmer thanks Director Pellegrini for his first time serving as Acting Mayor, for recently taking on management of the City’s parks, and for taking on additional grant coordinating responsibilities for the Police Athletic League in addition to his role as director, which he is being compensated for through a grant stipend at no cost to the City.
City of Hoboken announces:
UPDATE ON 300 WASHINGTON STREET FIRE SITE
The Hoboken Construction Code office issued a limited demolition permit today. The scope of work to be performed involves the manual removal of severely fire damaged portions of the building.
The areas of the building to be removed are the roof and chimney, the entire fifth floor, and a section of the fourth floor at the rear of the building.
It is difficult to estimate the timeline for completion of this work since it is dependent on weather conditions and the uncertainty of conditions as the manual removal of debris proceeds. At a minimum, this work will take at least two weeks and could be considerably longer. The City is exploring options for opening Washington Street to limited traffic in a way that does not impact public safety.
From the desk of the nutty fruit, bludiamonds:
Did my ears deceive me, or did one Councilman Timothy “Fredo (I’m not like they say, not like DUMB, I’m SMART)” Okyoopeentay suggest last night that the city hire lawyers but not pay them? Thereby creating plausible deniability that MORTe is aligned with developers against the public interest, arguing instead that they’re for the public, they just want to hobble the city from actually doing anything about it?
This sent my depraved old mind down memory lane, and reminded me of an ill-advised scheme a friend of mine once came up with to put one over on an impressionable young lady who was goodly enough to go out on a date with him.

RPW announces:
We are happy to announce that last night in a vote of 6-2 the Hudson County Planning Board denied Shipyard Associates’ application for Monarch at the Shipyard. This is a great step forward in our fight to keep the Hoboken waterfront open and free for all residents to enjoy. We will provide more details as they become available.
From
the desk of Councilman David Mello:
Dear
Friends and Neighbors, Tomorrow
evening, February 23rd, is the second Planning Board hearing on the Southwest
Redevelopment Study. Please attend this vital meeting about
the Southwest’s future. The hearing will be held at the Multi-Service Center, on the
corner of Grand St. and 2nd St. at 7:00 PM,
Thursday evening, Feb. 23rd.
This
is a very important meeting
In the special meeting of the City Council, MORTe was given not one but two opportunities to provide adequate funding for more than two dozen legal matters. As in last week’s City Council meeting MORTe (minus an absent Councilwoman Beth Mason who was out of town on family business) voted down the emergency appropriation for the second and third time.
The Council was presented with a legal shortfall through march of approximately $136,000 and voted twice short a necessary sixth vote for an emergency appropriation with only five votes in favor.