Thursday, March 7, 2013
He believes the website's contents impacted the settlement agreement.
Dear Mayor & Council, It is with deep regret that I must apologize to each and everyone of you. I have lied continuously regarding GallowayTwpNews.com. I have lied to many of you individually and to the media as well. From the first day GallowayTwpNews.com was launched, Lisa Tilton was involved, she also partly funded the site. The majority of the content published was written by her. Neither of us used a byline. All content was published under the generic byline of "News Desk". To the best of my recollection all but one post about Lisa Tilton was written by Lisa Tilton or she provided all information which included the color copy of her discipline record. Tilton also later admitted some of the anonymous information received by email was …
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Harry Scheeler says township hasn't fulfilled several requests filed since the beginning of February.
For the second time in seven months, Galloway Township is being served with a lawsuit in connection with alleged open public records violations. On Thursday, March 15, Harry Scheeler, publisher of gallowaytwpnews.com, filed a complaint in New Jersey Superior Court against the township and former part-time acting clerk Leticia M. Loeser. The suit alleged a failure to fill requests filed by Scheeler under the guidelines of the Open Public Records Act (OPRA) dating back to Feb. 6 of this year. On Monday, Scheeler, of Woodbine, posted a story on his website stating that the township had begun to fill the requests in connection with his suit, but told Galloway Patch via email that his lawsuit would proceed. “Even though they started to release …
Friday, December 23, 2011
Township officials called a meeting with local media to discuss OPRA requests. Blogger Harry Scheeler calls it an intimidation tactic. "I will be suing them," he vows.
Galloway Township has received 539 information requests since Oct. 4 of this year, compared with 242 received by the township all of last year, representatives of township council said during a meeting with members of the media at the municipal complex on Thursday morning, Dec. 22. According to Mayor Don Purdy, that’s four times the number of requests Hamilton Township has received this year. The number of requests is tracked since Oct. 4, which was Kimberly Hodsdon's first day as township clerk. Purdy, Deputy Mayor Tony Coppola, Councilman Brian Tyrrell and Hodsdon were present at the meeting with representatives from Galloway Patch, The Current and The Press of Atlantic City. The meeting was called after a request for information about …
smithvillian
9:21 pm on Thursday, March 7, 2013
Hey Har...don't hate the player....hate the game...and man did you lose this one. (insert pac man dying audio here)   more ›