Category: Security

  • Barbra Streisand recounts how Princess Diana saved her from a wardrobe malfunction

    Princess Diana wasn’t just the people’s princess, but a girl’s girl, at least according to the way Barbra Streisand memorializes the late royal in her new memoir.

    The “Way We Were” star, 81, recalled a time when the “wonderful” royal both helped and flattered her during the 1992 London premiere of “The Prince of Tides,” People reports.

    “The zipper on my skirt had come down a bit as I was sitting, and she noticed and quickly started to zip it up for me as I got to my feet,” the EGOT winner, who starred in and helmed the Oscar-nominated film, reportedly wrote in “My Name is Barbra.”

    The two were seated together at the event, which also served as a benefit for the AIDS Crisis Trust. Per royal protocol, Streisand waited to stand until Diana did, only for the princess to give her a “little push” to do so, according to People.

    But Diana didn’t just help the “Funny Girl” star avoid a wardrobe malfunction.

    “When I finally sat down, Diana turned to me and asked, ‘Do you know how wonderful you are?’” wrote Streisand. “Did I know it now? I’m not sure…maybe a little. I thought Diana was wonderful. I wonder if she knew how wonderful she was.”

    Streisand also wrote about considering then-Prince Charles a friend, following their 1974 meeting.

    “I loved spending some time at Highgrove for a weekend fundraiser and going through his gardens,” she wrote of the monarch, who wed Diana in 1981. The pair infamously separated in 1992 and divorced the year before her fatal car accident in 1997.

    Streisand said her friendship with Charles, who will celebrate his 75th birthday in coming days, predated his relationship with Diana.

    “I had a very funny line on stage when he came to see [my] show. I said, ‘You know, if I played my cards right, I could have wound up being the first Jewish princess!’” wrote Streisand.

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  • ‘I felt so naughty’: New open carry alcohol laws boost downtowns

    Holly Smith Mount wanted to be first.

    Smith Mount, chair of the city council in Huntington, West Virginia, was determined to see her community launch the state’s initial outdoor drinking zone — an idea made possible only after the legislature changed the state’s alcohol law earlier this year.

    “I will fully admit I’m very competitive,” she told Stateline. “And I told the mayor, ‘I want to be first on this one.’”

    So, when Huntington’s downtown drinking district launched this fall, Smith Mount aimed to be at the front of the line to grab a beer from a local taphouse. The new program sanctions open containers of alcohol within designated boundaries officially known as a Private Outdoor Designated Area, or PODA.

    “I walked down the street and I felt so naughty,” she said. “I went into one of my favorite shops and I was like, ‘Look, I’ve got a beer!’”

    Huntington leaders saw the district as a way to encourage economic growth by drawing more people to the heart of the city: The hope is that by allowing people to grab a drink and linger, they’ll spend more time and money downtown. Steps away from the banks of the Ohio River, the zone’s few square blocks include local restaurants, bars and shops.

    “To me this was just a cherry on top of our already thriving downtown,” Smith Mount said. “It’s a way to kind of get people outside, get people socializing, and ramp up the economy even more.”

    In recent years, several states have relaxed alcohol consumption laws to allow communities to create their own limited drinking zones. They aim to revitalize downtown cores hollowed out by the changing nature of retail and the post-pandemic loss of office workers.

    North Carolina cities have been creating outdoor “social zones” since Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper signed a new law in 2021. Dozens of Ohio communities big and small have created Designated Outdoor Refreshment Areas, which the legislature sanctioned in 2015 to allow people to walk around freely with a beer, wine or cocktail. Communities in Kansas and Indiana are exploring or creating new areas after legislatures in both states changed their laws earlier this year.

    Indiana’s new outdoor refreshment areas largely mirror those in neighboring Ohio. Republican state Sen. Liz Brown sponsored legislation over the past three years after a constituent enjoyed one of the districts in Ohio and asked her why the Hoosier State didn’t have something similar.

    “I don’t usually like to give other states credit, but I do have to give Ohio credit,” she said. “ … We copycatted them.”

    Aside from bringing foot traffic to shops and restaurants, officials say the success of the new districts reveals the need to update antiquated liquor laws that long banned public consumption in most places to try to reduce public intoxication and drunken driving. While some critics have raised concerns about the new districts’ potential to promote drinking, crime or littering, organizers across the country say they have largely been adopted without incident.

    In West Virginia’s second-largest city, officials said the drinking district faced little public opposition.

    Huntington, a city of about 47,000, is home to Marshall University. On football game days, the area around campus is already “basically open container,” Smith Mount said.

    The district is open on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from April to October. But Smith Mount said the effort was already so successful that city leaders are looking at expanding the season. In the future, she envisions holiday shoppers clutching mulled cider while browsing in downtown shops.

    The Private Outdoor Designated Area isn’t a free-for-all. Only licensed bars and restaurants can sell drinks, which must be served in clearly marked cups — no red Solo cups allowed. Drinks must be consumed within the district’s boundaries. And store owners can choose to opt in or out.

    So far, the city hasn’t heard of any problems with the program, officials said.

    “In the years past, you had to go to places like New Orleans or Key West to walk down the street just having a cold beverage,” Smith Mount said. “And those days are kind of past us.”

    ‘This is just the start’

    In the northern stretches of Topeka, Kansas, Redbud Park is home to sculpture gardens and bright murals. Once a month, the park turns into a concert venue for the area’s First Friday art walks.

    But those performances so far have been alcohol-free, said Thomas Underwood, executive director of the NOTO Arts & Entertainment District.

    “At this point you can’t buy a beer from the place across the street and come over and listen to the band, because you can’t cross the street with a beer,” he said. “That just seems stupid.”

    Until this year, Kansas law only allowed public consumption areas if streets were blocked off to traffic. Underwood’s nonprofit was among the groups that lobbied legislators earlier this year to make a change.

    The First Friday events bring valuable foot traffic to the state capital’s arts district. But Underwood said businesses don’t want to see streets closed off — which could dissuade customers from attending, not to mention the complications of renting barricades and acquiring city permits.

    This year, the legislature allowed communities to apply for Common Consumption Area permits that don’t require street closures. The Kansas Department of Revenue reports the state has licensed 32 common consumption areas, in a mix of tiny towns, larger cities and booming suburbs.

    With little opposition, Underwood expects Topeka to approve a common consumption area soon. In late October, a Topeka City Council committee discussed creating consumption areas in downtown and in the arts district. The city will hold a series of listening sessions before voting on the matter, said city spokesperson Gretchen Spiker.

    If approved, Underwood said, the common consumption area will bring more visitors to concerts, galleries and shops in the arts district — and hopefully boost sales for bars and restaurants.

    “Nobody down here thinks it should be a seven-day-a-week-type thing,” he said. “We think it should be somewhat limited. We know there’s going to be some enforcement and management issues with this.”

    Kansas Republican state Rep. Tory Blew was among those who supported the change in state law. She sits on the board of Great Bend Alive, a nonprofit that hosts a monthly Friday evening event in downtown Great Bend, a city of about 15,000 in the middle of the state.

    Called Fridays on Forest, the event has been held on a side street as Great Bend’s Main Street happens to be a state highway — making street closures there prohibitively difficult. So, organizers have closed down Forest Street to bring in food trucks, games and alcohol. As many as 600 people will attend any given Friday, Blew said.

    “People look forward to it,” she said. “It’s just everybody coming together. … I think it’s just a sense of something to do in town.”

    She knew Great Bend wanted to expand its Friday events without closing down Main Street, but was surprised to learn how many Kansas communities were also planning big events and celebrations with common consumption areas.

    “They all have a totally different vision,” she said.

    Great Bend is currently exploring ways to expand the seasonal event now that the state law has changed. In her community, the consumption area is part of a wider effort to rejuvenate downtown: Younger people are moving back or into town, bringing new coffee shops and a brewery.

    She said the alcohol district isn’t a panacea but has greatly helped improve downtown’s trajectory.

    “We’ve got a great start with what we’ve done so far with the common consumption district,” Blew said. “I think this is just the start of the momentum.”

    Recovering from the pandemic

    Robin Davis had been worried about opposition in Norwood, North Carolina, a town of about 2,600 people about 50 miles east of Charlotte.

    One of the community’s main churches sits just steps away from the small downtown where she aimed to create a social district that would allow alcohol following a new law in 2021.

    “Luckily, it was a Methodist church,” she said. “We went straight to them and said, ‘Look, this is our vision. We’re not looking to have an outdoor community where people are stumbling around drinking.’”

    The church and the town embraced the idea, she said.

    Davis owns 110 Main Mercantile, which houses a boutique, co-working space and coffee shop, and runs a nonprofit supporting the downtown businesses. She said the new social district complements other investments in rebuilding the downtown.

    “There was really nothing going on downtown,” she said. “You know, there wasn’t a community down there for hanging out and socializing. We actually have built that community.”

    Nestled just a few miles from Lake Tillery, Norwood was discovered during the pandemic by dwellers of North Carolina’s bigger cities, Davis said. The social district has helped downtown businesses, but it’s also elevated events such as the town’s annual Arbor Day celebration, which is now able to bring in wineries and breweries in addition to live music and other events.

    In fact, some members of the town council questioned why Norwood’s recent fall festival didn’t have any alcohol vendors on hand, Davis said.

    “So, it was kind of neat that they were asking for it and a bit disappointed,” she said.

    More than 100 miles away, officials in Raleigh purposely created their social district in the parts of downtown most affected by the loss of office workers during and after the pandemic.

    “We were avoiding our nightlife area because they didn’t have as many challenges,” said Rachel Bain, the city’s hospitality and nightlife planner.

    Raleigh launched its Sip n’ Stroll Downtown in August 2022 centered around Fayetteville Street and the Warehouse District. The district allows patrons to carry around specially marked cups from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day.

    That’s helped boost sales at places like Crank Arm Brewing Company, where business remains uneven more than three years after the pandemic.

    “2020 was really, really rough, as was the early part of 2021,” said co-owner Adam Eckhardt. “So we are definitely looking for a way to recoup massive and catastrophic losses.”

    More people are living in downtown Raleigh, he said, but the after-work crowd has not rebounded, as many employers remain on hybrid schedules or have closed their downtown offices altogether.

    Eckhardt said some residents were worried that the social district would cause a rise in public drunkenness or other crimes. But he said that simply hasn’t happened, because all the same laws forbidding drunken driving and disorderly conduct are still enforced.

    “Those laws aren’t being done away with. All that’s being done away with is essentially the retail open container law,” he said.

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    © 2023 States Newsroom

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  • Man charged in incident at Jewish group facilities

    A man arrested last week for allegedly having a gun in the parking lot of the Jewish Federation of Detroit’s building has been charged, officials said.

    Steven Daniel Zalla, 55, was arraigned Monday through 48th District Court in Bloomfield Hills on a charge of felonious assault, police said.

    A judge set his bond at $100,000 and scheduled his next court date for next Tuesday.

    If convicted, he faces up to four years in prison.

    Police arrested Zalla last Thursday after officers were called at about 11:30 a.m. to the Max M. Fisher Jewish Federation Building on Telegraph Road near West Maple Road. They were told there was a man outside of the building’s front doors with a gun.

    Investigators allege he went to the building and tried to enter, but staff denied him access because he didn’t have valid identification when he tried to check in at the front desk.

    Zalla returned to his vehicle to get his ID and then went back into the building, authorities said.

    Investigators said he encountered a food delivery person outside of the building. The delivery worker told police he allegedly saw a gun in Zalla’s waistband.

    At the same time, a FedEx delivery driver arrived at the building to drop off a package. Zalla allegedly ordered the driver to move the truck. He then pulled the gun out of his waistband and pointed it at the driver when he didn’t move fast enough, according to police.

    Detectives said the driver got back in his truck and drove away as Zalla allegedly ran behind the vehicle with the gun in his hand for a short distance.

    Building security and the FedEx driver called 911.

    Police arrived at the building and found Zalla in his vehicle. They took him into custody without incident, officials said.

    They also found a silver revolver on him. Officers later determined the weapon was a pellet gun.

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    © 2023 www.detroitnews.com

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  • Georgia Rep. McCormick closes district office after ‘serious threats’

    U.S. Rep. Rich McCormick sent staff in his Cumming, Georgia, office home Tuesday after it was targeted by “serious threats of violence.”

    McCormick, a first-term Republican who lives in Suwanee, wrote on X, the site formerly known as Twitter, that the threats were reported to U.S. Capitol Police, which has jurisdiction over members in Washington and their district offices.

    A spokeswoman for McCormick declined to share details about the threats received and whether they referenced any of his recent work at the Capitol. Staff members are safe and working from home; the district’s phone lines are still open and calls are being answered, but the physical office is closed indefinitely.

    McCormick took center stage on the House floor Tuesday, leading an effort to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan Democrat, over comments she made during pro-Palestine protests. The House voted to move forward with McCormick’s censure resolution, with a vote scheduled for Wednesday.

    That put McCormick at odds with fellow Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has her own competing censure resolution. Greene’s measure is struggling to gain support now that lawmakers have given McCormick’s legislation the green light.

    Supporters of both Greene and Tlaib have criticized McCormick. It’s unclear whether the threats to his office are related.

    The incident occurred on the same day that an Atlanta man carrying a long gun was arrested near the U.S. Capitol. Ahmir Lavon Merrell, who is currently on probation in Fulton County, prompted several street closures in a park north of the Capitol after he was spotted with a rifle, Capitol Police said.

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    © 2023 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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  • Top Democrat reveals 2024 plans

    Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) announced on Thursday that he will not seek reelection in 2024.

    “After months of deliberation and long conversations with my family, I believe in my heart of hearts that I have accomplished what I set out to do for West Virginia. I have made one of the toughest decisions of my life and decided that I will not be running for re-election to the United States Senate,” Manchin said in a statement. “But what I will be doing is traveling the country and speaking out to see if there is an interest in creating a movement to mobilize the middle and bring Americans together.”

    Manchin also posted a video statement on X.

    “To the West Virginians who have put their trust in me and fought side by side to make our state better – it has been an honor of my life to serve you. Thank you. My statement on my political future,” he wrote.

    Manchin’s decision comes after the Democrat senator indicated he would announce whether or not he intends to run for president within the next three months, fueling speculation that another top Democrat might challenge President Joe Biden in 2024.

    During an interview with Shannon Bream on “Fox News Sunday” last month, Manchin was asked about his potential decision to run as a third-party candidate in next year’s election.

    “Why not have options? People aren’t satisfied right now,” the West Virginia senator responded.

    Asked if he was going to announce his decision during Sunday’s interview, Manchin answered, “Not this morning. Let me just say this. I’ll do it. I’m more concerned about the country right now. What you’ve seen, the theatrics that played out yesterday and up until yesterday, it’s ridiculous.”

    This was a breaking news story. The details were periodically updated as more information became available.



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  • US military strikes Iran-backed Syria facility

    The United States military conducted a retaliatory airstrike Wednesday on a facility in eastern Syria that is connected to Iran-backed terrorist organizations.

    In a statement from the Pentagon Wednesday, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin stated, “Today, at President Biden’s direction, U.S. military forces conducted a self-defense strike on a facility in eastern Syria used by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and affiliated groups.”

    According to Austin, Wednesday’s airstrike against a weapons storage facility in eastern Syria was carried out by two U.S. F-15s. Austin explained that the “precision self-defense strike” was a military response to the dozens of attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria that have been conducted by the IRGC and other terrorist organizations.

    “The President has no higher priority than the safety of U.S. personnel, and he directed today’s action to make clear that the United States will defend itself, its personnel, and its interests,” Austin stated. “The United States is fully prepared to take further necessary measures to protect our people and our facilities. We urge against any escalation. U.S. personnel will continue to conduct counter-ISIS missions in Iraq and Syria.”

    READ MORE: Video: Iran-backed terrorists shoot down US military drone: Report

    Wednesday’s airstrike in Syria is the second time in the past couple of weeks that the United States military has conducted strikes against facilities used by Iran-backed terrorist organizations in retaliation for attacks against U.S. forces. According to Military.com, various terrorist organizations in the Middle East have conducted at least 40 attacks against U.S. forces since Oct. 17.

    Military.com reported that the most recent U.S. strike against an Iran-backed facility in Syria was intended to destroy weapons, ammunition, and supplies that could be used by Iran-backed terrorist organizations to carry out additional attacks against U.S. forces in Syria and Iraq, as well as to deter terrorist organizations from engaging in attacks against U.S. bases.

    On Oct. 27, the U.S. military executed two strikes against Iran-backed facilities in Syria. After the Oct. strikes, Austin stated, “The United States does not seek conflict and has no intention nor desire to engage in further hostilities, but these Iranian-backed attacks against U.S. forces are unacceptable and must stop.”

    Despite the U.S. military conducting retaliatory strikes to deter attacks against U.S. forces, terrorist organizations in the Middle East have continued to carry out both drone and rocket attacks. However, the Pentagon has reported that the most recent attacks have not resulted in significant damage or injuries.



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  • Man shoots, kills 2 climate activists

    Panama police arrested Kenneth Darlington, a 77-year-old American lawyer and professor, after he allegedly fatally shot two climate activists Tuesday who were blocking a major highway.

    According to The New York Post, Darlington, who is a dual citizen of the United States and Panama, was recorded approaching a climate activist blockade on the Chame sector of the Pan American Highway, before initially arguing and waving his hand at the climate activists.

    Video footage shared on X, formerly Twitter, shows how Darlingon eventually pulled out a handgun from his pocket and began removing the protestors’ items from the barricade. Video footage also shows the 77-year-old professor fatally shooting two climate activists for refusing to move out of the way.

    The first victim of the shooting, identified as Abdiel Diaz, was witnessed immediately collapsing dead at the scene, according to The Daily Caller; while, the second victim, Ivan Rodriguez, was pronounced dead after being taken to a local hospital.

    Newsroom Panama reported that Darlingon was arrested by the police and currently remains in custody. According to The Daily Mail, Darlington was previously convicted for illegally possessing a firearm.

    READ MORE: Judge shot and killed in his driveway

    According to The New York Post, climate activists have been blocking the Pan-American Highway over the last three weeks in protest against a mining contract that will allow First Quantum Minerals, a Canadian-based company, to operate the largest copper mine pit in the region for approximately 20 more years.

    The massive protest has resulted in up to $80 million in losses per day for businesses. The Panama climate protest has also resulted in schools being shut down across the nation for over a week.

    In response to the tragic shooting that resulted in two climate activists being killed, Panama President Laurentino Cortizo issued a statement on X. Cortizo expressed his sympathy to the families of the climate activists and emphasized that the type of violence exhibited in the shooting incident “has no place” in Panama.



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  • Iran-backed terrorists attack US military drone: Report

    A MQ-9 Reaper, an advanced U.S. military drone, was shot down by Iran-backed Houthi forces off the coast of Yemen Wednesday, a senior U.S. defense official revealed.

    “We can confirm that a U.S. military MQ-9 remotely-piloted aircraft was shot down off the coast of Yemen by Houthi forces,” the senior official told Fox News, underlining a spike in the regional tension that has involved multiple attacks by Iranian-backed groups against U.S. forces in the Middle East.

    According to the senior defense official, the latest confrontation occurred as the drone, valued at roughly $30 million, conducted routine surveillance over international waters. Central Command officials are currently investigating the details of the incident, which marks a significant challenge to U.S. military operations in the region.

    The downing of the MQ-9 Reaper, allegedly by a SA-6 surface-to-air missile, was allegedly documented in a video released by Houthi terrorists.

    The MW-9 Reaper drone, equipped with state-of-the-art imaging technology, is capable of high-altitude reconnaissance and precision strikes, carrying up to eight laser-guided hellfire missiles, according to the U.S. Air Force. The unmanned drone’s versatility makes it a critical asset in the U.S. military’s surveillance and intelligence-gathering operations.

    READ MORE: US military strikes facilities in Syria used by Iran

    The Houthi attack against the U.S. military drone mirrors an earlier incident from June 6, 2019, when Houthi forces successfully shot down a similar drone, according to Fox News. Notably, the Biden administration removed the Houthis from the U.S. list of terrorist groups in 2021, according to The Daily Wire.

    The attack against the MQ-9 Reaper, with its impressive 66-foot wingspan and ability to stay airborne for over 27 hours, reflects the heightened risks U.S. forces have faced from Iranian-backed terrorist organizations in the Middle East over the past few weeks.

    This news article was partially created with the assistance of artificial intelligence and edited and fact-checked by a human editor.



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  • Capitol Police arrest armed man near Senate building

    Capitol Police officers confronted and arrested a man in tan clothes Tuesday who had a gun in the park between Union Station and the Senate side of the campus, the department said.

    At 12:39 p.m. a person told Capitol Police officers near the Russell Senate Office Building that there was a man with a gun in the park near Union Station.

    A flurry of cop cars and officers descended on the park, causing closures of Columbus Circle and D Street Northeast between Louisiana and Delaware avenues northeast.

    Officers encountered Ahmir Lavon Merrell, 21, of Atlanta, who was holding the gun down as he walked slowly toward Union Station, the department said.

    Chief J. Thomas Manger said officers approached Merrell from behind, ordered him to stop and shouted at him to drop the gun, but Merrell did not comply.

    One officer tasered him in the back, causing him to fall forward onto his gun, the department said. He was taken to the hospital. Merrell left a bag in the park, which officers searched.

    Manger commended the quick work of the officers. “From the time that the officers got word that there was an individual in the park to the time we had him in custody was about three minutes,” Manger said.

    Manger said it’s unclear why Merrell was on the campus with a gun and that the department is still investigating. He added Merrell “may be dealing with some mental health issues” but “we don’t know that.”

    Merrell will be charged with having a firearm on Capitol grounds, and other charges are possible, Manger said. Merrell is a registered sex offender, according to the chief.

    Manger said the gun “appears to be a semiautomatic weapon.”

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  • ‘Sexist, chauvinistic and anti-military’ cops are harassing me, officer claims in suit

    A police officer in Aberdeen has sued her department, alleging she has been harassed, passed over for promotions and discriminated against for years because of her military background and gender.

    In a lawsuit filed in Superior Court in Monmouth County, Jessica McDougall Marr alleges her superiors and fellow officers have subjected her to “a strong culture of misogyny and anti-military bias” as well as a consistently hostile work environment.

    The suit names the police department, the township and the township manager Bryan Russell as defendants.

    “She’s so well respected within the military for her service that it’s really even more outrageous and harmful that the police department treats her like she’s incapable and incompetent solely because she’s a woman,” her Chatham-based attorney Gina Mendola Longarzo said by phone Monday. “She should have been promoted on several different occasions. If you line her up against anyone who has been promoted her accomplishments outshine them all. She’s been held back and it’s really unfair.”

    Russell said in an email that the township has yet to be served with the suit and declined to comment.

    Neither Aberdeen police Chief Matthew Lloyd nor Capt. Craig Hasumann are named as defendants, though both are mentioned prominently in an array of allegations made by Marr in the lawsuit. Neither could be reached by NJ Advance Media on Monday.

    Aberdeen Mayor Fred Tagliarini declined to immediately comment when reached by phone Monday, saying he hadn’t yet seen the lawsuit.

    In it, Marr alleges she has been mistreated by most of the department for years.

    “‘The “old boys club’ within the department has been supported and has thrived from her day of hiring through the current time and Marr has been shunned, abused and subjected to disparate treatment on an almost daily basis,” the complaint says.

    In one alleged example of many provided in the 57-page complaint, Marr said she was turned down for a position as a range instructor when the then deputy police chief in Aberdeen told Marr she would not be able to qualify or pass the course and that she “certainly had no knowledge of firearms.”

    He made the comment even though Marr held a similar position with the Navy, received a marksmanship award and is a drill instructor in the Monmouth County Police Academy, the suit claimed.

    The suit alleges Marr was regularly mocked for her military background — she is a Petty Officer First Class in the United States Navy Reserve and is still part of the Naval Criminal Investigative Services. Other officers and supervisors made comments about her “playing with puddle jumpers” on weekends.

    In addition to being denied promotions given to police officers with less experience who are men, the suit alleges Marr has never been moved off the traffic unit despite her stellar record on it and many requests for other assignments. Other officers have failed to provide her backup on traffic stops when she asked for it, and Marr herself is never asked to provide backup for other officers, according to the suit.

    In 2019, a sergeant mocked Marr by saying traffic officers are “not real cops” and by using the acronym “OATS” (Officers Against Traffic Safety) to refer to the traffic division.

    And while Marr is the senior officer on the police department’s traffic unit she is not called out to investigate fatal crashes, the suit says.

    She was also punished by being put on the midnight shift, after spending several months on leave from the police department while recalled to the military in 2019 and 2020, she claimed.

    In different instances, Marr alleged other officers suggested in 2016 she was a lesbian. When she told her fellow officers she is married to a man, they allegedly began referring to her as “bipolar.”

    Later, in 2018 rumors swirled in the department that she was having sex with other cops, according to the suit. The rumors led a former deputy chief to personally conduct surveillance on her home to see if other officers were leaving it, the suit alleges. She later moved to Manalapan to escape the intrusion.

    “Sexist, chauvinistic and anti-military comments and behavior have permeated her entire time in the department,” the suit alleges.

    Hired as a police officer in 2014, Marr previously worked as a dispatcher for the department. She is paid annual salary of $130,480, according to state pension records.

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