Dumont Man (Hoboken Police Officer), Wife Charged With $187G In Superstorm Sandy Scam Dumont Man (Hoboken Police Officer), Wife Charged With $187G In Superstorm Sandy Scam
Dumont Man (Hoboken Police Officer), Wife Charged With $187G In Superstorm Sandy Scam A 45-year-old Dumont man was forced to forfeit his position as a Hoboken police officer after he and his wife were found guilty of collecting $187,000 by lying on superstorm Sandy relief applications, authorities charged. Nikola Lulaj and Majlinda Lulaj, 32, falsely claimed in their applications that their home in Seaside Heights -- which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy -- was their primary residence at the time the disaster struck, New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal said. Their primary residence, however, was in Dumont, and the Seaside Heights home was a rental property, the atto…
Lodi Postman Charged With $37,822 Superstorm Sandy Scam Lodi Postman Charged With $37,822 Superstorm Sandy Scam
Lodi Postman Charged With $37,822 Superstorm Sandy Scam A U.S. Navy veteran from Lodi who works as a postal carrier pocketed $37,822 in taxpayer-funded Superstorm Sandy relief by claiming his damaged Jersey Shore home as his primary residence, state authorities charged. The home that 51-year-old Peter Raia Jr. owns on Lincoln Avenue in Seaside Heights that was damaged by the historic storm is actually a summer/weekend property, state Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal said. By lying on applications, Raia received $5,640 from FEMA, a $10,000 RSP grant, $14,000 in SBA loan proceeds, and $8,182 in SHRAP funds, Grewal said. Authorities charged him w…
Taut Bodies, Shiny Trophies? Nice, But Not What Hawthorne Fitness Coach Is Really After Taut Bodies, Shiny Trophies? Nice, But Not What Hawthorne Fitness Coach Is Really After
Taut Bodies, Shiny Trophies? Nice, But Not What Hawthorne Fitness Coach Is Really After Hawthorne bodybuilding coach Guy Del Corso has too many success stories to put a number on. He's turned hopeless amateurs into thriving professionals and transformed terminal cancer patients into champion athletes. He even gave last year's Ms. Olympia the single piece of advice that changed the trajectory of her stunning career. The taut bodies and shiny trophies, however, are not all that the 62-year-old is after. That, he says, is more than skin-deep. "The most fulfilling thing is not about winning," said Del Corso, a retired champion bodybuilder and Mr. New Jersey 1988. "…