Monday, 5 November 2012

Martial Law in New Jersey

Martial law declared in New Jersey
The boardwalk town of Seaside Heights in New Jersey has declared martial law in the wake of damage from Sandy.



4 November, 2012

6 Action News, the ABC affiliate based out of Philadelphia, reported that the fact, while showing the damage to rides and attractions in the area. Several other nearby towns are also under martial law, with the devastation to property and lives not yet clear.

We know people are there, we’re keeping an eye on them, and they need to stay on their property. If they come off their property to come off the island, then they don’t get back on. It’ll be a while before anybody gets back on the island until we make it safe,” Toms River Police Chief Mike Mastronardy told the station.


Police are conducting door-to-door sweeps to check for dead bodies and evacuate survivors.


Several video feeds show the damage to the pier and its attractions, as well as to the homes, many of which were reduced to splinters or heavily damaged by flooding.


Meanwhile, local communities in the flooded Susquehanna Valley in Pennsylvania have made emergency declarations and is “pondering martial law.” For the time being, curfews have been enforced in towns including Wilkes-Barre and West Pittston in the area.


City council in Wilkes-Barre authorized Mayor Tom Leighton to “take any necessary action,” which includes martial law, according to CitizensVoice.com. Prison Planet


HIGHLIGHTS


State troopers are being deployed in greater numbers at gas stations along the New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway, where stocks of gasoline are beginning to run low, causing frayed nerves and high angst on the third full day of massive power outages that industry analysts don't expect will be fixed too soon. --Natural News


Frustration with dwindling supplies of gasoline and other necessities of life is beginning to boil over in the tri-state region of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, the states hardest hit by Superstorm Sandy-caused power outages. --Fox News


Officials say better than half of all gas stations in the New York City area and New Jersey are not operating - either because they don't have fuel or because they don't have the electricity to operate their pumps. 
--Natural News


The U.S. death toll from the storm is currently 107, including 41 in New York City. More than 2.2 million customers in several states remained without power days after Sandy came ashore
--CBS News

About 875,000 still don't have electricity in the New York metropolitan area, including about 460,000 on Long Island
--CBS News

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