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Old Bridge, NJ Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Old Bridge, New Jersey Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(14 attorneys currently listed)

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Standard Listings

Antonis Flynn Colleen
18 Throckmorton Lane
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-1221
Brown Robert C & Anne K
14 Fernwood Place
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-3716
Jerome Convery
1 Jocama Boulevard
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 970-0970
A Del Gerard
72 State Route 34
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 566-1100
Thomas 4th Downs
2698 Highway 516
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-5600
Anthony Fruchter
3170 Bordentown Avenue
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 721-0600
Gallagher Harnett & Lagalante
14 Woodward Drive
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 360-2900
Mark Goldstein
14 Woodward Dr
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 360-9300
Himelman Wertheim & Geller
1405 State Route 18
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-4040
Burton Jacowitz
9 Prests Mill Road
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-2799
Steven Kropf
2501 Highway 516
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 679-8844
Elbert Rimma
2698 Highway 516
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 607-2121
Bert Lundberg
1816 Englishtown Road Suite 202
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 251-3434
Martinelli Vincent Esq
260 State Highway 34 North
Old Bridge, NJ 08857
(732) 566-6366
  

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United States Attorney News

Los Angeles lawyers insist on client's release

Blair Berk and Leonard Levine, defense lawyers in Los Angeles, are arguing for the release of their client, Darren Sharper, who used to play in the National Football League.

Sharper has submitted a not guilty plea to sexually assaulting two women in Los Angeles.

However, Sharper remains on indefinite custody with no bail after prosecutors pointed out that he also has an arrest warrant issued by authorities in Louisiana.

Sharper's lawyers are insisting on his release because no case has been filed yet pertaining to the Louisiana arrest warrant.

NSA employee accused in adopted son's death

Brian Patrick O'Callaghan is facing murder charges after it has been alleged that he had beaten his adopted son which resulted to the 3-year-old's death.

O'Callaghan is a former marine and a war veteran who now works for the NSA.

The suspicion against O'Callaghan started when police were called to the hospital where the boy was confined.

The boy was suffering from brain hemorrhage and fractures in the skull, injuries consistent with beating.

O'Callaghan had told police investigators that his wife had gone out of town thus he had been caring for the boy.

While under his care, O'Callaghan said the child had hit his shoulder in the shower after falling backwards. The next day, when he went to check on the boy who was napping, he said he noticed mucus coming out of the boy's nose and when he picked him up, the boy started vomiting so he brought him to the hospital.

Steven McCool, a defense lawyer in Washington representing O'Callaghan, is insisting on his client's innocence.

He said the allegations have no basis and that O'Callaghan is disputing that the child suffered several injuries in the head.

Ex-cab driver agrees to plea deal in murder charges

A plea deal agreement has Broderick Kenyo Smith admitting to manslaughter instead of capital murder in the death of Arlando Maurice Pritchett in 2012.

The plea agreement will have Smith serving just a year in jail for a split sentence of 10 years.

His jail stay will be followed with probation for three years.

Should Smith violate his probation, he could be made to serve the rest of his 10-year sentence.

According to the police, Pritchett had an argument with a cab driver prior to his shooting while Smith admitted that he had been driving a cab during the time of the incident.

Birmingham defense attorney Charles Salvagio said Smith had shot Pritchett because the latter had robbed him.

Cop gets two months for shooting trainee during an exercise

William S. Kern, a Baltimore Police instructor, was handed a 60-day jail stay, for shooting Raymond Gray, a police recruit, while they were doing exercises.

Kern, who has been in service for 19 years, told the court during his trial that he had brought a live gun to the exercises and he had accidentally used it instead of the training weapon.

Gray was hit in the head and was blinded in one eye when Kern fired his gun through the window to show the recruits the danger of lingering near the door, the window or the hallway.

Kern said that he brought his gun to the training for the safety of the recruits because the facility where they were having their exercises is not secure.

Baltimore defense attorney Shaun F. Owens had argued for Kern's release saying that his client's eventual dismissal from the service would already be enough of a punishment.

Kern is on a 60-day suspension while the Baltimore Police conducts an investigation within its ranks.

Gray's family, who expressed dissatisfaction with the sentence, has also filed a civil lawsuit in relation to the incident and is being represented by Baltimore litigator A. Dwight Pettit.

20 years in prison for murder conviction in nightclub shooting

A murder conviction will have Mark Anthony Garcia spending 20 years in prison for the death of Michael Angelo Morales.

Morales was shot to death outside a nightclub in 2008.

Garcia's first murder trial ended in a mistrial but he was not so lucky in the second trial.

Albert Acevedo, a defense attorney in San Antonio, said that his client, Garcia, was not the killer.

Instead he was the one who tried to stop another man, Hector Lozano, from shooting Morales.

Lozano is still awaiting for his own trial.