ASBURY PARK PRESS :: MONMOUTH EDITION APP.COM $1.00 WEDNESDAY 06.24.15 VOLUME 136 NUMBER 150 SINCE 1879 ADVICE 7D CLASSIFIED 1E COMICS 6D LOCAL 3A OBITUARIES 11A OPINION 14A SPORTS 1C TABLE 1D WEATHER 8C YOUR MONEY 10A The conduct of Asbury Park police at the shooting death of Tamara Wilson-Seidle on a city street will like- ly be reviewed by a government panel that includes at least two former Asbury police officers. Acting Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni said last week that the lack of force by po- lice to stop Neptune police Sgt. Philip Seidle — who is charged with firing on his ex-wife with two volleys of multiple shots while she sat in her car — will be part of the death investigation. Policing experts have told the Asbury Park Press that local law enforcement could have used deadly force at several instances to stop the suspect once he refused to drop his .40-caliber Glock service weapon and allow emergency response workers to remove the wounded Wilson-Seidle from her car. The county Prosecutor’s Office Professional Re- sponsibility and Bias Crime Bureau is generally re- sponsible for conducting investigation concerning po- lice conduct. The team includes former Asbury Park Ex-Asbury officers will investigate shooting KALA KACHMAR @NEWSQUIP “Is it an ideal situation? Not always. Is it something that’s automatically negative? Not necessarily.” ROBERT LOUDEN, CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSOR See SHOOTING, Page 8A We have the scoop on where to get the best ice cream at the Shore. In Table Thieves ready to pounce during vacations. YOUR MONEY, 10A It was a conversation no mother wants to have; a wish Kate Duerr never wanted to fulfill. Her daughter Caroline, a violinist at Neptune High School, had just played at a ceremony honoring organ donors at Jersey Shore University Medical Center. The experience — and the message of organ donation — so deeply moved Caroline that she made a decision, one she soon shared with her mother. “She said, ‘Mom, if anything ever happens to me, I want to do that, I want to be an organ donor,’ ” Kate Duerr recalled. “I said, ‘It’s nice to know you want to do that, but don’t talk like that.’ ” Two years later, in the worst moments of her life, Kate Duerr remembered that conversation. It was March, and her beloved Caroline had just died in a ter- rible car crash. Yet even as she struggled with her grief, Kate Duerr knew what she had to do. She donated her 17-year-old daughter’s organs. “There wasn’t a question for me,” Kate Duerr said. “I knew it was the right thing to do. I knew it was what she would have wanted.” Those organs saved the lives of four people. Caroline’s pancreas went to a 35-year-old woman. One lung went to a 50-year-old man. Her left kidney went to a 41-year-old woman. Her right kidney was Donation of Neptune teenager’s organs after car accident saved four others’ lives A legacy of LIFE PETER ACKERMAN/ STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Kate Duerr and daughter Erinn. “We didn’t get the miracle we were praying for, but we know she is going to continue living on in somebody.” KATE DUERR, ON THE DONATION OF HER DAUGHTER CAROLINE’S ORGANS See LIFE, Page 4A JERRY CARINO @NJHOOPSHAVEN PETER ACKERMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Caroline Duerr, seen in a family photo at age 15, was killed in a car accident at 17 but saved four other lives through the donation of her organs. Scout’s take on Karl-Anthony Towns. SPORTS, 1C TRENTON — New records show taxpayers shelled out $184,659 on travel costs for Gov. Chris Christie’s securi- ty detail over the first three months of the year, with Christie regularly making trips outside New Jersey to meet potential donors and supporters of his expected presidential candidacy. The total doesn’t include overtime for state troopers or the price of using the State Police vehicle and heli- copter fleets to transport the governor. The Asbury Park Press obtained the new expendi- ture information for January, February and March through a public records request. Christie has defended his frequent travels by saying political organizations or other groups often pay his way, but it’s up to taxpayers to foot the bill for security. The Christie security bill for 2014 was $492,420, a figure that will be easily exceeded at this year’s spend- ing pace. Christie has been outside the state for more than 200 days since the beginning of 2014. This month he’s been See COSTS, Page 5A Christie road trips hitting taxpayers’ wallets back home BOB JORDAN @BOBJORDANAPP WIKILEAKS: UNITED STATES BUGGED THREE FRENCH PRESIDENTS PAGE 1B