Breaking News
Hudson County Jail Under Fire: Paramedics Tell of Fatalities, Delayed Pronouncements, and Legal Chaos
KEARNY, N.J. — Hudson County Correctional Facility is facing mounting scrutiny as a former paramedic — who worked for Jersey City Medical Center EMS, and provide emergency medical services to the county jail — has come forward with alarming concerns about inmate deaths, delayed pronouncements, and a troubling lack of transparency in how fatalities are handled.
According to public reporting and court filings, the Hudson County jail has a long and deeply troubling history of in-custody deaths. Over the last decade, at least 17 deaths have been documented in internal investigations, though officials have struggled or allegedly declined to locate detailed incident reports.
A Paramedic’s Perspective: A Death Delay, Legal Fear, and Broken Process
The paramedic — who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation — describes a harrowing incident couple years ago, during a shift at the jail: “We responded to a cardiac arrest. When efforts failed, we prepared to pronounce the inmate deceased on-site, but correctional officers immediately intervened. They told us we were not allowed to pronounce anyone there — that it had to happen at a hospital.”
The officers’ reasoning, as conveyed by the paramedic, was bureaucratic and legalistic. They claimed that in-custody pronouncements would “trigger paperwork,” involve the county attorney’s office, and possibly draw in the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office. According to the paramedic, some officers expressed concern that such a pronouncement inside the jail could later expose the county to negligence claims — that it would look bad in the eyes of prosecutors and civil litigants.
“At the end of the incident at the jail, we basically transported a dead body to the hospital for the doctors to also complain why the patient not pronounced on scene.”
According to NJ Department of Health regulations, pronouncements are to be done on scene.
“I didn’t care about the officers inconvenience, I care about doing the right thing. We have laws we have to follow on the medical side, and we didn’t see the patient as an inmate or paperwork, we saw him as a person. Where’s the human dignity and for the family?”
Documented Fatalities Raise Alarming Questions
Here is a sampling of confirmed or alleged in-custody deaths, lawsuits, and investigations tied to the Hudson County jail:
Carlos Bonilla (2017): Bonilla, detained by ICE and held in Hudson County, died from internal bleeding. His family sued, alleging medical neglect by correctional staff and medical providers.
Medical Review Panel (2017): After two separate deaths — including Bonilla — Hudson County convened a review panel to examine the facility’s internal procedures.
Mary L. Williams: Legal documents show contested details about her death at the jail, including conditions inside the cell and alleged failures by the correctional system.
Wrongful-Death Settlement (2018): Hudson County reportedly settled a suit for $407,500, related to an inmate’s death and claims of inadequate medical care while in custody.
Civil Lawsuit (2020): A mother filed suit, claiming her child — an inmate — died by suicide inside the jail and that wrongful death and neglect were involved.
Errol Brown (2024): Brown, a 52-year-old held in connection with his daughter’s death, collapsed in his cell on February 15, 2024, and was later pronounced dead.
Recent Cases (2025): In March, a male inmate was found unresponsive in the medical unit; by June, two more inmates reportedly died within one week after falling ill — sparking a prosecutor’s investigation.
Questions About Safety, Oversight, and Accountability
Taken together — the paramedic’s firsthand account and the litany of documented deaths — raise serious and interrelated concerns:
Pronouncement Protocols: If paramedics are being barred from pronouncing deaths on-site, what are the legal and medical rationales behind this policy? Does it delay critical interventions or investigations?
Medical Neglect: Many of the lawsuits that followed inmate deaths cite poor medical care; the paramedic’s stories echo a culture where medical emergencies may not be handled with competency and transparency.
Bureaucracy Over Humanity: The officers’ claimed fear of legal exposure suggests a system driven more by litigation risk than by basic care — potentially putting inmates’ lives at risk.
Transparency: Despite repeated deaths, Hudson County has not made all internal incident reports or autopsy findings publicly available. Civil suits and settlements provide only partial insight.
Calls for Reform and Independent Oversight
Advocates for penal reform, civil rights attorneys, and prison watchdog groups are calling on Hudson County to:
Allow independent medical examiners and external monitors to review all in-custody death investigations; Make public a full, year-by-year log of in-custody deaths, causes, and investigation outcomes; Review and revise policies that prevent on-site pronouncement of death by medical responders; Train correctional officers and medical staff to prioritize timely and humane care over paperwork and risk management.
Hudson County’s Response — Or Lack Thereof
As of now, the county has not issued a public, detailed response addressing these specific allegations from a former paramedic. In prior statements related to settlements and lawsuits, county officials have generally expressed regret but cited “medical complications” and the complexity of detention healthcare.
The lack of transparency and accountability surrounding these deaths has raised serious red flags for community members, local watchdogs, and policy advocates — especially given the stakes: human lives behind bars.
Conclusion
The anonymous paramedic’s account — combined with a troubling trail of confirmed deaths, lawsuits, and internal reviews — paints a portrait of a correctional facility struggling to balance legal risk with basic medical care. Hudson County’s jail population may be in crisis, and every additional in-custody death underscores the urgent need for reform, oversight, and, above all, a commitment to human dignity.
If you or others have direct knowledge of incidents, I encourage you to speak out (safely, and anonymously if needed) and to push for independent investigations. The stakes are too high not to. Email us hudtruth201@gmail.com
UPDATE: 11/17/2025
Adding to the list:
HUDSON COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE INVESTIGATING DEATH OF INMATE AT HUDSON COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY
At approximately 7:40 a.m., members of the Hudson County Correctional Facility located an unresponsive male inmate within his cell. Officers and onsite medical personnel immediately rendered aid to the inmate, later identified as John Finucane, 32, of Jersey City. He was transported to Jersey City Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead shortly after 8:30 a.m.
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Breaking News
Don’t Move the Chair! The Unwritten Law After Snowfall
The first snowfall in Hudson County doesn’t bring holiday cheer — it triggers a full-scale societal breakdown. Traffic laws evaporate. Common courtesy goes into hibernation. And a new governing authority rises from the slush: the snow chair.
Let’s be clear — that chair is no longer furniture. It’s a notarized claim. A declaration of conquest. A weather-sealed affidavit stating: “I shoveled. I suffered. This spot is mine.” Someone didn’t just clear snow; they performed manual labor that would qualify for a workers’ comp claim, just to tuck a battle-scarred 2012 Nissan Altima safely into the curb. And you think you’re just gonna move the chair?
Bold. Dangerous. Historically unwise.
The moment you touch it, you’ve entered a feud with no statute of limitations. Windows become surveillance systems. Tires develop a sudden sense of vulnerability. Your license plate is mentally archived, cross-referenced, and ready for future action. This isn’t parking enforcement — it’s long-term memory with a grudge.
The real law states putting a chair in a cleaned parking spot doesn’t legally stop others from parking after breaking your back. Simply standing in a spot holding it for a friend or family member as they circle the block is not legal either. But common sense gets thrown out the window when society panics.
In Hudson County, parking spots aren’t shared. They’re defended. That chair isn’t asking for respect — it’s demanding recognition of prior suffering. It says, “I was here first,” and the subtext is, “Test me.”
So welcome to winter in Hudson County: where snow removal establishes sovereignty, parking is territorial, and the real forecast isn’t inches — it’s retaliation.
Stay warm. And don’t touch the chair.
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Breaking News
Political Violence Bill Advances as NJ Globe Credibility Comes in Question
TRENTON — New Jersey lawmakers have introduced bipartisan legislation that would create a new criminal offense for politically motivated violence, a move supporters say is necessary to deter attacks aimed at silencing political speech and civic participation.
The bill, sponsored by State Senators Brian Stack and Doug Steinhardt, would establish “political violence” as a separate charge that cannot be merged with other criminal offenses. Under the proposal, crimes such as assault or property damage would carry enhanced penalties when committed for political reasons, including potential first-degree exposure and lengthy prison sentences.
Supporters argue that political violence represents a direct threat to democratic institutions and free expression, warranting stronger deterrence and independent prosecution. The legislation would also establish a review mechanism to oversee enforcement and ensure consistency statewide.
Selective Outrage and a Distorted Narrative
Despite the seriousness of the legislation, controversy erupted following coverage by New Jersey Globe, particularly its final paragraph, which focused heavily on Union City Mayor Brian Stack and Investigative Journalist, Leroy Truth.
That coverage framed Leroy Truth as a central figure responsible for cyber harassment and alleged death threats directed at Stack, implicitly assigning blame for the actions of third parties who independently contacted Stack’s office by phone, email, or message. What the article failed to acknowledge is that harassment and death threats are not a one-way street.
For years, Leroy Truth has himself been the target of aggressive communications — including threats — from Stack supporters, political volunteers, and individuals believed to be connected to City Hall. Unlike Stack, however, Truth has not been afforded sympathetic coverage or public outrage from the same media outlet.
Dismissed Charges and First Amendment Reality
This is not the first time a narrative of “cyber harassment” has been advanced against Leroy Truth. Previously, Brian Stack and disgraced former Union City Police Chief Anthony Facchini pursued criminal cyber-harassment and bullying charges against him. Those charges were ultimately dismissed, reinforcing long-standing constitutional precedent that speech critical of public officials — even harsh, offensive, or uncomfortable speech — is protected under the First Amendment.
The courts have already spoken on this issue. Continuing to portray constitutionally protected political speech as criminal harassment is not journalism — it is misinformation.
New Jersey Globe’s Credibility Problem
The controversy surrounding the article has also reignited scrutiny of New Jersey Globe itself and its owner, David Wildstein.
Wildstein is not merely a political commentator with opinions — he is a convicted felon who pleaded guilty in the Bridgegate scandal, a nationally infamous case involving the intentional closure of lanes on the George Washington Bridge for political retribution. His role in that scandal is well documented and undisputed.
Yet New Jersey Globe continues to posture as a neutral arbiter of political truth while selectively shielding powerful political allies and attacking private citizens engaged in political commentary. The publication’s alignment with entrenched political machines, particularly in Hudson County, raises serious questions about editorial independence and motive.
If credibility were truly a priority, one might expect Wildstein to confront his own political history with the same intensity he applies to others. An honest, comprehensive accounting of Bridgegate — the abuse of power, the retaliation, and the corruption — would go far further toward restoring public trust than repackaging establishment narratives under the banner of “journalism.”
We would like to encourage David Wildstein to write an article about his involvement with Bridgegate under the direction of former governor Chris Christie. A transparent account will bring back some real credibility, not hosting gubernatorial debates.
The Bigger Picture
The proposed political violence legislation deserves sober, balanced discussion. But weaponizing the bill to smear critics, rewrite history, or criminalize dissent only underscores why such laws must be applied carefully — and why free speech protections remain essential when public officials are involved.
Political violence should be condemned.
Threats should be investigated.
But speech is not violence, and criticism is not harassment — no matter how uncomfortable it may be for those in power.
Additionally, the Leroy truth and North Bergen Mayor Nick Sacco alliance narrative is really becoming old fake news. Yes, we’re still waiting for David Wildstein and Brian Stack to provide any evidence that will prove beyond a reasonable doubt, direct payments from Mayor Nick Sacco to Leroy Truth. Clearly, David Wildstein has nothing else to report but the same old misinformation and fake news. Show the proof David show the public the proof!
Until media outlets stop “laying in the same bed” as political bosses and start reporting all the facts — not just the convenient ones — claims of moral authority will continue to ring hollow.
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Breaking News
Murphy Nomination of Fanny Cedeño Raises Concerns About Concentration of Political Power
Gov. Phil Murphy has nominated Fanny Cedeño, a two-term Hudson County Commissioner and longtime Union City political operative, to serve as a commissioner of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The nomination was reported by the New Jersey Globe. If confirmed by the New Jersey Senate, Cedeño would become the first Latina and the only woman on the Port Authority board from New Jersey.
While the appointment may appear to advance diversity at the bi-state authority, it also highlights a pattern of overlapping public roles and political influence centered on Hudson County leadership — particularly the political network led by State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian P. Stack.
Multiple Public Roles and Overlapping Influence
As of her nomination, Cedeño holds or has held:
– Hudson County Commissioner, a countywide elected office. Who initially elected in 2020 after the seat became vacant by Tilo Rivas. Brian (she didn’t run her own campaign) ran her campaign as the wife of an Army veteran primarily, not by any merit of actual public service other than being a secretary in city hall.
– A senior staff role at Union City Hall, where she spent more than a decade as a confidential aide under Mayor Brian Stack.
– Nominee for Port Authority Commissioner, a powerful regional position pending Senate confirmation.
If confirmed, Cedeño would be holding three positions simultaneously — a municipal administrative role, a county elected seat, and a key regional appointment — unless she relinquishes the first two after her confirmation. The practical and ethical implications of one individual occupying multiple public offices are significant; they raise questions about divided attention, potential conflicts of interest, and accountability.
This scenario feeds broader concerns about centralization of power within a single political network — in this case, political leadership tied to Brian Stack, who has dominated Union City and Hudson County Democratic politics for years. Cedeño’s career trajectory has been closely tied to Stack’s administration, and her nomination to the Port Authority appears, to some observers, as part of a broader pattern of stacking influential seats with loyal allies.
Kevin O’Toole and Overlapping Private and Public Roles
Also relevant to this discussion is Kevin J. O’Toole, the current Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. According to publicly available information, O’Toole has served in that capacity since 2017 and plays a significant role in guiding the authority’s direction.
O’Toole is also the founding and managing partner of the law firm O’Toole Scrivo, LLC.
The chairman of the Port Authority — a major regional agency overseeing billions in infrastructure and regulations — is simultaneously a private attorney whose firm contracts with Union City’s government.
This structure raises legitimate questions about potential conflicts of interest and the interlocking relationships between public authority leadership and local government legal work — especially when the mayor of that local government (Brian Stack) is a powerful political figure with influence in both county and state Democratic circles.
Centralization of Power and Democratic Accountability
Taken together, these circumstances illustrate a broader pattern:
A key state and local political leader (Stack) maintains influence across municipal government, county leadership, and now potentially on a major bi-state authority through allied appointees. An influential public official at the Port Authority (O’Toole) maintains significant private sector legal ties to local government stakeholders within the same political ecosystem.
Whether in local City Hall, county government, or on the Port Authority board, the concentration of power and overlapping roles can undermine public confidence, particularly when one political network appears to shape multiple levers of governance.
Why This Matters
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey oversees critical infrastructure — including airports, seaports, bridges, tunnels, and regional transportation. Decisions made by its commissioners affect the daily lives of millions and the economies of two states. Transparent, independent leadership is essential to maintain trust and effective governance.
The potential consolidation of influence — whether through overlapping roles or through networks of political allies — warrants scrutiny by the public and their elected representatives. Residents and stakeholders deserve clarity on how power is exercised, how responsibilities are balanced, and whether proper ethical safeguards are in place.
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