Connect with us

Breaking News

🚨 BREAKING NEWS: MAYOR BRIAN STACK CAUGHT INTIMIDATING SCHOOL EMPLOYEES IN SHOCKING POWER GRAB — WHISTLEBLOWERS EXPOSE CORRUPTION AT UNION CITY BOE! 🚨

Published

on

Union City, NJ — June 7, 2025

A huge scandal has erupted in Union City, NJ after a letter signed by Mayor and State Senator Brian Stack was leaked by whistleblowers to Independent Investigative Journalist Leroy Truth of the Facebook and YouTube Channels Leroy Truth Investigations — and it’s sparking extreme outrage.

We just learned that dozens of Union City, New Jersey teachers and staff have been reaching out to Leroy Truth nonstop over the past several hours enraged as they are demanding the immediate resignations and an immediate criminal investigation into:

Mayor and New Jersey State Senator and Head of the New Jersey State Judiciary Committee Brian Stack, the entire Union City Board of Education including President of the Board of Education Ydalia Genao, and Union City, New Jersey School Superintendent Sylvia Abbato among others.

They are also demanding an immediate investigation over Stack’s years-long allegations of extreme corruption as well additional scrutiny on Mayor and Senator Brian Stacks’ concrete grip and control on Hudson County politics.

The letter, printed on official City of Union City letterhead, paid for by “Union City First”, was mailed to the private home addresses of Union City Board of Education employees. It wasn’t about city policy. It wasn’t even from their employer, the BOE. Instead, it was a blatant political pressure campaign:

“Please speak to your family and friends about the importance of voting for the candidates who will help us continue to succeed,” Stack wrote.

These Board of Education employees don’t even report to Stack. So why is he sending political letters to their homes?

That’s the question at the heart of this controversy — and it’s exposing serious cracks in the firewall that should exist between municipal government and public education.

🔥 “Why is the Mayor Sticking His Nose Where It Doesn’t Belong?”

Stack’s letter raises eyebrows by making direct appeals on school-related issues — including Board of Education funding — despite the fact that the Board of Education is an autonomous entity, with its own trustees, its own superintendent, and its own officials.

Yet Stack wrote:

“As the election approaches, I ask for your help in protecting what we have worked so hard to achieve.”

That’s not his job. Mayors in New Jersey have no authority over BOE funding, and Stack knows this. The trustees of the Board — the very people he helped install — are supposed to represent the district and advocate for the resources they need.

So why is the Mayor acting like a middleman for the school board? The answer is clear: control. Stack has turned the Union City BOE into a political extension of his machine. Instead of an independent board working for students and parents, it has become a tool of his political empire.

🧨 Whistleblowers Step Forward: “We’ve Had Enough”

This letter didn’t stay quiet. Multiple employees at the Union City Board of Education — risking retaliation — leaked it to investigative journalist Leroy Truth, who confirmed its authenticity. Sources say this letter is just one of many examples of Stack using his position to manipulate public employees into supporting his preferred candidates.

One whistleblower told Leroy:

“This isn’t support — it’s coercion. We’re being told who to vote for, and it’s not okay.”

The use of public resources — including potentially misusing public employee contact information — is now under scrutiny. The letter did not include any campaign disclaimer or come from a political campaign other than paid for by Union City First. Instead, it carried the official letter head of “from the desk of Brian P. Stack, Mayor of Union City”, and was signed by the Mayor in his public capacity, not as a private citizen.

📬 Misuse of Employee Information?

Sources close to the Union City BOE confirmed that thousands of public school employees — including non-political staff — received the letter, despite never having shared their home addresses with Stack’s political operation.

One whistleblower told Leroy Truth, the independent journalist who broke the story:

“We’ve never given our addresses to Stack or his campaign. We don’t even work for the city. How did he get this information? Why is the mayor writing to us like we’re his employees?”

According to the Union City Board of Education’s Collective Bargaining Agreement, employee information — including home addresses — is not public record and cannot be shared outside specific legal exceptions. The relevant section (Article 6, P.2.E.) clearly states:

“The home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, date of birth… are not government records and are exempt from any disclosure requirements…”

If Stack obtained this data through the BOE or any government resource, it could constitute a violation of state privacy and election laws.

📢 Hypocrisy and Fear: The Stack Playbook

In his letter, Stack tries to play the victim, writing:

“The election cycle for the June Primary has been contentious and often hostile. My political opponents continue to spread lies and launch personal attacks that are aimed at hurting my family and me.”

“These same attacks are indicative of the true intentions of the political party bosses who continue to try to hurt our community for their own political gain.”

Let’s be clear: the only “political machine and party boss” here is the one run by Brian Stack himself.

He’s the one holding two powerful offices — mayor and senator — and still not content to let candidates speak for themselves. Now he’s crying foul over criticism, even as he inserts himself into races where he’s not on the ballot, all while targeting school employees who don’t answer to him.

But that’s the cost of politics — especially when you make yourself the face of someone else’s campaign and bring your own family into the political spotlight. Stack can’t have it both ways. If he wanted to stay above the fray, he should have stayed out of it. Instead, he’s weaponizing public institutions for his own gain, then crying when called out.

🏛️ The Bigger Problem: A Compromised School Board

The silence from the current Union City Board of Education trustees is deafening. These individuals are supposed to protect the integrity and independence of the school system, not serve as foot soldiers in Stack’s political machine. By allowing this level of interference and intimidation to occur, they have shown themselves to be political lackeys — not public servants.

Adding to the growing outrage, Marco Navarro — a current Board of Education trustee, city employee, and Republican candidate for the New Jersey State Assembly in District 37 — confirmed that he personally received one of the political letters at his home. “This is beyond unethical,” Navarro said. “As both an employee and an elected trustee, I find it deeply troubling that our personal information is being used to send political propaganda from our employer. This crosses the line between governance and coercion. I don’t even live in the district currently to be receiving this letter!” Navarro, who has been outspoken about the need for term limits and greater separation between local government and school boards, called the move “an outrageous abuse of power and a perfect example of why the political machine of Brian Stack in Hudson County must be dismantled.”

🚨 What Happens Now?

This explosive situation is now too big to ignore. The following questions demand answers:

Who provided the private home addresses of school employees to a political actor? Why is the Mayor acting on behalf of the Board of Education without authority? What legal boundaries have been crossed by using city resources for political campaigning?

📞 If You Have Information

If you received this letter or have evidence of political coercion at the Union City Board of Education, contact:

The New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, The FBI Public Corruption Division, and Investigative journalist Leroy Truth

Whistleblowers are stepping up — and this is only the beginning. The wall of silence is crumbling. The people of Union City and New Jersey deserve better than a political system built on fear, manipulation, and unchecked power.

The truth is coming out. And Brian Stack can’t run from it anymore.


Discover more from HUDTRUTH

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Breaking News

Wayne Mello Sworn In as Hudson County Prosecutor as Esther Suarez Retires

Published

on

August 1, 2025 – Hudson County, NJ – After nearly a decade as Hudson County Prosecutor, Esther Suarez officially retired today, and Wayne L. Mello, her former First Assistant Prosecutor, was sworn in as her successor.

A Bitter Farewell to Esther Suarez

Esther Suarez leaves office amid mixed evaluations. During her ten years (starting in September 2015), she oversaw the creation of regional units—including collision investigation, arson task force, and a SWAT team—and presided over a homicide division that reportedly achieved a 100% clear rate, far exceeding the national average of ~58%  .

She also spearheaded major modernization: an in‑house DNA lab to eliminate backlogs, a cybersecurity lab, and a child advocacy center. Suarez promoted mental health courts, criminal justice reform, and participated in federal crime‑reduction initiatives, drawing praise from law enforcement unions and local chiefs  .

But the praise comes with caveats. Critics argue that her tenure masked persistent problems of token diversity and favoritism. According to investigative commentary from Real Garden State, while Suarez touted minority hiring, the leadership largely stayed dominated by white men. The first assistant and deputy roles held by Wayne Mello and Peter Stoma—key decision‑makers—remain white males, fueling accusations of an “optical illusion of diversity”  .

Sources also criticized her for effectively defending Gene Rubino, a politically connected white detective who lacked formal certification for his position—exposing a disconnect between rhetoric on equity and actual internal promotions  . Additionally, a lawsuit from a former female detective accused the office of penalizing motherhood in promotions—a lampoon of Suarez’s professed support for women in law enforcement  .

Perhaps most controversially, Suarez’s decision not to charge Al Alvarez in connection with a rape allegation during Governor Murphy’s 2017 campaign drew heavy scrutiny. Then‑AG Gurbir Grewal publicly ruled Suarez acted “appropriately,” but critics remain unconvinced. Or perhaps her rejection by the Biden White House in attempts to become the NJ District Attorney.

Wayne L. Mello: The New Prosecutor

At age 79 (born July 27, 1946), Wayne L. Mello steps into the top role. A Bayonne native with a J.D. from Rutgers in 1976, Mello worked in private practice focusing on civil litigation, criminal defense, and white‑collar cases before becoming First Assistant under Suarez in approximately 2017. His government payroll records list his 2023 salary at about $194,000—over double what many colleagues earned  .

Mello has long stood at the core of Suarez’s leadership team, including involvement in public events and policy efforts under her watch  . With Suarez’s departure, Mello inherits an office built around her vision—though not without inheriting her shortcomings.

While specific details about Mello’s own priorities or reforms remain scarce, his tenure as First Assistant suggests continuity rather than change. Critics may find little hope that diversity and accountability issues will be addressed unless fresh leadership emerges.

A Transition Fraught with Continuity

Today’s change feels more like a reshuffle than a reset. As Mello steps into the top role, if Suarez’s departure is praised as good riddance, it’s because many felt her leadership was more style than systemic substance.

● Accomplishments: built labs, task forces, crime‑solving infrastructure; a perfect homicide clearance rate; federal resources for crime reduction.

â—Ź Criticisms: superficial diversity; questionable promotions; allegations of inaction on sexual assault; failure to elevate genuine leadership diversity.

● Succession outlook: Mello’s rise signals more of the same rather than an overhaul.

Attorney General Matt Platkin may hold the interim until Governor Murphy—or his successor—nominates someone new for confirmation by Hudson County’s state senators  . Whether that nominee will break from the entrenched culture Suarez helped build remains to be seen.

Bottom line: Suarez may have left the office today, but her legacy—and controversies—remain in place. Wayne Mello takes the reins without promising reform, raising questions whether Hudson County truly wants change or just a familiar face at the top.


Discover more from HUDTRUTH

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Breaking News

Six More Arrested in Expansive Hudson County Narcotics and Corruption Investigation

Published

on

HUDSON COUNTY, NJ — July 30, 2025

The Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office has announced the arrest of six additional individuals in connection with a sweeping, six-month narcotics investigation that has rocked multiple municipalities in North Jersey. These new arrests bring the total number of individuals charged in the case to thirteen, including multiple public employees and law enforcement officers.

According to Prosecutor Esther Suarez, the investigation, led by the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office Narcotics Task Force and Internal Affairs Unit, has resulted in the seizure of more than four kilograms of suspected cocaine, two handguns, seven vehicles, and over $70,000 in cash. The total street value of the narcotics recovered exceeds $150,000.

Latest Arrests Include Municipal Employees

Between July 28 and July 29, six additional suspects were arrested and charged with third-degree conspiracy to possess cocaine. Several of the arrestees are employees of the Town of West New York, further deepening concerns about public corruption within the municipality.

Jorge Delgado, 44, a security guard with the Town of West New York Johann Messina, 57, a laborer with the Town of West New York Carlos Begueria, 49, an employee of the West New York Parking Authority Dean Mannion, 61, of North Bergen Steven Betancourt, 43, of West New York Priscilla Acevedo, 44, of North Bergen

All are charged with conspiracy to possess cocaine, a third-degree crime.

Initial Raids Revealed Drug Lab, Firearms, and Official Misconduct

On July 17, law enforcement conducted coordinated search warrant raids across West New York, North Bergen, and Union City. These operations uncovered a fully operational narcotics production facility and led to the arrest of seven individuals, including former and current law enforcement and municipal personnel.

Among the most serious charges:

Alfredo Diaz, 50, of Union City, is accused of leading the narcotics operation. He faces over two dozen charges, including first-degree leadership of a narcotics trafficking network, maintaining a CDS production facility, multiple counts of conspiracy, distribution within school zones and public property, weapons offenses, child endangerment, and money laundering. Ileana Hernandez, 56, a dispatcher with the West New York Police Department, is charged with official misconduct, conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and participating in a pattern of misconduct—a serious blow to the public trust in local law enforcement. Edwin Martinez, 39, of North Bergen, faces numerous charges including first-degree possession with intent to distribute cocaine, multiple firearms violations, receiving stolen property, and distribution near public spaces and schools. Daniel Diaz, 28, of West New York, faces second- and third-degree drug distribution charges, including offenses near school zones and public property. Thomas Mannion, 60, a retired West New York Police Detective, has been charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Marquis Santiago, 33, a Hudson County Correctional Police Officer, is charged with conspiracy to possess cocaine. Cristian Cortez, 55, of Englewood, is also charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine.

Public Sector Ties Raise Alarms

The arrests of municipal workers, a police dispatcher, a retired detective, and a correctional officer highlight a disturbing pattern of official misconduct tied to the drug trade in Hudson County. Officials involved in the investigation describe the network as sophisticated and deeply embedded in public agencies.

Prosecutor Suarez emphasized that the investigation remains active and ongoing. “The extent to which public servants were allegedly involved in this narcotics operation is deeply troubling,” she said. “We will continue to follow the evidence wherever it leads.”

All individuals charged are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

This story will be updated as new details emerge from the ongoing investigation.


Discover more from HUDTRUTH

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Breaking News

Republican Leadership Set to Flip Hudson Sheriff’s Office

Published

on

Hudson County, NJ — A political transformation is underway at the top of Hudson County’s law enforcement leadership, and it’s brimming with promise. Republican candidate Elvis Alvarez, a decorated Hispanic law-enforcement veteran, is poised to bring change to the Sheriff’s Office—will he be backed by none other than outgoing five-term Sheriff Frank Schillari, who recently crossed party lines?

Frank Schillari: A Proven Public Servant Embraces Republican Values

After 15 years serving as Hudson County Sheriff—first elected in 2010—Frank Schillari has announced his switch from the Democratic to the Republican Party in July 2025, following a narrow loss in the June 10 Democratic primary to Bayonne Mayor Jimmy Davis. At age 78, Schillari emphasized that his decision was rooted in principle, not politics:

“Leadership isn’t about party lines … my oath never mentioned a party, it mentioned the people. That’s who I serve.” 

Republican county leaders quickly embraced Schillari’s move. Hudson County GOP Chair Jose Arango praised his switch as evidence of the GOP’s inclusive values, calling it “proof that the Democrats are a shrinking party” and affirming that the Republican Party is “here for all New Jerseyans who want commonsense, lower taxes, lower crime”—a message echoing concerns many residents hold. 

Elvis Alvarez: A Strong Republican Candidate with Local Roots

Running in the November 4, 2025 general election, Elvis Alvarez is the Republican nominee for Sheriff. A veteran West New York police officer with over two decades of service, Alvarez steadily rose through the ranks—eventually earning respect as a juvenile detective and community youth coach. He won his primary with over 95% of the vote. 

Sheriff Frank Schillari’s recent party switch and the GOP wave building across Hudson County, Alvarez brings the law enforcement experience, community dedication, and common-sense approach voters are seeking.

The Road to November: A Shift in Hudson County Politics

Schillari’s loss in the June 10 Democratic primary was close: he received about 46% of the vote versus Jimmy Davis’s 53%—roughly 31,200 votes to 32,600.  His campaign had highlighted past sexual harassment allegations and an overturned jury verdict involving Davis. Schillari’s team ran mailers calling Davis a “creep” and referencing lawsuits; although Davis was cleared and the $500,000 verdict vacated, the messaging resonated with many voters concerned about accountability. 

Why Republicans Are in a Strong Position

Bipartisan credibility: With Schillari’s switch, Republicans now carry the voice of an experienced, long-tenured sheriff who understands both sides of Hudson County politics. Law-and-order focus: Alvarez’s roots in policing and Schillari’s emphasis on public safety and fiscal discipline align with growing community concerns over crime and cost of living. Fresh alternative: Jimmy Davis, while Democratic nominee, remains shadowed by allegations of inappropriate text messaging and workplace conduct. Those controversies—though legally resolved—continue to be raised by opponents.  Changing political currents: The GOP’s inclusive message, spearheaded by local leaders like Chair Arango and the switch by Schillari, signals new momentum across Hudson County. 

What’s at Stake in November

On November 4, 2025, Hudson County voters will decide whether to embrace a new chapter of law enforcement leadership. With Elvis Alvarez representing a fresh law-and-order vision and Frank Schillari lending decades‑long credibility to the cause, the Republican ticket offers a compelling alternative to continued Democratic control. Hudson County hasn’t had a Republican Sheriff since 1904, can history be made this November? The only other question remains, will Sheriff Frank X. Schillari publicly endorse Elvis Alvarez for Sheriff along with other Republican candidates for the November election?


Discover more from HUDTRUTH

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025 Leroy Truth Investigations