Suspect: Pegg was a child molester

This article was originally published in The Township Journal and three other Straus newspapers on June 28, 2012.

Robert Reynolds’ vehicle became stuck after he frantically backed it down Pegg’s driveway the night of the murder. Photo by Daniel Fitzsimmons

By Daniel Fitzsimmons

STILLWATER, NJ — Clark T. Fredericks, who was arrested on June 13 for the murder of Stillwater resident Dennis Pegg, told police that Pegg “got what was coming to him” and that he was a “child molester for years,” according to his arrest affidavit obtained by The Township Journal.

According to the affidavit, Fredericks, 46, of Stillwater, and Robert Reynolds, 47, of Mansfield, drove to Pegg’s house in Stillwater armed with knives on the night of June 12. Reynolds said that the two entered Pegg’s house and that Fredericks “immediately began stabbing Dennis Pegg with a knife.” Reynolds said he ran out of the house and began backing his vehicle down the driveway before it got stuck. Fredericks came out of the house and helped free the vehicle, after which the two drove to Fredericks’ house in Stillwater. Reynolds told police that Fredericks removed his clothing and hid both knives. Reynolds then drove to his house in Mansfield where he power-washed the car they used.

Dennis Pegg’s house on Millbrook Road in Stillwater. Photo by Daniel Fitzsimmons

Police also spoke with Fredericks’ mother, Joan, who told them that her son came home around 2 a.m. on June 13 with cuts on his hands and blood on his clothes. She said she tried to get him to go to a hospital but he refused, took some sleeping pills, and went to bed.

Police were alerted when Joan Fredericks called Franklin counselor Diane Howe and told her that she believed her son may have hurt or killed someone the night before. Howe then called State Police and asked them to do a well-being check on Pegg. She later spoke with Fredericks’ sister, who said she believed her brother may have hurt or killed Pegg.

When troopers arrived at the residence they found Pegg dead, with a slash wound to his neck and several stab wounds to his torso.

Dennis Pegg

According to the affidavit, Joan Fredericks told police that Reynolds was also involved.

Fredericks was charged with first-degree homicide and is being represented by Newton attorney Daniel M. Perez.

Reynolds was charged with first-degree complicity/murder, first-degree conspiracy/murder and fourth-degree evidence tampering. He is being represented by John Vazquez of Critchley, Kinum and Vazquez in Roseland.

According to Pegg’s obituary, he was a lifelong resident of Sussex County and graduated from Newton High School in 1962. He was an Army veteran and worked for the Sussex County Sheriff’s Office for 28 years, retiring as a senior lieutenant.

Fredericks and Reynolds are currently lodged in the Sussex County Jail. According to Sussex County Sheriff’s Investigator Lee P. Liddy, Fredericks is under a medical watch and is being kept separate from the general inmate population.

Posted in News | Leave a comment

Back to Work?

UPDATE, June 26, 2012: The Albany Newspaper Guild announced today that they have reached a settlement with Hearst Corporation over a 2009 layoff dispute involving 11 employees of the Times-Union. Under the terms of the settlement, Hearst will reinstate three employees who wish to return to the Times-Union and will pay out financial settlements to 11 former employees.

The full press release is available at Romenesko.

ALBANY, NY – Local daily plans to appeal judge’s order to reinstate 11 employees. This story was published in Metroland on August 26th, 2010.

George Hearst, publisher of the Times Union, confirmed that the Hearst Corporation would be fighting the ruling by a National Labor Relations Board judge that found them guilty of violating labor law when they laid off 11 people last September.

“We don’t agree with the decision that was handed down,” said Hearst. “We plan to appeal it up to the [NLRB] in Washington and then we’ll see where we go from there.”

This recent development is the latest chapter in a litigation battle between the Newspaper Guild of Albany and the Times Union. The conflict began in April 2009 when the paper’s parent company, Hearst, canceled the contract it had with the guild over proposed cuts and outsourcing of jobs. The newspaper’s subsequent proposal was rejected by members of the guild.

NLRB Judge Mark Carissimi’s decision hinged on the fact that the newspaper acted on an illegitimate impasse it declared by laying off the 11 employees. According to labor law, either party may declare an impasse but may not make decisions based on that declaration. Hearst said that his company’s appeal strategy will be to argue that the declaration of impasse was indeed legitimate.

In his decision, Carissimi wrote, “while the [TU] bargained over the layoffs it desired to make, it did not bargain over the decision to place employees on paid leave, and this action had an integral impact on the bargaining regarding the layoff criteria.” Carissimi wrote that the newspaper was spurred on by an “arbitrary deadline” it set to reduce labor costs by the end of September 2009.

Hearst was of a different opinion, stating that it was the Newspaper Guild of Albany, which represents the laid-off employees that failed to “provide a meaningful counter-proposal or response to our proposal which ultimately led to the second declaration of impasse and then the subsequent elimination of jobs that we had been discussing.”

That is untrue, according to Tim O’Brien, president of the Newspaper Guild of Albany. O’Brien said that the union was willing to make concessions on the strict seniority standards that were first put in place by the newspaper. One of the concessions in play was allowing the newspaper to disregard seniority if a case could be made for such an action.

“When Mr. Hearst talks he always ignores that,” said O’Brien. “He acts like we aren’t willing to discuss any change to the way things function and that’s just not true, we were willing to offer those kinds of concessions.”

Reporter Alan Wechsler was with the Times Union for 11 years covering a variety of beats before he was let go last year. “They had been talking about layoffs for months, so it wasn’t a great surprise when it happened,” said Wechsler.

Wechsler said that aside from the obvious financial burden, the biggest ordeal was being forced out of a job he loved while negotiations were ongoing. “I guess rather than juggle people around they just figured it was easiest to just boot out the people whose jobs they wanted to end,” said Wechsler.

Hearst said that laid-off employees were not targeted based on their income level, but rather on an intricate series of considerations. “It’s a very complex set of discussions, it’s a very complex set of criteria, and each one was vetted through many layers of people,” said Hearst. “The motivation was realizing the need to restructure and restructure wisely, not just by the numbers.”

Hearst cited the multiple awards for excellence in journalism that the Times Union has recently won as a barometer of the atmosphere in the newsroom. “If you look at our productivity as a measure of morale, I would say that, generally speaking, people are hard at work, understanding the challenges that face our industry, and they’re doing a great job.”

Veteran TU reporter Carol DeMare said that while union employees are pleased with the judge’s decision, there is no illusion that this is over. “I just think that people realized it’s going to be a long process. The side that lost in the early round has every right to appeal.”

The newspaper has 14 days to reinstate the employees unless they file an appeal, which is more than likely. However, O’Brien said he feels comfortable that the court’s decision leaves little open to alternative interpretations.

“It seems to us that appealing it is really just a case of dragging this out rather than doing the right thing,” said O’Brien. “They have the right to appeal, doesn’t mean it’s right to appeal.”

Update: Tim O’Brien, a major source for this story, wrote in about his take on the article. Below are his comments.

To the Editor:

I appreciate Daniel Fitzsimmons’ story on the judge’s finding that the Times Union twice violated labor law. Dan’s story was accurate, and he did a thorough job of finding multiple voices. He sought out a laid-off worker and talked to at least one other colleague at the Times Union, which was more of an effort than most.

I was a bit surprised, however, that he put so much emphasis on Publisher George Hearst’s statements that he would appeal and included very little information about the contents of the judge’s ruling and how it came about. I thought your readers might be interested in that information.

The charges were filed by the National Labor Relations Board’s Albany office after they investigated our complaint. A trial was held in May, and witnesses for both sides testified. The judge reviewed both the testimony and the legal briefs filed by the two sides before coming to the same conclusion we had: The Times Union broke the law. Twice.

After only two days of negotiation on layoff criteria – and before even responding to an information request we filed – the Times Union walked employees out of the building in July 2009. In his testimony, the company’s own lawyer said people were walked out to “calm the atmosphere” because other workers were asking if they would be on the layoff list and the company wanted to reassure them. The judge correctly said that action was taken to send an unmistakable message, these are the people being laid off, and to hamper our ability to negotiate over criteria.

The second legal violation occurred when the Times Union management declared an impasse in our negotiations over layoff criteria in September. Mr. Fitzsimmons quotes Mr. Hearst repeating the publisher’s favorite piece of fiction, the claim that the Guild did not provide a meaningful counterproposal.

While Mr. Fitzsimmons allowed me the opportunity to respond that this was untrue, he left out the fact that the judge himself rejected the untruth that Mr. Hearst continues to repeat to every reporter. Here’s what the judge said: “Even though the respondent (meaning the Times Union) had presented the union with a fait accompli regarding the issue of layoffs, the union was exhibiting signs of addressing the respondent’s stated need for flexibility in conducting layoffs. The next day, however, the respondent declared an impasse.”

The judge added: “The record convinces me that, rather than exploring whether the union’s change in position could serve as a basis to move the parties closer to an agreement on this issue, the Respondent declared impasse on September 11, 2009, because of its determination that the layoffs were to be conducted by the end of that month regardless of the state of negotiations.”

If your readers are interested, they can read the judge’s 30-page decision for themselves. It is on the blog attached to our website at http://www.albanyguild.org/.

Thanks for listening,

Tim O’Brien

President

The Newspaper Guild of Albany/CWA

Posted in News | Leave a comment

Jobless? Get out of the city

I recently read an article called Young, Privileged, and Applying for Food Stamps on thebillfold.com (“everything about money you were too polite to ask”). The author relates how she, a college graduate who lives in Brooklyn, can’t find a media job despite going on countless interviews and having a bunch of internships under her belt.

It was typical of pieces written by recent college grads that crop up on web-only news and culture websites – why can’t I find a job? This is crazy! Nothing in the article stood out in any way, until I read this irony-steeped passage:

“Being young, privileged, and poor is not a fun twenty-something adventure. I’m not one cheeky fourth of Girls. This is not an audition for the Bohemia life before I return to my family’s house in the suburbs, or get a job at a financial firm owned by my father’s friend. I don’t have a family in the suburbs, and my father doesn’t have those friends. Moving in with my mom or dad is less an option than it is a death sentence for my professional life, barely existing as is.”

Her mentioning the hit HBO series Girls and claiming her life isn’t a quirky interlude to the start of her career is ironic because it seems like that’s exactly what she wants it to be. Moving back in with either of her parents would not be a “death sentence” for her professional life. It would be a death sentence for her social life and self-image. I would be more inclined to sympathize with her if she tried looking for jobs outside of one of the most densely populated metropolitan areas in the U.S. She writes as if Brooklyn is the only place she can live.

There are a number of articles and authors who tap this vein that could be picked on, but what it boils down to is this: get out of the city (yes, I’m calling Brooklyn “the city” because I’m from “upstate” New York – deal with it). You shouldn’t be on food stamps. They aren’t for you. The only reason you’re thinking about applying for them (by the end of the article the application is sitting on her desk, filled out but undelivered) is because you want a job where all the action is.

That notion is simply untrue. If you’re looking for a media job in public relations, there are any number of firms and companies that aren’t based in NYC. If you want a job as a reporter, there are a number of listings on journalismjobs.com not in the city. A 24-year-old reporter who writes for the Patriot-News in Harrisburg, PA, just won the Pulitzer Prize.

The truth is that you go where the jobs are, test your mettle, and then go where you want. Yes, there are people who land jobs in the city right after graduating college. But most of those are in the financial sector, not in the media – and for good reason.

Go back to your hometown and help improve the local economy. Move to a city with a less competitive job market. Build your resume. After five or so years, return to the Big Apple if you still want to and are able. But don’t write an article about how you have to apply for food stamps because there are no jobs – it isn’t true. There just aren’t any jobs where you want them to be.

Posted in Commentary | 1 Comment

Why is the NY Times running the Bo Xilai scandal into the ground?

Since news of the Chinese politician Bo Xilai’s fall from grace broke on March 15, the NY Times has run close to 50 articles that either deal specifically with the scandal or mention Xilai in some related context.

The totality of articles concerning Xilai amount to what is the most comprehensive coverage of the scandal anywhere online or in print.

The stories range in subject matter from the specifics of the scandal itself (wiretapping, murder, wire transfers) to the political implications in China (communist-party shakeup, boon for Chinese vice-president) to the periphery of relevance (a red Ferrari and Jon Huntsman’s daughter, impact on Chen Guangcheng’s fate).

The Times is indeed in thrall, with headlines that read, in part or in full, “Layers of Intrigue in Chinese Political Scandal,” “…More Political Intrigue,” “China’s Rumor Mill,” “…Crime Crackdown Adds to Scandal,” “…Race to Contain Scandal” and “…Wife Adds to Chinese Mystery,” among many others.

The story is juicy, there’s no denying that. But in scrolling through the four pages of headlines that the Times devoted to the story, I didn’t see one that mentioned whether the scandal has implications for US/Chinese relations or whether any of this will play out on the world stage. Perhaps the Times is just calling the play by play on a Chinese Watergate.

But what other news outlet has covered this story so voraciously? Is it simply a case of the Times owning a story as they so often do? I don’t know, but I think the question is worth asking.

By contrast, take the case of Gareth Williams, the British MI6 spy and apparent fetishist who was found dead – entombed nude in a duffel bag in his own bathtub – in August 2010.

Williams was a code-breaker, worked for the same outfit as James Bond, had some pretty far-out sexual tastes ($30,000 in women’s clothing, bondage), and wasn’t missed at MI6 until a week went by with nary a peep.

So how many stories did the Times run on Williams? A whopping two, one on May 2 of this year and another on April 27.

Granted, Xilai’s story has been breaking and Williams was found in August of 2010. But if you take the ingredients and impact of each story, 50 articles on a Chinese political scandal compared to two on the extremely mysterious death of a British code-breaker, something doesn’t add up. Perhaps there was nothing to find on Williams death. But John Burns was the only one writing about it. The Times had dozens of reporters on the Xilai story.

The only plausible reason I can think of for this deluge in coverage is that the Times is writing for its Chinese and/or business audience. Titillation factor notwithstanding, I doubt the average news consumer stateside has the endurance or inclination to follow the Xilai story as far as the Times has.

Posted in Commentary | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The strangest tip I’ve ever received [UPDATE]

In December 2011 I posted a story that a colleague and I had written together about a bizarre phone call I received at work one afternoon (that story can be read here).

Briefly, in December a PA state trooper named Mark Pizzuti called to tell me that he was  arresting a source of ours for making a false statement against a certain character we were looking into. The phone call was odd for several reasons, mainly because the source herself didn’t know she was being arrested (we actually broke the news to her when we asked for a comment) and because it was a huge breach of protocol. I work in an office with five veteran editors who all said they’ve never heard of a police officer calling a newspaper unsolicited to tip them off about an arrest they’re about to make.

We obtained the affidavit that Pizzuti filed against our source and were struck by one passage in particular where he claims to have spoken with four law enforcement agencies in NY who cleared the character we were looking into of any wrongdoing (the same one our source was making allegedly false statements about).

An excerpt of the affidavit used to arrest one of our sources that was later proved, at least partially, to be false.

We then FOIL’d all four agencies Pizzuti claimed to have spoken with, asking them whether or not they looked into this character. Two of them, who we had trouble getting information from on this in the past, refused to answer us. The other two said that they never investigated this character.

The sauce is thick on this particular story. What all this means is that a source of ours was arrested based on claims made by a police officer that were proved, at least partially, to be false. Yet our source still faces the same charges she did when our story broke.

Read the update here as it appeared in The Chronicle on April 13.

Posted in News | 2 Comments