By Associated Press - Sunday, March 29, 2020

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Additional ventilators are currently the New Jersey’s biggest need to combat the coronavirus outbreak, Gov. Phil Murphy said Sunday.

Murphy, a Democrat, said on ABC’s “This Week” that he made a request for more ventilators during a call with federal officials Saturday night.

“The big headline for us right now are ventilators. We had a very specific conversation with the White House last night about ventilators. That’s our No. 1 ask. It’s our No. 1 need. And that’s the one that we are focused most on right now,” Murphy said.

He said the state also has significant need of personal protective equipment for medical professionals.

Murphy said President Trump’s proposed travel advisory for New Jersey, New York and Connecticut was fine with him, noting that state residents were largely avoiding travel.

“The fact of the matter is people aren’t really traveling a whole lot,” Murphy said. “A travel warning we’re fine with. The fact of the matter is we are all in flattening that curve, social distancing as aggressive as any states in America and we’ll continue to be that way.”

More than 11,000 people in New Jersey have tested positive and 140 have died from COVID-19.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

A look at coronavirus developments Sunday:

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FATAL WRECK-TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS

Authorities say a New York man facing charges in a traffic accident in New Jersey that claimed the lives of three people, including an infant, is also accused of violating the governor’s executive order restricting nonessential activities.

Middlesex County prosecutors and Perth Amboy police say a pickup truck they allege was “driving aggressively, cutting in and out of traffic” in excess of the posted speed limit struck a minivan at about 6:30 pm. Friday. Two minivan passengers were pronounced dead at the scene and an 8-month-old infant died the following day at a hospital; the minivan driver was also treated.

Prosecutors say the Staten Island man driving the pickup faces aggravated manslaughter, vehicular homicide and aggravated assault charges. Prosecutors allege that he told detectives that he was in the state to visit friends, and he also faces charges stemming from alleged violation of the executive order.

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OFFICERS TESTING POSITIVE

The acting superintendent of New Jersey’s state police said more than 160 officers in the state have so far tested positive for the coronavirus.

NJ.com quoted Col. Patrick Callahan saying two officers who had been in serious condition are now considered stable, and none have died.

New Jersey has about 36,000 full-time police officers.

HOBOKEN PARKS CLOSED

The Hoboken mayor and emergency management department have announced the closure of all parks in the city for two weeks to help stop the spread of the coronavirus epidemic.

Mayor Ravi S. Bhalla said Sunday that many people have been adhering to proper social distancing protocols. But Bhalla said “we’ve still seen congregating in our public green spaces, including at our waterfront parks, despite our best efforts to dissuade people from doing so.”

He said warmer weather next month will likely draw even more people to parks, and the risks of further spread of the virus will grow unless more measures are taken to contain the epidemic. __ This story has been corrected to show more than 160 New Jersey police officers have tested positive for coronavirus, not more than 700. The New Jersey State police said it overstated the number of officers with the virus and revised its total.

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