Avenel-Colonia First Aid Squad accused of partying with prostitutes as squad fights closure

by Sergio Bichao on Jul 28th | Email

Avenel-Colonia First Aid Squad accused of hosting stripper and sex parties at its building in Avenel. Staff photo: Mark R. Sullivan

WOODBRIDGE, NJ -- Township officials say Avenel-Colonia First Aid Squad put their emergency blue lights on hold while their headquarters became a temporary party house suitable for a red-light district.

Allegations of misconduct by members of the private nonprofit squad – including allegedly hosting parties with prostitutes – are the latest charges by township officials looking to remove squad leaders and volunteers from their positions or shut down the squad in the interest of public safety.

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In response, the squad – which was suspended last month by an executive order by Mayor John E. McCormac – launched a petition drive calling on officials to keep the organization in business.

The squad's attorney is expected to file an 11-count complaint in Superior Court in Middlesex County on Thursday seeking damages from the township for defaming the squad in a “public smear campaign.” The lawsuit also alleges ethics and open-government violations by McCormac and the council.

Avenel-Colonia First Aid Squad

Photos posted on an Avenel-Colonia First Aid Squad member's Facebook page show what appears to be members of the squad inside a building.

The battle began last month when Woodbridge police charged seven squad members, including board members Capt. Carmen Parisio and Assistant Capt. Wayne Tasaki, with criminal trespass into a vacant skating rink building in Edison. Police were tipped by photos of the trip, which appeared on a squad member's Facebook profile, authorities said.

McCormac signed an executive order redirecting all 911 calls from the Avenel-Colonia district to the Woodbridge Township Ambulance and Rescue Squad (WTARS).

The council is expected to take a final vote Tuesday to redraw the first-aid map to exclude Avenel-Colonia as one of the four nonprofit squads serving the township.

Township Business Administrator Robert Landolfi said officials were hoping to keep the squad open provided all seven accused individuals – as well as board member James Powers, who condoned the actions during a meeting with the township – resigned and the squad allowed a township-appointed supervisor to manage its day-to-day functions.

The squad rejected that proposal because it would have no say over the appointment of either the supervisor or a consultant the township would hire to determine the township's ambulance response needs, squad attorney Lavinia Lee Mears said.

News of the squad's lawsuit came hours after township officials briefed the press about the prostitution allegation.

An investigation by Woodbridge police Det. Joseph Nisky led to a Kenilworth man, who is not a member of the squad, being charged July 14 with promoting prostitution, a third-degree offense.

Officials say Stanley P. Misiuk, 58, brought women to parties at the squad building where they danced nude and were available to perform sexual acts for money. Police are aware of several of these parties in the past two years, officials said, but they declined to provide further details.

Police this month also charged two squad members with causing false alarms to which the Iselin Chemical Hook and Ladder Fire Company in Fire District No. 11 responded. Dale Eckensberger Jr. was charged with two counts of causing false alarm while his brother Randy was charged with one count. Eckensberger Jr. and his father were among the seven squad members charged with trespassing.

Neither the Eckensbergers nor Misiuk could be reached for comment Wednesday.

Meanwhile, a report by the township's emergency management coordinator describes three instances of the squad “stacking calls,” the practice of dispatching the same ambulance to multiple calls, resulting in “inadequate response time.”

The squad charges patients for its services and its captains are paid.

In a statement, Mears called the charges against squad members “trumped up and politically motivated.”

“It is very disappointing that the township's public officials will stop at nothing, including unnecessarily trying to ruin the members' reputation and abusing the criminal process, to turn the tide of public opinion against the squad when all the squad wants to do is serve the community,” she said.

The squad purchased a full-page advertisement in the Sunday Home News Tribune touting its better-than-average response time of less than five minutes and said the township's decision to suspend the squad was “based on ... grossly exaggerated allegations.”

Landolfi said that even if the squad's actions “don't rise to the level of criminality,” they are still wrong from a management point of view.

"It compromises public safety and (Avenel-Colonia board members) condone it. That's wrong,” he said.