Crime & Safety

100 Hours Of Recordings Included In Case Against Ex-Police Chief

Frank Nucera has been indicted on charges of hate crime assault, deprivation of civil rights and making false statements.

Part of the evidence against a former Burlington County police chief accused of hate crime assault, deprivation of civil rights under color of law and making false statements reportedly includes over 100 hours of recordings.

Former Police Chief Frank M. Nucera was secretly recorded by another police officer at the Bordentown Township Police Department, Nucera’s attorney told nj.com. Nucera’s attorney added that the officer made the recordings on his own, and that he had a number of questions, including whether or not the recordings were edited and when they were started and stopped.

Nucera pleaded not guilty to the charges last week. The charges relate to an incident from Sept. 1, 2016, in which Nucera was called in for backup by police officers responding to an incident at the Bordentown Ramada. Two teenagers had stayed at the hotel without paying, and were swimming in the hotel pool that afternoon, according to police. The teens were identified by Bordentown Township police as 18-year-old Timothy Stroye, of Trenton, and a 16-year-old female acquaintance.

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When the first officers arrived to speak with them, both teens resisted arrest and the situation escalated into a physical altercation in which one cop used pepper spray, according to the indictment. As they were being arrested, Nucera arrived on the scene.

After Stroye was handcuffed and was being escorted from the hotel by police, Nucera came up from behind and slammed his head into a metal doorjamb, authorities allege.

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Stroye had stopped for a moment to loudly complain, but wasn't kicking or struggling, according to the indictment. Authorities said the officer who was escorting the suspect at the time didn't file a complaint because he was afraid of Nocera retaliating.

When later questioned about the incident by Special Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Nucera claimed he hadn't touched the suspects during the arrest or detention. Stroye was charged with two counts of aggravated assault on police, resisting arrest, improper behavior/disorderly conduct and theft of services. No information was provided concerning the teenage girl involved in the incident.

Nucera served as Bordentown Police Chief and Township Administrator before he abruptly retired earlier this year. The complaint filed earlier this year chronicled past incidents in which Nucera enlisted the use of police dogs to intimidate African Americans, including at high school basketball games. In 2016, he allegedly told an officer to walk a K-9 through an apartment building in order to intimidate the African Americans who lived there.

His sudden resignation earlier this year came after the Attorney General's Office was told by federal authorities that he was under investigation, according to the Courier Post. He made $151,418.31 per year, and has an annual pension of $105,992.76, according to nj.com. He receives $8,832.73 per month.

Authorities previously said the use of excessive force and hate crime counts with which Nucera is charged each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Have you been a victim to or have witnessed a hate crime? Tell your story here.

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