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Superior Court in Essex County, NJ

Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Admits Doing It Again, Faces 10-Year Minimum Term Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Admits Doing It Again, Faces 10-Year Minimum Term
Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Admits Doing It Again, Faces 10-Year Minimum Term A registered sex offender from Wayne who served state prison time for downloading child porn is headed to a federal penitentiary this time after admitting that he did it again. Robert Klemt, 34, had more than 70 photos and videos “depicting the sexual exploitation of children" on a laptop, Acting U.S. Attorney Rachael A. Honig said. Klemt, of New Street, had been imprisoned after pleading guilty in Superior Court in Essex County in 2014 to possessing and distributing child pornography. Agents with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security – Homeland Security Investigations arrested him in J…
Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Could Get 10 Years Minimum For New Offense Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Could Get 10 Years Minimum For New Offense
Feds: Convicted Wayne Child Porn Collector Could Get 10 Years Minimum For New Offense A registered sex offender from Wayne who served state prison time for downloading child porn is looking at a mandatory 10 years in a federal penitentiary for doing it again, authorities said. Robert Klemt, 34, had more than 70 photos and videos “depicting the sexual exploitation of children”on a laptop, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito said Wednesday. Klemt, of New Street, was imprisoned after pleading guilty in Superior Court in Essex County in 2014 to possessing and distributing child pornography. Records show he was released the following March and classified under Megan’s Law in Tier 2 at…
LAWSUIT: Student Loan Giant Crippled NJ Borrowers, State Authorities Charge LAWSUIT: Student Loan Giant Crippled NJ Borrowers, State Authorities Charge
Lawsuit: Student Loan Giant Crippled NJ Borrowers, State Authorities Charge One of the nation’s largest student loan servicers has screwed young borrowers in New Jersey, state authorities charged Tuesday in a blockbuster lawsuit against Navient. This includes deliberately fooling some of them into paying back more money than was due at the time by lying about the amounts, they said. “Higher education should be a pathway to success, not a road to financial ruin,” Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal said in announcing the suit's filing. “Even before the financial fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, too many New Jerseyans were struggling to pay off their student loans,…