Grand Opening of Haddonfield Police HQ

Commissioners Join Federal, State, and Local Leaders to Celebrate

Congressman Donald Norcross, Commissioner Director Louis Cappelli Jr.Commissioner Colleen Bianco Bezich, and federal, state, and local officials gathered in Haddonfield earlier today, to celebrate the grand opening of the newly constructed Haddonfield Police Headquarters. The Camden County Improvement Authority was the project manager for the renovation and construction that transformed the former bank into the borough’s new police station.

“As the former mayor of Haddonfield, I know firsthand how hard the men and women of the Haddonfield Police Department work every day to protect the residents and visitors of the town,” said Commissioner Colleen Bianco Bezich. “I am thrilled to see these officers have a dedicated space to help the department continue to grow, thrive, and serve the community.” To see photos, Click Here.

Bill to Set Guidelines for AI Use Among NJ Professionals Clears Committee

As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly used in the workplace to streamline tasks and make operations more efficient, Assembly Democrats continue to encourage responsible growth of technology. The Assembly Regulated Professions Committee today advanced Bill A4731, which would create a model policy for the use of generative AI. Assemblymembers Tennille R. McCoyBalvir Singh and Luanne Peterpaul sponsored the legislation.
“Navigating the practical uses of AI is one of the most important challenges facing professionals today,” said Assemblywoman McCoy (D-Mercer, Middlesex). “As this technology becomes more common in workplaces across New Jersey, we must ensure there are clear standards and regulations in place to protect consumers while also allowing a space for innovation.”
Bill A4731 would direct professional and occupational boards to promulgate rules for licensee use of generative AI. Specifically, the bill would direct the Division of Consumer Affairs to create a model policy governing the use of generative AI by licensed professionals across New Jersey’s regulatory boards. The boards would then be able to use that model policy to create and adopt policies for their professions, putting guardrails in place to ensure that professionals use generative AI in ethical and fair ways to best benefit their clients, patients or customers.
“New technology like generative AI can be a useful tool to boost efficiency, but we need to put some standards in place,” said Assemblyman Singh (D-Burlington). “As we continue moving into the digital future, providing guidance to make sure licensed professionals are using AI in a way that is consistent with their duties and obligations is more important than ever.”
“Studies show that many businesses and professionals are still in the experimentation or piloting phase of using AI, making now the perfect time to advance Bill A4731,” said Assemblywoman Peterpaul (D-Monmouth). “The integration of AI in the workplace is inevitable, and establishing guidelines today will benefit the patients, workers and consumers of tomorrow.” 

Why a Single AI Model Is Never Enough for Real Image Editing

The AI image editing space has a quiet problem that most promotional content avoids. Almost every platform talks about its model as if one engine can handle every editing job equally well. In practice, that is rarely true. A model that produces stunning style transfers may struggle with removing a simple background line. An engine that removes objects flawlessly may distort facial features when asked to adjust lighting. I have seen this pattern repeat across dozens of tests, which is why the structure of PicEditor AI caught my attention differently. Instead of betting everything on a single model, the platform integrates multiple engines and lets the user choose which one fits the task. That approach does not claim perfection, but from a practical user perspective, it solves a real frustration. And that is exactly where AI Photo Editor starts to feel less like a demo and more like a workspace designed for actual variety.

Different Editing Jobs Pull in Different Technical Directions

Not every edit asks for the same thing. Some jobs need photorealistic detail preservation. Some need raw speed for rapid iteration. Some require pixel-level precision on complex regions. Some need to turn a still image into motion. A single model optimized for one of these directions will inevitably be weaker in others, not because it is bad, but because optimization requires trade-offs.

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Trump Administration Full-Scale War on Fraud

(WASHINGTON, D.C.)(CNBNews)(JUNE 1, 2026)–President Donald J. Trump and Vice President JD Vance are unleashing an unrelenting, full-scale assault on the fraudsters, scammers, and corrupt operators who have looted billions from American taxpayers. The White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud is moving at unprecedented speed and ferocity to root out the waste, abuse, and criminal exploitation of government programs that have drained billions from hardworking taxpayers.

This is a direct offensive against every fraudulent scheme preying on hardworking Americans — and the results are already staggering.

Here are some of the Task Force’s key actions and victories to date:

  • February 25, 2026: The Trump Administration halted nearly $260 million in Medicaid payments to Minnesota over rampant fraud allegations, demanding full cooperation with federal investigators.
  • March 19, 2026: Federal prosecutors charged 11 individuals in a major real estate and loan fraud ring preying on elderly Americans in California.
  • March 25, 2026: The Trump Administration suspended dozens of high-risk hospice and home health providers in the Los Angeles area.
  • March 30, 2026: The Trump Administration launched a new national fraud whistleblower program to empower Americans to expose waste and abuse.
  • April 2, 2026: The Trump Administration suspended hundreds additional high-risk hospice and home health providers across California.
  • April 3, 2026: Federal prosecutors charged more than a dozen individuals in a $50 million hospice fraud scheme.
  • April 7, 2026: The Department of Justice secured a guilty plea from a California fraudster accused of submitting $270 million in false reimbursement claims.
  • April 8, 2026: The Department of Justice confirmed it has 8,000 active, ongoing fraud cases.
  • April 8, 2026: The Task Force uncovered $6.3 billion in suspected fraudulent government contracts and immediately launched a sweeping investigation.
  • April 15, 2026: The Trump Administration suspended 447 hospices and 23 home health agencies in Los Angeles, with estimated fraud exceeding $600 million.
  • April 16, 2026: The Trump Administration served criminal warrants and administrative charges on 20 Minnesota businesses suspected of SNAP fraud.
  • April 17, 2026: The Department of Justice announced its newly established National Fraud Enforcement Division took enforcement action in schemes totaling over $340 million in its first week alone.
  • April 24, 2026: The Small Business Administration referred 562,000 fraudulent or delinquent pandemic-era loans — totaling $22 billion — for aggressive collection.
  • April 28, 2026: The Department of Justice conducted targeted enforcement operations at nearly two dozen Minnesota childcare centers suspected of systemic fraud.
  • April 30, 2026: The Department of Justice launched a West Coast Strike Force team targeting healthcare fraud across Arizona, Nevada, and northern California.
  • April 30, 2026: The Trump Administration deferred an additional $91 million in federal Medicaid funds from non-cooperating Minnesota.
  • May 12, 2026: The Trump Administration identified over 10,000 suspected fraud cases in immigration student work programs.
  • May 13, 2026: The Trump Administration suspended $1.4 billion in home health and hospice funding nationwide.
  • May 13, 2026: The Trump Administration deferred $1.3 billion in federal Medicaid reimbursements for California.
  • May 13, 2026: The Trump Administration halted all new Medicare enrollments for hospice providers nationwide until the fraud crisis is brought under control.
  • May 13, 2026: The Trump Administration launched audits of Medicaid Fraud Control Units in all 50 states.
  • May 13, 2026: The Trump Administration blocked $60 million in fraudulent student loan applications in just the first month since deploying enhanced screening.
  • May 20, 2026: The Department of Justice charged a Minneapolis daycare owner featured in Nick Shirley’s viral video.
  • May 21, 2026: The Department of Justice expanded its Health Care Fraud Strike Force program, adding additional prosecutors to combat Medicaid fraud nationwide.
  • May 21, 2026: The Department of Justice charged 15 individuals in a wide-ranging Minnesota healthcare fraud scheme — including the highest loss amount ever charged in a Medicaid case in the state and the largest autism fraud scheme ever prosecuted.

This is only the beginning. The Trump Administration will continue this relentless effort until every scheme is exposed, every dollar possible is recovered, and the American people’s trust in their government is restored.

Ramps to I-676 from Holtec Boulevard eastbound to be closed and detoured overnight this week in Camden

The I-676 northbound ramp from Holtec Boulevard eastbound is scheduled to be closed and detoured tonight as a bridge replacement and paving project advances in Camden and Gloucester City, Camden County. In addition, the I-676 southbound ramp from Holtec Boulevard eastbound is scheduled to be closed and detoured Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights.

Beginning at 11 p.m. tonight, Monday, June 1 until 5 a.m. tomorrow, Tuesday, June 2, the Holtec Boulevard eastbound ramp to I-676 northbound is scheduled to be closed. The closures are necessary to place construction barrier for upcoming noise wall demolition. The following detour will be in place:

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Wanted: Suspects for Assault in the 9th District [VIDEO]

The Philadelphia Police Department-Central Detective Division is seeking the public’s help in identifying the individuals depicted in the following stills and video clips.

On April 18, 2026, at approximately 2:15 AM, the complainants were assaulted along the 1300 block of Chestnut St by a group of three. During the assault the complainants’ bags were stolen and their credit cards were later used fraudulently. The complainants were hospitalized with significant face and head injuries.

  • Suspect Description:
    Suspect #1: Black female, 25-30 years-of-age, 5’5″-5’7″, 150 lbs., medium build.
    Suspect #2: Black female, 25-30 years-of-age, 5’2″-5’4″, 130 lbs., medium build, tattoo on right side chest..
    Suspect #3: Black female, 25-30 years-of-age, 5’5″, 175 lbs, heavy build.
  • To view this video and more, visit The Philadelphia Police YouTube Channel or https://phillypolice.com/news

Note: This video has no audio.

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Pine Hill Police Department is Seeking Public Assistance

Pine Hill Police Department are asking for assistance from the public in locating Brian Johnston who is wanted on Complaint-Warrant 0428-W-2026-000109 for Stalking.

Anyone with information or observing Brian Johnston are asked to contact Pine Hill Police Department.

Contact D/Sgt. Eric Davies #43 at 856-783-1549 x 443/ edavies@pinehillpd.com or at confidential@pinehillpd.com.

You can also text TIP PINEHILLPD followed by your tip to 88877.

How AI-Powered Media Strategy Is Helping Small Businesses Compete With Big Brands in 2026

For years, small and mid-sized businesses have faced an uncomfortable truth: competing with big brands in the marketing arena felt like showing up to a gunfight with a pocket knife. Large corporations commanded massive media budgets, armies of analysts, and access to proprietary data that smaller businesses could only dream about. But 2026 looks very different — and artificial intelligence is the reason why.

The old playbook is broken

Traditional media strategy rewarded scale. The more you spent, the more reach you got. Big brands could afford to blanket television, radio, and digital channels simultaneously, while small businesses were forced to pick one or two channels and hope for the best. Even when SMBs tried to compete digitally, they were outbid on keywords, outspent on social ads, and out-resourced when it came to data analysis. The playing field was anything but level.

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Migrant Jail Protestors Arrested in Newark for Curfew Violation

(THE NEW JERSEY MONITOR)(June 1, 2026)–A new curfew implemented in Newark led to numerous arrests outside migrant jail Delaney Hall Sunday night as state and local police attempted to keep protesters and members of the media away from the detention center.

It’s unclear how many people were taken into custody, and authorities did not respond to a request for comment Monday. The weekend marked the start of a new strategy employed by Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s administration to have New Jersey State Police, and not federal agents, manage the crowds that have gathered outside the jail in the last 10 days to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Protesters are criticizing state troopers’ tactics. In a statement Sunday, Nedia Morsy of immigrant advocacy group Make the Road New Jersey said police have not made honest attempts to de-escalate tensions outside the jail or talk to people who are gathering there.

“If the State Police are going to use the same tactics as ICE agents, then they are no different than ICE. These actions do not in fact uphold public safety and do not protect people’s constitutional rights to peacefully demonstrate,” she said.

Morsy said troopers used excessive force against unarmed protesters exercising their First Amendment rights, a move she called baffling.

Amy Torres of the New Jersey Alliance for Immigrant Justice said she received calls from people at Sunday’s protest who were confused about where they could and could not protest. Newark city officials implemented a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew for the half-mile around Delaney Hall, but some protesters said they were chased away by authorities even if they were farther than that from the detention center.

Torres said no map was published for people who want to comply with the curfew, and said the lack of direction gave her “flashbacks to sunset towns in West Texas.”

“It’s absurd. It’s absolutely impossible for people to comply when the law is written loosely enough for police on the ground to interpret it however they would like,” she said. “Police are chasing people into the night. It boggles my mind. It’s so irresponsible, and it’s not keeping anyone safe.”

Attorney General Jen Davenport said in a statement that police issued dispersal warnings in both English and Spanish beginning at 8:15 p.m. on Sunday. She said a group of people who were “armed with helmets, shields or gas masks” that ignored the order were arrested.

“Their actions put the public at risk, and I am grateful to law enforcement for de-escalating the situation,” she said.

Kathy O’Leary has been organizing outside of Delaney Hall since it opened last year, and helps run a volunteer tent where families and loved ones of detainees receive food and connect with attorneys and social workers. O’Leary said she’s been unable to get to the tent since police blocked off Doremus Avenue to pedestrians and some vehicular traffic.

O’Leary stressed that protests shifted focus away from the detainees inside the jail, who launched a hunger and labor strike 10 days ago to protest conditions in the facility.

“Having this many people put pressure, there’s value in that. But if they put the energy into actually finding out who is inside Delaney Hall, what their stories are, what’s happening inside, it would be different,” she said. “This hole that we’re in, it’s not helping people uplift (detainees’) voices. People have been dehumanized for so long.”

Loved ones of people locked up in the privately operated, 1,000-bed facility on Doremus Avenue, run by Geo Group, have described overcrowded rooms, moldy food with live worms, inadequate medical care, and retaliation by guards. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has denied those claims and said no detainees were on strike.

The crisis escalated over Memorial Day weekend, when federal lawmakers were denied entry into the facility. Protesters and ICE officials clashed outside the jail, with ICE firing pepper balls and tear gas, catching Sen. Andy Kim in the melee.

Each night last week brought new clashes between protesters and ICE agents. By Friday, Sherrill, a Democrat who has clashed with the Trump administration over its mass detention and deportation effort, announced that state troopers would take over security outside the jail.

Family visitation privileges for inmates, which had been suspended after protests broke out, resumed Sunday. Sherrill characterized the switch as one she demanded, but Trump administration officials told reporters they restored visitation after authorities moved protesters away from the jail’s entrance.

Officials did not say how many families were able to enter the facility Sunday afternoon.

O’Leary said just five family members were allowed into Delaney Hall Sunday. And she noted that visitation allowances are about to change, with detainees required to list eight approved people to visit with their full names, birth dates, and home addresses. Prior to this, people needed just an ID to get in, she said.

“If yesterday was a normal day, we would’ve seen 500 visitors come. The families are desperate, the people inside are suffering, and they’re suffering from being tortured,” she said.

More Democratic elected officials visited the jail over the weekend. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries arrived at the facility Sunday morning alongside Reps. Josh Gottheimer, LaMonica McIver, and Rob Menendez for an oversight visit.

Jeffries said the conditions he saw inside and discussions with about two dozen detainees “shocked the conscience.” He pointed to unsanitary living conditions, lack of medical care, and unhealthy food.

“Immigration enforcement in this country should be fair, just, and humane,” he said. “The Trump administration is doing the exact opposite. Delaney Hall must be shut down immediately.”

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Published with permission of The New Jersey Monitor

Concerts & Shows at Scottish Rite Auditorium

Tickets are Available Now!

The stage is set for an exciting lineup of live entertainment, and tickets are available now! From high-energy concerts to unforgettable live performances, the historic venue welcomes an incredible mix of artists and shows for you to enjoy. Dedicated music fans, those that love live theater, and anyone just looking for a fun night out with friends or family, there’s something on the calendar for everyone. To purchase tickets, Click Here.

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