
New Jersey meeting to decide host of fall election debate stalled by ‘Zoom bomb' flashing racist, antisemitic, pornographic material
The New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission held a virtual meeting with nine sponsors to narrow down the host for the gubernatorial general election debates and a singular discussion between the lieutenant governor candidates in the fall.
The beginning of the meeting was largely uninterrupted as the ELEC members explained the process and agenda.
Advertisement
3 The New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission's meeting held to decide the host of this fall's election debates was spoiled by a troll.
AP
The first presentation went off without a hitch.
The second, led by WABC-TV New York/WPVI-TV Philadelphia/Rutgers Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, was plagued with inexplicable noises including alarms, ringtones and explosions, POLITICO reported.
Advertisement
The moderators interrupted to try and patch the source of the interruption and instructed anyone with their microphone still on to mute themselves.
The grating noises stopped for a moment until one of the hopeful sponsors started to speak again. A series of pornographic images, including one with a Swastika, started to flash across the screen.
At the same time, the audio fizzled into a recording of a song that repeated the N-word, according to the outlet.
The chaos ensued for just a minute before the meeting was promptly shut down.
Advertisement
3 The Zoom bomber flooded the meeting with antisemitic pornographic materials and audio of someone singing the N-word repeatedly.
AP
ELEC Chair Thomas Prol reached out to the offices of the governor and state attorney general to investigate the 'shocking breach of public trust,' he wrote on LinkedIn.
'They have put their top investigators on the hack that occurred. On behalf of my fellow commissioners and myself, I say this to those responsible: You will not disrupt democracy in New Jersey. We will find you and prosecute you,' Prol wrote.
'My office is aware of the disruption of today's virtual meeting of the Election Law Enforcement Commission, and the incident is being investigated by the Division of Criminal Justice. We will not tolerate any attempts to interfere with our democratic process,' Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin added in a statement obtained by The Post.
Advertisement
3 The state's Attorney General's Office is investigating the Zoom bombing.
Getty Images
The commission rescheduled the selection process for next Tuesday with additional 'safeguards in place,' Prol added.
Zoom bombing was a phenomenon bred from the COVID-19 pandemic as people across the world suddenly relied on the virtual communication platform to work and go to school.
In February 2021, a squadron of Zoom bombers took aim at a New York City Council meeting and flooded the call with a mountain of lewd NSFW smut, including videos of people in the middle of having sex.
Other trolls crashed a virtual AA meeting, taunting the recovering addicts by saying 'Alcohol is soooo good.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Vox
24 minutes ago
- Vox
RFK Jr. defunds a medical miracle
This story appeared in The Logoff, a daily newsletter that helps you stay informed about the Trump administration without letting political news take over your life. Subscribe here. Welcome to The Logoff: In a blow to US pandemic preparedness, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on Tuesday evening that he was slashing $500 million in federal mRNA vaccine contracts. What is HHS cutting? Twenty-two mRNA vaccine projects, intended to combat respiratory viruses like bird flu, are set to be wound down following the announcement. What is mRNA? mRNA, or messenger RNA, is the reason the US had safe, effective Covid-19 vaccines available as early as it did. A promising but still unproven technology prior to the pandemic, mRNA allowed pharmaceutical companies to develop effective vaccines far more rapidly and more adaptably than was once possible. Beyond respiratory viruses like Covid, researchers hope mRNA could even be effective in treating cancers. What's the context? Kennedy has long made false claims about mRNA vaccines, including describing the Covid-19 vaccine as 'the deadliest vaccine ever made.' On Tuesday, he falsely stated that mRNA vaccines 'don't perform well against viruses that infect the upper respiratory tract,' such as Covid. In fact, by one estimate, the Covid vaccines saved some 2.5 million lives. The Logoff The email you need to stay informed about Trump — without letting the news take over your life. Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. What are the implications of the cuts? Tuesday's announcement is bad news for two distinct reasons. As far as Kennedy is concerned, this is just the latest reminder that he is who he always appeared to be, and only partially covered up while seeking to be confirmed as the secretary for the US Department of Health and Human Services: not a fair 'skeptic' but an anti-vaccine advocate who will use his power to impose unscientific beliefs on US public health infrastructure. For the country, vaccine experts say Tuesday's news is a real blow to efforts to prepare for the next pandemic, the arrival of which is a question of when and not if. mRNA vaccines have proved to be one of our best tools for saving lives, and the US will now be further behind in developing new vaccines than it otherwise would be. The consequence is likely to be measured in human lives. And with that, it's time to log off…
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump takes an unexpected walk on the White House roof to survey new projects
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump's day began typically enough, with a television interview and a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Then it took an unexpected and unusual turn when he appeared on the roof of the White House's West Wing. Late Tuesday morning, Donald Trump emerged from a door connected to the State Dining Room and stepped onto the roof above the press briefing room and west colonnade that walls the Rose Garden. He spent nearly 20 minutes surveying the rooftop and the grounds below, including a newly paved makeover of the Rose Garden. Reporters, tipped off by the out-of-the-ordinary positioning of snipers above the Oval Office, shouted questions from below. One called out: 'Sir, why are you on the roof?' 'Taking a little walk,' Trump shouted back. 'It's good for your health.' Trump walked with a small group that included James McCrery, architect of the newly announced $200 million ballroom project. They moved slowly, with Trump frequently gesturing and pointing at the roof and grounds. Several times, he wandered toward the corner nearest the press corps, waving and cupping his hands to shout responses to shouted questions. At one point, he said he was looking at 'another way to spend my money for this country.' Later, near the end of his appearance on the roof, Trump was asked what he was going to build. He quipped, 'Nuclear missiles.' The unexpected walk on the rooftop comes as Trump looks to leave a lasting footprint on what's often referred to as 'The People's House.' He has substantially redecorated the Oval Office through the addition of golden flourishes and cherubs, presidential portraits and other items and installed massive flagpoles on the north and south lawns to fly the American flag. And last week, his administration announced that construction on a massive ballroom will begin in September and be ready before Trump 's term ends in early 2029. While Trump appeared on the West Wing, the White House has said the ballroom will be where the 'small, heavily changed, and reconstructed East Wing currently sits.' While rare, there have been times through the years where presidents ventured out onto — and even slept on — the White House roof. To promote renewable energy, President Jimmy Carter installed 32 solar panels on the West Wing roof in the 1970s. The panels were removed during the Reagan administration. In 1910, President William Howard Taft had a sleeping porch built on the roof to escape Washington's hot summer nights.


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
Nation's violent crime rate fell in 2024 to lowest in 20 years: FBI
The nation's violent and property crime rates dropped to a two-decade low in 2024, following the COVID-era surge in homicides, according to new FBI data released this week. Why it matters: The numbers show crime was heading toward a 20-year record low in the last year of the Biden administration, despite President Trump's false campaign claims that President Biden was overseeing a nationwide crime spike. The big picture: The new FBI numbers released Tuesday also come as preliminary data from the country's largest cities in 2025 so far suggest violent crime is falling even more and could be heading to modern record lows. By the numbers: The U.S. had a violent crime rate of 359.1 per 100,000 residents last year, the FBI said. That surpassed the lowest violent crime rate the nation has had since 2014, when it was 372.4 per 100,000 residents, and many cities saw 30-year lows, an Axios analysis found. The rate was 370.4 in 2021, but that year the FBI collected data using two reporting systems, which makes the year not comparable. Meanwhile, the nation's property crime rate dropped to 1760.1 per 100,000 residents last year. That's also a 20-year low, according to an Axios analysis of FBI numbers. Zoom in: Overall violent crime dropped by 4.5% and all property crime decreased 8.1% from 2024 to 2023, the FBI said. Murder and non-negligent manslaughter fell 14.9% during the same period. Automobile theft went down a staggering 18.6%, FBI data showed. The intrigue: The FBI announcement made no mention of crime rates falling to 20-year lows — and didn't give out the crime rates per 100,000 residents as it does each year. The FBI also didn't say what was behind the drops. Context: Violent crime ticked up early in Biden's term, but reports show it's dropped significantly since then as law enforcement agencies responded to the pandemic surge and adopted more detailed recordkeeping. Throughout the 2024 campaign, Trump repeated false claims that immigration had sparked rising crime nationwide — a reason he gave for his mass deportation plan. What they're saying:"As the pandemic receded, criminal justice experts fully expected crime to decline," Insha Rahman, vice president of advocacy and partnerships at the Vera Institute of Justice, told Axios. Rahman said the crime drops occurred, even while police staffing levels have declined in the past five years by around 5% nationwide. "What's driving these unprecedented gains in community safety is the government investment in community infrastructure from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act and the 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act." Yes, but: The 2024 year-end data follows the Justice Department's April cancellation of $820 million in grants that had supported over 550 organizations focused on crime prevention research and services. What we're watching: The Major Cities Chiefs Association (MCCA) will continue to issue quarterly preliminary violent crime data from nearly 70 large cities.