Sean Higgins Charged In Johnny Gaudreau Death

sean higgins
Sean Higgins

Sean Higgins is an accused killer from New Jersey who has been charged in the deaths of NHL player Johnny Gaudreau and his brother Matthew Gaudreau

According to police reports Sean Higgins was allegedly drunk when he was driving in Woodstown New Jersey when he attempted to pass a slow moving vehicle. When he attempted to pull back into the lane a vehicle in front of him had mover over to safely avoid two cyclists. Higgins attempted to pass the vehicle on the right where he would strike Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau killing the pair of brothers who were in town to attend their sisters wedding. Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau would die from their injuries

Sean Higgins would be arrested and has been charged with two counts of second degree vehicle manslaughter, reckless driving, possession of an open container, improper passing and consuming alcohol in a motor vehicle.

Sean Higgins News

The suspected drunk driver accused of killing NHL star Johnny Gaudreau and his brother, Matthew, in Salem County, New Jersey, remains behind bars on a slew of charges, including vehicular homicide.

The crash happened Thursday around 8:30 p.m. on Pennsville Auburn Road (County Route 551) near Stumpy Lane in Oldmans Township.

Police say Sean Higgins, 43, of Woodstown, was traveling north on Pennsville Auburn Road in a Jeep Grand Cherokee when he allegedly attempted to pass a slower-moving sedan and SUV.

Police say Higgins entered the southbound lane of the roadway and passed the sedan

When he attempted to reenter the northbound lane, police say the SUV in front of him moved into the middle of the roadway, splitting the north and south lanes in order to safely pass two bicyclists on the right side of the road.

Higgins then attempted to pass the SUV on the right and struck the Gaudreau brothers from behind, troopers said.

The Gaudreau brothers died from their injuries, according to state police.

According to the police affidavit, the trooper who arrived on the scene detected a “strong odor of alcohol,” and Higgins allegedly told the trooper he had consumed “five to six beers” before the crash.

Higgins allegedly told investigators that he thought the driver of the SUV was trying to stop him from passing. Higgins told investigators that his consumption of alcohol contributed to his impatience and reckless driving, according to the criminal complaint.

Witnesses reportedly told police that they observed Higgins approaching them from behind, adding that he appeared to be traveling at a high rate of speed.

The trooper also said Higgins then failed a field sobriety test.

Action News has learned that Higgins is a field artillery officer assigned to the New Jersey Army National Guard, Joint Force Headquarters. He is a part-time traditional Drill Status Guardsman and was not on duty at the time of the incident.

The New Jersey Army National Guard could not comment on Higgins’ service, but released this statement on the deadly crash: “We are profoundly saddened by this tragedy,” said Col Yvonne L. Mays, Acting Adjutant General of New Jersey. “Our hearts go out to everyone affected, and we share in the grief of the Gaudreau family.”

In a post on Facebook, Gaudenzia, a drug and alcohol abuse treatment provider, identified Higgins as an employee but said that he had been immediately placed on leave.

During Friday’s first appearance hearing, Judge Michael Silvanio explained to Higgins the charges against him, adding that two counts of second-degree vehicular homicide each carry a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

Other charges include reckless driving, possession of an open container, improper passing and consuming alcohol in a motor vehicle.

Higgins is being held at Salem County Correctional Facility, where he will remain until a detention hearing on Sept. 5.

On Friday, he made an initial court appearance via Zoom.

He spoke briefly to say he understood the charges and would be hiring his own attorney.

As he was being excused from the court, he did question how long he was staying behind bars: “So…I’m here until Thursday?”

The Gaudreau brothers were riding their bicycles, not far from their family home, when they were struck and killed. The Gaudreau family had gathered in Salem County to attend the wedding of the men’s sister, Katie, which had been scheduled for Friday. The event was canceled.

The widow of Johnny paid tribute to him in a pair of social media posts on Saturday, calling him her “forever” and praising him as the “best dad” to their young children.

Meredith Gaudreau also shared family photos of her late husband celebrating his 31st birthday earlier in August with her, daughter Noa and son Johnny.

“Thank you for the best years of my life. Despite losing you, I am still the luckiest girl in the world to have been yours,” she wrote in an Instagram post. “I love you so so much. You were perfect. Some days it felt too good to be true. I love every single thing about you. You are my forever and I can’t wait to be with you again. I love you so much forever and ever.”

Matthew Gaudreau, 29, was the hockey coach at the men’s high school alma mater, Gloucester Catholic in New Jersey, and he also was an expectant father. His wife, Madeline, is expecting their first child in December.

The brothers also leave behind their parents and two sisters.

Johnny and Matthew played hockey at Boston College.

After playing for teams in the AHL and ECHL, Matthew returned home to South Jersey, where he served as the head hockey coach at Gloucester Catholic.

Johnny went on to play 11 professional seasons for the NHL, starting his career with the Calgary Flames and most recently playing for the Columbus Blue Jackets.

https://6abc.com/post/sean-higgins-woodstown-nj-johnny-gaudreau-crash-drunk-driver-salem-county/15253326

David Shroitman Murders Maryrose Fealey

David Shroitman Maryrose Fealey

David Shroitman is an alleged killer from New Jersey who has been charged in the brutal murder of Maryrose Fealey

According to police reports David Shroitman had written out a very detailed plan where he would describe the brutal murder of former classmate Maryrose Fealey. David Shroitman would act out his plan and would stab the woman thirty seven times causing her death

David Shroitman would be arrested and has been charged with a host of charges including irst-degree murder, possession of a weapon, tampering with physical evidence and hindering prosecution

David Shroitman News

A New Jersey man was arrested this week on accusations he fatally stabbed an ex-classmate who advocated passionately to help those addicted to drugs.

On Monday, David Shroitman, 27, was arrested on charges of first-degree murder, possession of a weapon, tampering with physical evidence and hindering apprehension in connection with the death of Maryrose Fealey, 27, according to a press release from the Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office.

Fealey was found by officers who responded to a 911 call outside an apartment complex in Somerville on Jan. 30, the release states. Fealey, who suffered multiple stab wounds, was pronounced dead at the scene. Authorities said she knew her alleged killer.

While authorities declined to share how the pair knew each other, Patch.com and MyCentralJersey.com reported that David Shroitman graduated from Somerville High School with Healey in 2014.

According to a probable cause affidavit obtained by Patch.com, Fealey was stabbed approximately 37 times and had returned home from a business in Bridgewater around 9 p.m. that night, roughly an hour and a half before police arrived on the scene and found her dead at 10:20 p.m. The affidavit states that Fealey’s car door was open with her belongings spread across the front yard.

On Feb. 1, police obtained dashboard camera footage showing a man wearing a gray sweatshirt, a black face gaiter and thick cushioned sneakers standing at the corner of the block near Fealey’s home around 9 p.m. the night she was killed, per the affidavit obtained by Patch.com. The following day, detectives tried to speak with David Shroitman at a business in Bridgewater, but he refused. Detectives allegedly saw a white garbage bag over the driver’s seat of his car, as well as a black gaiter in the front passenger seat and duct tape in the back seat, the affidavit claims.

Authorities later obtained more surveillance footage showing a man matching David Shroitman’s description allegedly running up and down Fealey’s street around 9:02 p.m. the night of her killing, according to the affidavit, which was also obtained by NJ.com. A vehicle believed to be Shroitman’s was also spotted in the footage.

On Sunday, police responded to a report of a suspicious person at a business in Somerville and allegedly found Shroitman wearing latex gloves while cleaning his car, according to the affidavit. Officers claimed they smelled bleach in a puddle near the driver’s side door. Later, officers said they recovered a latex glove with apparent blood on Fealey’s street.

A search warrant was then granted and authorities searched Shroitman’s home, where they allege several bleach containers were recovered, along with a “manifesto laying out a plan step-by-step for the homicide,” the affidavit alleges. Investigators also allegedly detected blood in the entryway and bathroom through luminol spray tests and found clothing — some of which was covered in bleach — and sneakers matching the description of the man seen in the surveillance footage. The affidavit also alleges that Shroitman’s driver’s side car door was treated with bleach.

Shroitman was subsequently arrested and booked into the Somerset County Jail. He pleaded not guilty Tuesday and is still awaiting a detention hearing, MyCentralJersey.com reports. 

According to her obituary, Fealey was “committed to her vision and efforts to empower youth and those battling addiction.” Founder of the non-profit organization 4TheYoungerMe (4TYM), she also was involved with non-profit organizations Not An Easy Fix and Empower Somerset.

“She firmly believed that ‘substance abuse does not define the person’ and that ‘a toxic environment does not define the child’s future,’” her obituary states.

Not An Easy Fix called Fealey’s death “horrific news” in a Feb. 1 statement posted to Facebook.

“She was always extremely supportive and had a big smile whenever she entered a room,” committee member Ian Bockus said in the post. “My friend group and I have dealt with a lot of loss over the years but never anything like this. It doesn’t make sense and it isn’t right but it’s times like this where we need to come together as a family and a community and offer our support.”

A 2018 graduate of Rutgers Business School, Fealey also worked as a logistics management specialist and was a former federal employee for the Naval Surface Warfare Center, according to her obituary.

Her family has asked for donations to go to Not An Easy Fix.

https://people.com/ex-classmate-allegedly-stabbed-beloved-addiction-recovery-advocate-detailed-plan-police-8559778

Nakira Griner Gets Life For Infants Murder

Nakira Griner

Nakira Griner was convicted in a New Jersey court regarding the murder of her 23 month old son and now she would learn her fate which is to spend the rest of her life in prison. According to court reports Nakira Griner would lose her temper and fatally beat the little boy to death. After he was dead Nakira Griner would burn the little boys body and bury his remains. Nakira Griner would eventually be arrested and later convicted of murder, desecration of remains, tampering with evidence and false public alarm

Nakira Griner More News

A 28-year-old woman who killed her 23-month-old son before burning, dismembering and burying his remains was sentenced to life in prison on Tuesday.

Nakira Griner admitted to burning and dismembering Daniel Griner Jr.’s remains in 2019, but denied intentionally killing the baby.

Griner initially claimed she was assaulted with the infant strapped to her chest and had the baby stolen in a series of frantic 911 calls.

Officers and members of the public searched for the child, but when they found no evidence, Griner changed her story.

She claimed her baby fell down a flight of stairs, and that, fearing she would be blamed for the incident, she left Daniel alive in a stroller in a public space. She told investigators she hoped someone would find and help him.

Soon after, police found the baby’s burned and dismembered remains buried in the backyard of the family’s Bridgerton home.

Griner was convicted of murder, desecration of remains, tampering with evidence and false public alarm last month.

https://www.audacy.com/1010wins/news/nj-mom-gets-life-in-prison-for-murdering-infant-son

4 Teen Girls Charged In Adriana Kuch Suicide

Adriana Kuch suicide

Four teenage girls have been charged in the assault that led to fourteen year old Adriana Kuch taking her own life. According to police reports the four teen girls allegedly beat up Adriana Kuch in the hallways of Central Regional High School in Bayville New Jersey which was bad enough however the video of the attack would soon spread online which made the matters even worse. Adriana Kuch would take her life three days after the attack.

Now four teen girls have been charged with an assortment of charges: One was charged with aggravated assault, two others with conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, and a fourth with harassment. The aggravated assault could lead to adult charges. The four girls have been suspended indefinitely from the school. None of the four girls have yet to be identified.

Adriana Kuch More News

Four students have been charged in connection with an attack inside a New Jersey high school hallway that took place just days before the victim in that incident, a 14-year-old girl, took her own life.

Prosecutors announced the charges Friday afternoon against those involved in the Feb. 1 incident at Central Regional High School in Berkeley Township. The charges came the same day that friends and family honored the memory of Bayville’s Adriana Kuch at a memorial service.

One student has been charged with aggravated assault, two were charged with conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, and the fourth person faces a harassment charge, according to the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office.

All of those whom were charged are juveniles, and because of that, have not been identified. The prosecutor’s office added that each of the four, along with their respective guardians, were served with a copy of the criminal complaint against them, and were released pending future court appointments.

Earlier in the day, the Ocean County prosecutor released a statement saying the office had discussed the matter with the district superintendent and talked about ways to improve district response to incidents. The office also suggested the district work on programming and services for the students.

The bullying case has drawn national headlines due to the tragic details involved, including the video of the horrifying attack and the controversy surrounding the school’s response. The teen’s father, Michael Kuch, previously said Ocean County prosecutors told him they planned to file criminal charges against at least three of the girls seen on video attacking his daughter.

All four girls involved in the attack on Adriana Kuch, who took her own life at her home 48 hours after video of the bullying surfaced online, had already been suspended indefinitely pending the outcome of the legal process, the district superintendent confirmed Thursday. Kuch’s family members were the ones who found her dead on Feb. 3.

Two days earlier, the hallway attack video was posted to social media. News 4 has obtained that footage (below). WARNING: Note that some viewers may find its contents disturbing.

The footage itself lasts less than a minute. It shows Adriana Kuch walking down the hallway with her boyfriend as the kids recording the moment approach them going in the opposite direction. Suddenly, there’s a quick movement from someone near the phone-holder and pink liquid sprays out of a cup, all over Adriana Kuch. She is then set upon by at least two people, the video shows, slammed into school lockers and surrounded by what is now a trio of attackers.

Adriana Kuch crumples on the floor. The three classmates, backpacks swinging, fall over themselves a bit near the lockers, almost stepping on Kuch as she crawls around on the floor, trying to collect herself. Then they start shoving her, dragging her almost along the ground on her knees, raking her against the red school lockers, the white soles of her shoes the only part of her visible underneath her attackers at various points. Then one girl grabs her by the hair.

The violent attack continues for another few seconds before two adults run into the video frame and pull the attackers off Adriana Kuch. She is seen writhing on the ground, her hands holding either side of her head as a man stands over her. He then helps the bruised and bloodied girl up. The footage wraps.

While authorities have not publicly connected the attack video post to Kuch’s death, her father Michael has. He says he believes bullying drove his daughter to suicide and eviscerated the school for not calling the cops after the attack, despite the fact he says Adriana Kuch blacked out. Taking her to the school nurse alone was insufficient, he says.

District Superintendent Triantafillos Parlapanides said the response at Central Regional was in line with policy, telling NBC New York that it’s standard practice for the school to notify the police.

“We’ve always notified the police but we don’t always press the charges. It depends on the severity of the charges,” Parlapanides said.

When asked if the district was possibly rethinking whether or not they press charges, or whether suspensions were appropriate, Parlapanides said “we are looking at that, we are looking at all of that.”

The girl’s father says if the district believes their actions satisfied policy, then the policy is woefully insufficient. He did file a police report.

Michael Kuch unleashed his own social media messaging, saying he took Adriana Kuch to the cops right after the incident. Had the school launched an investigation at that point, he says, he believes the videos could have been discovered and taken down earlier, potentially preserving his daughter the mortification he says cost her life.

Now he wants the footage seen — widely.

“I want the entire world to know what these animals did to my daughter,” Michael Kuch said.

Parlapanides pinned the blame for much of the behavior seen on the video on an somewhat surprising target: pandemic schooling.

“They’ve seen things at home, domestic violence, things they shouldn’t have been privy to, but unfortunately with COVID, they were,” Parlapanides said.

Now, new videos are surfacing of other bullying incidents at the high school. A video from 2022 shows a girl, with her arm in a sling because of a shoulder injury during a wrestling match, getting attacked. That student’s mother told NBC New York she had to send her daughter to an out-of-district school after her attackers were suspended for just 10 days.

In another attack from the same year, the victim again had to be transferred out afterward. Jonathan Ettman, the lawyer for the family suing the school, said that video of the incident “immediately [went] up on social media to intimidate and harass the victim, in this case my client.”

Ettman suggested a cellphone ban be instituted.

“Perhaps the solution is we have to restrict these kids from having their cellphones while in school, while they should be learning,” Ettman told NBC New York.

The school and district continue to face mounting fallout from the attack, in particular how the aftermath (including the video of the incident being posted online, punishment for those involved, and Kuch’s suicide) was handled.

Friday was another day of student protests at the school, as students expressed their outrage at the administration over Kuch’s case by walking out of classrooms en masse. The student protests started Wednesday, when hundreds of students walked out of class after the district sent a letter out in which they acknowledged the growing frustration.

“Since the tragic passing of our student this past Friday, we fully understand that students, staff and the community are hurting for the loss of such a young lady with a bright future,” the letter begins.

It goes on to reference a moment of silence, and the school’s plan to let the students rally in a peaceful, organized manner. Read the letter below:

“Unfortunately, however, the student activity began to interfere with the learning process as the day continued,” the letter read. Dismissal was early and a bit chaotic that day, and the district said it would not permit further rallies without prior administrative approval, citing its concern for the “health, safety and well-being for all students.”

But students on Friday again walked out of class, voicing their displeasure with the school’s response to the tragedy.

“They didn’t send out a letter until two days after she died, they tried to hide it. They didn’t want anyone talking about it,” said senior Destiney Gilliland.

The district first sent out a letter to parents on Monday, the first school day after Adriana Kuch took her life. It more or less informed the school community of Kuch’s passing, offered heartfelt condolences to her family and friends and advised people of crisis counseling and other resources.

https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/4-students-charged-in-nj-high-school-hallway-attack-days-before-victim-took-her-life/4098533/

Leiner Miranda Lopez Wanted In Luz Hernandez Murder

Leiner Miranda Lopez

Police are searching for Leiner Miranda Lopez who is wanted in relation to the murder of murdered teacher Luz Hernandez in New Jersey. Earlier today police announced that Luz Hernandez ex husband Cesar Santana was arrested in Florida and held on a charge of concealing human remains. Now police have released that Cesar Santana and Leiner Miranda Lopez were pulled over following a traffic stop. The vehicle was unregistered and impounded and following a search of the vehicle officers filed charges against Leiner Miranda Lopez and Cesar Santana. Luz Hernandez was found in a shallow grave in New Jersey a day after being reported missing.

Leiner Miranda Lopez More News

New Jersey prosecutor announced Friday that an arrest has been made and another suspect is being sought after a missing kindergarten teacher’s body was found this week in what “appeared to be a shallow grave.” 

Cesar Santana, 36, was taken into custody at a motel in Miami this morning with the help of the U.S. Marshals Service following the discovery of the remains of 33-year-old Luz Hernandez in Kearny on Tuesday, according to the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office.

Leiner Miranda Lopez, a 26-year-old who like Santana is from Jersey City, remains on the run. Both men have so far been charged with one count of desecrating/concealing human remains.

Hernandez, a mother of three and a teacher at BelovED Charter School in Jersey City, died of blunt force trauma to the head and compressions to the neck, prosecutors say, citing preliminary autopsy findings. The motive for her death remains unknown.

Officials found the body of Hernandez in what “appeared to be a shallow grave” after she was reported missing Monday and a welfare check was conducted at her home. 

“During the course of the investigation, it was determined Cesar Santana and Leiner Miranda Lopez were involved in a motor vehicle stop on Sunday, February 5, 2023 on Central Avenue in Kearny, prior to Luz Hernandez being reported missing,” the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office said Friday. “The vehicle was unregistered and impounded by the Kearny Police Department. A court authorized search of the vehicle was executed on Tuesday, February 7, 2023, and additional evidence was recovered.”

On Tuesday, “The Kearny Police Department, knowing details of the traffic stop, led the Homicide Unit to the area of Central Avenue and Third Street in Kearny, where investigators ultimately located what appeared to be a shallow grave,” prosecutors also said. “The body of a female — later identified as Luz Hernandez, 33, of Jersey City — was recovered a short time later and she was pronounced dead at the scene at 4:53 p.m.”

Police also found “blood splatters” on the door of her apartment, according to NJ.com

Hernandez did not show up to work on Monday, prompting her employer to contact the police, the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office said. 

Hernandez started at the BelovED Charter School after graduating from Saint Peter’s University in 2017, NJ.com reports. She initially worked as a teacher’s assistant. 

“People loved her. She was a wonderful co-worker,” BelovED founder Bret Schunder said of Hernandez, according to the report. “She was a beloved member of the BelovED family. People are feeling devastated by this.” 

https://www.foxnews.com/us/arrest-made-missing-new-jersey-kindergarten-teacher-found-dead-shallow-grave