The Record

October 2, 2008 - 4:06pm

Pillets not likely to be charged; state says reporter initially denied having DEP files

Sources say that the Department of Law and Public Safety is not expected to file criminal charges against Jeff Pillets, a Pulitzer-nominated investigative reporter at The Record, after reviewing a report from the Department of Environmental Protection that Pillets removed public documents.  David Wald, a spokesman for Attorney General Anne Milgram, had no comment on the Pillets matter.  Written statements from Elaine Makatura, a spokesman for DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson, and Pillets, are essentially the same -- except on one point: the DEP says Pillets initially denied having the missing files, while Pillets says he was a model of cooperation.

The following is a written statement from Makatura, send to PolitickerNJ.com yesterday and today:

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September 30, 2008 - 12:51pm

It's that old 'do as I say, not as I do' trick

Jennifer Borg, who runs the legal department at The Record and is part of the family that owns the newspaper, continues to decline comment on the state probe of reporter Jeff Pillets, who allegedly removed state documents from the Department of Environmental Protection.  There is speculation that The Record and Pillets has retained a criminal defense attorney -- if the reporter is charged with stealing public documents, he could face time in prison -- but Borg, Pillets and his editor have not responded to numerous inquiries.  It's been a week since Pillets filed a story.

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  • Friday, September 26, 2008
    Winners:
    THE STAR-LEDGER, , JON CORZINE, , LEONARD LANCE AND CHRISTOPHER MYERS, , JOSH DREW, , N.J. STUDENTS, , , , , , , , , , ,
    Losers:
    The Record, Howard Schoor, LEONARD LANCE AND CHRISTOPHER MYERS, Joe Garcia, DEMOCRATIC COUNTY CHAIRMEN
  • September 24, 2008 - 11:12am

    No comment

    Often when a reporter uses phrases like "declined to answer questions", "had no comment for this article", and "did not respond to requests for an interview", it's usually not good for the person the story is about. 

    At least it did not bode well for those who refused to answer questions posed by The Record's Jeff Pillets in a series of articles he wrote about EnCap that has recently earned him accolades from his peers.  The EnCap series was also "selected as a finalist in the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting," (The Record, 8/22/08).

    So it seems like a double standard when North Jersey Media Group Vice-President/Editor Frank Scandale declined to confirm or deny any investigation of Pillets by the New Jersey State Police for allegedly swiping some documents from the Department of Environmental Protection.

    Instead Scandale punted PolitickerNJ.com's inquires to the Attorney General Office's who also declined to comment. 

    But of course.  That's standard operating procedure for law enforcement folks.  It's not for a newspaper organization.

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    September 2, 2008 - 3:56pm

    For New Jersey cartoonists, the best view of the convention is from behind their drafting table

    A convention cartoon by Jimmy Margulies, editorial cartoonist for The Record.: (www.northjersey.com)A convention cartoon by Jimmy Margulies, editorial cartoonist for The Record.: (www.northjersey.com)Several cartoonists from throughout the country converged upon the Democratic National Convention last week in Denver, and many more will attend this week's Republican National Convention in Minneapolis.

    But their New Jersey comrades won't be joining them.

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    July 23, 2008 - 8:36am

    Torricelli on The Record, aka the 'Hacks of Hackensack'

    One hesitates to quote Shakespeare to the Editors of The Record. The thought of all that dust rising from their library shelves is enough to make me sneeze. They do, however, "protest too much".

    The Editors of the Record (known affectionately as the "Hacks on the Hackensack") announced that they were closing their main office, firing photographers, and reporters would operate from homes and automobiles by cell phone. This announcement, in the context of falling subscription rates and declining advertising revenues, led to the inevitable observation that the Record is on a course to bankruptcy.

    It was a fair point. Newspapers are failing every day. The Record is located in one of the best demographic regions of the nation but has been increasingly marginalized. Its readership is aging and limited to the least educated and lowest economic base of Bergen County. Subscription rates and the County mortality rate are almost exactly equal.

    The Record probably would have died anyway but the decision to abandon its role as the staple of suburban living and adopt an angry and mean tone accelerated the larger destructive trends. Newspapers are dying every day but some survive by filling niches. The Star Ledger has become the only credible source of state news while the New York Times and Washington Post have become indispensable as sources of international or national information. The Record decided that it had a role as the mirror of everything that was ugly on the face of its own constituency.

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    July 21, 2008 - 9:43am

    Bossgate '08: Frank Lautenberg the scalper

    A rather excellent column by The Record’s Charles Stile could put the kibosh on a fundraiser that was expected to bring in $60,000 for U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg’s re-election campaign.   The Lautenberg campaign, according to the published report, had devised a scam of sorts: they requested forty premium seats to the Bruce Springsteen concert at Giants Stadium through their friends at the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, which they intended to buy at $108 per ticket and sell for $1,500 each.   

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    July 4, 2008 - 9:10am

    Round 2: Doblin takes on Torricelli

    Alfred Doblin, the editorial page editor and columnist for The Record, was offended by former U.S. Sen. Bob Torricelli's PolitickerNJ.com Op-Ed that sharply criticized his newspaper.

    "Being lectured on meanness by the likes of Bob Torricelli is akin to Amy Winehouse leading a rehab retreat for substance abusers," Doblin wrote.  CLICK HERE TO READ DOBLIN'S COLUMN

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    July 1, 2008 - 10:19pm

    Torricelli on The (Bergen) Record

    Former U.S. Sen. Bob Torricelli says The Record is deadFormer U.S. Sen. Bob Torricelli says The Record is dead
    The Record announced yesterday that it was closing its Hackensack offices and "reinventing"itself. It was actually announcing its own death without the benefit of the Obit page.

    It reminded me of the death of an aging uncle. You felt badly because of the loss but you remembered all of the times that he kicked the dog and yelled at the kids.

    It's a death march that started long ago. A generation ago, the Record was the Bible for suburban living in Bergen County. Every local football game, road closing and store opening filled its pages. It was "A Friend of the People it Serves". Somewhere it all fell apart.

    It's easy to dismiss its death as an evitable result of changes in technology. The Internet will eventually destroy most newspapers but the looming death of the Record is still ahead of its time. Bergen County has among the best demographics in the United States. Incomes are high, educational levels are good and there's a real sense of local community. Available advertising from retailers may be the best in the nation.

    It has everything that the Ledger, Inquirer and a dozen other papers lack. They'll survive another decade or two while the Record will be gone in a matter of a few years. Why?


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