Englewood, NJ – An estate in northern New Jersey owned by the Libyan government that was at the center of a legal battle last month has been vandalized.
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Englewood Mayor Michael Wildes says flammable debris was left on the driveway of the sprawling estate.
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi had addressed the U.N. General Assembly earlier Wednesday during his first visit to the U.S.
Residents had complained in August about Gadhafi’s rumored stay in upscale Englewood.
The city got a court order halting some renovations at the estate and Gadhafi stayed at the Libyan mission in Manhattan.
New Jersey officials had opposed Gadhafi staying in the Garden State, which lost dozens of residents in the Lockerbie airplane bombing widely believed to have been the work of Libyan intelligence.