Nicholas Scutari
Nicholas Paul Scutari is an American politician and attorney who has served as the 115th president of the New Jersey Senate since 2022. A member of the Democratic Party, he has held a Senate seat since 2004, representing the 22nd legislative district. Scutari has served as Acting Governor of New Jersey on multiple occasions, the first time being in June 2022.
Early life
Scutari attended Union County College, received a B.A. from Kean University in Psychology, an Ed.M. from Rutgers University in Education and a J.D. from the Western Michigan University Cooley Law School. He is an attorney with the Law Offices of Nicholas P. Scutari.Political career
Before his election to the New Jersey Senate, Scutari was a member of the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders, where he became the youngest freeholder chairman in county history. He served as freeholder chairman in 1999, after serving a year as freeholder vice chairman. Prior to being a freeholder, he served as a member of the board of education of the Linden Public Schools.New Jersey Senate
He was nominated for the Senate after Senator Joseph Suliga announced that he would not seek re-election after a female casino employee in Atlantic City accused him of sexual harassment.Scutari has served on the State Government Committee, the Joint State Leasing and Space Utilization Committee, the Commerce Committee and the Judiciary Committee. Scutari held the role of chair of the New Jersey Senate Judiciary Committee for the longest period in modern history. He is a former commissioner of the New Jersey Clean Elections Commission. He is also a former vice chairman of the Senate Education Committee. He is President of the New Jersey Senate. Scutari was the chief sponsor of New Jersey's Medical Marijuana law that was signed into law in 2009 and has been an advocate for the effort to legalize marijuana for all individuals over the age of 21. After a bill he introduced failed in 2014, Scutari introduced a bill in May 2017 to legalize, regulate and tax recreational marijuana use; while then-Governor of New Jersey Chris Christie was vigorously opposed to the measure, incoming governor Phil Murphy had announced that he would support legalization.
Committees
Committee assignments for the 2024—2025 Legislative Session are:- Joint State Leasing and Space Utilization Committee
District 22
- Senator Nicholas Scutari
- Assemblywoman Linda S. Carter
- Assemblyman James J. Kennedy
Acting Governor
In August 2024, while Governor Murphy and Lieutenant Governor Taheshea Way were out of state for the 2024 Democratic National Convention, Scutari passed four bills as acting president, including a bill that raises the cap on attorney fees in workers’ compensation cases from 20% to 25%, as well as another that gives raises to appellate judges and county prosecutors. This raised concerns because Scutari’s law firm works in these cases. Other bills passed included the designation of the interchange between State Highway 42 and Interstate 295 as Ensign John R. Elliott Memorial Interchange; a bill that directs the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs to establish a self-certification program allows architects and engineers to self-certify as design professionals; and a bill that allows members of the Police and Firemen’s Retirement System to purchase credit for service as a class two special law enforcement officer.
Linden municipal prosecutor
Scutari served for about fifteen years as municipal prosecutor in the City of Linden. In January 2019 the city council voted to remove him from the position.The city retained the Newark law firm **Calcagni & Kanefsky LLP** to review the prosecutor’s office. Its October 2019 report alleged that Scutari attended fewer than half of his scheduled municipal court sessions, that cases were dismissed as a result of absences, and that the need for substitutes and related costs added more than $200,000 in expenses for the city. The review also noted that Linden taxpayers continued contributing to Scutari’s pension during this period.
Scutari denied wrongdoing, calling the report politically motivated, and said a 2005 city memorandum authorized him to retain and personally pay substitute prosecutors when absent. In early 2019 Linden Mayor Derek Armstead publicly requested that U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito investigate the matter, and in March 2020 *NorthJersey.com* reported that prosecutors had subpoenaed records related to Scutari’s work as prosecutor. Activists later urged an ethics investigation and compared the controversy to the 2008 conviction of former state senator Wayne Bryant for “no-show job” arrangements, though Scutari was not charged with any crime.
In October 2020 Scutari filed a $10 million lawsuit against Mayor Armstead and several council members, alleging defamation, libel, slander, and malicious prosecution.