I Was Ordered to Take Anger Management in Tenafly, New Jersey
Your Complete Guide to Completing Court-Ordered Anger Management from the Tenafly Municipal Court — 100 Riveredge Road — Including How to Enroll, What the Court Expects, the Shared Tenafly/Demarest Docket, and How to Get Your Case Dismissed
If the Tenafly Municipal Court just ordered you to complete anger management, take a breath — you have options, and this page will walk you through every one of them. Maybe a domestic argument in your home on a quiet residential street escalated until a neighbor heard shouting and called Tenafly Police. Maybe a road rage incident along County Road 501 or at the Route 9W intersection ended with a confrontation and a simple assault charge. Maybe a verbal dispute at a youth sports event at Roosevelt Common or Huyler Park crossed the line into harassment. Whatever happened, the court has spoken: complete anger management or face consequences including jail time, extended probation, or a permanent criminal conviction on your record.
This is not the kind of situation most Tenafly residents expect to find themselves in. Tenafly is an affluent Bergen County suburb of approximately 15,500 people — one of the highest-income communities in New Jersey, known for its excellent school system, wooded neighborhoods, and quiet pace of life. An arrest here feels particularly disorienting. But anger management charges do not discriminate by income bracket or zip code, and the Tenafly Municipal Court handles them with the same seriousness as any court in the state. This guide walks you through the entire process from enrollment to completion, with specific details about the Tenafly court, its twice-monthly evening sessions, and exactly what documentation the court needs from your anger management provider.
Your Court: Tenafly Municipal Court
Tenafly Municipal Court (Shared Court with Demarest)
Address: 100 Riveredge Road, Tenafly, NJ 07670 (Tenafly Borough Hall)
Phone: (201) 408-3613
Fax: (201) 541-6412
Email: municipalcourt@tenafly.net
Judge: Hon. Allen M. Bell
Court Administrator: Dawn Curatola (ext. 5540)
Prosecutor: Mark P. Fierro
Court Sessions: 1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month, 5:00 PM
Office Hours: Monday – Friday, 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Court Code: 0261 (Tenafly) / B63
Shared Court: Tenafly Municipal Court also serves the Borough of Demarest. Cases arising in Demarest are heard on the same schedule at 100 Riveredge Road in Tenafly.
Virtual Appearances: Initial appearances are generally conducted virtually. Subsequent appearances and matters involving consequences of magnitude are typically conducted in person. Contact the court to confirm whether your hearing is virtual or in-person.
Payment Methods: Cash, check, credit card, or money order in person. Online payments accepted via NJMCdirect.com.
What Charges Lead to Anger Management Orders in Tenafly
The Tenafly Municipal Court handles disorderly persons offenses, petty disorderly persons offenses, traffic violations, and borough ordinance violations. The charges that most commonly result in anger management orders include simple assault under N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a), harassment under N.J.S.A. 2C:33-4, criminal mischief under N.J.S.A. 2C:17-3 when property is damaged during an argument, disorderly conduct under N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2, and any domestic violence offense at the disorderly persons level where the court has jurisdiction.
If your charge is an indictable offense — aggravated assault, terroristic threats, or a weapons charge — it will transfer from Tenafly Municipal Court to the Bergen County Superior Court at the Bergen County Justice Center, 10 Main Street in Hackensack. Our anger management program is accepted at both court levels. If your case has been transferred, see our guide to how Bergen County cases move from Municipal Court to Superior Court for a full breakdown of that process.
How Anger Management Gets Ordered in Tenafly
Anger management enters your case at one of three points. The best outcome is a conditional dismissal under N.J.S.A. 2C:36A-1 — you agree to complete anger management and other conditions, and if you satisfy everything, the charge is dismissed entirely. No conviction. No criminal record. The second scenario is a plea agreement where you plead guilty to a lesser charge — often petty disorderly persons harassment — with anger management as a sentencing condition. The third scenario is probation after conviction, where anger management is a mandatory condition of your probation term.
“Tenafly runs court only twice a month — the first and third Wednesday at 5:00 PM. That means if you miss a court date or show up unprepared, you wait two weeks for the next session. In a town where cases are heard on this limited schedule, you cannot afford to waste a single appearance. Walking in with your enrollment letter on the first court date tells Judge Bell and Prosecutor Fierro that you are already in motion. That single document can be the difference between a conditional dismissal and a conviction that follows you for years.”
— Santo Artusa Jr, NJAMG Program Director, Rutgers Law 2009About Tenafly: Understanding the Community
Tenafly is a 4.6-square-mile borough in the eastern part of Bergen County, bordered by Alpine to the north, Cresskill to the northwest, Bergenfield to the west, Englewood to the south, and Englewood Cliffs to the southeast. The Hudson River and the Palisades Interstate Park form the borough’s eastern boundary, with the dramatic cliffs of the New Jersey Palisades rising along its edge. Tenafly has a population of approximately 15,500 residents, a population density of roughly 3,350 people per square mile, a median age of 42, and a median household income of approximately $208,000 — among the highest in the state.
The borough’s demographic profile is distinctive. Approximately 58 percent of residents are White and 31 percent are Asian, with a significant Korean American community that accounts for a large share of the Asian population. About 38 percent of residents are foreign-born, and approximately 43 percent of households speak a language other than English at home — with Korean, Chinese or Mandarin, Spanish, and Hebrew among the most common. These demographics are important in the court context because language barriers and cultural differences around law enforcement interaction can complicate an already stressful situation. NJAMG provides bilingual enrollment coordination and documentation in multiple languages when needed.
The terrain of Tenafly is defined by its East Hill — the elevated area east of the downtown commercial center that rises toward the Palisades. Homes on the East Hill are among the most expensive in Bergen County, commanding panoramic views of the Hudson River and the Manhattan skyline. The western portion of the borough, closer to the downtown area along Washington Street (not to be confused with Hoboken’s Washington Street), contains the commercial center, Borough Hall, and the municipal court. The Tenafly Nature Center at 313 Hudson Avenue provides 55 acres of natural preserve. County Road 501 runs north-south through the borough, and U.S. Route 9W and the Palisades Interstate Parkway pass through the eastern edge.
Why Tenafly’s Character Matters for Your Case
Tenafly is not a town with a busy nightlife scene or high-density apartment friction. The anger management cases here arise from the specific pressures of suburban affluent life: domestic disputes in private homes that escalate until someone calls the police, confrontations at youth sports events where parents lose composure, road rage on narrow Bergen County roads, neighbor disputes that boil over after months of tension, and arguments that spiral during high-stress family situations like divorce proceedings or custody transitions.
In a community where professional reputation, school involvement, and neighborhood standing carry significant weight, an arrest feels catastrophic. The thought of sitting in a courtroom at Borough Hall — the same building where you attend council meetings or renew your dog license — adds a layer of humiliation that larger, more anonymous courts do not. NJAMG’s remote format addresses this directly. You attend your anger management sessions via secure video from the privacy of your home or office. No sitting in a waiting room where you might encounter a neighbor or fellow parent. No scheduling around in-person appointments in a town where parking at Borough Hall on a Wednesday evening is already tight.
Our program also addresses the specific triggers common in communities like Tenafly: managing perfectionist and high-achievement stress, navigating co-parenting conflict during or after divorce, maintaining composure in competitive youth sports environments, resolving neighbor and property disputes without escalation, and processing the acute shame and anxiety that accompany an arrest in a small, close-knit community.
Directions to Tenafly Municipal Court
Getting to 100 Riveredge Road — Tenafly Borough Hall
The Tenafly Municipal Court is located inside Tenafly Borough Hall at 100 Riveredge Road. Court sessions are held on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month at 5:00 PM. Bring your court summons, a valid photo ID, and any anger management documentation.
From the George Washington Bridge / Route 9W
Cross the George Washington Bridge into New Jersey. Take Route 9W north through Englewood Cliffs into Tenafly. Turn left (west) onto County Road 501 (Piermont Road / Engle Street). Borough Hall is at 100 Riveredge Road, just south of the downtown area near the intersection with Riveredge Road. Approximate driving time from the GWB: 10–15 minutes depending on traffic.
From the Palisades Interstate Parkway
The Palisades Interstate Parkway passes through the eastern edge of Tenafly, but there are no exits on the parkway within the borough itself. Use Exit 1 (Englewood Cliffs / Palisade Avenue) to the south or Exit 2 (Alpine) to the north. From Exit 1, head north on Palisade Avenue / 9W through Englewood Cliffs into Tenafly, then turn west toward Borough Hall.
From Route 4 / Hackensack
From Route 4, take Teaneck Road or River Road north. Continue north through Bergenfield into Tenafly. Turn east on Riveredge Road to reach Borough Hall at 100 Riveredge Road. From Hackensack and the Bergen County Justice Center area, the drive is approximately 15–20 minutes.
NJ Transit Bus
NJ Transit bus route 166 provides local and express service between Tenafly and the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan. The 166 runs along County Road 501 through Tenafly’s downtown area. Additional local bus routes connect Tenafly to Englewood, Hackensack, and other Bergen County communities. Check NJTransit.com for current schedules.
Parking
Borough Hall has a parking lot, but it can fill up quickly on court nights since sessions are held at 5:00 PM on Wednesdays — overlapping with other borough business. Additional street parking is available on Riveredge Road and surrounding residential streets. Arrive at least 20 minutes early to secure parking and clear any security procedures. Court sessions at 5:00 PM mean you will likely be driving during afternoon rush — build in extra time if commuting from Hackensack, Englewood, or the GWB area.
When to Arrive
Court sessions begin at 5:00 PM on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month. Your summons will specify your exact date. Plan to arrive by 4:30 PM to clear security, check in, and find seating. Bring your court summons, a valid photo ID, and any anger management documentation (enrollment letter, progress reports, or completion certificate). Cell phones must be silenced. Dress business casual. If your appearance is virtual, you will receive instructions from the court — contact (201) 408-3613 or municipalcourt@tenafly.net to confirm.
Weather and Seasonal Considerations
Tenafly sits at a slightly higher elevation than many Bergen County communities, particularly in the East Hill area near the Palisades. Winter weather can be more impactful here than in lower-lying towns, and the hilly terrain makes icy road conditions a real concern during court nights in January and February.
Weather is one of the strongest arguments for NJAMG’s remote format. A winter storm that makes Tenafly’s hilly roads dangerous does not cancel your anger management session. You attend from home via secure video, regardless of what the weather does outside. This keeps your completion timeline on track and ensures you are ready for your next court date — which, on a twice-monthly schedule, you cannot afford to delay.
Your Anger Management Program: Structure and Pricing
NJAMG Program Details for Tenafly Court Orders
Format: Live, one-on-one sessions via secure video platform. Every session is facilitator-led — never pre-recorded video modules.
Facilitator: Santo Artusa Jr, JD (Rutgers School of Law, 2009). 15+ years working with New Jersey courts across all 21 counties, including Bergen County Municipal Courts and Bergen County Superior Court.
Session Length: 50 minutes per session.
Schedule: Flexible scheduling including evenings and weekends. Weekly sessions are standard, but accelerated tracks are available if your court deadline is close.
Documentation: Enrollment confirmation letter (same day), progress reports (on request), and formal completion certificate. All documents are accepted by Tenafly Municipal Court and Bergen County Superior Court.
Language: Sessions conducted in English. Bilingual coordination available for Korean-speaking and Spanish-speaking participants who need assistance with enrollment and documentation.
| Program Option | Cost | Timeline | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment + 1 Session | $150 | Same day | Start here. Includes same-day enrollment letter for court. |
| 8-Session Standard | $375 | ~8 weeks | Most Municipal Court orders. Conditional dismissals. |
| 8-Session Expedited | $485 | ~3 weeks | Tight court deadlines. Multiple sessions per week. |
| 12-Session Program | $525 | ~12 weeks | DV-related charges. Extended court orders. |
| 16-Session Program | $675 | ~16 weeks | Superior Court PTI conditions. Indictable offenses. |
| 26-Session Comprehensive | $950 | ~26 weeks | Batterers intervention. Extended probation conditions. |
The Best Move You Can Make Today
Tenafly only holds court sessions twice a month. If your next appearance is on the 1st or 3rd Wednesday, enroll now. The Assessment & First Session ($150) includes a same-day enrollment confirmation letter. When you walk into Borough Hall at 5:00 PM with that letter in hand, you show Judge Bell and Prosecutor Fierro that you are already in motion. In a court that moves on a twice-monthly schedule, that single document can be the difference between a conditional dismissal (charge dismissed, no record) and a guilty plea (permanent criminal conviction).
Call (201) 221-2522 or enroll online at newjerseyangermanagementgroup.com/enroll. We will have your letter ready the same day.
Case Studies: Tenafly Anger Management in Practice
The East Hill Argument That Went Too Far
The situation: A couple going through a contested divorce got into an argument at their East Hill home during a custody exchange. The husband blocked the doorway, and the wife called Tenafly Police. Under New Jersey’s mandatory domestic violence arrest statute (N.J.S.A. 2C:25-21), the husband was arrested and charged with simple assault. Their children were present during the incident.
The strategy: Defense counsel contacted NJAMG within 48 hours of the arrest and enrolled the client in the 12-session program. An enrollment confirmation letter was produced the same day and presented to the court at the next Wednesday session.
The outcome: The court agreed to a conditional dismissal: complete 12 anger management sessions, maintain no further violations for 12 months, and follow all family court orders. The husband completed all sessions with specific focus on managing conflict during custody exchanges, processing divorce-related anger without escalation, and maintaining composure in front of children. The charge was dismissed. No conviction. No record. The family court judge in the parallel custody proceeding also noted the completion favorably in her ruling.
The Weekend Soccer Game at Roosevelt Common
The situation: A parent disagreed with a referee’s call during a youth soccer game at Roosevelt Common. He confronted the referee verbally, and when another parent stepped in to intervene, the first parent shoved him. Tenafly Police were called. The aggressor was charged with simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)) and disorderly conduct (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2).
The strategy: The defendant — a finance professional with no prior record — was mortified. The arrest happened in front of other parents, coaches, and children from the same school district. Defense counsel enrolled the client in NJAMG’s 8-session program the following Monday and presented the enrollment letter at the next court session.
The outcome: The disorderly conduct charge was dropped. The court offered a conditional dismissal on the simple assault: complete 8 anger management sessions and maintain no further incidents for 12 months. The defendant completed all sessions with focus on managing competitive intensity in youth sports settings, recognizing escalation triggers in public situations, and rebuilding reputation after a public incident. The charge was dismissed entirely. No conviction. No record.
The Route 9W Intersection Incident
The situation: A Tenafly resident rear-ended another vehicle at a Route 9W intersection near the Englewood Cliffs border. Both drivers exited their vehicles. The Tenafly resident, already furious about the accident, punched the other driver in the face, fracturing his cheekbone. The injury severity elevated the charge to third-degree aggravated assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1)). The case was transferred from Tenafly Municipal Court to the Bergen County Superior Court at 10 Main Street in Hackensack.
The strategy: Defense counsel enrolled the client in NJAMG’s 16-session program immediately after the indictment. By the time the PTI application was submitted to the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, the client had already completed 14 sessions with full progress documentation.
The outcome: PTI was granted. The defendant completed all 16 sessions and the supervision period without incident. The aggravated assault indictment was dismissed. The same program that would have satisfied Judge Bell at 100 Riveredge Road in Tenafly satisfied the Bergen County Superior Court in Hackensack.
The Property Line Confrontation
The situation: Two Tenafly neighbors had been feuding for months over a property line issue involving a new fence installation. When the contractor arrived to begin work, the neighbor confronted the homeowner in the driveway, grabbed his shirt collar, and threatened to “make him pay.” The homeowner called Tenafly Police. The neighbor was charged with simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)) and harassment (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-4).
The strategy: The defendant was a longtime Tenafly resident with deep community ties. The last thing he wanted was a criminal conviction attached to his name in a borough where everyone knows everyone. Defense counsel enrolled him in NJAMG’s 8-session program and presented the enrollment letter at the first court date.
The outcome: The harassment charge was dropped. The court offered a conditional dismissal on the simple assault: complete 8 sessions and maintain no contact with the neighbor beyond what is necessary as adjacent property owners. All sessions were completed, with specific focus on managing long-simmering disputes, communicating through proper channels (attorneys, mediators) rather than direct confrontation, and developing impulse control strategies for high-frustration situations. The charge was dismissed. No conviction. No record. The fence got built without further incident.
What If Your Tenafly Case Involves a Restraining Order?
When a Tenafly arrest involves a domestic relationship — spouse, partner, former partner, household member, or someone you have a child with — a restraining order can be filed in addition to the criminal charge. In Bergen County, the TRO and subsequent FRO hearing are handled by the Bergen County Family Division at the Justice Center, 10 Main Street in Hackensack.
If the other party lives in a different county, the TRO may be filed in that county’s Family Division, creating a multi-county case. Either way, NJAMG’s program is accepted in all 21 New Jersey counties. One enrollment, one program, every court satisfied.
⚠ If a Restraining Order Has Been Filed Against You
Do not contact the protected party. Do not go to the shared residence without court permission. Do not post about the situation on social media. In a borough of 15,500 people where your children may attend the same school as the protected party’s children, maintaining complete compliance is critical. Violating a restraining order is a separate criminal offense (contempt under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-9) that carries up to 18 months in prison. If you have questions about what you can and cannot do, talk to your defense attorney. And enroll in anger management immediately — it demonstrates to the family court judge that you are taking concrete steps toward change.
The Tenafly/Demarest Shared Court: What You Need to Know
As of 2025, Tenafly Municipal Court also serves the Borough of Demarest. If your incident occurred in Demarest, your case is heard in Tenafly at 100 Riveredge Road on the same 1st and 3rd Wednesday schedule. The same judge (Hon. Allen M. Bell), the same prosecutor (Mark P. Fierro), and the same court administrator (Dawn Curatola) handle both Tenafly and Demarest matters. From an anger management perspective, the process is identical regardless of which borough the incident occurred in. Your enrollment letter and completion certificate reference the Tenafly Municipal Court, and all documentation is accepted for cases originating in either Tenafly or Demarest.
Your Step-by-Step Path from Arrest to Case Closed
Step 1: The Arrest and Release
You are arrested by Tenafly Police, booked at the station, and released with a summons listing your court date at 100 Riveredge Road. Court sessions are on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month at 5:00 PM. Your summons will specify your date.
Step 2: Retain an Attorney and Enroll in Anger Management (This Week)
Contact a criminal defense attorney who practices in Bergen County Municipal Courts. Simultaneously, call NJAMG at (201) 221-2522 to enroll. The Assessment & First Session ($150) gets you started and produces the same-day enrollment letter your attorney needs.
Step 3: Your Attorney Presents the Enrollment Letter
Your defense attorney presents the NJAMG enrollment letter to the court at your first appearance. In Tenafly, where court runs only twice monthly, making the most of every appearance is critical. This document signals to Judge Bell and Prosecutor Fierro that you have already begun addressing the underlying behavior.
Step 4: Complete Your Sessions
Attend your weekly (or accelerated) sessions via secure video. Stay on schedule. If you need a progress report for an interim court date, request one and we will provide it immediately. Between Tenafly’s twice-monthly court dates, you can complete 2–4 anger management sessions — building substantial progress each time you return to court.
Step 5: Submit Your Completion Certificate
Upon completing all sessions, NJAMG provides a formal completion certificate. Your attorney submits this to the Tenafly Municipal Court — either in person at the next Wednesday session or via email to municipalcourt@tenafly.net. If the court ordered a conditional dismissal, the charge is dismissed. Case closed. No record.
Ordered to Take Anger Management in Tenafly?
Start today. Same-day enrollment letters. Live sessions via secure video. Accepted at Tenafly Municipal Court, Bergen County Superior Court, and every court in New Jersey.
📞 Call (201) 221-2522 Enroll Online Now
Assessment + First Session: $150 • Same-Day Letter • Live Facilitator • All 21 NJ Counties
Frequently Asked Questions: Tenafly Anger Management
Nearby Bergen County Town Pages
Other Bergen County Communities We Serve
Tenafly borders Englewood, Englewood Cliffs, Cresskill, Bergenfield, and Alpine. If you have cases in multiple towns, one NJAMG enrollment covers all of them:
Englewood • Englewood Cliffs • Cresskill • Bergenfield • Alpine • Hackensack • Fort Lee • Ridgewood • Paramus • Ridgefield Park • Bergen County Superior Court
Related Guides
Municipal Court to Superior Court in Bergen County — How Bergen County cases move between court levels
Multi-County DV Cases in New Jersey — When your criminal case and restraining order are in different counties
Conditional Dismissals in New Jersey — How to get your charge dismissed through anger management
PTI and Anger Management — Using anger management to strengthen your PTI application
Divorce, Custody, and Anger Management — How anger management affects family court proceedings
