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Bad Police Behavior: Who is looking through your garbage?

Neptune Township, NJ is a multicultural community that has a police force that uses criminal behavior to police their citizens.

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Bad Police Behavior: Who is looking through your garbage?

Neptune Township, N.J. is a multicultural community that has a police force that uses criminal behavior to police their citizens.

Unheard Voices presents this story to its readers to let all people whether you are Black, White, Spanish or Asian to become aware of what goes on in a neighborhood corrupted with bad police behavior.

Bad police behavior

Unheard Voices focuses on Neptune because it is supposed to be the melting pot for people of color.

There are many interracial couples that reside in the township as seen through the many rainbows of beautiful kids that live there. Most people probably selected Neptune because it is supposed to be a place where race is more tolerable compared to neighboring towns like Ocean, Wall, and Tinton Falls. It reminds you of the middle and upper middle class blacks of Baldwin Hills of California where doctors, lawyers, engineers, scientists and school teachers reside there.

But, should a community like Neptune be subjected to bad policing practices just because of the people that live there? Any typical person would say no! Then, the Neptune police force has a lot of explaining to do to the people of their township.

This story starts in Neptune Township in 1991. Buying a house was an American dream that came true for this couple from the neighboring town of Long Branch in March of 1991. The couple chose Neptune because of their rainbow of people and reasonable house prices. It was their second best choice compared to Long Branch. The couple moved in and started their life in Neptune.

Neptune was considered or thought to be Monmouth County’s best kept secret as far as affordability of living. To Black and interracial couples, it was a beautiful safe haven for their kids to grow up. And the school system had and still has diversified faculty members which also made Neptune Township appealing. It was thought to be a safe place for this (wife) Accountant and (husband) Computer Scientist. But this couple never thought the police force was racist until they showed their racist faces.

The first week that the couple moved to Neptune, a white police officer staked out in an unoccupied house across the street, on the corner from the couple on (Sunnyfield Terrace and White).

The couple’s husband tells Unheard Voices how he could feel someone looking at him while he was in the garage. The husband slowly turned around and spotted the police looking at him.

He said that it was very strange. Why were they looking at him? The white officer looked very comfortable in doing what he was doing.

Was this a typical procedure on how the police greeted their new neighbors of color? The husband immediately told his wife. They were both shocked. The husband decided to paint the garage windows green to match the door and to keep the police from looking inside of their place of residence. But that wasn’t end of their interaction with the officer.

The couple was slowly learning that some of the Neptune police officers were very racist. Should Unheard Voices name a few of them? The police quickly reacted to the couple painting their garage’s windows. What did the police have in store for the new Black professional family next?

The racist police decided that it was necessary to look through the couple’s garbage. What were they looking for?

The couple’s privacy was definitely being invaded. Neptune Township police had no right to do what they had done. The husband realized that the garbage was being picked through and you can actually see how the officer left items out of the garbage.

The police laid the garbage out very nicely and meticulous as if he wanted us to recognize what he had done. The husband thought to himself that the police had a lot of nerve.

The couple knew then that Neptune wasn’t a nice place for Black people and the police was going to be trouble for their family in the future.

After the husband’s wife passed away in 2000, the mayor of Neptune proclaimed that day to belong to his wife in the township. The police went out on a complete attack against the husband.

By the year 2003,  the police had harassed and made life totally miserable for the husband and his family. The husband wound up retiring from his scientist job and teaching position to take care of his two kids who were also harassed and followed by the police throughout the township.

By the end of 2003, the husband actually watched a white police officer pick through the garbage of another Black family that had just moved to the neighborhood as he was coming home from food shopping.

The husband could not believe his eyes. He slowly took his time so that he could watch the police officer’s every move. The officer had a long pointed stick to use to move the garbage around. It was incredible.

It is very imperative that the people watch their officers at all times in their community, especially in Neptune. The racist police officers need to stop this bad behavior. It is unconstitutional and an infringement of one’s civil rights. This family definitely needed a voice and thank God for Unheard Voices for being there.

By 2004, Unheard Voices went into publication in the Neptune and Asbury Park area because of the injustices that existed there. This story of the police going through the garbage was one of the first stories that were voiced by Unheard Voices. Neptune and Asbury police department did not feel well about the stories that were written about their communities and continued to harass the husband. This story was a good indicator that Black people needed a voice in their community.

The husband was a good friend of the Mayor of Neptune and had a great relationship with a detective and the Captain of the police force. The husband was able to express his concerns with them. They were totally shocked that the couple was being harassed by racist cops in their unit.

They were able to put a stop to some of the madness that the couple was going through. The husband truly thanks these instrumental people in his life that helped to put an end of the police harassment towards him.

We at Unheard Voices try to relay stories like this to put communities and their bad police officers on blast. You have a voice here at Unheard Voices. Don’t be scared to tell your story.

Speak Up and Be Heard!

Follow Unheard Voices on its new Facebook fan page, http://www.facebook.com/unheardvoicesmag


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Unheard Voices is an award-winning news magazine that started in 2004 as a local Black newsletter in the Asbury Park, Neptune, and Long Branch, NJ areas to now broaden into a recognized Black online media outlet. They are the recipient of the NAACP Unsung Hero Award and CV Magazine's Innovator Award for Best Social Justice Communications Company.

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New Jersey

New Jersey man filmed shouting racial slurs at Black neighbors in viral video sentenced to 8 years in prison

In October, Mathews, 47, pled guilty to four counts of bias intimidation and possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute.

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Edwards C Mathews sentenced to eight years in prison

Edward C Mathews, the New Jersey man who was captured in a viral video in 2021 harassing his Black neighbors and hurling racial epithets, has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

Sentenced

In October, Mathews, 47, pled guilty to four counts of bias intimidation and possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute.

The charges stem from a July 2021 incident in which viral video showed him repeatedly calling his Black neighbors the N-word and another offensive slur outside a home in Mount Laurel, N.J.

“Our office is committed to combatting bias crimes and sending a clear message that such actions will not be tolerated in our community,” Burlington County Prosecutor LaChia L. Bradshaw said in a statement. “Nobody should have to endure what these victims experienced.”

Mathews had been terrorizing his Black neighbors

Before the viral incident, a neighbor filed a harassment complaint against Mathews with the Mount Laurel Police Department. That same day, police received a report about a man who needed to be removed from the area.

When officers arrived to the scene, they found Mathews “using racial slurs while engaged in a verbal altercation with four residents,” prosecutors said. During a search of Mathews’ home, police found numerous psilocin mushrooms, which are known for their hallucinogenic effect, according to prosecutors.

Bradshaw said Mathews had been terrorizing his Black neighbors long before the viral moment, including a time when he allegedly left a threatening note on one of their vehicles. He was also accused of stalking, smearing feces on his neighbors’ windows and damaging their cars, NBC Philadelphia reported.

According to a report by The Philadelphia Inquirer, Mathews apologized before his sentencing.

“Every saint has a past and every sinner has a future,” he told the judge, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. “I want to commit to rebuild the community.”

Mathews must serve at least four years before he is eligible for parole, NBC reported.


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Education

Meet 6-year-old genius Declan Lopez

Meet 6-year-old Declan Lopez who is now a member of Mensa, which includes the smartest of the smartest with an IQ of 138.

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Declan Lopez 6-year-old genius
Declan Lopez (Photo Credit: Glenn Maida Photography)

Meet 6-year-old Declan Lopez, who is now a member of Mensa, which includes the smartest of the smartest with an IQ of 138, that’s Einstein level.

Declan Lopez is a genius

To put this in perspective, the highest average score for people under 64 years of age is 109.

The gifted kindergartener reads on a third or fourth grade level.

She is interested in physics particularly “the force in motion”, Lopez told ABC7.

Lopez goes to school in Dover, New Jersey where she is a shining star.

Her parents started noticing Lopez’s intelligence when she was 18 months old.

“We were on a trip in the airport, and she just started to count in Mandarin,” Declan’s mom Meachel Lopez told ABC7.

Declan’s parents make sure she’s involved in social activities like karate, soccer and music theory. The family is also exploring coding classes.

All in the family

On top of raising an exceptional daughter, there is strong evidence showing Lopez’s little brother Maddox is following in her footsteps.

The Lopez family said they might get a DNA test to see if this level of genius runs in their family.


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Crime & Justice

New Jersey High School Basketball Standout Fatally Shot

Latrell Duncan, a high school basketball standout in New Jersey, was fatally shot shortly after leaving school.

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Latrell Duncan, N.J. Basketball Standout, Shot And Killed
Latrell Duncan

Latrell Duncan, a high school basketball standout in New Jersey, was fatally shot shortly after leaving school.

Basketball Standout Latrell Duncan killed

According to reports, Latrell – a sophomore at East Orange Campus High School – was shot four times at around 3:15 PM near his H.S. He was rushed to University Hospital in Newark where died just before 4 p.m.

No arrests have been made in connection to the fatal shooting. Investigators, however, are looking for “a group of people and a vehicle seen in the area at the time of the shooting.”

“Targeted”

In an interview with the New York Times, Latrell’s aunt Marsha Douglas, told the outlet her nephew and his friends were approached by a group of men after leaving school. The group exchanged words and then eventually dispersed.

Latrell Duncan

Latrell Duncan/Twitter

But minutes later, two people wearing ski masks and carrying a gun confronted the teenagers on a sidewalk, said Douglas, who heard the account from her nephew’s friends.

Latrell Duncan was well on his way

Duncan, a 6’1 point guard, was one of the top 10 basketball players in New Jersey. He scored 180 points last season as a freshman at East Orange Campus, helping the team to a 15-9 record in one of the most competitive conferences in the state.

His AAU team, Garden State Bounce, had described him as a “floor general, team captain, and the best point guard our program has seen.”

“He was an excellent teammate,” the team added in a social media post mourning his loss, “a great friend, and a coach’s ideal player.”

Loved ones and the community are reeling after Latrell’s murder

On Tuesday, grief counselors were sent to the 1,660-student high school campus, said Khalifah Shabazz, the district’s lawyer.

“He was a loved student,” Douglas, Latrell’s aunt said. “We’re just really saddened….He didn’t deserve this”

GoFundMe for Duncan’s family has been set up.

Anyone with information is asked to call detectives at 877-TIPS-4EC or 1-877-847-7432.


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