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LIFE

Moore was a young Student who had graduated high school in 2006. She was to start college at the University Of Hartford in the Fall. She had decided in July to enjoy New York City Nightlife with a friend. They traveled to New York City for a 'night on the town'. It was later, after a number of incidents that Moore was later found murdered.


EVENTS LEADING UP TO HER MURDER

Moore had graduated in May of 2006 from Saddle River Day School in Bergen County where, according to a Friday, July 28 , 2006 New York Post article, "she was captain of the girls' Soccer team, and was planning to attend the University Of Hartford this fall."

It was also reported in the same article:


"Neighbor Seymour Lieberman, 75, remembers watching the girl play Basketball in her parents' driveway. "''She was a very quiet girl''," Lieberman said. "''Then something like this happens. You just can't believe it. I'm just shocked''."


Moore decided to engage in a night of 'clubbing' (See Nightclubs ) and drinking with her 18 year old friend, Talia (one report reads 'Tara') Keenan. Keenan drove with Moore to New York City using her own car to a nightclub in the Chelsea, Manhattan district on West 27th Street named ''Guest House''.

To quote the Saturday, July 29 , 2006 article in the New York Post:


"Talia and Moore then returned to Manhattan to go to the Guest House nightclub on West 27th Street - despite being underage.

When they left at around 2:45 a.m., they discovered that Talia's Dodge had been towed.

Police records obtained by The Post show the car had first been ticketed at 10:58 p.m. in front of 300 W. 49th St. It is believed that Talia had dinner with friends at that location.

Moore then drove to the club and parked in front of 502 W. 27th st., where she was ticketed again at 2:45 a.m., records show.

That ticket led to the car getting towed, and it was at the West 38th Street impound lot where troubles grew tragically worse for the young women.

After Talia collapsed there, she awoke in the ambulance and tried to get in touch with Moore.

"''Talia was desperately trying to reach out to Jennifer''," Kenan's mother said. "''She kept trying to call Jennifer, 'Come to the hospital. Where are you?' She got through once''. {Link without Title} ''said she was walking around and a nice man was helping her. When she was asked she said 'I'm OK, I'm OK.' She kept trying to use her cellphone but couldn't get through''."


To quote another source, the New York Times in an article dated July 28 , 2006 and written by Al baker, titled "Night Out in City Ends in Slaying of Woman, 18":


"But tow lot attendants refused to give Ms. Keenan the car because she appeared to be intoxicated, the police said. Ms. Keenan then passed out, collapsing, and the attendants called for an ambulance. The lot workers also called officers to the scene because another apparently inebriated woman, who was not with Ms. Moore and Ms. Keenan, was there trying to retrieve her car and was becoming ill, the authorities said. Ms. Moore went to use the tow lot’s bathroom. About 3 a.m., just before the ambulance arrived and with officers there attending to the two ill women, Ms. Moore apparently left the bathroom, slipped by all the authorities and simply walked off unnoticed, the police said."


Other witnesses were reported to have said that she was last seen walking uptown, dressed in a black halter top (''See'' Halterneck ) and a white Miniskirt , alongside of the West Side Highway.

According to a New York Post front page headline dated Friday, July 28 , 2006 titled "Last Call", in an article on page 4 written by Lorena Mongelli, Murray Weiss and Lukas I. Alpert titled: "Tragic Party girl's friend: 'Such psychos in the world - it's hard'" Moore was reported as saying to her boyfriend, Kofi Boakye, in a frantic phone call:


"''There's a guy following me. He's offered me drugs. He won't leave me alone''."


The New York Times , in the same article quoted above, then made note of her murder:


"Her body was found at 4:30 a.m. yesterday inside the trash bin in a parking lot in the shadow of two 24-story buildings at Park Avenue and West Broadway in West New York. From there, the trail led two blocks away to the Park Avenue Motel, at 60 48th Street in Weehawken, where witnesses said Ms. Moore was seen at 5:20 a.m. Tuesday, and where investigators believe she was beaten and strangled."



Accused murderer with prior criminal record

New York City Police later Arrested a man suspected of her Murder , who was named Draymond Coleman, age 35, of New York City . He was charged with the slaying. He was reported as being located at an SRO in upper Manhattan and of having 'an extensive Arrest record'. After interrogating Coleman, the New Jersey Police later located Moore's body in a Dumpster in the West New York section of New Jersey . The Crime had taken place in a nearby Weehawken , New Jersey Motel named the 'Park Avenue Hotel'. One news report, the New York Daily News , described as the Hotel as "squalid". A New Jersey Judge had later signed an arrest warrant on Thursday, July 27 , 2006 .

Videotape recovered from the Hotel showed Coleman and Moore entering the premises. Police had said that Coleman beat and strangled Moore. Coleman then stuffed her body into a duffel bag for disposal. It seems that Coleman also tried to remove his DNA Evidence from her body by cutting Moore's fingernails and cleaning her body with alcohol. Police believe that Moore had put up a struggle. The New Jersey newspaper, '' The Record (Bergen County) '' writes:


"''The scene inside the room was so gruesome, detective said, that he passed on viewing the body''." Coleman was supposed to be extradited to New Jersey; his prior record includes drug selling.


The Friday, July 28, 2006 New York Post had an article titled: "12th Ave. stalker 'won't leave me alone,' she told beau" written by Murray Weiss, Larry Celona and Leonard Greene, which further reported:


"Coleman's criminal history includes two assaults in the mid-'90s for which he served community service.

In 1997 , police said he sold drugs to an undercover cop in Midtown. He was convicted on that charge and served about five years in prison.

After his release in June 2002 , he spent three years in and out of prison on parole violations. His last jail stint ended in January 2005.


A judge in the same article made the following comments:


"''Your actions show a tendency to use violent/assaultive behavior; when granted the opportunity of temporary release, you absconded'',"...


A Parole Board is also quoted in the same New York Post article:


"''You have been denied an earned eligibility certificate. You have failed to take advantage of the opportunities offered you by the criminal-justice system. You lack insight into your antisocial actions''."



Cell phone investigation

It was reported that Police 'were fortunate to find Coleman through the use of a cell phone'.

To quote the New York Post from their Friday, July 28, 2006 article on page 6, "Cellphone trace led to 'killer'", written by John Mazor and John Doyle:


"Cops cracked the case in the brutal death of Jennifer Moore after the killer used the teen's cellphone to call his mother and girlfriend, authorities said.

Draymond Coleman, 34, allegedly called his mother and girlfriend on Tuesday around 5 a.m. using Moore's phone -- which police were tracking.

The NYPD interviewed Coleman's mother, Griselda Wright, 49, who said her son called her asking for his ex-girlfriend's number.

Once their suspect was identified, cops interviewed his acquaintances and papered his hangouts with pictures.

Following a telephone tip, Coleman was tracked to the Hamilton Heights, Manhattan Casablanca Hotel on West 145th Street and Broadway, where cops nabbed him and his current girlfriend.

Coleman's former girlfriend, Clarissa Thompson, 23, told investigators she played phone tag with Coleman but never spoke to him.

"''They must have the wrong guy''," Wright said. "''I don't know him to be violent''."

Wright said she "''can't believe he would kill a girl''."

"''He likes girls a lot''," she added. "''The girl he's with now straightened him out a lot''."


It was also interesting that cell phone use investigation was also the technique applied in the Imette St. Guillen murder case.


Teenage prostitute accomplice to her murder

Another young woman, a 20-year old ''Hooker'' (''See'' Prostitution ) named Krystal Riordan, was an Accomplice with Coleman in the murder of Jennifer Moore and credited herself as an '' Escort ''. She also helped him in the disposal of her body and was also arrested. She was reported by a police source as allegedly trying to sell herself for sex, offering a "$150 special" with the web-name, 'Lisa", a day after Moore's death, July 26 , 2006 , on the website, Craigslist .

In a Bergen Record article containing an Associate Press article dated Monday, August 7 , 2006 , titled: "Felony murder charge for girlfriend of teen slay suspect", it was reported in that article the following about Riordan's further fate:


"JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) - Authorities in Hudson County have filed a felony murder charge against the girlfriend of a New York man accused of murdering an 18-year-old Harrington Park woman.

Krystal Riordan, 20, was charged Friday with kidnapping Jennifer Moore, who investigators say was raped, beaten and strangled in a Weehawken hotel on July 25.

Riordan is accused of participating with her boyfriend, Draymond Coleman, 35, in crimes leading to Moore's death, which is why she was charged with felony murder Friday night, Hudson County Prosecutor Edward DeFazio said.

"''It's clear that Ms. Riordan and Mr. Coleman were partners in these brutal allegations''," he told The Jersey Journal on Monday. "We are alleging a felony murder based on her being an accomplice to (Moore's) unlawful confinement that facilitated other offenses, i.e, the sexual assault. We allege she was present when the girl was killed."



NIGHTLIFE

Following Jennifer Moore's death, New York Post articles focused on teenagers of the age of 16 years old attending nightclubs in New York City, specifically in the Chelsea District. The articles discussed how easy it was for them to obtain fake I.D. cards, discussions with some bar owners on the problems of verifying the legitimacy of the I.D. card as, the cards were very convincing in appearance, and the problem of underage drinking.


Chelsea Nightclubs

In a New York Post Monday, August 28, 2006 article on page 23 titled, "Bar-probe Pol toasts The Post" written by Kenneth Lovett, mention was made of Senator Nicholas Spano scheduling a hearing on September 7 on existing liquor laws and how they were being enforced. Mention was made of Jennifer Moore and another murder victim, Imette St. Guillen in the article. To quote the article in full:


ALBANY -- A key state senator has expanded the scope of an upcoming hearing into state liquor laws after accompanying The Post to witness the out-of-control behavior in the Chelsea bar scene.

Sen. Nicholas Spano, who has scheduled a Sept. 7 hearing on the existing liquor laws and how they are being enforced, said his committee will now also seek testimony on new ways to crack down on underage drinking, including whether to mandate training and licensing for all bouncers, servers and liquor-license holders.

In addition, Spano said he'd seek information on the possible use of optical-scanning devices to check identification at Cabarets , and the use of state lottery terminals as ID-checking mechanisms.

Spano decided to expand the hearing's scope after traveling with The Post several weeks ago to Chelsea, where he saw scores of drinkers who appeared underage, including at least one who vomited several times in the street.

"After seeing firsthand the condition of some Chelsea-area club patrons at closing time, I am more determined than ever that New York has no time to lose in putting the brakes on liquor-law violations that are evidently going on inside these clubs," Spano said.

Downtown bars have become a high-profile issue with the recent murders of New Jersey teen Jennifer Moore and John Jay student Imette St. Guillen during nights out.



Teenage/underage drinking

The New York Post, in it's Sunday July 30, 2006 edition, started a series of continuing articles titled: "''Wasteland''". The front page featured two photographs, one of Jennifer Moore, and another which showed a young teenage girl laying drunk on the sidewalk, with discussion on how common this occurrence was.

To quote the front page of New York Post, Sunday, July 30, 2006 edition:


"Just 12 hours before yesterday's heartbreaking funeral for Jennifer Moore (left), the Chelsea street where she met her doom was strewn with drunken and passed-out young partiers -- at least one of whom had to be loaded into an ambulance. The block, which teems with 5,000 club kids every weekend night, was a teenage wasteland."


Councilwoman Melinda Katz also discussed the issue of underage drinking in a later New York Post article dated Friday, August 25, 2006 in an article titled: "Bottle battle against clubs".


Further in the same New York Post article, Katz is also looking to hike the minimum age for gaining entry to bars and nightclubs from 16 to 18. The drinking age in New York is 21.

"''Do people know you could even get into a club at 16''?" she asked.

Katz's aides reported that at the club Pre:Post "''17-year-olds can come but cannot drink''."

Another club, 40/40, said a 17-year-old would be admitted "''but has to leave by 11 p.m.''"

Ron Bookman, who represents the New York Nightlife Association, accused Katz of "grandstanding" and predicted her legislation would never get beyond the draft stage.

"''Ms. Katz is misinformed as to the city's authority in that issue. They have zero chance''," he said.

"''It's an embarrassment to her if she does it''."

Bookman said it would make sense for all legislators to await a summit meeting scheduled next month with club owners before "picking on the industry."

Katz's legislation is being introduced on Sept. 13, along with other reforms pressed by council Speaker Christine Quinn .

The summit is scheduled for later that month."


Further, in a New York Post, Friday, December 29, 2006 article titled "Want promoters licensed", writer Stephanie Gaskell has this to write:


"Club promoters -- who often allow young kids past the velvet ropes -- would be targeted for licensing under a City Council plan unveiled yesterday to put the lid on underage drinking.

The crackdown comes in the wake of the death of Jennifer Moore, an 18-year-old who was raped and murdered after a night of partying at a Chelsea nightclub."



Fake I.D. cards and other card uses

The New York Post started a series of continuing articles titled 'Wasteland' beginning with the Sunday, July 3, 2006 edition. That beginning article had the following:


"And while many of the underage revelers on West 27th Thursday and Friday nights said they were spooked by Moore's murder, it hasn't kept them from going wild.

A 20-year-old named Melissa, also from New Jersey, told her mom she was going to a slumber party on Thursday night.

But at 3 a.m. Friday, the college student was wandering down 27th Street on the heels of her stumbling-drunk friend Jessica, a strawberry-blond 18-year-old from Paramus, weaving through the throng of young bodies.

Jessica and Melissa said they hit the clubs on 27th Street twice a week in the summer, flashing IDs belong to older relatives and dropping names of promoters and others who work in the clubs in order to get inside.

"''These are the clubs we see on 'Sex and the City.' It's a whole image. It feels cool to be there, like you're really part of the city circle''," Melissa Said.

"''You learn where to go and who to talk to''.""


Also:


"Courtney Siegel, 19, who has been an insider in the Chelsea club scene since she was 14, said suburban youngsters treat 27th Street like "''a big night out''."

"''The guys'll spend more, the girls'll get dolled up and the bouncers can take advantage of that, because getting inside means everything''," she said.

Siegel said promoters with e-mail lists 10,000 names long tell their underage clientele to meet at 11 p.m. so the promoters can escort the bulk of teens through the door, no IDs, no questions asked.

"''Young girls and hot girls make clubs more popular''," Siegel said.

She has several tricks to get into a club as an under-ager.

One, make best friends with a promoter.

Two, say you worked at a club in Los Angeles and then start chatting with the bouncer about employment opportunities.

Three, carry a large messenger bag and explain that you "''just came from a shoot''" and are meeting your producer inside.


The article is quoted further to say:


"Many of the underage teens carrying fake IDs said they just want to be part of the Chelsea scene.

John Moss, a 22-year-old clubber from Brooklyn, and his friend who calls himself "Tako Smith," sat in a car drinking Coronas as a "pre-game" before hitting the clubs, and said they've gone to clubs since they were 18 because "''they're cool places to be''."

They usually get a table by paying $400 for a bottle of alcohol because "''you can't get in without a table or girls''."

Moss said, "''We like to go, spend some cash, have fun in a really cool place''."

"''A lot of teenagers come and use fake IDs''," said Moss. "''It's easier in some places than others. But when you're 18, you want to be in places like this''.""


New York Post writer Stephanie Gaskell included the below for the Post newspaper dated Friday, December 29, 2006 in her article titled ''Want promoters licensed'':


"The council is also targeting people who make, sell and use fake IDs. The head of the council's Public Safety Committee also said a mandatory one-year driver's license suspension for kids who scam their way in to clubs needs to be considered."


In 2007, The Post continuing its series of ''Wasteland'' articles, had the following in its Sunday, January 7, 2007 edition on pages 6-7 titled "Teenage Card Tricks", subtitled: "Sweep vs. Club-Kid 'Fakers'", written by Brad Hamilton and Angela Montefinese:


"Police are cracking down on teens using fake IDs to get into nightclubs, arresting 106 kids in Chelsea's clubland since August.

A high-level police source said cops in the 10th Precinct have kept a close watch on underage clubgoers on and around West 27th Street, where New Jersey teen Jennifer Moore partied before being raped and murdered in July.

On Friday night, cops padlocked popular club Crobar, celeb hangout Pink Elephant and hot spot Club Sol, citing numerous violations for drugs, underage drinking and violence.

Club Sol released a statement yesterday denying police claims of stabbings inside the club, and said it is "looking forward to reopening."

Undercover and uniformed cops are doing random checks of patrons inside clubs and are watching the doors, targeting youthful revelers.

Signs around clubland warn: "Using a fake ID is a crime."

Those caught have been arrested and charged with criminal possession of a forged instrument.

Some were issued a ticket with a future court date, but more than half of the 106 kids caught in Chelsea spent a night in jail and appeared before a judge the next day.

"''That's a good start''," said Rob Bookman, a spokesman for the New York Nightlife Association. "''For about a quarter of a century, there's been a complete ignoring of the rules''."

Police sources said that before the crackdown, enforcement was minimal and most kids were released.

Bookman and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn are advocating state legislation to impose license suspensions on any teens caught with fake IDs."



DMV and fake IDs

The New York Post, again in its ''Wasteland'' series, in its Sunday, January 7, 2007 edition, on pages 6-7 there was the series article titled: "Teenage Card Tricks", with the sub-article titled: "Scoring fake IDs over DMV's 'net", written by Elizabeth Wolff.


"Scores of teenage drinkers seeking fake IDs are going to a cheap, easy and reliable source -- the state of New York.

They log on to the state Department of Motor Vehicles Web site and, for $15, order a duplicate of a driver's license belonging to an of-age relative or buddy.

The process requires no passwords or other security checks. The only information needed is a driver's-license holder's name, birth date, gender, ZIP code and the last four digits of his or her Social Security number.

That is exactly what happened in the cases of at least a dozen current and former fake-ID holders interviewed by The Post in recent weeks."


The Post article continued further, reporting:


"One 20-year-old club-hopper, who identified herself only as Amy, said she ordered a duplicate of her sister's ID without her sister ever knowing.

"''When my sister found out, she didn't even care''," Amy said.

Another illegal drinker said she and her of-age cousin hit bars 15 minutes apart -- each using copies of the same license -- and get in "without a hitch.""


The article ended with these comments:


"Also caught unaware by the DMV's loophole was Long Island state Sen. Charles Fuschillo Jr., an anti-ID-theft crusader.

"''If it's that easy to get someone's identification'', (the site) ''should be shut down''," he said.

A DMV spokesman said there is no plan to stop the program or make it more secure.

"''We have to provide the ability to get a duplicate license to the motoring public''," said agency spokesman Ken Brown. "''It's illegal to have more than one driver's license''.""



Required buying of Liquor

To further quote the ''New York Post'' article from the 'Wasteland' series titled "Bottle battle against clubs", subtitled: "Pol blasts 'dangerous' $300 rule" written by David Seifman, City Hall Bureau Chief, and which was published on August 25, 2006 on page 27:


"Nightclubs that require patrons to buy bottles of liquor at $300 or more a pop are creating "dangerous" conditions that a Queens legislator pledged yesterday to stamp out.

Councilwoman Melinda Katz (D-Queens) said she is drafting legislation that would outlaw the popular practice by some nightspots of demanding partygoers purchase two or more bottles of liquor to guarantee a table.

"''I believe the two-bottle requirement is dangerous''," said Katz. "''Nobody's buying a $300 bottle of alcohol and leaving it''."

Eight out of 12 clubs in and around Chelsea surveyed by Katz's staff imposed the "''bottle service''" requirement.

One of those was Guest House on West 27th Street, where 18-year-old Jennifer Moore was partying last month before a thug picked her up as she wandered drunk on the West Side, took her to New Jersey and killed her.

Guest House requires that two bottles be purchased per table, according to Katz's survey. Prices start at $300."


The article went on further to say:


"Katz cited articles in ''The Post'' that exposed how some club owners resell leftover bottles as many as four times when big spenders actually leave a few behind.

Liquor laws are under the control of the state, not the city.

But Katz pointed out that the city intervened to ban smoking in bars just a few years ago.

"I'm not sure why we can't outlaw this practice, too," she said.

As insurance, Katz is adding a resolution asking state authorities to do away with the two-bottle minimum.



Other

The issue of bouncers was discussed in the Tuesday, August 8, 2006 edition of the Bergen Record by Jeff Page, who started his article with this comment:


"IT'S TRUE that Jennifer Moore was failed by many people; the bouncers who allowed her into the nightclub at age 18, the bartenders who served her, the cabbie who drove her and her alleged killer to New Jersey. Any of these people doing the right thing could have stopped a deadly process."


The issue of Bouncers , their power in a bar establishment, and how some of them were abusing their power, had previously surfaced in February of 2006 with the murder of Imette St. Guillen . Darryl Littlejohn is being held in St. Guillen's murder. Stephen Sakai was another bouncer whose name was used frequently in the media and was using a firearm. In discussing Sakai, website Gawker.com had the following from the New York Times:


"Stephen Sakai, the former bouncer accused of enforcing a gunfire-based door policy at currently for-sale Opus 22 in Chelsea, may have a slight history of accelerating others' mortality. The New York Times reports forthcoming indictments against Sakai for three previous murders in Brooklyn, revolving around Sakai's bouncing at Opus 22 and Sweet Cherry, a waterfront strip dive in Sunset Park. The now-closed Sweet Cherry is described as "a dark place that maddened neighbors, prosecutors and city officials for years." Of the three Brooklyn victims one was a bouncer-runner at Sweet Charity, another a customer of the same club, the third was another bouncer at Opus 22. Various bizarre statements from Sakai about the Brooklyn deaths (now disavowed) include his admitting to shooting the bouncer-runner "in the cheek or the leg or maybe someplace else."



COMPARISON TO OTHER AND CHANEL PETRO-NIXON

The spanish language newspaper periodical, El Diario, in it's Friday, July 28, 2006 edition, used the front page headline title, 'Otra Imette' with Jennifer Moore's picture on front. Moore was compared to John Jay College Of Criminal Justice Student , Imette St. Guillen , who was murdered earlier in February of 2006 , allegedly by a bouncer at The Falls bar, Darryl Littlejohn. Her death was also related to Nightlife in general. Some media sources focused on nightlife, bars, Bouncers , underage drinking and fake I.D's in their television and newspaper stories.

With the further murder of Chanel Petro-Nixon , columnist Andrea Peyser, quoted below in a New York Post article dated Saturday, July 29, 2006 article titled "''It's open season on young gals''", which linked the fates of Imette St. Guillen , Jennifer Moore and Chanel Petro-Nixon , had this comment to write:


"It's open season on young girls. An 18-year-old was found murdered this week in Jersey, allegedly by a man who took her from Manhattan after a night of underage clubbing. In February, graduate student Imette St. Guillen was taken from a SoHo bar and killed, allegedly by the bouncer. But the case of Chanel Petro-Nixon stands out for three reasons: She went missing in broad daylight, blocks from her house -- not at night, coming out of a bar."



AFTERMATH


According to an article published one year after Moore's death in the New York Post:


"...the wild clubland strip has seen felony assaults drop 13 percent - and 36 percent over the last month.

But the crowds seem to have just moved elsewhere - several blocks east to the Flatiron District where assault busts spiked 35 percent this year in the area's 13th Precinct as hordes of weekend partygoers stagger between West 21st and 24th streets."


It was also noted in the article:


Every clubgoer must present an I.D. to be checked by handheld scanners that can sniff out fakes, and teams of cops patrol the street after the 4 a.m. closing time.

"''The effect is a crackdown''," said Joshua Toas, CEO of the SLA , noting the agency formed a new rapid-enforcement unit this year and is working more closely with the NYPD .



Year 2006 in general

As the year 2006 has been one in which a number of high-profile murders of young women Students have been covered in the media, there have been no revelations, however, to another murder case of a young woman. Specifically, the case of young, 16 year-old Chanel Petro-Nixon , who disappeared in broad daylight while walking in Brooklyn on a Sunday afternoon to apply for a job.


Jennifer Moore's Family

Jennifer Moore's father, Hugh Moore, is quoted as saying: "''I think you all know by now we've learned the worst possible news. Jennifer's been taken from us''."

Jennifer Moore is survived by her father, Hugh Moore, her mother, Candida, an older brother and an older sister. In the New York Post July 29 article, Jennifer's life is summed up by her father, Hugh, as follows:


"''Jennifer is so, was so, full of life. I am sorry''," he said, tearing up. "''She just had a million things she wanted to do every day. She had a ring that said 'carpe diem', seize the day''."



SEE ALSO






ONLINE REFERENCES

  • CityPaperOnline website discussing: "Where's the Party?" subtitled: "Looking for Fun in Baltimore's Under-21 Nighlife Wasteland" By Anna Ditkoff and Anne Ray; dated August 23, 2000.


  • Gothamist website article titled: "Teen's Night of NYC Clubbing Ends in NJ Dumpster", dated July 28, 2006 posted by Jen Chung.


  • CBS TV News article titled: "Nightmare Murder in Big Apple", subtitled: "Suburban Teen Out For Night On Town Abducted, Beaten And Strangled" dated July 28, 2006 by the Associated Press. ©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


  • My Crime Space website article titled: "Hooker placed ad on craigslist day after she watched murder" by Trench on August 3, 2006.


  • The New York Sun website article titled: "Clubs Go High-Tech To Stop Underage Patrons" By Bradley Hope, staff reporter of the Sun, dated August 8, 2006.


  • New York Post article titled: "Hold The Phony! City Targets Fake-I.D. Kids" by Stephanie Gaskell; article dated: December 28, 2006.


  • Article in New York Post titled: "Clubs to play it 'SAFE' as Crackdown OK'D", By Stephanie Gaskell, dated March 1, 2007.


  • Downtown Express, Volume 19, Issue 41. Article titled: "N.Y.P.D. backs laws to crack down on bars" By Albert Amateau. Dated: Feb. 23 - March 1, 2007. NOTE: Reference is made to Jennifer Moore, but her name is not included in the article. Imette St. Guillen's name, however, is included.


  • Clubplanet Nightlife style website with webpage article titled, "New York City Nightlife Summit, September 29, 2006"


  • New York Post, dated Sunday, July 22, 2007, page 12 article, titled: 'Slay Strip' Squeeze'; subtitled: "Clubland cleans up as mobs head east" by Angela Montefinise, Elizabeth Wolff and Brad Hamilton.


  • Gawker.com web-article titled: "Chelsea's Shootin' Bouncer: Now 300% More Murder" by Chris Mohney; date and time: 11:05 A.M. on Thursday, July 13, 2006.



ADOBE PDF LINK(S)

Weblink to: The Council of the City of New York Office of Communications newsletter, dated August 8, 2006, titled: "Council Speaker Announces 3-Point Plan to Improve Nightclub Safety".


Weblink to: The Council of the City of New York Office of Communications newsletter, dated September 28, 2006, titled: "Speaker Quinn to Lead Summit on Strengthening Nightlife Safety".


NEWSPAPER REFERENCES


  • New York Post, Friday, July 28, 2006 -- front page headline titled "Last Call".


  • New York Times article dated Friday, July 28, 2006 titled "Night Out in City Ends in Slaying of Woman, 18" by Al baker.


  • New York Post, Saturday, July 29, 2006, with article on page 4 titled: "Tragic Party girl's friend: 'Such psychos in the world - it's hard'" written by Lorena Mongelli, Murray Weiss and Lukas I. Alpert.


  • New York Post, Sunday, July 30, 2006 -- the start of the series "Wasteland", featuring the article titled: "Dead-drunk risky world of 27th St. party horde" by and Angela Montefinise and Elizabeth Wolff.


  • The Record (Bergen County) - Monday, August 7, 2006, containing an Associated Press article titled: "Felony murder charge for girlfriend of teen slay suspect".


  • The Record (Bergen County) - Monday, August 7, 2006, article titled "Suspect says he didn't kill Bergen woman" by 'Staff and News Service Reports'. (NOTE: This contains the information of which college Moore was to attend in the Fall of 2006).


  • New York Post, Friday, August 25, 2006 with article titled: "Bottle battle against clubs", subtitled "Pol blasts 'dangerous' $300 rule" written by David Seifman, City Hall Bureau Chief.


  • New York Post Monday, August 28, 2006 article on page 23 titled, "Bar-probe Pol toasts The Post" written by Kenneth Lovett.


  • New York Post, Friday, December 29, 2006 article titled: "I got a fake ID in 5 minutes flat" written by Marianne Garvey.


  • New York Post, Friday, December 29, 2006 article titled: "Want promoters licensed" by Stephanie Gaskell.


  • The New York Post, Sunday, January 7, 2007 edition, pages 6-7 titled "Teenage Card Tricks", subtitled: "Sweep vs. Club-Kid 'Fakers'", written by Brad Hamilton and Angela Montefinese (continuing its series of 'Wasteland' articles).


  • The New York Post, Sunday, January 7, 2007 edition, pages 6-7 titled "Teenage Card Tricks", article subtitled: "Scoring fake IDs over DMV's 'net", written by Elizabeth Wolff. (continuing its series of 'Wasteland' articles).