![]() ![]() |
MITCHELL COHEN had a long career as a lawyer and judge in Camden. A Democrat aligned with George R. Brunner in the mid-1930s, he was named Camden City Prosecutor in the October of 1936, when a New Jersey State Supreme Court decision gave control of City government to the Democrat party. He was made acting judge in Camden's Police Court by August of 1938. Mitchell Cohen also served as Camden County Prosecutor in the late 1940s and early 1950s. The 1947 Camden City Directory shows that Mitchell Cohen was living at 413 Penn Street. This house had been from the 1900s through at least the 1930s the home for three sisters who were long-time Camden schoolteachers, Frances Wilmerton, Mary Brown, and Margaret Thomson. Mitchell Cohen was Camden County prosecutor in 1949 when Howard Unruh went on a rampage, leaving 13 people dead. Mitchell Cohen took Unruh's statement, which remains sealed to this day. Also during Cohen's tenure as County Prosecutor, long-time Camden County Chief of Detectives Larry Doran retired. He was still County Prosecutor as late as 1954. Mitchell Cohen rose to the post of Chief Justice of the Federal District Court in Camden. The Courthouse, erected in the late 1990s, bears his name. |
Camden Courier-Post * October 29, 1931 |
BAIRD TO ADDRESS HEBREW LEAGUE David Baird, Jr., Republican nominee for governor, will make his final appearance in the current election campaign Monday night, in his "own home town," when he will address a monster rally at the Hebrew Republican League, at the Talmud Torah, 621 Kaighn avenue. The Hebrew league reorganized formally at a luncheon in the Hotel Walt Whitman. Lewis Liberman, assistant city solicitor, was elected president; Sig Schoenagle, Samuel Shaner, Israel Weitzman, vice-presidents; L. Scott Cherchesky, secretary, and Samuel Label, treasurer. Trustees of the league include Hyman Bloom, Mitchell E. Cohen, Benjamin Friedman, Jacob L. Furer, Isadore H. Hermann, Carl Kisselman, Edward Markowitz, Louis L. Markowitz, Harry Obus, Maurice L. Praissman, Samuel Richelson, Meyer L. Sakin, Julius Rosenberg, Jacob Rosenkrantz and Jack Weinberg. In addition to former Senator Baird, speakers at the Jewish rally will include Mrs. Elizabeth C. Verga, Republican state committeewoman and vice chairman of the county committee; Congressman Charles A. Wolverton, Congressman Benjamin Golder, of Pennsylvania, and State Senator Samuel Salus, of Pennsylvania. |
Camden Courier-Post - August 29, 1935 |
|
![]() |
|
.... continued... |
|
![]() |
![]() |
.... continued... |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Albert
S. Woodruff - Elizabeth C. Verga - Emma
Hyland - Harry L. Maloney - Hotel
Walt Whitman |
Camden Courier-Post * February 15, 1938 |
RACKET IN CLEANERS LAID TO PRISONER One of the strangest gyp rackets discovered in Camden in recent years—a vacuum cleaner sales scheme—was believed broken up yesterday with arraignment of Leonard Hauser, 218 North Eighth street, before Police Judge Mariano. Hauser was arrested at his home by Patrolman John Ferry after an investigation by Frank Thompson, representative of a nationally- known vacuum cleaner company with offices at Sixth and Cooper streets. Ferry testified Hauser paid $10 down on a cleaner for a certain trial period. Then, Ferry said, he represented himself as a salesman for the company and sold it to Mrs. Mary Kirby, 552 Bailey street, for $25, plus her old cleaner for a trade in. Later, the cleaner mysteriously broke down. Hauser called and said he would take it back, Ferry testified, and bring a new one. He took the cleaner, said Ferry, but never was seen at the Kirby home again. "If he had taken the broom," remarked City Prosecutor Cohen, "would you call it a clean sweep?" Mariano said he had information that Hauser was "working a real racket and that a number of other North Camden residents had been similarly defrauded." C. Lawrence Gregorio, defense counsel, waived a hearing and the suspect was held in $2000 bail for the Grand Jury. Detective Edwin Mills said after the hearing that Hauser did not restrict his activities to vacuum cleaners. William Shaw, of 1474 Broadway, i dentified Hauser, according to Mills, as the man who collected $5 from him for an electric toy which was to have been Shaw's little son's Christmas present.- The toy never arrived, Mills said Shaw told him. Mrs. Emily C. Hedley, of Berlin, and Mrs. Howard Brown, of Williamstown, also identified Hauser as the "vacuum cleaner salesman" who duped them, Mills declared.. |
Camden Courier-Post * February 16, 1938 |
||||||
|
Camden Courier-Post - February 16, 1938 | |
|
Trenton Evening Times * August 21, 1938 |
|
![]() |
|
Edwin
T. Mills - Mitchell
Cohen - Dorothy Pearce - Rose Cavalier |
Camden Courier-Post - June 1, 1939 |
MAN
IS HELD AGAIN IN FERRY MURDERS Raymond Beckett, 24, who police said confessed participation in the holdup-murder of Harry C. Armstrong, ferry toll collector, on July 17, last year, was held without bail for the grand jury yesterday as a "material witness" in the case. Beckett will complete a six month county jail sentence for assault and battery today. County Detective James J. Mulligan appeared before Acting Police Judge Mitchell Cohen and asked that he be held for the grand jury, and the court complied. Beckett, a resident of Bedford, Pa., was arrested after he allegedly had informed his wife "he could not come to Camden, because of a murder mixup there." Later Beckett implicated two other Camden men in the slaying, according to police. The case is still being investigated. Armstrong, veteran employee of the Pennsylvania Railroad, was shot by two "white-pants" bandits early on the morning of July 17, when he sounded an alarm as they attempted to hold him up in the ferry toll booth at the Market street ferries.. |
Camden Courier-Post * July 30, 1941 |
![]() |
Mitchell
Cohen - Gene
R. Mariano - Mrs. Albert E. Essinger - David Glickman |
![]() |
Camden
Courier-Post July 30, 1941 Mitchell
Cohen |
![]() |
Kingston, NY Daily
Freeman |
![]() |
County Prosecutor
Mitchell
Cohen -
Judge Bartholomew A Sheehan |
Camden Courier-Post * November 29, 1949 |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
NAMED CHIEF of the Camden police department today, Captain‘Gustav Koerner, a 26-year veteran of the department and one time baseball player, is shown receiving the congratulations of Public Safety Director Aaron. A native of Camden, Chief Koerner succeeds George W. Frost, who resigned Jan. 1, 1948. Captain Samuel Johnson had been acting chief since then. Gustav
A. Koerner - George
W. Frost |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
Camden Courier-Post * May 16, 1950 | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Benjamin
Dzick - Anthony
M. Lario - John R. DiMona - E. George Aaron - Mitchell
H. Cohen Rocco Lario - Frank M. Lario - Dr. David S. Rhone - Chris Miller - Pine Street - North 35th Street |
Camden Courier-Post * December 29, 1950 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Lawrence Bleichner - Mitchell Cohen - Rocco Palese - Market Street |
Camden Courier-Post * September 26, 1951 | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
First
Camden National Bank & Trust Company
- Ralph
W.E. Donges - Edward V.
Martino Bartholomew J. Sheehan - William C. Gotshalk - Mitchell H. Cohen - Benjamin Asbell - Ralph W. Wescott Gene R. Mariano - John J. Crean - J. Hartley Bowen - Jerome Hurley - Hurley Stores William B. Macdonald - Camden Trust Company - Isador Herman - Fred Albert - Herbert Richardson Howard C. Wickes Sr. - Carl Kisselman - Frank M. Traveline - William F. Hyland Jr. Henry Stockwell - Grover C. Richman - Emma W. Boyle - William T. Boyle |
A difficult case that Mitchell H. Cohen investigated in 1953 while County Prosecutor was that of the tragic suicide of James S. Wilkie, son of a veteran Camden police officer, John V. Wilkie. For several days after the shooting, Sgt. Wilkie claimed that he had shot his son, in order that he receive a Catholic funeral. He retracted his confession after it became apparent that he could not deceive the city and county investigators, and was released after the grand jury refused to return an indictment. This tragic case saw the involvement of many of Camden's law enforcement and legal community, including Benjamin Asbell, Wilfred Dube, Thomas Murphy, James J. Mulligan, J. James Hainsworth, Samuel P. Orlando, John Healey, and Joseph Bennie, among others. |
|||
|
Camden Courier-Post - December 12, 1957 | ||||||||||||
![]() |
|
![]() ![]() |
Camden
Courier-Post Orvyl
Schalick
|
Camden Courier-Post - June 10, 1960 |
Plea Changed By Peterson To No Defense Henry W. Peterson, former secretary of the South Jersey Port Commission, changed his plea in Camden County Court from not guilty to no defense to charges of malfeasance in office and false swearing. The charges grew out of a grand jury investigation of the Port Commission, which operates the Camden Marine Terminal. Peterson, of Woodbury, entered the plea through his attorney, J. Claud Simon, Thursday before Camden County Judge Cohen. Cohen said he would sentence Peterson June 23. He ordered a pre-sentence investigation. The indictments were returned against Peterson, former Woodbury mayor, in January. Camden County Prosecutor Heine said at that time that the indictments charged Peterson with malfeasance in office as the result of padding his expense in the amount of $2000 between 1958 and 1959. The other indictment listed four counts of false testimony before the grand jury on September 10. |