LLMpediaThe first transparent, open encyclopedia generated by LLMs

Robert DiRomualdo

Generated by GPT-5-mini
Note: This article was automatically generated by a large language model (LLM) from purely parametric knowledge (no retrieval). It may contain inaccuracies or hallucinations. This encyclopedia is part of a research project currently under review.
Article Genealogy
Parent: Borders Group Hop 4
Expansion Funnel Raw 50 → Dedup 7 → NER 6 → Enqueued 4
1. Extracted50
2. After dedup7 (None)
3. After NER6 (None)
Rejected: 1 (not NE: 1)
4. Enqueued4 (None)
Similarity rejected: 2
Robert DiRomualdo
NameRobert DiRomualdo
Birth date1950s
Birth placeNew Jersey, United States
OccupationAttorney, Prosecutor, Law Professor
EducationRutgers School of Law–Newark; Princeton University
Notable works"New Jersey White-Collar Prosecution" (monograph)
AwardsNew Jersey State Bar Association Professionalism Award

Robert DiRomualdo is an American attorney and former prosecutor known for his work in public corruption, white-collar crime, and appellate litigation in New Jersey. Over a multi-decade career he held senior positions in state and county prosecutor's offices, taught at law schools, and contributed to jurisprudence through briefs and lectures that influenced prosecutors, judges, and legislators. DiRomualdo's career intersected with prominent institutions and cases involving municipal, state, and federal actors.

Early life and education

DiRomualdo was born in New Jersey and raised in a suburban community with ties to regional political and legal networks such as Essex County and Union County, New Jersey. He attended Princeton University for undergraduate studies, where he took courses that connected him to faculty from Woodrow Wilson School affiliates and civic leaders from Newark and Trenton. DiRomualdo earned his law degree from Rutgers School of Law–Newark, studying under professors who had clerked for judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and the Supreme Court of New Jersey. During law school he interned at the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice and worked with attorneys from the Office of the Attorney General of New Jersey on municipal litigation and regulatory matters.

DiRomualdo began his career as an assistant prosecutor in a county prosecutor's office that collaborated with federal counterparts including the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey and agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service. He later served in senior leadership roles within the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice and participated in task forces alongside the Office of Inspector General and the Department of Justice on coordinated prosecutions. His practice emphasized grand jury work, appellate advocacy before the New Jersey Supreme Court, and coordination with New Jersey institutions like the New Jersey State Police and municipal law departments in Jersey City and Paterson, New Jersey.

DiRomualdo developed expertise in prosecuting financial fraud and public corruption, often working with regulatory bodies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission when cases involved securities fraud. He also advised elected officials and prosecutors on ethics issues governed by statutes passed in the wake of high-profile scandals in New Jersey General Assembly politics.

Notable cases and investigations

Throughout his tenure DiRomualdo led and contributed to a range of investigations into public corruption, healthcare fraud, and municipal contracting. He supervised grand jury probes that resulted in indictments involving municipal officials in cities like Newark, New Jersey and Camden, New Jersey, and coordinated prosecutions with the United States Attorney's Office on racketeering and mail fraud matters connected to construction and zoning disputes. His work intersected with investigations by the New Jersey Attorney General into bid-rigging and public bid statutes, and cases that reached appellate review before the New Jersey Appellate Division.

DiRomualdo also handled white-collar cases involving bank fraud and mortgage fraud, collaborating with prosecutors from the United States Department of Justice and agents from the Secret Service and Drug Enforcement Administration when offenses crossed state lines. In several prosecutions his litigation strategy and briefs were cited in judicial opinions on issues such as witness immunity, subpoena enforcement, and sentencing guidelines issued under federal statutes administered by the United States Sentencing Commission.

Academic and teaching roles

Parallel to his prosecutorial work, DiRomualdo held adjunct and visiting positions at law schools, delivering seminars on trial practice, grand jury procedure, and white-collar defense at institutions like Rutgers Law School, Seton Hall University School of Law, and regional programs affiliated with Columbia Law School externships in New Jersey. He taught trial advocacy courses modeled on curricula from the National Institute for Trial Advocacy and participated in continuing legal education programs sponsored by the New Jersey State Bar Association and the American Bar Association.

DiRomualdo guest-lectured at criminal justice and public policy forums organized by entities such as Rutgers University–Newark School of Public Affairs and Administration and contributed to symposiums featuring judges from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey and scholars from Princeton University.

DiRomualdo authored articles and practice materials on prosecutorial ethics, grand jury practice, and white-collar litigation that appeared in state bar journals and symposium volumes. His monograph, often cited in municipal prosecution circles, offered guidance on coordinating complex investigations with federal partners such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development when public housing funds were implicated. His published briefs and practice notes influenced policy discussions in the New Jersey Legislature on statutory reforms to whistleblower protections and bid solicitation laws.

Legal scholars and practitioners have referenced DiRomualdo's writings in analyses published by the Rutgers Law Review and the Seton Hall Law Review, and his courtroom strategies have been discussed in panels convened by the National Association of Attorneys General and the Association of Prosecuting Attorneys.

Personal life and legacy

DiRomualdo is known among colleagues for mentoring younger prosecutors and participating in bar association initiatives such as task forces on professional responsibility with the New Jersey State Bar Association and civic outreach through organizations like the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey. His influence persists in prosecutorial training programs and in precedents cited by state appellate courts in matters of evidence and procedure.

He resides in New Jersey and has been active in local civic institutions and charities connected to faith-based and community organizations in Hudson County, New Jersey and Middlesex County, New Jersey. DiRomualdo's legacy is visible in the practices of contemporary prosecutors and in academic programs that continue to train trial lawyers across the Northeast.

Category:American lawyers Category:People from New Jersey