
EPISODE 5: New Jersey’s Other Boss
05/17/22 • 29 min
4 Listeners
John Sheridan’s decision to go work at Cooper University Hospital came at a curious time. It was just months after news about the Palmyra tapes came out. The tapes caught George Norcross bullying and offering a favor to a small town official; they are a rare instance where evidence emerged of the rough and tumble side to the south Jersey political machine. An email shows Norcross' control over the state legislature and city council members in Camden explain what it means to be a "yes yes" person.
• Kelly Francis, union organizer and Camden activist
• Kevin Riordan, Philadelphia Inquirer reporter who has covered south Jersey off and on for the past 45 years
• Micah Rasmussen, director of Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics at Ryder University
• Tom Knoche, lecturer at Rutgers University in Camden
• Matt Katz, reporter at WNYC
• Shaneka Boucher, Camden City Councilwoman
• Marilyn Torres, Camden City Councilwoman
• Jeffrey Brenner, doctor who worked and lived in Camden during its worst years
John Sheridan’s decision to go work at Cooper University Hospital came at a curious time. It was just months after news about the Palmyra tapes came out. The tapes caught George Norcross bullying and offering a favor to a small town official; they are a rare instance where evidence emerged of the rough and tumble side to the south Jersey political machine. An email shows Norcross' control over the state legislature and city council members in Camden explain what it means to be a "yes yes" person.
• Kelly Francis, union organizer and Camden activist
• Kevin Riordan, Philadelphia Inquirer reporter who has covered south Jersey off and on for the past 45 years
• Micah Rasmussen, director of Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics at Ryder University
• Tom Knoche, lecturer at Rutgers University in Camden
• Matt Katz, reporter at WNYC
• Shaneka Boucher, Camden City Councilwoman
• Marilyn Torres, Camden City Councilwoman
• Jeffrey Brenner, doctor who worked and lived in Camden during its worst years
Previous Episode

EPISODE 4: The Dirt on the Garden State
After it becomes clear the Somerset county prosecutor’s office couldn’t have done a worse job (unless their goal was to destroy the crime scene), some 200 prominent citizens send a letter to the state attorney general asking for his office to intervene in the investigation. Despite the letter signed by the biggest names in New Jersey legal circles—including two former attorneys general and three former governors—the attorney general never gets involved. The quest to find out why takes us through a brief history of problems in New Jersey's criminal justice system.
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EPISODE 6: On the (Camden) Waterfront
A couple months after his parents’ deaths, Mark Sheridan comes across a paper trail: extensive email exchanges, dated memos, and handwritten notes detailing a real estate deal on the Camden waterfront. His father, John Sheridan, wrote himself a note on an envelope: “I have a duty of loyalty and good faith and I need to act in a way consistent with that responsibility." How did John act and what impact did it have?
New voice interviewed in episode:
• Jeff Pillets, an investigative reporter who spent a year at the Bergen Record looking at George Norcross and his insurance business
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