newjerseynewsroom.com

Friday
Jun 01st

Norway's girls love Justin Bieber: Police...not so much

BieberJustin.optBY MIKE OLIVA
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

Justin Bieber can’t seem to keep quiet. After a controversial incident involving Bieber potentially assaulting paparazzi last week, his presence in Norway has caused police to nearly declare a state of emergency and cancel the concert.

According to TMZ, tens of thousands of Bieber fans, better known as Beliebers, have swarmed the city of Oslo causing police to lose control. TMZ reported 49 teenage girls injured, including 14 who were taken away by ambulance.

The free six-song concert was scheduled as part of his Around The World TV special, but has attracted feverish Beliebers from all parts of Europe.

The frenzied crowd also caused a spike in mobile usage during Bieber’s arrival, obstructing cellular service in Oslo, according to MTV.

Nonetheless, Bieber opted to help the situation by advising fans to cooperate with local police.

"Please listen to the police. I don't want anyone getting hurt. I want everything to go to plan but your safety must come first," Bieber tweeted yesterday.

Police advised Bieber to take the stage early to prevent any more chaos.

 

Add your comment

Your name:
Subject:
Comment:


Follow/join us

Twitter: njnewsroom Linked In Group: 2483509

Hot topics

 

Children can be conned out of inheritance after multiple marriages

BY CAROL ABAYA NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM THE SANDWICH GENERATION Multiple marriages and blended families can mean children get cheated out of money and assets their parent(s) earned and had before the second or third marriage. At the 2012 senior citizens’ law day conference, Lawrence A. Friedman, Bridgewater elder law attorney, said elders need to protect their children of prior marriages from being disinherited. "Even if your spouse’s current will provides for your children, your spouse may change it after you pass away,” he said. In addition to protecting one's child, an appropriate will can minimize N.J. estate taxes, which kick in if assets are over $675,000. At the conference, Cathyanne Pisciotta from North Brunswick discussed guardianship which could be necessary if various legal documents are not signed. Pisciotta said that if a person does not have a durable power of attorney (for financial affairs) and a living will (for medical decisions), anyone else can seek guardianship of that person. An expensive court proceeding is mandatory. And she said, “If one person seeks guardianship, someone else can challenge the appointment. Another relative may seek to be appointed guardian because he/she wants the money and power.”

 

NJNR Press Box

 

Join New Jersey Newsroom.com on Twitter

 

Be a Facebook fan of New Jersey Newsroom.com


**V 2.0**