Prosecutors allege the attack is the culmination of resentment Nucera held against African Americans, as evidenced by his regular use of racial slurs, recorded on tape by one of his former subordinate officers.
“He wanted to teach them a lesson,” Gribko said, adding that Nucera “wanted African Americans like Timothy Stroye to stay out of his town.” Gribko said Nucera said so himself on the secret recording made by then-Bordentown Sgt. Nathan Roohr.
Roohr, now a lieutenant, began secretly recording Nucera on his cell phone before the incident at the Ramada, capturing Nucera on tape using racial slurs against Black people. He continued recording Nucera and other officers discussing what happened to Stroye.
Roohr said he deleted about 20 recordings from before September 2016 because they didn’t contain anything important. He turned over 81 one recordings to federal investigators and worked with them to record more conversations with other officers about the incident at the Ramada.
Nucera’s defense claimed Roohr had an ulterior motive for recording Nucera, and that he had been conspiring with Lt. Brian Pesce, who replaced Nucera as police chief, to keep a “bad Frank diary” in order to push their boss out.
Gribko told the jury Roohr didn’t have to go to the FBI if he wanted to push Nucera out. He said the recordings were enough on their own, citing that a former township employee, who worked closely with Nucera on the administration team, resigned once it was learned she had used the same racial slurs Nucera did in conversations.
“[Roohr] could have went to the township committee or leaked it to the press,” Gribko said. “All he had to do was push play.”