Piscataway Motel 6 Stabbing Victims: Attorney911 Holds G6 Hospitality & Piscataway Enterprise LLC Accountable for Negligent Security After 700+ Police Calls & 130 Domestic Violence Incidents — Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Practice, Lupe Peña the Former Insurance-Defense Insider Who Knows How the Claims Machine Undervalues Crime Victims, We Preserve Surveillance Footage & Prior Incident Reports Before They’re Overwritten, New Jersey’s Premises Liability Doctrine & the Township’s Failed Ordinance Fight, the Firm Has Recovered Millions for Violent Crime Victims — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
When the Door Opens for a Stranger with a Knife: What a Stabbing at a Budget Motel Means for Your Civil Rights in New Jersey You are reading this at a kitchen table in Piscataway, or in a hospital waiting room at Robert Wood Johnson, or in the front seat of a car parked on Stelton Road, because someone you love — or you — checked into a Motel 6 on Stelton Road and Centennial Avenue and never came out the same. The victim of a stabbing is rarely prepared for what follows: the pain, the ICU, the surgery, the nightmares, the slow realization that the place you were staying was not the safe harbor you were promised. Then comes the second injury: the silence. The motel does not call. The insurance adjuster sends a short, polite letter that says almost nothing. The question no one in your family knows how to ask is the most important one: can you actually hold the motel accountable? Yes. Under New Jersey law, when a commercial property owner knows — or has every reason to know — that violent crime is happening on its property and does not take reasonable steps to stop…