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Woman arrested in New Jersey Wawa parking lot after stabbing man multiple times, prosecutors say

Woman arrested in New Jersey Wawa parking lot after stabbing man multiple times, prosecutors say

CBS News5 hours ago

An Egg Harbor City woman is being charged with attempted murder after she allegedly stabbed a man multiple times in a South Jersey Wawa parking lot Friday afternoon, officials said.
Berlin Township police responded to the Wawa on the 400 block of Route 73 for a stabbing Friday afternoon, just before 2:45 p.m., according to the Camden County Prosecutor's Office.
Investigators arrived to find a 35-year-old man in the parking lot, who had been stabbed multiple times. According to the prosecutor's office, officers then found 36-year-old Kelli Feaster nearby and took her into custody behind the Wawa.
Prosecutors said the man and woman seemed to be acquainted and were both from Egg Harbor City, New Jersey.
The man was flown to Cooper University Hospital, where he's said to be in critical condition, according to officials. The prosecutor's office did not provide a name for the man.
Feaster is charged with attempted murder, aggravated assault, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose and unlawful possession of a weapon. She was remanded to the Camden County Correctional Facility.
Anyone with information about the investigation is asked to call Detective Felicia Tilton of the Camden County Prosecutor's Office Major Crimes Unit at 856-225-8432 or Lieutenant David Childs of the Berlin Township Police Department at 856-767-5878, ext. 235.

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New Jersey Anti-SLAPP Law Applies In Part In Federal Court In Paucek
New Jersey Anti-SLAPP Law Applies In Part In Federal Court In Paucek

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New Jersey Anti-SLAPP Law Applies In Part In Federal Court In Paucek

The U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals are split on the application of Anti-SLAPP laws in the federal ... More courts. Chip Paucek had been the CEO of a company (U2, Inc.) which had failed under some negative circumstances. Paucek is now the CEO of a new company (Pro-Athlete Community, Inc. a/k/a "PAC") which provides educational and other support to professional athletes who have ceased playing. Paucek came to the attention of Dahn Shaulis, who is a blogger covering the education industry through his publication Higher Education Inquirer ("HEI"). After following Paucek's failure with U2, Shaulis then began to investigate and cover Paucek's new venture, PAC. Long story short, Shaulis made some unflattering comments about Paucek on social media. Paucek had his attorney send Shaulis a cease-and-desist letter which also called for Shaulis to retract the offending comments. Shaulis agreed to do so, but only on terms that were unacceptable to Paucek. The day after receiving Paucek's cease-and-desist letter, Shaulis then posted on social media that he had received the letter but that he stood by the statements therein based on a variety of information. Paucek then sued Shaulis in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. Paucek alleged that Shaulis' social media posts were defamatory and that Shaulis had intentionally interfered with Paucek's prospective business relations. Shaulis responded by filing a motion to first determine if the New Jersey Uniform Public Expression Protection Act ("UPEPA") applied in federal court and which of several states' Anti-SLAPP laws should be applied to this controversy. The idea here was that the court would decide these threshold issues before Shaulis filed his UPEPA motion to dismiss (which had not yet been filed as of the time of this opinion). Shaulis also answered Paucek's complaint with a counterclaim under the UPEPA. All of this led to the opinion in Paucek v. Shaulis, 2025 WL 1298457 (D.N.J., May 6, 2025), that you can and should read for yourself here, and which we will next review. The first question addressed by the court was whether the New Jersey UPEPA would be recognized in federal court. The issue here is that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) already provide a means for the early dismissal of a case, which is by way of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. If a defendant attaches evidence to a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, then that motion is converted to a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56. As I have often written, a special motion to dismiss or strike under the UPEPA is essentially an early summary judgment motion and akin to a "motion to dismiss on steroids". In fact, the UPEPA deliberately uses the summary judgment standard to test whether the plaintiff's complaint should be dismissed because that standard is well-understood by the courts and has already withstood constitutional challenges based on the plaintiff's right to a jury trial. So, the question becomes: if the Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss is already employed by the federal courts, then why substitute it with the UPEPA? The answer is twofold. First, in diversity of citizenship cases (as here), the federal courts will apply their own procedural rules but they are also required to apply the substantive rules of the state from where the action arises. This is known as the Erie doctrine, after a 1938 U.S. Supreme Court opinion of that name. But there is an important limitation, being that if the state substantive law "is in direct collision" with the federal procedure on some issue, then the federal procedure will govern that issue. Second, there are some differences between a Rule 12(b)(6) motion and a UPEPA special motion, mostly being the UPEPA special motion triggers a stay of discovery and the UPEPA automatically awards attorney fees to a defendant who successfully asserts a UPEPA special motion. A Rule 12(b)(6) motion does neither of these things. This is not the first time that a federal court has addressed whether the state law UPEPA should apply in the federal courts. In fact, throughout the nation, the state law UPEPA has been asserted in many federal court cases. The problem is that the federal courts have not all agree on the outcome, but rather there has been a split of opinion by the various federal circuits. The Fifth, Tenth, Eleventh and D.C. Circuit Courts of Appeals have held that Anti-SLAPP laws do not apply in federal court, while the 1st and 9th Circuits have held that they do. For its part, the Second Circuit has opinions going both ways, but with the latest opinions stating that Anti-SLAPP law do not apply in federal court. Obviously, the U.S. Supreme Court is eventually going to have to step in and resolve this split of decisions among the Circuits, but we're not there yet. The District of New Jersey, where this case was heard, sits in the 3rd Circuit which hasn't ruled yet on the issue. The court here declined to look at the issue as merely being one of whether an Anti-SLAPP law should apply in federal court or not. Rather, the court thought that the correct analysis was whether a particular Anti-SLAPP law (here, New Jersey's UPEPA) through its text and structure was in conflict with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. This would be the analysis to be followed by the court. To this end, it was obvious to the court that some provisions of the UPEPA do indeed conflict with the FRPC. 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Woman arrested in New Jersey Wawa parking lot after stabbing man multiple times, prosecutors say
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CBS News

time5 hours ago

  • CBS News

Woman arrested in New Jersey Wawa parking lot after stabbing man multiple times, prosecutors say

An Egg Harbor City woman is being charged with attempted murder after she allegedly stabbed a man multiple times in a South Jersey Wawa parking lot Friday afternoon, officials said. Berlin Township police responded to the Wawa on the 400 block of Route 73 for a stabbing Friday afternoon, just before 2:45 p.m., according to the Camden County Prosecutor's Office. Investigators arrived to find a 35-year-old man in the parking lot, who had been stabbed multiple times. According to the prosecutor's office, officers then found 36-year-old Kelli Feaster nearby and took her into custody behind the Wawa. Prosecutors said the man and woman seemed to be acquainted and were both from Egg Harbor City, New Jersey. The man was flown to Cooper University Hospital, where he's said to be in critical condition, according to officials. The prosecutor's office did not provide a name for the man. Feaster is charged with attempted murder, aggravated assault, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose and unlawful possession of a weapon. She was remanded to the Camden County Correctional Facility. Anyone with information about the investigation is asked to call Detective Felicia Tilton of the Camden County Prosecutor's Office Major Crimes Unit at 856-225-8432 or Lieutenant David Childs of the Berlin Township Police Department at 856-767-5878, ext. 235.

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