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Tag: pennsylvania

  • 100 arrested, $365K worth of drugs, guns seized across 3 Pa. counties

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    Over 100 people were arrested over a two month period as three Pennsylvania counties confiscated illegal drugs and firearms coming out of Philadelphia as part of “Operation Clean Sweep,” officials said.

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    In a joint effort between the District Attorneys of Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties, officials reported to have stopped the flow of more than $365,000 worth of drugs coming from Philly’s Kensington neighborhood in September and October.

    “The Operation Clean Sweep collaboration will make communities safer with arrests of dozens of drug traffickers and seizures of firearms and deadly poisons that are not contained by municipal borders,” Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday said.

    In total, the District Attorneys said that law enforcement arrested more than 100 people, confiscated 12 illegal firearms and seized large quantities of fentanyl, methamphetamine, oxycodone and other narcotics.

    “For too long, Philadelphia has been the epicenter for the supply of dangerous drugs, but we recognize that the counties surrounding Philadelphia — Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties—are also part of the problem,” Montgomery County District Attorney Steele said.

    According to DA Steele’s office, officials also worked with some people who were addicted to get them help.

    “When we stand united in an endeavor like this, we are taking a stand against drug traffickers who are transporting and delivering poisonous drugs into our counties and into the hands of our loved ones,” Bucks County District Attorney Jen Schorn said.

    Several agencies, including Montgomery County Detective Bureau, Bucks County Detective Bureau, Delaware County Detective Bureau, Pennsylvania State Police, Philadelphia Police Department and other officials were part of the effort.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Who is Zico Kolter? A professor leads OpenAI safety panel with power to halt unsafe AI releases

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    If you believe artificial intelligence poses grave risks to humanity, then a professor at Carnegie Mellon University has one of the most important roles in the tech industry right now.

    Zico Kolter leads a 4-person panel at OpenAI that has the authority to halt the ChatGPT maker’s release of new AI systems if it finds them unsafe. That could be technology so powerful that an evildoer could use it to make weapons of mass destruction. It could also be a new chatbot so poorly designed that it will hurt people’s mental health.

    “Very much we’re not just talking about existential concerns here,” Kolter said in an interview with The Associated Press. “We’re talking about the entire swath of safety and security issues and critical topics that come up when we start talking about these very widely used AI systems.”

    OpenAI tapped the computer scientist to be chair of its Safety and Security Committee more than a year ago, but the position took on heightened significance last week when California and Delaware regulators made Kolter’s oversight a key part of their agreements to allow OpenAI to form a new business structure to more easily raise capital and make a profit.

    Safety has been central to OpenAI’s mission since it was founded as a nonprofit research laboratory a decade ago with a goal of building better-than-human AI that benefits humanity. But after its release of ChatGPT sparked a global AI commercial boom, the company has been accused of rushing products to market before they were fully safe in order to stay at the front of the race. Internal divisions that led to the temporary ouster of CEO Sam Altman in 2023 brought those concerns that it had strayed from its mission to a wider audience.

    The San Francisco-based organization faced pushback — including a lawsuit from co-founder Elon Musk — when it began steps to convert itself into a more traditional for-profit company to continue advancing its technology.

    Agreements announced last week by OpenAI along with California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings aimed to assuage some of those concerns.

    At the heart of the formal commitments is a promise that decisions about safety and security must come before financial considerations as OpenAI forms a new public benefit corporation that is technically under the control of its nonprofit OpenAI Foundation.

    Kolter will be a member of the nonprofit’s board but not on the for-profit board. But he will have “full observation rights” to attend all for-profit board meetings and have access to information it gets about AI safety decisions, according to Bonta’s memorandum of understanding with OpenAI. Kolter is the only person, besides Bonta, named in the lengthy document.

    Kolter said the agreements largely confirm that his safety committee, formed last year, will retain the authorities it already had. The other three members also sit on the OpenAI board — one of them is former U.S. Army General Paul Nakasone, who was commander of the U.S. Cyber Command. Altman stepped down from the safety panel last year in a move seen as giving it more independence.

    “We have the ability to do things like request delays of model releases until certain mitigations are met,” Kolter said. He declined to say if the safety panel has ever had to halt or mitigate a release, citing the confidentiality of its proceedings.

    Kolter said there will be a variety of concerns about AI agents to consider in the coming months and years, from cybersecurity – “Could an agent that encounters some malicious text on the internet accidentally exfiltrate data?” – to security concerns surrounding AI model weights, which are numerical values that influence how an AI system performs.

    “But there’s also topics that are either emerging or really specific to this new class of AI model that have no real analogues in traditional security,” he said. “Do models enable malicious users to have much higher capabilities when it comes to things like designing bioweapons or performing malicious cyberattacks?”

    “And then finally, there’s just the impact of AI models on people,” he said. “The impact to people’s mental health, the effects of people interacting with these models and what that can cause. All of these things, I think, need to be addressed from a safety standpoint.”

    OpenAI has already faced criticism this year about the behavior of its flagship chatbot, including a wrongful-death lawsuit from California parents whose teenage son killed himself in April after lengthy interactions with ChatGPT.

    Kolter, director of Carnegie Mellon’s machine learning department, began studying AI as a Georgetown University freshman in the early 2000s, long before it was fashionable.

    “When I started working in machine learning, this was an esoteric, niche area,” he said. “We called it machine learning because no one wanted to use the term AI because AI was this old-time field that had overpromised and underdelivered.”

    Kolter, 42, has been following OpenAI for years and was close enough to its founders that he attended its launch party at an AI conference in 2015. Still, he didn’t expect how rapidly AI would advance.

    “I think very few people, even people working in machine learning deeply, really anticipated the current state we are in, the explosion of capabilities, the explosion of risks that are emerging right now,” he said.

    AI safety advocates will be closely watching OpenAI’s restructuring and Kolter’s work. One of the company’s sharpest critics says he’s “cautiously optimistic,” particularly if Kolter’s group “is actually able to hire staff and play a robust role.”

    “I think he has the sort of background that makes sense for this role. He seems like a good choice to be running this,” said Nathan Calvin, general counsel at the small AI policy nonprofit Encode. Calvin, who OpenAI targeted with a subpoena at his home as part of its fact-finding to defend against the Musk lawsuit, said he wants OpenAI to stay true to its original mission.

    “Some of these commitments could be a really big deal if the board members take them seriously,” Calvin said. “They also could just be the words on paper and pretty divorced from anything that actually happens. I think we don’t know which one of those we’re in yet.”

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  • Community mourns 3 teens killed in Bucks County crash

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    Loved ones identified three teenagers who were killed in a crash in Bucks County on Halloween night.

    Police said four teenagers were inside a Toyota Camry that was traveling eastbound on the 2600 block of Bristol Road around 9:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 31, in Warrington Township. At the same time, an SUV was traveling westbound, according to investigators.

    As the Camry approached a downward crest on the road, the driver lost control and crashed into the side of the oncoming SUV, police said. Three teenagers – identified by friends and family as 16-year-old Kozyrev Artem, 15-year-old Elkhan Saparbekov and 18-year-old Aziz Amonov – were all killed in the crash. A fourth teen, a 14-year-old boy, suffered serious injuries.

    The driver of the SUV was not injured.

    The community continues to mourn three teenagers who were killed in a crash in Bucks County. NBC10’s Siobhan McGirl has the details.

    Police told NBC10 they believe 15-year-old Saparbekov was the teen who was driving at the time of the crash.

    “You have to be 16 and a half before you get your junior driver’s license so it’s safe to say he was an unlicensed diver, unfortunately,” Warrington Township Police Chief Daniel Friel told NBC10. “Very tragic. Very heartbreaking. And another term is unimaginable. I’ve been doing this for 25 years. That is one of the most serious crashes I have come across.”

    Artem and Amonov were both buried on Sunday and Saparbekov will be taken to his native Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia to be buried.

    A memorial was also held for Saparbekov Sunday night in Northeast Philadelphia.

    “It was kind of unexpected for me to say the least. When I heard the news two hours later after the accident, I thought it was something minor,” Umar Urkumbaev, Saparbekov’s friend, told NBC10. “I witnessed firsthand the cries and the pain of their parents because I was there with them.”

    Urkumbaev’s 14-year-old cousin was the only teen who survived the crash. The boy’s family said he’s in critical condition at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. They also said he underwent two surgeries and is expected to survive.

    Two of the teens who were killed attended Neshaminy High School. Counselors at the school hosted an open house on Sunday, Nov. 2, at Poquessing Middle School in Feasterville. They also said they’ll provide support for Neshaminy students when they return to class on Monday.

    Those in need of support can call the Neshaminy High School Counseling Center at 215-809-6101.

    The following organizations are also offering additional support:

    • Hands Holding Hearts – 445-444- 5374 (Newtown)
    • Safe Harbor – 225-491-5993 www.amh.org (Abington Memorial Hospital)
    • Center for Grieving Children, Teens, and Families – 215.744.4025 (Philadelphia)
    • Good Grief – 908-522-1999 ext. 8006 (Princeton, NJ)
    • St. Mary’s Medical Center, Langhorne, Spiritual Counseling Department, 215.710.5902
    • Lenape Valley Foundation Mobile Crisis Unit, 1.877.435.7709
    • PanAmerican Mental Health Services, https://panamericanmhs.org/services (Philadelphia)

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    David Chang, Johnny Archer and Siobhan McGirl

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  • Killer identified in 1962 church murder cold case

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    Killer identified in 1962 church murder cold case – CBS News










































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    A 1962 Pennsylvania murder cold case closed this week after prosecutors announced they identified the killer.

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  • Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

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    Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

    Governor, thank you for sitting down with us and uh allowing us to see what has been going on here inside of the residence. Um, I know you’ve spoken at times over the last several months about how you were doing, but 6 months later, um, how are you feeling? How are you and your family doing? I mean, thanks for asking, you know, we’re OK, um, I I think in the. Initial weeks it was really hard just as *** dad trying to get your kids through that trying to process it myself Laurie trying to process it trying to continue to you know run the Commonwealth and be here for the wonderful people that work at the residences and and it was *** lot and, and you know we worked our way through that um we were there for the kids I think got them through it. Over the last couple weeks since um the conviction, I, I think it you know it, it sort of brought it back up again um while we’re pleased that there’s some finality and some closure to this chapter, you know, seeing the video and. Sort of having to go through that again that was hard hard for our family but we’re working our way through it. I, I can tell you that I’m more focused and determined than ever before to do this work. uh I’m not afraid, uh, but it certainly has an impact. How has it changed you as you look at not only your role as the governor but also uh as the head of *** family as as *** father? Yeah. I don’t think any parent can ever be prepared for something like this as *** parent, you know, all you want is for your kids to be healthy and safe and have opportunity in life and I think every parent, uh, universally wants that for their kids and so when you realize that the job you’ve chosen the career path you’ve chosen, the work you love to do, put your kids’ lives at risk and compromise one of those central tenets you have as *** parent, um. It’s really hard so that that’s been hard for me as *** dad to work through. I, I think what it has, um, caused me to do is just not cause that’s not the right word, but what what it’s led me to do is just be more present for my kids, um, try and be there when they wanna have *** catch or they just wanna do something and answer their questions just be super attentive to what’s on their mind. uh, I think sometimes I’m probably annoying to them when I go, hey buddy, what’s up? Is there anything you wanna ask me anything on your mind? Um, but I, I just have found that being more attentive, more connected, answering their questions, uh, you know, has helped us, helped us get through this. I don’t know that I have *** perfect answer, um, and I’m processing it every day, and I think Gloria and I strive every day to be better parents, you know, to our kids as I think every parent does, and, um. You know we’ve got some amazing children that that that have you know they’re just really strong to the core and they’ve gotten through this. When you talk about being here at the residence, whether it’s having stayed overnight here since the incident or or just been visiting and hosting an event uh like state dinner. Have things changed for you when you walk through the halls, when you walk through this garden area. Yeah, candidly, um, one of the things I like to do is after, you know, my meetings or *** dinner meeting or an event or whatever it is, I work really late, as you know I get up really early, you know, so it might be 10 o’clock at night. Um, and I will get on the phone, throw my AirPods on, and I will walk these gardens because rather than sitting still I like to move and as I walk here I can’t help but think, you know, the steps that he took or where he hid or the windows that he he broke through and it probably will be some time till I can shake that now I’m not afraid it doesn’t make me not want to come outside, um, you know, I still sleep here and spend *** lot of time here with our family. So I’m, I’m not afraid, but, but I’d be lying if I said I don’t think about it when I opened the double doors that lead to, you know, our, our more private area, those are double doors he was trying to kick down and get through. I’d be lying if I said when I grabbed the door handle to open it up and go through, I, I don’t think about that. Again, not in *** way that that holds me back or in *** way that stops me from doing what I gotta do, um, but it’s present and, and I think about it. When you’re having moments like that, perhaps over the last several months where you’re thinking about what happened, maybe, uh, you know, you, you remember some of those emotions they come back to you *** little bit. Who have you leaned on the most over these last 6 months to try to uh. Whether it’s come to terms or or just deal with the emotions Laurie, um, I, I, someone asked me the other day, you know, did you go to therapy for this and, and I didn’t, not because I think there’s any shame in therapy. I think it’s *** wonderful thing, but for, for Laurie and I think because we experienced it together, um, processing it together, talking about it together. Um, telling her what I’m thinking and what I’m feeling when I’m wandering here in the gardens or whether I’m upstairs, you know, in the living quarters above where the, the attack took place, um, I think just being able to talk with her has been the, the most important thing, you know, Laura and I, uh. Walk every day when we’re together and if we’re not together you know I’m here and she’s back in Montgomery County with the kids or something. I, I’ll still throw throw my airpods on and walk and talk to her that way. I think just that process of walking of talking, she’s my best friend in the world since the 9th grade that’s, yeah, that’s really helped me get through this. You know this event obviously brought *** lot of attention to the governor’s residence and I know we’re gonna walk around in *** little bit with all the attention, all the scrutiny, how, how do you balance all of that happening while you’re still trying to do your job, still trying to deal with, uh, the emotions of what happened. Is it difficult to process all of that sometimes? Yeah, and, and look, I mean. Like anyone, I value my privacy and I don’t really have any. I mean, I’m not, I’m not complaining. I asked for this job and, and I love this job and I wanna do it for *** good long while, but you know you, you do give up that sense of privacy and so even more so now, um, you lose that privacy. I, I think you know as I walk around these grounds late at night we now have armed troopers who are who are here. Um, you look through the windows and there’s like *** waviness to it because we’ve got ballistic shields on the windows. I mean, and *** lot of other technology and stuff here that’s been installed to keep us safe and so while it’s comforting to know that my family and I are safe and guests are safe and the staff is safe, you know, I don’t know anybody really wants to live in, you know, with ballistic windows knowing that there are people that wanna do you harm and. I think for for us I I just try and have comfort in knowing that we got wonderful people in the state police there to keep us safe. This is just the reality of the world we’re in and I and I can’t let it slow me down or deter me from from doing the work I’m doing, but it does, you know, it does take some getting used to and and certainly something that we’re constantly processing. We talked with Colonel Paris earlier today and he admitted there were failures that uh evening when you talk about that and trying to come back here and and be here and you look around at all the different things that are happening, the new barrier on the outside, some of the new technology that is going in, um, do you feel confident that they have taken the steps to make this place safer than it was on that evening? I do now I mean I I I I was rattled. Uh, you know, that day and in the days thereafter I asked *** lot of questions about how could this happen. Um, they had some answers and to Colonel Paris is great credit, um, he thought we needed an outside, you know, expert to come in and do an assessment here and at our home and, and in the way we travel and make sure that we were safe not only here but in in all different, you know, aspects of our lives. I, I am now confident that they’ve taken the steps and continue to take the steps necessary. To keep me and my family safe, to keep the staff and others safe that that are here and to make sure our guests are safe. So yeah, I’ve got confidence in the state police. I really do. And you know, I wanted to ask obviously Cody Ballmer, um. In the investigation they they were able to determine that he had uh what sounded like *** political motivated reason for for doing what he was doing. We talk about political violence we talk about the fact that there was an attempted murder of you at this residence. With what we continue to see, do you feel like as it pertains to political violence we need to, uh, look back on things like this and say we really have to do *** better job as *** society, not allowing it to happen absolutely and and I think it starts with. All leaders speaking and acting the moral clarity to condemn political violence, I think it requires all of us to take down the temperature we can have strong disagreements with, you know, the, the political opposition without treating them like they’re our enemy. You know, I think our our politics in many ways have gotten so dark and and political violence is certainly quite dark, but I’ve also just seen an extraordinary amount of light from, you know, ordinary Pennsylvanians who are just really good and decent people who, who pray for us who, who want society to be less violent who wanna just disagree agreeably with politicians or agree with them if their positions happen to be in sync. Uh, but I, I think too often times our political leaders are not good examples of, of what we need more of, um, and, and so I’ve made it *** point. I, I know others have. Spencer Cox, *** good friend of mine, the governor of Utah, has, you know, of trying to make sure that the rhetoric is, is toned down, that we find more common ground even if we might have *** disagreement on *** policy. And that we universally condemn political violence and and not allow *** certain group or type of person or person with *** certain ideology to think their hateful rhetoric or their violence is OK. None of that type of hate, none of that type of violence is OK and it’s got to be universally condemned. Before we look around the residents and you, you know, before, before we, we go through some of the steps about what occurred that night, I, I wanted to ask for you. With everything that’s happened over the last 6 months with with what happened on that evening. Is there anything you feel like people just haven’t understood about that and, and, and, you know, something you perhaps haven’t articulated yet as far as, you know, your emotions or perhaps just the experience of trying to process all that and. I don’t know, Tom. I mean, I’m still processing *** lot of it. And I don’t expect Pennsylvanians to bear my burden, you know, this is my responsibility to bear. I do think *** lot of people were shocked when they saw the videos that came out, uh, just *** couple weeks ago when, um, when he was convicted and sentenced up to 50 years in prison when they saw just how brazen the attack was, how deep he got into the residence, the destruction that, uh, that took place, the fact that, you know. He pled guilty to trying to kill me. Um, I think that was *** shock to *** lot of people, you know, who hadn’t seen that video and didn’t realize just the extent of the damage and. And how, how much in danger my family and I were and uh I think that’s that that was *** shock to *** lot of people. I, I don’t want Pennsylvanians to be worried about me or our family or this or be burdened by it. I want them to go about their their daily lives and know I’m working my *** off for them to make their lives better. That’s my job and I love what I do and and I’m gonna keep doing it and and working incredibly hard for them. With everything that’s been happening, will you be, will you be excited when this place has all the construction equipment gone? I gotta say, I mean the construction has been *** challenge not just for our family but the wonderful people that work here. We’ve tried really hard to still be able to bring people in and have the events tonight we’re honored to host the state dinner. Um, which usually here state dinner you think *** bunch of insiders get to come to *** fancy meal. Actually my wife Laurie, our first lady changed that concept. We now honor 10 unsung heroes in in communities across Pennsylvania. We honor them. With the fancy dinner here and and give them the Governor’s Keystone Award for um their incredible contributions to to our commonwealth so we’re really excited to have that uh in here. I wish the gardens were put back together. I wish the outside looked *** little better but um it will and and I I also want all of our neighbors here to know that we realized this has been. Um, disturbing to them, it doesn’t look as pretty as it did before. It’s gonna look amazing when it’s done. We’re gonna plant *** lot more trees and, and beautify the area. We, we have *** commitment not just to our safety and security here for visitors but also to make it beautiful on the outside for for neighbors as well. So sure, I’d love for the construction to be over soon, but we’re not letting uh letting it hold us back. We’re gonna keep going forward. Do you think that’s when things might start to feel normal again? Maybe yeah yeah I think um. You know, no normal for you may maybe the ability to take *** bike ride or take *** walk and kinda just be able to blend in we, we don’t really have that ability right now and um particularly with so many people around so I think the fewer people that are around, the more we can get back. Our, uh, semblance of normalcy sure that’d be great, but I, I do have to say to the amazing people who have worked here, I mean they’ve been working almost nonstop since the moments after the police released this scene to us, um, and let us get going with the rebuild. So I, I have no complaints. The people here have worked really, really hard. I’m excited for them to finish their job and, and, and to get it, get it all back in tip top shape for the public. Governor, thank you.

    Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

    Updated: 4:02 AM PDT Nov 1, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro spoke exclusively with Hearst sister station WGAL about the arson attack on the state governor’s residence earlier this year and walked the station through the grounds and residence to describe how it happened. Touring grounds, governor’s homeDuring a walkthrough of the gardens, Shapiro describes how the intruder, Cody Balmer, scaled what was then a six-foot fence, hid near a brick gazebo in a once-wooded area, and initially evaded troopers. “That’s where he climbed over (a fence) with relative ease,” Shapiro said, pointing out an area where a brick wall is now being built. “And he sort of hid back here in what used to be a pretty wooded area … after one of the troopers realized that there was a breach of the fence came to try to find him, and missed him.”Carrying a metal hammer and a bag of Molotov cocktails, Balmer moved deliberately to a window, smashed it, and hurled a firebomb that gutted the room. He then broke another window, climbed inside, and tried to reach double doors leading to the family’s living and work areas. The double doors had been locked just minutes earlier. “And this is the window that he smashed and climbed through, wielding this metal hammer that he admitted he was going to use to kill me if he found me,” Shapiro said.Balmer prowled about inside, kicking doors, but as the smoke thickened, he turned back.Shapiro called the incident a clear security failure but said state police have learned from it and upgrades are in place. He recounted his family’s evacuation down a back stairwell and his later return with firefighters, where dense smoke, water, and wreckage made it evident the blaze was intentional.”I remember as I was walking down the hallway in the house, you couldn’t see your hand in front of you. The smoke was so thick it was burning your nose, your eyes,” Shapiro said. “You could hear the water dripping. And obviously I’m no expert, but I had assumed up until that moment when I came back in here, whatever it was about, you know, two or three in the morning, that it was an accident, that something caught fire in the kitchen or, you know, something like that or a faulty wire. And then when I walked in this room and saw what it looked like … I realized, OK, I don’t think this was an accident. And then, sure enough, a few minutes later, I was informed it was an attack. And it was very purposeful.”You can watch the full tour of the grounds and residence with Shapiro in the video player below.Security improvements, costsRebuilding began immediately — ceilings, floors, windows, and a melted chandelier were replaced — and the room was restored to its original look, being prepared to host a state dinner honoring 10 Pennsylvanians. In a letter to the Pennsylvania House and Senate, the Department of General Services laid out how much it would cost to repair the governor’s residence and make various security improvements that were deemed necessary after numerous vulnerabilities were exposed. The total cost for the restoration and security enhancements totaled roughly $40 million. The Department of General Services provided the following breakdown as well as explanations for each expenditure. You can read the full letter here. $6.44 million: Estimated cost to restore the residence to pre-event condition. $14 million: Outer perimeter, barrier replacement.$6.3 million: Updated cameras, improved lighting motion sensors.$8 million: Retrofit existing windows with bulletproof, shatter-proof glass.$4 million: Fire suppression system.”The horrifying attack on the Governor, his family, and Commonwealth property, coupled with the unfortunate rise in political violence across our country, has made these updates necessary to protect the Governor and his family and ensure the continued operation of the executive branch of the Commonwealth. No family should have to live behind bulletproof glass or behind large walls – but the nature of the threats against elected officials today require us to take these important steps,” the letter said.Arsonist sentencedOn Oct. 14, Cody Balmer pleaded guilty to setting fire to the Pennsylvania governor’s residence in April. Balmer was convicted of attempted homicide, aggravated arson and terrorism. The judge sentenced him to 25 to 50 years in prison.Motive behind attackBalmer admitted to targeting the residence due to Shapiro’s stance on the war in Gaza.

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro spoke exclusively with Hearst sister station WGAL about the arson attack on the state governor’s residence earlier this year and walked the station through the grounds and residence to describe how it happened.

    Touring grounds, governor’s home

    During a walkthrough of the gardens, Shapiro describes how the intruder, Cody Balmer, scaled what was then a six-foot fence, hid near a brick gazebo in a once-wooded area, and initially evaded troopers.

    “That’s where he climbed over (a fence) with relative ease,” Shapiro said, pointing out an area where a brick wall is now being built. “And he sort of hid back here in what used to be a pretty wooded area … after one of the troopers realized that there was a breach of the fence came to try to find him, and missed him.”

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro walked WGAL step-by-step through what happened during the April 2025 arson attack at the governor’s residence.

    WGAL

    The governor points to the area where Balmer scaled a fence.

    Carrying a metal hammer and a bag of Molotov cocktails, Balmer moved deliberately to a window, smashed it, and hurled a firebomb that gutted the room.

    He then broke another window, climbed inside, and tried to reach double doors leading to the family’s living and work areas. The double doors had been locked just minutes earlier.

    “And this is the window that he smashed and climbed through, wielding this metal hammer that he admitted he was going to use to kill me if he found me,” Shapiro said.

    Balmer prowled about inside, kicking doors, but as the smoke thickened, he turned back.

    Shapiro called the incident a clear security failure but said state police have learned from it and upgrades are in place. He recounted his family’s evacuation down a back stairwell and his later return with firefighters, where dense smoke, water, and wreckage made it evident the blaze was intentional.

    “I remember as I was walking down the hallway in the house, you couldn’t see your hand in front of you. The smoke was so thick it was burning your nose, your eyes,” Shapiro said. “You could hear the water dripping. And obviously I’m no expert, but I had assumed up until that moment when I came back in here, whatever it was about, you know, two or three in the morning, that it was an accident, that something caught fire in the kitchen or, you know, something like that or a faulty wire. And then when I walked in this room and saw what it looked like … I realized, OK, I don’t think this was an accident. And then, sure enough, a few minutes later, I was informed it was an attack. And it was very purposeful.”

    You can watch the full tour of the grounds and residence with Shapiro in the video player below.

    Security improvements, costs

    Rebuilding began immediately — ceilings, floors, windows, and a melted chandelier were replaced — and the room was restored to its original look, being prepared to host a state dinner honoring 10 Pennsylvanians.

    In a letter to the Pennsylvania House and Senate, the Department of General Services laid out how much it would cost to repair the governor’s residence and make various security improvements that were deemed necessary after numerous vulnerabilities were exposed.

    The total cost for the restoration and security enhancements totaled roughly $40 million. The Department of General Services provided the following breakdown as well as explanations for each expenditure. You can read the full letter here.

    • $6.44 million: Estimated cost to restore the residence to pre-event condition.
    • $14 million: Outer perimeter, barrier replacement.
    • $6.3 million: Updated cameras, improved lighting motion sensors.
    • $8 million: Retrofit existing windows with bulletproof, shatter-proof glass.
    • $4 million: Fire suppression system.

    “The horrifying attack on the Governor, his family, and Commonwealth property, coupled with the unfortunate rise in political violence across our country, has made these updates necessary to protect the Governor and his family and ensure the continued operation of the executive branch of the Commonwealth. No family should have to live behind bulletproof glass or behind large walls – but the nature of the threats against elected officials today require us to take these important steps,” the letter said.

    Arsonist sentenced

    HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 13: (EDITOR'S NOTE: This Handout image was provided by a third-party organization and may not adhere to Getty Images' editorial policy.)  In this handout provided by Dauphin County District Attorney's Office, Cody A. Balmer appears for a mugshot photo after being charged in connection with a fire at Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence on April 13, 2025 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. It was reported that on April 13, 2025, an individual attacked the Governor’s Residence in Harrisburg while Governor Shapiro and his family were within the residence. Video surveillance shows a perpetrator throwing a Molotov Cocktail into the residence, igniting a substantial fire within. Balmer is charged with attempted murder, aggravated arson, burglary, terrorism, and related offenses.  (Photo by Dauphin County District Attorney's Office via Getty Images)

    On Oct. 14, Cody Balmer pleaded guilty to setting fire to the Pennsylvania governor’s residence in April.

    Balmer was convicted of attempted homicide, aggravated arson and terrorism. The judge sentenced him to 25 to 50 years in prison.

    Motive behind attack

    Balmer admitted to targeting the residence due to Shapiro’s stance on the war in Gaza.

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  • Multi-vehicle crash closes Bucks County road Friday

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    A crash involving several vehicles has forced all lanes to close on several roads in Bucks County on Friday night.

    According to Pennsylvania’s 511, the crash happened on Bristol Road on Oct. 31.

    The roadway is closed between Folly and Pickerton roads.

    NBC10 crews at the scene saw a large police presence on Bristol Road as well as a car with severe damage.

    No word yet on what caused the crash or if anyone was injured.

    This is a developing story. Check back here for updates.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Transferred to New Jersey Prison to Serve 4-Year Prostitution-Related Sentence

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Sean “Diddy” Combs has been transferred to a prison in New Jersey to serve out the remainder of his four-year prison sentence on prostitution-related charges.

    The hip-hop mogul is currently incarcerated at the Fort Dix Federal Correctional Institute, located about 34 miles (55 kilometers) east of Philadelphia on the grounds of the joint military base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, according to his listing in the federal Bureau of Prisons inmate database as of Friday.

    It’s not immediately clear when Combs was moved from the troubled Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where he had been held since his arrest last September.

    Lawyers for Combs and spokespersons for the agency didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment Friday.

    Combs’ lawyers had asked a judge earlier this month to “strongly recommend” transferring him to the low-security male prison so that he could take part in the facility’s drug treatment program.

    FCI Fort Dix, one of several dozen federal prisons with a residential drug treatment program, would best allow Combs “to address drug abuse issues and to maximize family visitation and rehabilitative efforts,” Teny Geragos, his lawyer, wrote in a letter.

    Combs has already served about 14 months of his 50-month sentence and is set to be released from prison on May 8, 2028, though he can earn reductions in his time behind bars through his participation in substance abuse treatment and other prison programs.

    Earlier this week, Combs’ lawyers asked a federal appeals court to quickly consider the legality of his conviction and sentence. The 55-year-old wants his appeal to be considered soon enough that he can benefit from a reduction of time spent in prison if the appeals court reverses his conviction, his lawyers said.

    President Donald Trump has also said Combs had asked him for a pardon, though the Republican did not say if he would grant the request.

    The founder of Bad Boy Records was convicted in July of flying his girlfriends and male sex workers around the country to engage in drug-fueled sexual encounters in multiple places over many years. However, he was acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges that could have put him behind bars for life.

    In a letter to the judge before he was sentenced, Combs said he has gone through a “spiritual reset” in jail and was “committed to the journey of remaining a drug free, non-violent and peaceful person.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • SNAP Has Provided Grocery Help for 60-Plus Years; Here’s How It Works

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    Originally known as the food stamp program, it has existed since 1964, serving low-income people, many of whom have jobs but don’t make enough money to cover all the basic costs of living.

    Public attention has focused on the program since President Donald Trump’s administration announced last week that it would freeze SNAP payments starting Nov. 1 in the midst of a monthlong federal government shutdown. The administration argued it wasn’t allowed to use a contingency fund with about $5 billion in it to help keep the program going. But on Friday, two federal judges ruled in separate challenges that the federal government must continue to fund SNAP, at least partially, using contingency funds. However, the federal government is expected to appeal, and the process to restart SNAP payments would likely take one to two weeks.

    Here’s a look at how SNAP works.

    There are income limits based on family size, expenses and whether households include someone who is elderly or has a disability.

    Most SNAP participants are families with children, and more than 1 in 3 include older adults or someone with a disability.

    Nearly 2 in 5 recipients are households where someone is employed.

    Most participants have incomes below the poverty line, which is about $32,000 for a family of four, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers the program, says nearly 16 million children received SNAP benefits in 2023.

    People who are not in the country legally, and many immigrants who do have legal status, are not eligible. Many college students aren’t either, and some states have barred people with certain drug convictions.

    Under a provision of Trump’s big tax and policy law that also takes effect Nov. 1, people who do not have disabilities, are between ages 18 and 64 and who do not have children under age 14 can receive benefits for only three months every three years if they’re not working. Otherwise, they must work, volunteer or participate in a work training program at least 80 hours a month.


    How much do beneficiaries receive?

    On average, the monthly benefit per household participating in SNAP over the past few years has been about $350, and the average benefit per person is about $190.

    The benefit amount varies based on a family’s income and expenses. The designated amount is based on the concept that households should allocate 30% of their remaining income after essential expenses to food.

    Families can receive higher amounts if they pay child support, have monthly medical expenses exceeding $35 or pay a higher portion of their income on housing.

    The cost of benefits and half the cost of running the program is paid by the federal government using tax dollars.

    States pay the rest of the administrative costs and run the program.

    People apply for SNAP through a state or county social service agency or through a nonprofit that helps people with applications. In some states, SNAP is known by another, state-specific name. For instance, it’s FoodShare in Wisconsin and CalFresh in California.

    The benefits are delivered through electronic benefits transfer, or EBT, cards that work essentially like a bank debit card. Besides SNAP, it’s where money is loaded for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, program, which provides cash assistance for low-income families with children, and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.

    The card is swiped or inserted in a store’s card reader at checkout, and the cardholder enters their PIN to pay for food. The cost of the food is deducted from the person’s SNAP account balance.

    SNAP benefits can only be used for food at participating stores — mostly groceries, supermarkets, discount retail stores, convenience stores and farmers markets. It also covers plants and seeds bought to grow your own food. However, hot foods — like restaurant meals — are not covered.

    Most, but not all, food stores participate. The USDA provides a link on its website to a SNAP retail locator, allowing people to enter an address to get the closest retailers to them.

    Items commonly found in a grocery and other participating stores that can’t be bought with SNAP benefits include pet food, household supplies like toilet paper, paper towels and cleaning products, and toiletries like toothpaste, shampoo and cosmetics. Vitamins, medicines, alcohol and tobacco products are also excluded.

    Sales tax is not charged on items bought with SNAP benefits.


    Are there any restrictions?

    There aren’t additional restrictions today on which foods can be purchased with SNAP money.

    But the federal government is allowing states to apply to limit which foods can be purchased with SNAP starting in 2026.

    All of them will bar buying soft drinks, most say no to candy, and some block energy drinks.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • DNC chair predicts wins in key governor races as Trump agenda faces first test

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    EXCLUSIVE: PHILADELPHIA, PA Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair Ken Martin is confident his party’s investment in 2025’s most consequential elections will pay off.

    “I do expect that we’ll win those elections in New Jersey and Virginia,” Martin said in an exclusive national interview with Fox News Digital, pointing to the only two states holding gubernatorial contests this year. “We feel pretty bullish about our chances.”

    Democrats are looking to rebound from last year’s setbacks – when the party lost control of the White House and Senate and failed to win back the House majority – with strong showings in next week’s races. 

    The New Jersey and Virginia contests are viewed as early tests of President Donald Trump‘s agenda and as a barometer for next year’s midterm elections, when Democrats hope to win back control of Congress.

    FIVE KEY RACES TO WATCH IN NEXT WEEK’S ELECTIONS

    Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin addresses party members at the DNC’s summer meeting, on Aug. 25, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News )

    The DNC has dished out over $7 million – a party record – for get-out-the-vote and organizing efforts this summer and autumn in New Jersey, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, where Democrats are fighting to retain three state supreme court seats. 

    “I’ve always taken the position that every election matters, whether it’s an on year off year, whether it’s a local election, a federal election, every inch of ground that we gain here adds up,” Martin emphasized.

    Martin said that since Trump returned to the White House in January, “there’s been 45 elections on the ballot. Democrats have overperformed in all of them to the tune of about 16 percentage points on average.” While confident, he added that “we’re not taking anything for granted.”

    DEMOCRATIC AND REPUBLICAN NOMINEES IN CRUCIAL GOVERNOR’S RACE TOUT SURGE IN EARLY VOTING NUMBERS

    Asked what a ballot box setback would mean for Democrats, Martin said his focus is on “turning out every single vote we can over these next several days left to make sure we do win.”

    He reiterated, “I do expect that we’ll win those elections in New Jersey and Virginia. We have terrific candidates who are running great campaigns.”

    Martin spoke during a two-day campaign swing through Pennsylvania, ahead of return stops to boost voter turnout in New Jersey and Virginia.

    Mikie Sherrill in Elizabeth, New Jersey

    Rep. Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic nominee for governor in New Jersey, greets voters at a senior center in Elizabeth, N.J., on Oct. 29, 2025 (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

    In blue-leaning New Jersey, polls show a tight race between Democratic nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill and GOP rival Jack Ciattarelli, who is vying in the race to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy.

    Asked why Republicans feel bullish about their chances to capture the Garden State’s governor’s office, Martin told Politico in a recent interview that “New Jersey is the best place, probably, for Donald Trump to actually stop the Democratic momentum — or at least minimize the Democratic momentum that we’ve seen throughout this year.”

    Presented with his comments, Martin said that “we expect this race to be close, and it certainly seems like it will be close.”

    And he noted that “history is not on our side in the sense that we’ve never elected, at least in 50 years, a Democrat to a third term in the governorship” in New Jersey.

    HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING AND ANALYSIS ON THE 2025 ELECTIONS

    Still, he argued that Sherrill “is running a really strong campaign on a message that’s resonating with New Jerseyans.”

    In Virginia, recent controversy in the state’s attorney general race has complicated Democrats’ efforts to hold the governor’s mansion, forcing nominee, former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, to defend against GOP attacks. Polls had shown Spanberger with a solid lead over Republican rival Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. 

    Jay Jones speaks at a podium while wife Mavis Jones stands behind him

    Jay Jones addresses supporters after winning the Democratic nomination for Virginia Attorney General as wife Mavis Jones looks on in Norfolk, Virginia, on June 17, 2025.  (Trevor Metcalfe/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    The controversy centers on Democratic attorney general nominee Jay Jones, who apologized for texts sent in 2022 comparing then-House Speaker Todd Gilbert to mass murderers Adolf Hitler and Pol Pot, saying that if given two bullets, “he would use both” on the Republican lawmaker. 

    Republicans have demanded Jones withdraw from the race. 

    “Let me be very clear, I immediately condemned those vile and indefensible comments and text messages that he made and called on him to apologize,” Martin said. “He needed to apologize to Virginians, which he did.”

    Asked by Fox News Digital if he should have called for Jones to step aside, Martin said, “That’s not up to me to decide. That’s up to Virginians to decide whether or not his comments were disqualifying, and they’ll make their decision in a few days.”

    Martin also called Pennsylvania’s state supreme court retention elections in Pennsylvania “critical for our party, because what we’ve seen over many years now is attempts by billionaire donors and special interests to buy Supreme Court seats throughout the country, and it’s an attempt actually to thwart our democracy.”

    “The reality is, is for us, this is a critical election for the National Democratic Party, because if they win here, if these billionaire donors are able to win these three Supreme Court races, they will certainly take this on the road and try to do this everywhere else in the country,” Martin warned.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    The Republican National Committee (RNC), asked to respond to Martin’s remarks, pointed to its fundraising edge. 

    “Ken Martin has turned the DNC into a debt-ridden circus run by radicals — and we sincerely hope he keeps up the great work, RNC national press secretary Kiersten Pels argued in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Regardless of what happens next Tuesday, it won’t be because of anything Ken Martin did. The DNC is broke, desperate, and wasting its last dollars trying to save face in blue states, and even then, Democrats are struggling to hold on.”

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  • Smoke shops in Philly suburbs mislead consumers by selling ‘straight-up marijuana,’ district attorney says

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    Hundreds of unregulated smoke shops that sell hemp products in the Philadelphia suburbs use fraudulent lab reports that leave their customers “dangerously uninformed” about the potency of the drugs they’re taking, according to a Montgomery County grand jury report released Thursday.

    The 10-month investigation led by the district attorneys of Montgomery, Bucks and Chester counties examined a patchwork of businesses launched in recent years to take advantage of federal laws that allow hemp products to be sold legally with low levels of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis.


    MORE: Intercity bus terminal on Filbert Street to be renovated and reopened in 2026


    Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele said an “unintended consequence” of the 2018 Farm Bill is that unregulated smoke shops now sell a wide range of products that they claim meet legal standards but are actually much stronger than advertised.

    “What we found in a lot of them is they’re selling straight-up marijuana,” Steele said at a news conference Thursday.

    Narcotics detectives from all three counties went undercover to purchase products from smoke shops and have them lab-tested for potency. More than 90% of the edibles, THC vapes and loose flower products that were analyzed exceeded federal standards, the grand jury found, and many were mislabeled or backed by dubious certificates from suppliers.

    “This deception means that adults and children alike are exposed to substances whose potency and risks are hidden from view,” the report says.

    Steele said the most troubling facet of the smoke shop industry is that the products are often marketed toward children and can be sold to anyone who walks through the door. Some shops also carry other intoxicating products, including kratom and tianeptine, that have been associated with hospitalizations and substance abuse issues. 

    The grand jury report details nine times in the past year children were sickened after ingesting THC products commonly sold at smoke shops. 

    “They’re selling illegal products without oversight, and without concern for the health of Pennsylvanians, especially without regard for the health of our children,” Steele said.

    The 107-page report calls on state lawmakers to impose standards for product safety and testing at accredited labs, establish an age limit of 21 for THC products, and regulate the marketing of THC products with the same rigor applied to tobacco and nicotine. The report also urges lawmakers to create clear definitions of marijuana derivatives — such as Delta-8, Delta-10 and THCA — to prevent them from being sold under the banner of “legal hemp.”

    Steele said Montgomery County’s 240 smoke shops now outnumber schools and have turned fuzzy federal hemp laws into big business.

    “People are hiding behind that, saying this is Farm Bill compliant,” he said.

    Steele was joined Thursday by Bucks County District Attorney Jennifer Schorn and Chester County District Attorney Chris de Barrena-Sarobe, who said the deceptive practices of smoke shops are “flagrant” and “unsustainable.”

    In Chester County, De Barrena-Sarobe said he’s already issued 16 search warrants at smoke shops, arrested some lawbreakers and seized more than half a million dollars in cash and other proceeds. Steele said his office has taken similar actions when illegal activities are found.

    “People that are selling drugs out of their stores — selling marijuana, that’s a felony,” Steele said. “If you continue on in this way, plan on getting arrested.”

    The grand jury report comes against the backdrop of Pennsylvania’s halting efforts to legalize recreational marijuana, a move that would create clear standards and a licensing process for sales of the drug, amid a monthslong budget standoff in Harrisburg. Some lawmakers hope to first establish a cannabis control board to lay the groundwork that would address the sale of marijuana derivatives.

    Steele said the problems found at smoke shops are separate from the state’s licensed medical marijuana dispensaries, noting that their business has been impacted by unregulated stores that circumvent taxes and other restrictions on cannabis.

    Last week, Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday joined colleagues across the country in a joint letter calling on Congress to close the loophole that has allowed “intoxicating hemp-derived THC products” to flourish at businesses that “pursue profits at the expense of public safety and health.”

    Steele said smoke shops in the region are getting away with selling products that don’t even hide their appeal to kids and teens. He displayed a photo from the grand jury report showing packages of edible THC products found at shops in the area.

    “You’ve got Cheetos with marijuana leaves on it,” he said.

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  • A Man Who Spent 43 Years in Prison Before His Conviction Was Overturned Now Faces Deportation

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    PHILADELPHIA (AP) — After waiting more than four decades to clear his name in a friend’s 1980 killing, Subramanyam Vedam was set to walk free from a Pennsylvania prison this month.

    Vedam and Thomas Kinser were the 19-year-old children of Penn State University faculty. Vedam was the last person seen with Kinser and was twice convicted of killing him, despite a lack of witnesses or motive.

    In August, a judge threw out the conviction after Vedam’s lawyers found new ballistics evidence that prosecutors had never disclosed.

    As his sister prepared to bring him home on Oct. 3, the thin, white-haired Vedam was instead taken into federal custody over a 1999 deportation order. The 64-year-old, who legally came to the U.S. from India when he was 9 months old, now faces another daunting legal fight.

    Amid the Trump Administration’s focus on mass deportation, Vedam’s lawyers must persuade an immigration court that a 1980s drug conviction should be outweighed by the years he wrongly spent in prison. For a time, immigration law allowed people who had reformed their lives to seek such waivers. Vedam never pursued it then because of the murder conviction.

    “He was someone who’s suffered a profound injustice,” said immigration lawyer Ava Benach. “(And) those 43 years aren’t a blank slate. He lived a remarkable experience in prison.”

    Vedam earned several degrees behind bars, tutored hundreds of fellow inmates and went nearly half a century with just a single infraction, involving rice brought in from the outside.

    His lawyers hope immigration judges will consider the totality of his case. The administration, in a brief filed Friday, opposes the effort. So Vedam remains at an 1,800-bed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in central Pennsylvania.

    “Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S,” a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said in an email about the case.


    ‘Mr. Vedam, where were you born?’

    After his initial conviction was thrown out, Vedam faced an unusual set of questions at his 1988 retrial.

    “During your teenage years, did you ever get into meditation?”

    Gopal Balachandran, the Penn State law professor who won the reversal, believes the questions were designed to alienate him from the all-white jury, which returned a second guilty verdict.

    The Vedams were among the first Indian families in the area known as “Happy Valley,” where his father had come as a postdoctoral fellow in 1956. An older daughter was born in State College, but “Subu,” as he was known, was born when the family was back in India in 1961.

    They returned to State College for good before his first birthday, and became the family that welcomed new members of the Indian diaspora to town.

    “They were fully engaged. My father loved the university. My mother was a librarian, and she helped start the library,” said the sister, Saraswathi Vedam, 68, a midwifery professor in Vancouver, British Columbia.

    While she left for college in Massachusetts, Subu became swept up in the counterculture of the late 1970s, growing his hair long and dabbling in drugs while taking classes at Penn State.

    One day in December 1980, Vedem asked Kinser for a ride to nearby Lewisburg to buy drugs. Kinser was never seen again, although his van was found outside his apartment. Nine months later, hikers found his body in a wooded area miles away.

    Vedam was detained on drug charges while police investigated, and was ultimately charged with murder. He was convicted in 1983 and sentenced to life without parole. To resolve the drug case, he pleaded no contest to four counts of selling LSD and a theft charge. The 1988 retrial offered no reprieve from his situation.

    Although the defense long questioned the ballistics evidence in the case, the jury, which heard that Vedam had bought a .25-caliber gun from someone, never heard that an FBI report suggested the bullet wound was too small to have been fired from that gun. Balachandran only found that report as he dug into the case in 2023.

    After hearings on the issue, a Centre County judge threw out the conviction and the district attorney decided this month not to retry the case.


    Trump officials oppose the petition

    Benach, the immigration lawyer, often represents clients trying to stay in the U.S. despite an earlier infraction. Still, she finds the Vedam case “truly extraordinary” given the constitutional violations involved.

    “Forty-three years of wrongful imprisonment more than makes up for the possession with intent to distribute LSD when he was 20 years old,” she said.

    Vedam could spend several more months in custody before the Board of Immigration Appeals decides whether to reopen the case. ICE officials, in a brief Friday, said the clock ran out years ago.

    “He has provided no evidence nor argument to show he has been diligent in pursuing his rights as it pertains to his immigration status,” Katherine B. Frisch, an assistant chief counsel, wrote.

    Saraswathi Vedam is saddened by the latest delay, but said her brother remains patient.

    “He, more than anybody else, knows that sometimes things don’t make sense,” she said. “You have to just stay with stay the course and keep hoping that truth and justice and compassion and kindness will win.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Fan at Penguins game hospitalized after falling from upper concourse

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    A fan at Monday night’s game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and St. Louis Blues was taken to a hospital after falling from the upper concourse at PPG Paints Arena.

    The incident happened early in the first period after Anthony Mantha’s goal gave the Penguins a 2-0 lead.

    Emergency personnel treated the fan, a man who was not identified, before taking him to Mercy Hospital, located a few blocks from the arena.

    Play was not halted at any time while the man was being treated. Pittsburgh police told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that the man was in critical condition.

    “Our concerns remain with the individual and his family at this time,” the Penguins said in a statement.

    Penguins captain Sidney Crosby, who became the ninth player in NHL history to score 1,700 points, said the team found out about the fall after the game.

    “It doesn’t feel right to be talking about points when you hear something like that,” Crosby said. “Obviously, our thoughts and prayers are with that person and their family and hopefully they’re OK.”

    Penguins coach Dan Muse echoed Crosby’s sentiments.

    “We all come here for a sport and a game and when you hear something like that, it kind of puts everything else aside,” Muse said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with him and his family.”

    The fall was the third such incident at a Pittsburgh sporting event this year.

    In May, Kavan Markwood fell over the railing atop the 21-foot-high Clemente Wall and onto the field at PNC Park late in a game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs. Markwood spent several days in the hospital but did make a recovery. An acquaintance of Markwood was later charged with providing alcohol to Markwood, who was 20 at the time of the incident.

    On Saturday night, a worker at Acrisure Stadium, home of the Pittsburgh Steelers, suffered injuries to his legs when he fell approximately 50 feet while doing work near the stadium’s scoreboard.

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  • 1 dead, 6 injured in homecoming shooting at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania

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    A man is dead and six others were injured in a shooting during a homecoming celebration at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania Saturday night, the Chester County district attorney said.

    District Attorney Christopher de Barrena-Sarobe said one person who had a gun has since been detained.

    Jujuan Jeffers, 20, of Wilmington, Delaware, died in the shooting, de Barrena-Sarobe said during a press conference Sunday.

    One current Lincoln student is among the wounded, as well as one graduate of the school. The other people injured are not directly connected to the university, the DA said. All of the victims are 20 to 25 years old and are expected to survive.

    The shooting happened in the parking lot of the International Cultural Center (ICC) building just before 9:30 p.m., where a post-football game celebratory tailgate and Yardfest event was being held, Lincoln University Police Chief Marc Partee said during a press conference early Sunday morning.

    “This was to be a joyous occasion,” Partee said. “Homecoming — when individuals come back, and they give back to their alma mater, and they live the good memories of their time at Lincoln University, which has helped them propel into life. This was interrupted by gunfire that should not have occurred.”

    At this time, it’s still unclear what led up to the shooting and why shots were fired. The school was placed on lockdown, but that was later lifted.

    “Today, we’re operating as if this is not an incident where someone came in with the design to inflict mass damage on a college campus,” de Barrena-Sarobe said during the news conference.

    Investigators believe there were multiple shooters, but there is no clear threat to the campus at this time, de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    In a statement posted Sunday afternoon on social media, Lincoln University President Brenda A. Allen’s office said the school is cooperating with authorities.

    “As this remains an ongoing investigation, details may evolve over the next several days,” the post says. “We will continue to keep the Lincoln University community informed of any major updates as they become available.”

    Classes are canceled Monday “for a day of healing and reflection,” but the school will remain open with staff on campus to support students, the statement says. The president’s office also invited the campus community to gather at noon on Monday in the Historic District for a moment of connection and healing. 

    Counseling services will be available all week for students, faculty and staff, the post says. 

    Lincoln University is on Baltimore Pike in southern Chester County, about 45 miles from Philadelphia.

    1 arrested in connection with Lincoln University shooting

    Zecqueous Morgan-Thompson, of Wilmington, Delaware, was arrested for carrying a concealed firearm without a license and is being held at Chester County Prison on $25,000 cash bail, de Barrena-Sarobe said, adding that he could not confirm whether the gun he had was used in the shooting.

    As of 5 p.m. Sunday, the scene remained active, de Barrena-Sarobe said, and investigators are conducting a grid search of the area and working with K9s to gather evidence. They are also interviewing people and reviewing video evidence, he said.

    “Stitching together videos is going to be a key part of this investigation,” de Barrena-Sarobe said.

    “Devastating” night in southern Chester County, DA says

    Law enforcement described a chaotic scene where people fled in every direction after shots were fired. People were seen running for cover, and several others were being treated after they were knocked to the ground and trampled, officials said.

    CBS News Philadelphia spoke to a witness who said he saw one person receiving CPR.

    Tents were set up in the ICC parking lot for the tailgating event, designed for people to come together, reconnect and celebrate Lincoln University. De Barrena-Sarobe said the ICC is also where the Lincoln University Police Department is housed.

    “This mass shooting should never have happened,” the district attorney said.

    “We are concerned for our students who had to experience this, our alumni who had to experience this, and our visitors and friends,” Partee said. “We set this out to be a time to celebrate the legacy of Lincoln University, the first historically Black, HBCU in the country. So, devastated, if there was another word to describe that, that’s more impactful, I would use it, but devastated is a start.”

    The Chester County DA said officials are continuing to monitor all the victims and are investigating the shooting with the full power of federal, state and local law enforcement. 

    Following the shooting, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said on X, “I’ve been briefed on the shooting at Lincoln University tonight, and my Administration has offered our full support to President Allen and local law enforcement. Please avoid the area, continue to follow the guidance of local law enforcement, and join Lori and me in praying for the Lincoln University community.”

    Lincoln community processes a tragedy

    People who were on campus said the tragedy has been difficult to process. 

    “The last thing you think about is something as tragic as this occurring when you’re just here for a good time and having fun,” Joslyn Royster, who graduated from Lincoln in 2015, said.

    When the shooting happened, a nearby bowling alley went into lockdown and soon became a staging area for first responders. Workers said they stayed until 2 a.m. to offer coffee, food and a place to warm up. 

    “It was hard to sleep that night. I always see it in the movies or on screen, but seeing it happen right in front of my eyes definitely puts a whole different perspective on things,” Rocco Saienni, a shift supervisor at Timber Wolfe Lanes, said.

    A plea for tips

    De Barrena-Sarobe urged anyone with any information about the shooting to call 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324) or share it online. Digital evidence will be key in this investigation so law enforcement can hold the shooter or shooters accountable, officials said.

    “Because we are going to not stop until we are able to arrest and to find the person or people that shot all of these people at Lincoln University,” he said.

    The Chester County detectives are leading the investigation. The FBI is assisting.

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    Frederick Sutton Sinclair

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  • 7 Charged in 2024 Pennsylvania Voter Registration Fraud That Prosecutors Say Was Motivated by Money

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    HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A yearlong investigation into suspected fraudulent voter registration forms submitted ahead of last year’s presidential election produced criminal charges Friday against six street canvassers and the man who led their work in Pennsylvania.

    The allegations of fraud appeared to be motivated by the defendants’ desire to make money and keep their jobs and was not an effort to influence the election results, said Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday, a Republican.

    Guillermo Sainz, 33, described by prosecutors as the director of a company’s registration drives in Pennsylvania, was charged with three counts of solicitation of registration, a state law that prohibits offering money to reach registration quotas. A message seeking comment was left on a number associated with Sainz, who lives in Arizona. He did not have a lawyer listed in court records.

    The six canvassers are charged with unsworn falsification, tampering with public records, forgery and violations of Pennsylvania election law. The charges relate to activities in three Republican-leaning Pennsylvania counties: York, Lancaster and Berks.

    “We are confident that the motive behind these crimes was personal financial gain, and not a conspiracy or organized effort to tip any election for any one candidate or party,” Sunday said in a news release. Prosecutors said the forms included all party affiliations.

    In a court affidavit filed with the criminal charges on Friday, investigators said Sainz, an employee of Field+Media Corps, “instituted unlawful financial incentives and pressures in his push to meet company goals to maintain funding which in turn spurred some canvassers to create and submit fake forms to earn more money.”

    The chief executive of Field+Media Corps, based in Mesa, Arizona, said last year the company was proud of its work to expand voting but had no information about problematic registration forms. A message seeking comment was left Friday for the CEO, Francisco Heredia. The Field+Media Corps website did not appear to be operative.

    Field+Media was funded by Everybody Votes, an effort to improve voter registration rates in communities of color. The affidavit said Everybody Votes “fully cooperated” with the investigation and noted its contract with Field+Media prohibited payments on a per-registration basis.

    “The investigation confirmed that we hold our partners to the highest standards of quality control when collecting, handling and delivering voter registration applications,” Everybody Votes said in a statement e-mailed by a spokesperson.

    Sainz, who managed Pennsylvania operations from May to October 2024, is accused of paying canvassers based on how many signatures they collected. The police affidavit said Sainz told agents with the attorney general’s office earlier this month he was unaware of any canvassers paid extra hours if they reached a target number of forms.

    “Sainz had to be asked the question multiple times before he stated he was not aware of this and that ‘everyone was an hourly worker,’ ” investigators wrote.

    One canvasser said she created fake forms to boost her pay and believed others did, too, according to the police affidavit. Another told investigators that most of the registration forms he collected were “not real.” A third reported that when she realized she was not going to reach a daily quota, “she would make up names and information,” police wrote, “due to fear of losing her job.”

    The investigation began in late October 2024, when election workers in Lancaster flagged about 2,500 voter registration forms for potential fraud. Authorities said they appeared to contain false names, suspicious handwriting, questionable signatures, incorrect addresses and other problematic details.

    The suggestion of criminal activity related to the election came as the battleground state was considered pivotal to the presidential election, and then-candidate Donald Trump seized on the news. At a campaign event, he declared there was “cheating” involving “2,600” votes. The actual issue in Lancaster was about 2,500 suspected fraudulent voter registration forms, not ballots or votes.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Letter shows cost of security upgrades to Pa. Governor’s Residence after arson

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    A letter from Pennsylvania State Police to Pennsylvania House and Senate leaders details the costs of recommended security upgrades to the Governor’s Residence months after a man tried to burn it down in an attempt to kill Gov. Josh Shapiro as he and his family slept inside.

    Earlier this month, Cody Balmer, 38, of Harrisburg, pleaded guilty to charges of attempted murder, aggravated arson, burglary, terrorism, reckless endangerment, aggravated assault and related offenses. Under the plea deal, Balmer was sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison. Officials said he won’t be eligible for parole until he is 63 years old.

    The attack, which happened on April 13, 2025, caused millions of dollars in damages to the Governor’s Residence. On Friday, Oct. 24, Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Colonel Christopher L. Paris and Pennsylvania Department of General Services (DGS) Secretary Reginald B. McNeil, II, sent a letter to 10 Pennsylvania House and Senate leaders addressing the recommended security upgrades after the arson and how much they cost.

    “While unsuccessful, the incident showed that major security updates were needed to protect public visitors to the Governor’s Residence, the current First Family, and all future governors from active threats at a time when elected officials across the country are facing rising political violence,” the letter states.

    Paris and McNeil said their respective agencies have worked to restore the Governor’s Residence to its original condition as well as make improvements to security since the attack.

    “Our first priority was to restore the Governor’s Residence in order to allow the public to once again have access to the property and ensure the First Family could resume residency in the home,” they wrote. “The destruction was significant – the illegal, forced entry, as well as the subsequent fire started with homemade Molotov cocktails, resulted in considerable damage to the structure, interior rooms, furniture, and fixtures throughout the Governor’s Residence.”

    An update to Gov. Shapiro’s executive budget proposal that was submitted by Secretary of the Budget Uri Monson on May 16, 2025, showed the estimated cost to restore the Residence back to its pre-fire condition was $6.44 million. As of Oct. 24, the DGS has submitted $4.5 million in expenses incurred, Paris and McNeil wrote. They also said FM Global – the insurance carrier the DGS has worked with – has so far approved a reimbursement of $2 million, retained $1 million for the deductible and paid the Commonwealth back $1 million.

    “We continue to work closely with FM Global for approval on additional reimbursements for restoration-related costs already incurred and expect to fully recover for all smoke and fire damage to the property,” the letter states.

    The letter also details the structural improvements needed to enhance the security of the Governor’s Residence following an independent security review in May which led to the security recommendations.

    The letter states the update to the budget proposal submitted by Secretary Monson requested an appropriation amount of $16.9 million to cover the safety upgrade improvements that weren’t covered by insurance. According to Paris and McNeil, they identified General Fund appropriations and Capital Projects Public Improvement Program (PIP) funds as sources for funding.

    They also said replacing the entire outer perimeter barrier at the Residence – which was another one of the security recommendations – would cost an estimated $14 million.

    Other recommendations included installing updated security cameras, improving lighting and adding motion detection sensors to the yard of the Residence which would cost an estimated $6.3 million.

    The recommendation of retrofitting the Residence’s existing windows with bullet-proof and shatter-proof glass would cost an estimated $8 million, according to the letter.

    The Residence – which was built in 1968 and has not been substantially updated since 1974 – did not have a fire suppression system or sprinklers during April’s attack in which Balmer threw Molotov cocktails throughout the State Dining Room to light the building on fire. Following the recommendations, the DGS is installing a comprehensive fire suppression system inside the building. The letter states the sprinkler system costs an estimated $4 million and will be paid for with PIP funds.

    The fire also damaged decorative items inside the home. The letter states private money is being used to replace them.

    Finally, the letter states that Pennsylvania State Police consulted with independent experts to conduct a security review of Gov. Shapiro’s personal residence. The security improvements to the home based on recommendations from the review would cost around $1 million.

    “The horrifying attack on the Governor, his family, and Commonwealth property, coupled with the unfortunate rise in political violence across our country, has made these updates necessary to protect the Governor and his family and ensure the continued operation of the executive branch of the Commonwealth,” McNeil and Paris wrote. “No family should have to live behind bulletproof glass or behind large walls – but the nature of the threats against elected officials today require us to take these important steps.”

    Senator Jarrett Coleman responds to letter

    After the letter was sent, Sen. Jarrett Coleman (R – 16th District), the Chairman of Senate Intergovernmental Operations Committee, released a statement in response.

    “For the past two weeks, the Intergovernmental Operations Committee has been looking into whether or not tax dollars were being used to modify the Governor’s private residence,” Sen. Coleman wrote. “Today we were informed by the Department of General Services and the Pennsylvania State Police that $1 million will be spent on modifying and increasing the value of the governor’s private real estate property. The Intergovernmental Operations Committee will continue to investigate how this decision was made and what steps are being taken to protect taxpayers as this unprecedented project is being completed.”

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    David Chang

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  • PGCB Places Three People on Exclusion List for Leaving Children Unattended

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    Earlier this week, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (PGCB) announced that three adults were placed on the PGCB’s Involuntary Casino Exclusion List for leaving children unattended in their vehicles while they went off to gamble. Additionally, the regulator issued several fines to casinos for various rule violations.

    Several Adults Were Placed on the Involuntary Casino Exclusion List 

    In one case, state officials reported that a male and female patron left two children, ages 11 and 12, unattended in a vehicle outside Hollywood Casino Morgantown. According to the PGCB, the guardians spent more than 30 minutes gambling inside while the children remained in the parking lot.

    In a separate incident, a female patron left three children, ages 2, 6, and 12, alone in a vehicle in the parking lot of Hollywood Casino York. The individual, who has since been barred from all casinos in the state, reportedly spent nearly 30 minutes playing slot machines and table games.

    The PGCB stated that actions like these, which result in the loss of statewide gambling privileges, serve as a reminder that adults are prohibited from leaving minors unattended in a casino’s parking lot or garage, hotel, or other areas. Doing so creates a potentially unsafe and dangerous environment for the children, the regulator explained.

    The board stated that revoking gambling privileges serves as a reminder that adults are prohibited from leaving minors unattended, as it creates an unsafe environment for the children. Placement on the Involuntary Exclusion List bars individuals from gambling at any Pennsylvania casino, through an online betting site regulated by the board, or at a Video Gaming Terminal location. These actions have increased the total number of individuals on the board’s various Involuntary Exclusion Lists to 1,448.

    PGCB Also Commits Other Regulatory Actions

    In addition to the incidents involving unattended children, the PGCB took action against a video gaming terminal (VGT) operator for regulatory violations. The Lucky Seven Travel Plaza in Lock Haven, Clinton County, was fined after authorities determined that the truck stop’s gaming area did not comply with the state’s VGT regulations. Investigators found that the Lucky Seven gaming room was at times inadequately staffed with board-credentialed employees, allowed access to individuals under 21, and, on at least two occasions, permitted minors to gamble on the machines.

    Additionally, Vasas Inc., operating as Lucky Seven Travel Plaza, was fined $45,000, and the PGCB additionally imposed $5,000 fines on each of the facility’s two owners. The PGCB also reached consent agreements with two casinos that resulted in fines. Live! Casino & Hotel Philadelphia agreed to a $12,000 fine to resolve an issue involving a compromised deck of cards in play, while Hollywood Casino York agreed to a $10,000 settlement after allowing an involuntarily excluded individual onto the gaming floor.

    On a brighter note, the PGCB reported a significant increase in revenue from gambling recently. A large part of it came from the growth of the online segment, although slots also remained crucial for the substantial sum collected.

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    Stefan Velikov

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  • Pennsylvania Bans Three Adults From Casinos

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    Posted on: October 24, 2025, 05:29h. 

    Last updated on: October 23, 2025, 01:34h.

    • Three adults in Pennsylvania lost their casino privileges after they left children unattended in their vehicles to gamble
    • The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board has also announced fines against three licensees

    Three more adults have been permanently excluded from brick-and-mortar casinos in Pennsylvania.

    Pennsylvania casinos unattended children
    The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board recently banned three adults for leaving children unattended in their vehicles while they gambled inside a casino. The three adults have permanently lost their privileges to gamble inside a physical casino within the commonwealth. (Image: Shutterstock)

    On Wednesday, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (PGCB) disclosed that it recently levied several financial penalties against its licensees. The state gaming regulatory agency additionally announced that three adults had been added to the PGCB’s Involuntary Casino Exclusion List.

    In one incident, the state reports that a male and female patron left two children, aged 11 and 12, unattended in a vehicle outside of Hollywood Casino Morgantown. The PGCB detailed that the two guardians gambled inside the casino for more than half an hour while the children sat in the parking lot.

    In another incident, a female patron left three children, aged 2, 6, and 12, in a vehicle in the parking lot of Hollywood Casino York. The unidentified person, who is now barred from entering all casinos in the commonwealth, reportedly gambled on slot machines and table games for almost half an hour.

    Actions such as these to deny statewide gambling privileges serve as a reminder that adults are prohibited from leaving minors unattended in the parking lot or garage, a hotel, or other venues at a casino since it creates a potentially unsafe and dangerous environment for the children,” the PGCB said.

    Pennsylvania is home to 17 physical casinos. The state is additionally one of only seven jurisdictions in the country where online slot machines and live dealer table games are legal. Pennsylvania is also home to online and in-person sports betting.

    Regulatory Violations 

    Along with the unattended children incidents, the PGCB took action against a video gaming terminal (VGT) operator for regulatory violations.

    The Lucky Seven Travel Plaza in Lock Haven, Clinton County, was fined after it was determined that the truck stop gaming area wasn’t compliant with the state’s VGT statute. Law enforcement determined that the Lucky Seven gaming room was, at times, not properly staffed with board-credentialed employees. Individuals not at least 21 years of age were allowed to access the gaming terminals, and on at least two occasions, minors gambled on the machines.

    Vasas Inc., doing business as the Lucky Seven Travel Plaza, was fined $45K. The PGCB additionally fined the two owners of the facility $5K.

    The PGCB also executed consent agreements with two casinos that resulted in fines.

    Live! Casino Hotel Philadelphia agreed to pay a $12K fine to settle a dispute regarding a compromised deck of cards being in play. Hollywood Casino York agreed to a $10K settlement after allowing an involuntarily excluded person access to the gaming floor. 

    September Revenue

    Pennsylvania retail casino revenue slowed last month as physical slot win was about 3% lower and table win was flat from September 2024. The in-person declines were easily offset elsewhere, however, as iGaming slot revenue surged 37% and online table games climbed 18% from the prior year.

    Along with sports betting, fantasy sports, VGTs, and online poker, total gross gaming revenue last month was $533.3 million. That represented a 5.4% improvement from September 2024, or a net positive difference of $27.5 million.

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    Devin O’Connor

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  • Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s memoir is coming out in January

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    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro has a book coming out in January, touching upon everything from his swift political rise to the trauma of his home being set on fire.

    Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, announced Tuesday that “Where We Keep the Light: Stories From a Life of Service,” will be released Jan. 27. Shapiro, 52, has become a prominent national Democrat since he was elected governor in 2022. He was on Kamala Harris’ shortlist as a running mate in last year’s presidential election and he has often been cited as a potential candidate for 2028.

    According to Harper, Shapiro “shares powerful stories about his family, his faith, and his career in public service.”

    “Gov. Shapiro reflects on what he has learned along his journey,” Tuesday’s announcement reads in part, “knocking on doors, serving his community, and bringing people together to tackle the tough problems we face.”

    In April, a man set fire to the governor’s mansion while Shapiro and his family were sleeping inside, according to authorities. The Shapiros, who hours earlier had hosted a gathering for the Jewish holiday of Passover, were awakened by state police and ushered to safety. Cody Balmer pleaded guilty last week to charges of arson and attempted murder, and was sentenced under a plea deal to 25 to 50 years in state prison.

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    Hillel Italie | The Associated Press

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  • November SNAP benefits will not go out in PA unless immediate action: Officials

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    Unless Congress takes immediate action to end the government shutdown, beneficiaries of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNPA) in Pennsylvania will not receive payments for November, the state’s Department of Human Services said on Monday.

    According to officials, SNAP payments rely on funding from the federal government, and Pennsylvania’s state government does not have the funds available to backfill the lost funding.

    “Republicans’ failure to pass a federal budget in Washington, D.C. is having a direct impact on our Commonwealth and now, this federal shutdown is threatening critical food assistance for two million Pennsylvanians who rely on SNAP to feed themselves and their families,” Gov. Josh Shapiro said in a press release.

    State officials said that the November payments could still go out if Congress takes immediate action, but Republicans and Democrats remained at odds on Monday and it is unclear when they will reach a funding deal.

    Democrats say they will not vote for a bill to fund the government until Republicans agree to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies that are set to expire this year, but Republicans say that can wait and a funding bill should be passed without the extension.

    If beneficiaries do miss their November payments, officials want them to know any unused funds from October will carry over, as funds carry over month-to-month.

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    Brendan Brightman

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  • Kada Scott: Police find human remains in search for missing woman

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    Police have found human remains while searching for Kada Scott, a missing woman from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    John Stanford, the deputy commissioner of the Philadelphia Police Department told reporters at a press conference, shared by NBC Philadelphia, that investigators had found remains that were around a week old in a shallow grave in a wooded area behind the abandoned Ada H. Lewis Middle School near the Awbury Arboretum following an anonymous tip.

    They have not yet been identified but a spokesperson for the department told ABC News that they believed they belonged to Scott.

    Newsweek reached out to the Philadelphia Police Department for comment on this story.

    This is a developing story. More to follow.

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