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Dozens of residents urge Warren County commissioners to adopt 'Rights for All Persons' proclamation

June 25, 2025 | Warren County, New Jersey


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Dozens of residents urge Warren County commissioners to adopt 'Rights for All Persons' proclamation
More than a dozen residents used the meeting’s closing public-comment period on June 25 to urge the Warren County Board of County Commissioners to adopt a proclamation titled “Warren County Proclaims Rights for All Persons,” which would affirm due process and equal protection under the law for all people within county jurisdiction. Guy Citron, identifying himself as a resident of Califon speaking on behalf of Voices for Justice, read the proposed proclamation’s language and urged the commissioners to “stand with your neighbors and on true American common ground,” saying federal immigration enforcement and impersonation incidents have raised local concern. Citron read portions of the drafted proclamation, including lines that say “All persons in the United States are entitled to due process and equal protection under the law, including citizens and all persons within its jurisdiction, regardless of immigration or citizenship status,” and called on the board to work with the group. The transcript shows 11 additional public speakers joined Citron in requesting the proclamation: Robert Falcone, Viveka G. Aftrolle, Bob Larson, Marin Martin, Anne Perry, Tomas Cambara, Margaret Penza, Monica Scott, Adam McGovern, Tyler Powell and Martin Keane. The board did not vote on or respond with a formal action adopting the proposed proclamation during the meeting; the public-comment item closed after the speakers finished. Commissioners listened during the remarks but took no recorded vote or commitment on the specific proclamation text. Speakers framed the request as a humanitarian and civil-rights appeal and expressed concerns about Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions and alleged impersonation of officials; the transcript indicates they asked the board to collaborate with the group on the proclamation language. Because the transcript does not record any board action on the request, the article reports the public comments and the number of speakers but does not attribute policy positions to the commissioners beyond their attendance and listening during the public-comment period.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
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