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Tag: northeast philadelphia

  • 1 year after deadly Northeast Philadelphia plane crash, inside 10-year-old Ramesses’ road to recovery

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    Ramesses Vazquez-Viana was just 9 years old when a medical jet crashed in Northeast Philadelphia and burned most of the young boy’s body.

    Six people traveling on the plane and two people on the ground were killed, and two dozen people were injured in the aftermath of the tragic accident, which decimated homes and cars near Roosevelt Boulevard and Cottman Avenue.

    As one of the youngest survivors of the crash, Ramesses’ story of strength and positivity has touched people around the country. The now-10-year-old still has a long road ahead of him, but one year later, his recovery has been nothing short of a miracle.

    Here’s a look back at Ramesses’ journey.

    “I ask for prayers”

    A few days after the deadly crash, Virgen Viera identified her grandson Ramesses as the person seen running through the street while on fire in videos and photos posted on social media.

    “In an instant when I see him, I say, ‘That’s him,’” Viera told CBS News Philadelphia.

    Photo of 9-year-old Ramesses, who was burned in the Philadelphia plane crash

    Virgen Viera


    Ramesses’ dad’s car caught on fire after the plane crashed near the Roosevelt Mall on Jan. 31, 2025. His father, identified as Steven Dreuitt, was killed. Dreuitt’s girlfriend, Dominique Goods-Burke, was also in the car at the time of the crash and died from her injuries several months later.

    Despite more than 90% of his body being burned, Ramesses managed to climb out of the car’s open window. Witnesses helped get the 9-year-old to safety, and the next day, he was airlifted to a burn center in Boston, Massachusetts.

    “I ask for prayers. He is strong and my faith in God is big,” his mom posted on social media.

    Recovery continues in Boston

    For the next four months, Ramesses continued to fight for his life at Shriners Children’s Hospital in Boston. By May, Jamie Vazquez Viana said her son already undergone multiple surgeries, including partial amputations on both of his hands.

    Because of the extent of his burns, Jamie said her son will likely need skin grafts for years as he grows.

    “He can hear me. He can see me,” she said. “He can tell you if he’s in pain.”

    Photos showed Ramesses propped up in his hospital bed, connected to tubes and wires, wrapped in bandages from head to toe.

    “Not everybody in the family is comfortable with seeing him like that,” Jamie said. “It’s shocking.”

    Doctors called Ramesses survival a miracle; only his feet were spared from the burns.

    Ramesses Vasquez Viana

      Ramesses Vasquez Viana

    CBS Philadelphia


    “I’m going to stay here until it’s time to go,” said Jamie, who had several other children still at home in Philadelphia. “Philadelphia and everyone else has come together for him. Continuing praying. He still needs it.” 

    Back at home, Ramesses’ classmates and teachers said it was “tough” not having their friend and student in class. Ramesses was in third grade at Mastery Charter Smedley Elementary School in Frankford when he was burned.

    Assistant Principal Danielle Nicoletti said his class kept Ramesses’ desk ready for the day he could come back, and hosted fundraisers to support his family.

    The class sent Ramesses handmade origami cards, his favorite Philly snacks, and sold bracelets to raise money. The school also asked people to record read-alongs of Ramesses’ favorite books, and had students and staff wear yellow in his honor.

    Firefighters in Philadelphia also collected donations for Ramesses and his family and wrote handwritten notes to be delivered in Boston.”

    “I feel happy that I’m able to still do the things I do”

    In October, Ramesses turned 10 years old. Though he was still in the hospital in Boston, Ramesses had lots to celebrate on his road to recovery.

    He started wiggling his fingers and toes, his hearing and sight improved, and after six months, he was able to tell his mom, “I love you.”

    “I cried,” Jamie said. “Half of Philly was crying with me that day.”

    After 42 surgeries and months of intense treatment, Ramesses was moved to the Weisman Children’s Rehabilitation Hospital in Marlton, New Jersey, where he practiced climbing stairs, getting out of bed and walking in physical therapy.

    Ramesses practicing walking during physical therapy

    Ramesses practicing walking during physical therapy

    CBS Philadelphia


    In November, Ramesses progressed so much that he was able to sit down for his first television interview with CBS News Philadelphia’s Wakisha Bailey.

    “I feel happy that I’m able to still do the things I do,” he said. 

    His mom, Jamie, said Ramesses remembered everything that happened the night of the plane crash, and that he tried to save his dad from their burning car. “He said he remembers two big booms — like two crashes at once,” she said. “He tried to get his dad out of the car, but he couldn’t. His dad told him to get out … said, ‘I love you.’ And he said, ‘I love you back.’”

    Ramesses Vasquez Viana

      Ramesses Vasquez Viana

    CBS Philadelphia


    Even in the face of immense heartbreak, Ramesses had this message for anyone going through hard times: “I want them to know God is there,” he said. “You may not hear him, but he’s listening, and he’s helping.”

    Home for Christmas

    Eleven months after the Northeast Philadelphia plane crash, Ramesses was finally headed home. In December, Smedley Elementary celebrated Ramesses with a pep rally, where CBS News correspondent David Begnaud helped surprise Jamie with a new car courtesy of David Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram in Glen Mills.

    The school was also given a $50,000 check from Canva.  


    Car donated to mom of Ramesses Vazquez-Viana, child burned in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash by
    CBS Philadelphia on
    YouTube

    “I’ve been here for 16 years, and we’ve never had more of a need with our students and less of a budget,” Principal Caitlin Murphy said. “It couldn’t have come at a better time.”

    While Ramesses couldn’t attend the celebration in person, several of his friends visited him before the event, where they laughed and joked as little boys do.

    community-rallies.jpg

    Ramesses Dreuitt Vazquez was in his family’s car last January when a medical transport plane crashed, and the car caught on fire. His dad and his dad’s girlfriend died from their injuries. Vazquez was saved by a stranger, but sustained burns on 90% of his body. 

    CBS News


    “I was praying so hard we’d be home for Christmas,” Jamie Vazquez-Viana said. “I just wanted my three boys with me.”

    One year later

    After being released from Weisman Children’s Rehabilitation Hospital in December, Ramesses started school with virtual classes a few days a week.

    One year after the crash, Ramesses is back in Boston for another surgery that’ll keep him in the hospital for about five weeks.

    Once home, his family tells CBS News Philadelphia that Ramesses will go back to Smedley after he recovers and heads home to Philly.

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  • Man shot in leg during Northeast Philly gunpoint robbery, police say

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    Police say an investigation is underway after a man was shot in the leg during a gunpoint robbery that happened moments after he stepped out of a parked vehicle in Northeast Philadelphia overnight.

    According to Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small, the incident happened at just before 1 a.m. on Tuesday morning, just as the victim stepped out of his vehicle after he parked along the 2100 block of Knorr Street in Northeast Philly where he was planning to visit a friend’s house.

    As he stepped out of the vehicle, Small said, he was approached by two men, both dressed in gray hooded sweatshirts, who produced a firearm.

    The men, Small said, took a Rolex watch and “ripped some chains from his neck.”

    “And, for some reason, after stealing the jewelry, they fired one shot, striking the 23-year-old victim in his right leg, below his knee,” said Small.

    The victim was hospitalized in stable condition, Small said.

    Small said the men are believed to have entered a gray sedan, possibly a Nissan, before fleeing the scene of the crime.

    Investigators, he said, found one spent shell casing on the ground near where the shooting occurred.

    Also, Small said, investigators believe some of the crime was captured on nearby surveillance cameras and they are still reviewing footage to learn more.

    An investigation, he said, is ongoing.

    This is a breaking news story. It will be updated as new information becomes available.

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    Hayden Mitman

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  • Woman suffers ‘severe bite injuries’ in Northeast Philly dog attack

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    A woman was hospitalized on Monday morning, police said, after she suffered ‘severe bite injures’ when she was attacked by her own dogs in an incident that happened at a home in Northeast Philadelphia.

    According to police, officers responded to a home on the 2800 block of Sebring Road in Northeast Philly at about 9:11 a.m. on Monday after receiving a report of a woman being attacked by several dogs.

    Responding officers arrived to find three dogs “actively attacking” a woman in the backyard of the home and, police said, the officers at the scene discharged their weapons to stop the attack.

    In a Monday afternoon statement on this incident, police did not immediately say if the dogs were hurt or killed when the officers fired their weapons.

    The woman, police said, was taken to a nearby hospital after she suffered “severe bite injuries to her face, leg and arm.”

    Police did not immediately provide the woman’s condition after she was taken to the hospital.

    All of the dogs involved were owned by the victim, according to police.

    An investigation into this incident, officials said, is ongoing.

    NBC10 is working to learn more.

    This is a breaking news story. It will be updated as new information becomes available.

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    Hayden Mitman

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  • FBI seeks suspects in botched armored truck robbery at Northeast Philly Wawa

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    The FBI is looking for suspects involved in the attempted robbery of an armored truck in Holmesburg.

    According to the bureau’s Philadelphia office, two masked men approached a Loomis truck parked in front of the Wawa at 7715 Frankford Ave. around 8 a.m. Friday morning. Both wore dark clothing and blue gloves, and one carried a rifle. 


    MORE: Kada Scott’s parents say their ‘hearts are shattered’ by her death


    When they attempted to rob the vehicle, the driver fired five rounds at the suspects. They retreated down an alley behind the Wawa, jumping into a stolen red Honda Accord waiting for them. 

    The pair and a getaway driver later abandoned that car and fled on foot. The suspects also left a stolen Acura RDX at the scene of the attempted robbery.

    The FBI said the men should be considered armed and dangerous. Anyone with information about the crime can contact the Philly field office at 215-418-4000 or submit a tip online.


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    Kristin Hunt

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  • Missing Philly woman’s disappearance being investigated as homicide, police say

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    After missing for more than a week, police said the case of 23-year-old Kada Scott is now being investigated as a homicide.

    Contacted Tuesday, police did not immediately provide more information other than to confirm that the police homicide unit was working the case.

    Scott has been missing since Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, after she disappeared while working an overnight shift at her job at the Terrace at Chestnut Hill, a nursing home on East Abington Avenue.

    Her family last saw her at about 9:45 p.m. that evening when she left her home along the 8300 block of Rodney Street to head to work.

    However, police said she never finished her shift.

    Police said that she drive to work, and parked her car there, but she didn’t leave in her vehicle. The car was found by police in the parking lot of the nursing home after she was reported missing, officials said.

    Also, officials said that interviews with Scott’s coworker revealed that she had complained that someone had been harassing her through her phone shortly before her disappearance.

    However, police also said they haven’t seen any cellphone activity from Scott since she went missing.

    Also, police also said Scott was typically active on social media but they haven’t seen any activity on her social media accounts since her disappearance.

    Family members also said Scott does not have a history of disappearing, describing her as an energetic woman.

    Her family hasn’t given up hope of finding Scott and they spent last weekend canvassing the neighborhood where she was last seen and handing out flyers with the hopes that they can find any clues that can lead to her being found.

    “We are just trying to figure out more. As much as we can,” said Sanaya Murray, Scott’s friend.

    A day earlier, Friday, Oct. 10, 2025, investigators were searching the Awbury Arboretum in Philly’s Germantown neighborhood, but officials said they found nothing.

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    Hayden Mitman

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  • Crash investigation closes Tacony-Palmyra Bridge early Sunday

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    Drivers in Northeast Philadelphia and across the Delaware River in New Jersey were diverted around alternate routes early Sunday after an overnight crash caused the closure of the Tacony-Palmyra Bridge overnight.

    At about 3:27 a.m., Burlington County, New Jersey officials shared an alert online noting that the bridge was closed in both directions due to a single-vehicle crash.

    However, officials did not immediately detail further specifics of the crash, what led it to occur or if anyone was hurt in this incident.

    But, officials said, the bridge had been partially lifted as a result of the crash.

    As of about 7:15 a.m., the bridge was still closed to traffic as officials worked to clear the situation.

    This is a breaking news story. It will be updated as new information becomes available.

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    Hayden Mitman

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  • 2 children shot in separate incidents in Northeast Philly on Saturday: Police

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    Two children were shot in separate incidents in Northeast Philadelphia on Saturday night, police said.

    One of the incidents occurred at the Fox Chase Recreation Center at around 8:25 p.m., where a girl was struck by gunfire.

    The girl, who police have not issued an age for, was taken to the hospital and is in stable condition, police said.

    In another incident, a 15-year-old boy was shot in the leg at around 7 p.m. in Northeast Philadelphia on Saturday night, police said.

    The second shooting occurred at around 7:05 p.m. in the area of the 800 block of Brill Street, police said.

    The boy was taken to the hospital by police and no information on his condition has been given.

    No arrests have been made and no motive has been determined for either shooting, police said.

    The Shooting Investigation Group for the Philadelphia Police Department is investigating both incidents.

    Anyone with any information on either incident is urged to contact the Philadelphia Police Department at 215-686-TIPS (8477) or anonymously online here.

    This is a developing story; check back for more details.

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    Brendan Brightman

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  • Teen shot in Northeast Philly on Monday afternoon, police say

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    A 14-year-old boy was shot in the right leg in the Tacony neighborhood of Northeast Philadelphia on Monday, police said.

    The shooting occurred at around 3:08 p.m. at the 6500 block of Hegerman Street on Labor Day, with the teen arriving at the hospital via private vehicle, police said.

    The teen is currently listed in stable condition, police said.

    No arrests have been made and no motive has been determined, but Philadelphia police say they are investigating the incident.

    Anyone with any information on either incident is urged to contact the Philadelphia Police Department at 215-686-TIPS (8477) or anonymously online here.

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    Brendan Brightman

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  • ShopRite to bring scan-as-you-go smart carts to some Philly region stores

    ShopRite to bring scan-as-you-go smart carts to some Philly region stores

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    Four ShopRite stores in the Philadelphia area will be the first in Pennsylvania where customers can use high-tech shopping carts that keep running totals of their groceries and unlock rewards. 

    The New Jersey-based supermarket chain said Thursday it will introduce the carts at the following stores:

    • ShopRite of Morrell Plaza – 9910 Frankford Ave., Northeast Philly
    • ShopRite of Brookhaven – 5075 Edgemont Ave., Brookhaven, Delaware County
    • ShopRite of Bridge & Harbison – 5597 Tulip St., Northeast Philly
    • ShopRite of Drexeline – 5000 State Road, Drexel Hill, Delaware County

    The new Caper Carts, made by grocery delivery company Instacart, were introduced at a ShopRite in Hoboken, New Jersey, in May and have since been added to 11 stores in the retailer’s footprint in the Northeast. 

    Each smart cart has a screen where shoppers scan their items as they shop, displaying how much they’re spending and which coupons are available. For those with a ShopRite Price Plus membership, the screen also shows customers how much they need to spend to get rewards. There’s also a built-in scale that weighs and determines the price of produce, and when items are removed from a cart, sensors know to deduct the cost from the customer’s total. 


    MORE: FDA warns Horsham-based Bimbo Bakeries USA to stop ‘misbranding’ products


    When shoppers are ready to pay, they take their carts to the self-checkout area and scan the bar code on their cart to check out.

    The carts also offer first-time users a tutorial mode that explains how to use them. At the end of the shopping trip, the smart carts can be returned to the same area where regular carts are kept. 

    The technology has more features than the “Just Walk Out” shopping carts that Amazon Fresh introduced when the tech giant opened its first grocery stores in 2020. Earlier this year, Amazon Fresh opted to get rid of those carts because they had received feedback from customers who wanted to be able to see a running total of their shopping lists while going through the store.

    Amazon Fresh has just over 40 stores and has struggled to gain traction, resulting in some closures and a pause on store openings. The company now plans to replace its older carts with new Dash Carts that have similar features to the ones entering ShopRite stores.  

    Instacart is rolling out its Caper Carts at a growing number of U.S. grocers as part of a wider effort to make the technology available to more shoppers. 

    ShopRite is a retailer-owned cooperative with more than 300 locations operated by 50 members. The brand’s presence in Philadelphia has grown to 13 stores, including nine operated by Brown’s Super Food Stores, Inc. — the company led by businessman and former mayoral candidate Jeff Brown. The four that initially will have the new carts are not among Brown’s stores.

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Man dead after he was found with a gunshot wound to the neck in Northeast Philly, police say

    Man dead after he was found with a gunshot wound to the neck in Northeast Philly, police say

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    Police are investigating after a man has died after being found on a highway bleeding in Northeast Philadelphia Wednesday night.

    Just before 9:30 p.m. police received a call for a person shot on the highway at Algon and Longshore avenues, according to the police.

    When police arrived, they found an unresponsive man bleeding heavily from his neck. He was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced dead at 9:58 p.m., Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small said.

    Police said the victim, who appeared to be an adult in his late teens or early 20s, had a gunshot wound to the neck.

    At this time officials have not identified the victim.

    Small said there was a large amount of blood at the scene that led police into a basement apartment on the 6800 block of Algon Avenue.

    That is where the shooting is believed to have taken place, according to police.

    There is no motive at this time and the investigation is ongoing.

    This is a developing story, check back for updates.

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    Kaleah Mcilwain

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  • Two 18-year-olds charged with SEPTA bus stop shooting that injured 8 Northeast High students

    Two 18-year-olds charged with SEPTA bus stop shooting that injured 8 Northeast High students

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    Police have arrested two suspects tied to the shooting of eight teenagers who were waiting to board a SEPTA bus in Northeast Philadelphia last week, investigators said. 

    Jamaal Tucker and Ahnile Buggs, both 18, were identified Monday afternoon as two of the four suspects linked to Wednesday’s shooting near the intersection of Cottman and Rising Sun avenues in the Burlhome neighborhood. Three gunmen fired more than 30 shots at a group of people at the bus stop and then fled in a stolen vehicle driven by a fourth person, investigators said. All of the injured victims are students at Northeast High School. 

    Tucker surrendered to Philadelphia police on Friday, police said. Investigators were able to identify him using evidence gathered from the stolen, dark blue Hyundai Sonata that was shown in surveillance video from the shooting. The car had been recovered Wednesday night, hours after the shooting, police said.  

    Buggs was arrested Saturday after police and U.S. Marshals served search warrants on multiple properties. Buggs allegedly had a 40-caliber Glock 22 handgun with an extended magazine and a “switch” that turned the weapon into a fully automatic firearm, investigators said. Ballistics evidence collected from the shooting scene matched the same gun, police said. 

    Two other suspects remain at large, and police said more could face charges if investigators determine others had roles in orchestrating the shooting. 

    Tucker and Buggs each are charged with multiple of counts of attempted murder, aggravated assaulted, conspiracy and recklessly endangering another person. Buggs faces additional weapons charges, and Tucker has been charged separately with receiving stolen property and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, according to court documents. 

    Authorities shared few other details about the ongoing investigation into the shooting but suggested they are examining wider connections that it may have to other crimes in the city. 

    “We are not done until any group involved in this kind of conduct is done — until they do not exist anymore,” District Attorney Larry Krasner said. “And that is exactly where this investigation needs to go. It’s not about a single incident. It’s about every other incident that has any connection to it.”

    The shooting was one of several last week that involved SEPTA buses. Another shooting at a bus stop near Broad Street and Godfrey Avenue in Ogontz left a 17-year-old boy dead and four others injured. Police are still searching for the two gunmen in that shooting, but have not said whether there is evidence connecting that shooting with the one in Burholme. 

    “We are not ready to commit to that,” Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel said. “We are working through this investigation now. We believe there may be (a connection), but we still have a lot of work to do.” 

    On Friday, police said a second stolen vehicle — a gray Kia Sportage — appears to be linked to the shooting in Burholme. The Kia was found parked where the Hyundai used in the shooting had been initially reported stolen. Police believe the suspects left the Kia and then stole the Hyundai used in the shooting. Both cars are being held as evidence, authorities said. 

    Surveillance video from the shooting last Wednesday shows three suspects emerging from the Hyundai, which was parked in the Dunkin’ Donuts lot near the intersection. After the shooting, the suspects can be seen getting back into the car, which fled the scene. 

    On Monday, Northeast High School’s 11th and 12th grade students were back at the school for the first time since the shooting. Classes had been virtually on Thursday and Friday. Those students will have virtual learning again Tuesday as the ninth and 10th grade students return to the building. The phased return is allowing “more small group and individualized support,” the school said in a statement. Crisis counselors will remain at the school to provide emotional support to the Northeast High community.

    Philadelphia police and school safety officers plan to maintain a visible presence in the area around Northeast High and nearby bus routes. 

    Eleven teenagers were struck in the two shootings that occurred in Burholme and Ogontz last week.

    “Gun violence doesn’t just leave physical scars,” Bethel said. “It tears at the fabric of our community — impacts our schools, impacts our families, and leaves a ripple effect of fear and trauma.”

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  • 8 teens injured in shooting at SEPTA bus stop in Northeast Philly, police say

    8 teens injured in shooting at SEPTA bus stop in Northeast Philly, police say

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    At least eight teenagers were injured when a group of gunmen fired more than 30 shots at a SEPTA bus stop in Northeast Philadelphia’s Burholme neighborhood on Wednesday afternoon, police said.

    The shooting happened around 3 p.m. at the intersection of Rising Sun and Cottman avenues. Police received numerous 911 calls about gunshots erupting near a Dunkin’ Donuts at the intersection. 

    The wounded teenagers, all students at nearby Northeast High School, had been waiting to board a bus when three suspected gunmen got out of a parked car and opened fire at the bus, Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel said during a news conference Wednesday afternoon. 

    The injured teens range between 15 and 17 years old, police said. They were taken to hospitals to be treated for their injuries, and the most seriously injured was a teen shot nine times and in critical condition. Wednesday evening police police released more information about the ages, injuries and conditions of each of the victims:

    • Male, 16, shot nine times in the torso; critical condition
    • Male, 1
    6, gunshot wounds to the chest, right leg, and right arm; stable condition
    • Male, 15, shot twice, once in left arm, once in upper back; stable condition
    • Male, 15, shot in the lower back; stable condition
    • Female, 16, gunshot wounds to the left buttocks and right thigh, stable condition
    • Male, 17, shot in the left leg; stable condition
    • Male, 16, gunshot wound to the left leg, stable condition

    6ABC reported the suspected shooters wore masks and then left the scene in a dark blue Hyundai sedan driven by a fourth suspect. The vehicle reportedly was last seen crossing the Tookany Creek Bridge toward Cheltenham Township.

    Two SEPTA buses nearby the shooting scene — a Route 18 bus and a Route 67 bus — were each struck by bullets, spokesperson Andrew Busch said. No passengers or SEPTA employees were hit. One of the buses is being held at a nearby terminal for further investigation, police said.

    Bethel was joined at Wednesday’s news conference by Mayor Cherelle Parker, who pledged to address a surge in shootings over the last several days — including several at SEPTA bus stops. 

    “We will not be held hostage. We will use every legal tool in the toolbox to ensure the public health and safety of the people of our city,” Parker said. 

    Wednesday’s shooting happened at what is known as the Five Points intersection in the Burlhome neighborhood, where numerous businesses and at least four day cares and preschools are within the vicinity.

    The scene of the shooting is about 3/4 of a mile from Northeast High at 1601 Cottman Ave. The Kennedy Crossan School, a K-5 public school, also is two blocks away from the Five Points at Bleigh Avenue and Bingham Street.

    On Monday, a 17-year-old boy was killed and four other people were injured when two gunmen fired at a SEPTA bus that had stopped near the intersection of Broad Street and Godfrey Avenue. Two of the other people injured in that shooting were teenagers. 

    “It’s hard to sit here, in three days, and have 11 juveniles shot who were going and coming from school,” said Bethel, who served as the city’s chief of school safety before Parker appointed him to lead the police department. “The cowardly acts that we’ve seen over the last three days are unacceptable.”

    Crisis counselors will be available on Thursday at Northeast High and at Imhotep Institute Charter High School, which is less than a mile from the scene of Monday’s shooting in Ogontz.

    “As a result of what we’ve seen over the last three days, we’re going to be ramping up our resources significantly,” Bethel said. “I want parents and families to know that we’re going to be along our corridors across the entire city of Philadelphia until we can figure out exactly what’s going on in this situation — and whether it’s linked to the situation on Monday.”

    Philadelphia School District Superintendent Tony B. Watlington said he and his colleagues are “heartbroken and angry” about the uptick in gun violence involving students from city schools, and SEPTA Transit Police Chief Charles Lawson said his department will work with city leaders to stop the recent pattern of shootings on and near city buses. 

    On Sunday, a 27-year-old man was fatally shot in the Oxford Circle neighborhood of Northeast Philadelphia after an argument escalated on a Route 59 bus, investigators said. Then on Tuesday evening, a 37-year-old man was shot and killed as he stood in the doorway of a Route 79 bus near Broad Street and Snyder Avenue in South Philadelphia. The gunman opened fire after an argument, police said.

    Authorities have not yet made any arrests in the string of shootings.

    Lawson said SEPTA planned to “be aggressive” in trying to stop the gun violence impacting the transit system. 

    “What we can definitively say is overwhelmingly the pattern that we see in our system is that individuals who are armed – overwhelmingly illegally – get into verbal arguments which escalate to violent encounters and then the armed individual uses the weapon,” Lawson said at a separate news conference earlier Wednesday. 

    Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner vowed to prosecute the people responsible for Wednesday’s shooting. 

    “We will catch the people who did this. We will hold those people in custody. We will charge them and we will vigorously prosecute them,” Krasner said. “And we will give them the consequences that they absolutely deserve for this devastating and horrifying act.”

    Below, watch Parker, Bethel and other city leaders speak during the press briefing at the scene of Wednesday’s shooting.

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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