Skip Ribbon Commands
Skip to main content
Sign In
Skip to main content Open accessibility information page
Alert
On January 16, 2024, Governor Phil Murphy signed the New Jersey Data Privacy Law, P.L. 2023, c. 266. The law went into effect on January 15, 2025. Please click on this Frequently Asked Questions link to learn more about the new law and your rights under it.
Alert
On January 8, 2024, Governor Murphy signed into law P.L. 2023, c. 237, which, among other things: amended the Contractors’ Business Registration Act (“CBRA,” formerly the “Contractors’ Registration Act”), N.J.S.A. 56:8-136 et seq., and created the “Home Improvement and Home Elevation Contractor Licensing Act,” N.J.S.A. 45:5AAA-1 et seq. For more information on the registration requirements for contractors and businesses under these laws, click here.
Alert
On July 10, 2024, Governor Murphy signed into law the Real Estate Consumer Protection Enhancement Act, P.L. 2024, c.32, which, among other things, requires sellers of residential property located in New Jersey to use the "Seller's Property Condition Disclosure Statement" ("Disclosure Statement," questions 1 through 108).

Additionally, on July 3, 2023, Governor Murphy signed into law P.L. 2023, c.93, which, among other things, requires sellers of all real property located in New Jersey to make certain additional disclosures concerning flood risks on the "Disclosure Statement." On July 15, 2024, the Division published a "Flood Risk Addendum" to the Disclosure Statement (questions 109 through 117), which includes the additional disclosures concerning flood risks.

As a result of these two laws, effective August 1, 2024:
  • Sellers of residential property must complete the Disclosure Statement (questions 1 through 108). A copy of the Disclosure Statement is available here; and
  • All sellers of real property, both residential and non-residential, must complete the Flood Risk Addendum to the Disclosure Statement (questions 109 through 117). A copy of the Flood Risk Addendum is available here.

The Division has created an instruction sheet with additional information regarding the use of these forms. The forms linked above supersede any forms previously posted by the Division, including, but not limited to, the "Amended Disclosure Statement" posted on December 21, 2023.

Press Release

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​For Immediate Release:
January 24, 2019

Office of The Attorney General
Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General

Division of Consumer Affairs
Paul R. Rodríguez, Acting Director

Division of Law
Michelle Miller, Director
​​​​ For Further Information Contact:
Lisa Coryell 609-292-4791

State Board of Medical Examiners Permanently Revokes Licenses of Two Doctors Convicted in Unrelated Criminal Cases
Includes One Doctor Imprisoned for Supplying Opioids to a Criminal Drug Ring


​ ​​​

TRENTON – Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal and the Division of Consumer Affairs announced today that the state Board of Medical Examiners has permanently revoked the licenses of two physicians as a result of their criminal convictions in unrelated cases.

Dr. George Beecher, an ear, nose and throat specialist in Warren, N.J. who conspired to supply a drug ring with tens of thousands of high-dose opioid painkillers, agreed to surrender his medical licenses for permanent revocation under a plea agreement reached with the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice last month.

Dr. Zahid Aslam, an NJ-licensed OB-GYN practitioner who conspired to commit bank fraud in Delaware, agreed to surrender his medical licenses for permanent revocation under a plea agreement reached with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Delaware in November.

“There is no room in New Jersey’s medical profession for physicians who break the law, as these two men did,” said Attorney General Grewal. “As a result of their actions, Dr. Beecher and Dr. Aslam are not only facing serious criminal consequences, they are forever banned from practicing medicine in this state.”

“The doctor-patient relationship is rooted in trust, a trust that is undermined when doctors abandon their professional ethics in pursuit of self-serving criminal activities,” said Paul R. Rodríguez, Acting Director of the Division of Consumer Affairs. “We believe the vast majority of physicians in this state uphold the highest standards of practice. By bringing enforcement actions such as these, we are protecting the public as well as the integrity of the medical profession.”

Beecher, a 78-year-old resident of New Providence, was sentenced to 10 years in state prison last month after pleading guilty to second-degree charges of conspiracy and distribution of oxycodone.

The charges were the result of “Operation Busted Script,” an investigation by the Attorney General’s Prescription Fraud Investigation Strike Team, a team of detectives and attorneys in the Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau that targets corrupt healthcare professionals and “pill mills.”

The investigation revealed that Beecher, in order to supply the drug ring, wrote prescriptions without a legitimate medical purpose for tens of thousands of 30 mg oxycodone pills in the names of people he never examined, treated, or even met.

Beecher was arrested in December 2015 and has been temporarily suspended from practice under a Consent Order he entered with the Board in January 2016. 

Aslam, a 46-year-old resident of Elkton, MD, had practices in Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Scotch Plains, New Jersey. In November 2018, he pleaded guilty to a federal charge of making a false statement to a financial institution in connection with a scheme to commit bank fraud in a case brought by the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the District of Delaware. He is scheduled to be sentenced in May 2019.

According to the charges contained in an indictment handed up by a grand jury in Delaware in June 2017, Aslam entered into a bank fraud scheme with a loan officer at a Delaware bank in which Aslam recruited two other associates to misrepresent in loan applications that they were the true borrowers and operators of medical practices, when in actuality Aslam owned and operated the practices and ultimately controlled the loan proceeds.

Aslam has been temporarily suspended from practice in New Jersey under an Interim Consent Order he entered with the Board in October 2018.  On January 16, 2019, under a Consent Order of Permanent Revocation of Licensure, Aslam agreed to a permanent revocation of his New Jersey medical license.

Under the terms of their respective Consent Orders with the Board, Beecher and Aslam are permanently precluded from managing, overseeing, supervising, or influencing the practice of medicine or provision of healthcare activities in New Jersey and must divest themselves from any current and future financial interest in or benefit derived from the practice of medicine.

Investigators with the Enforcement Bureau within the Division of Consumer Affairs conducted the investigation into the Beecher matter.

Investigators with the Enforcement Bureau within the Division of Consumer Affairs conducted the investigation into the Aslam matter with cooperation from investigators within the New Jersey Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor (“OIFP”) and OIFP’s Deputy Attorney General Jennifer Menjivar and Detective Kristi Procaccino.

Deputy Attorney General Delia DeLisi of the Professional Boards Prosecution Section in the Division of Law represented the State in the Beecher matter.

Deputy Attorney General Kathy Stroh Mendoza of the Professional Boards Prosecution Section in the Division of Law represented the State in the Aslam matter.

###

Last Modified: 1/24/2019 6:08 AM