Via Daniel J. Kov, dkov@thedailyjournal.com
BRIDGETON
A felony gun charge against a Port Elizabeth resident arrested by
police last year for possessing an unloaded antique weapon has been
dismissed by the Cumberland County Prosecutor's Office, according to a
news release issued Wednesday.
Prosecutor Jennifer Webb-McRae announced in the release that the state will exercise "prosecutorial discretion to dismiss" the second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon charge against Gordon N. Van Gilder.
"Accordingly,
the public should be forewarned about the prescriptions against
possessing a firearm — even an antique — in a vehicle," she continued.
Webb-McRae declined to comment further on the dismissal.
Van Gilder's Eatontown attorney Evan Nappen said he was delighted to hear charges were dropped.
The attorney learned of the dismissal while in an interview with The Daily Journal.
"That is very good," he said while reading the news release over the phone. "I commend the prosecutor for exercising her dis
cretion accordingly."
If convicted of the second-degree charge, Van Gilder could have faced a maximum of 10 years behind bars
The
charge also carried a minimum 3.5-year sentence that could have
seriously jeopardized Van Gilder's public school pension, his right to
vote and his reputation in the community, Nappen said.
"I'm very appreciative that they exercised their discretion here and did the right thing," Nappen said.
Nappen
said his client will follow up on trying to retrieve the centuries-old
"Queen Anne" flintlock antique pistol now in custody of the county.
"It's a valuable collector's item," he said.
The
dismissal comes after a two-week long public outcry against state and
law enforcement officials, with many charging that officials overstepped
in their pursuit of charges against the elderly man over an unloaded
antique weapon.
Van Gilder, a 72-year-old former educator at Millville
Senior High School, was arrested at his Port Elizabeth home by members
of the Cumberland County Sheriff's Department on Nov. 21, 2014.
The arrest came a day after he and 22-year-old Adam Puttergill were stopped in their Toyota Tacoma by Sheriff's Department officers in a Millville neighborhood.
The two said they were in the process of returning to their Port Elizabeth home after visiting a Vineland pawn shop, at which Van Gilder purchased the 300-year-old flintlock pistol.
Puttergill was acting as the driver for Van Gilder, who suffers severe arthritis, he said.
He also lives with Van Gilder, who informally adopted him about a decade ago.
Cumberland County Sheriff Robert Austino later said his officers pulled the two over because they were in a suspicious neighborhood known for illegal drug activity.
While talking to the two, officers at the scene discovered empty heroin bags and a broken scale used for measuring drugs, Austino said.
The
discovery prompted a full search of the vehicle and officers also found
Van Gilder's 300-year-old flintlock pistol wrapped in cloth inside the
glove compartment.
Puttergill was taken into custody on an outstanding Vineland Municipal Court contempt warrant, he told The Daily Journal last week.
He
also was charged with possessing two prescription pills that were not
in their pharmacy container. The drug charge has since been handled by Puttergill's attorney in Millville Municipal Court, resulting in a conditional discharge of the charge.
While
Van Gilder was let go at the scene, Sheriff's Officers returned to his
home the next day and arrested and booked the 72-year-old on the
unlawful weapons charge for his unregistered gun.
The incident
quickly went on to attract state and national attention following
revelation of the arrest by The Daily Journal last week.
Nappen
and other public supporters of Van Gilder accused the Sheriff's
Department of a "smear campaign" for charging the elderly man with what
they view as an egregious and overstepping charge.
The incident
even spurred at least two New Jersey lawmakers to introduce bills that
would provide state judges with sentencing discretion in such future
cases involving those charged with unlawful weapons possession.
A bill sponsored by state Sen. Jeff Van Drew and Assemblyman Bob Andrzejczak, whose district includes Millville,
would further revise the Graves Act, allowing courts to permit a person
convicted of unlawful possession of a firearm admittance to pretrial
intervention or supervisory treatment if they had no known association
with a criminal street gang and no criminal convictions.
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