Herbert Stern

February 13, 2008 - 1:45pm
SLIDESHOWS

U.S. Attorneys from New Jersey

U.S. Senators Frank Lautenberg and Bob Menendez have asked President Obama to appoint Paul Fishman as  New Jersey's 48th United States Attorney.  Past U.S. Attorneys have included a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, a Secretary of Homeland Security, a state Attorney General, and several federal Judges.

Click here to view the slideshow
February 6, 2009 - 2:12pm
INSIDE EDGE

Murray could be Morris County's third candidate in GOP gubernatorial field

Morris County Freeholder James Murray is thinking about running for Governor.

If 70-year-old Freeholder James Murray enters the race for Governor, it would bring the number of Morris County Republicans to three.  Murray, who raised just $5,000 on his upset primary win over incumbent John Inglesino in 2007, is hardly a first-tier statewide candidate.  But he could siphon off Morris County votes from former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie - as could another Morris candidate, Assemblyman Richard Merkt (R-Mendham).

Inglesino is part of Christie's political inner circle and has been attending Christie for Governor campaign meetings for more than a year.  He has played a leading role in the reform of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, where his law firm (he is former federal Judge and U.S. Attorney Herbert Stern's law partner) had been awarded a lucrative federal monitor job by Christie.  

Read More >
August 21, 2008 - 11:15am

How about Hollenbeck vs. McNerney?

Superior Court Judge Harold Hollenbeck will reach the mandatory retirement age of seventy on December 29, possibly ending a career in public service that began with his election to the East Rutherford Borough Council in 1966. But some Republican insiders say that Hollenbeck could be the GOP’s strongest candidate to challenge Bergen County Executive Dennis McNerney in 2010.

Hollenbeck was elected to the State Assembly in 1967, at the age of 29, as part of a Republican sweep of Bergen County in the second mid-term election of Democratic Gov. Richard Hughes. After two terms in the Assembly, he won a State Senate seat in 1971.

Read More >
January 9, 2008 - 10:27am

PolitickerNJ.com Boss of the Year 2007: Christopher Christie

Democrats and Republicans statewide spent nearly $70 million on state legislative races in 2007, combining to oust three State Senators and one Assemblyman. Spending much less money, Christopher J. Christie, the United States Attorney, was responsible for unseating three Senators and two Assemblymen – making him more effective at tossing incumbents from office than any party leader in New Jersey, even our Winner of the Year.

And Christie’s ability to deliver no-bid contracts worth huge amounts of money to his friends and former colleges – like a deal worth up to $50 million for John Aschcroft, and mega million dollar contracts for Herbert Stern and John Inglesino at UMDNJ, GO P ex-N.J. Attorney General David Samson and David Kelley, a former U.S. Attorney in New York – might make party leaders like George Norcross, Glenn Paulsen, Charlotte DeFilippo and Joseph Ferriero envious. It’s possible that Christie gives out more contracts than several of the party bosses.


Like an effective boss, Christie has been able to avert public criticism – maybe because his name doesn’t actually appear on a ballot (although that may change in 2009.) Neither party has been willing to publicly criticize him – perhaps because of Paul Byrne’s old rule about not ticking off the U.S. Attorney – but suddenly Rep. Frank Pallone took the lead just before Thanksgiving, becoming the first Democrat in seven years to take Christie on.

Read More >
December 7, 2007 - 2:15pm

$8 million magnificent reasons

Morris County Freeholder John Inglesino is leaving office in a few weeks – the victim of a bad ballot position that removes perhaps the most intellectually superior and politically savvy county official from public service.

Now, with the tribute to Inglesino over, he did leave himself open to one opportunity for abuse.  Earlier this year, he told PolitickerNJ.com’s Matt Friedman that while he was “not going to participate in all of the speculation” about the 2009 gubernatorial campaign -- "the only people who speculate about things that happen that far out in advance are fools,” Inglesino explained – he did have kind words for one of the likely candidates: Chris Christie.

Read More >
December 20, 2006 - 7:04pm

Old rivals, new fight

The public careers of Herbert Stern and Robert Del Tufo have long been intertwined, and the tension that currently exists between the two former United States Attorneys, now at opposite ends of the battle to fix the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, goes back almost thirty years. Stern is the U.S. Department of Justice's federal monitor overseeing the state-run school, and Del Tufo is the Chairman of the UMDNJ Board of Trustees.

Stern was a career prosecutor who went from law school to trying Homicide cases as an Assistant Manhattan District Attorney. (He was the DA sent to the scene when Civil Rights leader Malcolm X. Shabbaz was murdered.) He spent four years as a trial attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice's Organized Crime and Racketeering Section. When Frederick Lacey became the new U.S. Attorney for New Jersey in 1969, he hired Stern as Chief Assistant. The two met a year earlier during the prosecution of Peter Weber, the powerful head of the New Jersey Operating Engineers Union. Stern was the prosecutor and Lacey was the defense attorney; Stern won.

Stern was named U.S. Attorney in 1970, when Lacey became a Federal Judge. In 1974, Stern joined Lacey on the bench and was replaced by his deputy, Jonathan Goldstein, also a career prosecutor.

This trio of federal prosecutors won national attention for their war on political corruption and for their aggressive prosecution of organized crime figures. While nominally Republican (they were appointed by Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford at the suggestion of GOP U.S. Senator Clifford Case), they were viewed as fairly non-political. In fact, they took town several key members of Republican Governor William Cahill's administration; that scandal contributed toward Cahill's defeat in the 1973 GOP primary.

After Jimmy Carter defeated Gerald Ford in the 1976 presidential election, Carter replaced Goldstein with Del Tufo, a Democrat who had served as an Assistant Morris County Prosecutor and as the Director of the state Division of Criminal Justice under Brendan Byrne's first Attorney General, William Hyland. During his three years as a federal prosecutor, the more partisan Del Tufo seemed to annoy Stern when he replaced many career federal prosecutors with lawyers that had political ties.

Stern spent thirteen years as a U.S. District Court Judge and was the presiding Judge at the U.S. Court for Berlin in 1979. Martin Sheen played Stern in the movie, Judgement in Berlin, based on his 1984 book. Del Tufo sought the Democratic nomination for Governor in 1985 -- he finished last in a field of five candidates. After the 1989 election, Governor Jim Florio appointed him to serve as state Attorney General.

Read More >
April 12, 2006 - 4:54pm
PRESS RELEASE

Assemblyman Jon Bramnick

BRAMNICK SAYS UMDNJ MONITORS SHOULD AUDIT PRESCHOOL AND SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION FUNDS

Calls on Corzine to Retain Herb Stern's Forensic SWAT Team When Its Mission for U.S. Attorney is Complete

Read More >
Syndicate content