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Tag: pennsylvania

  • Staffing Shortages Cause More US Flight Delays as Government Shutdown Reaches 7th Day

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    Staffing shortages led to more flight delays at airports across the U.S. on Tuesday as the federal government shutdown stretched into a seventh day, while union leaders for air traffic controllers and airport security screeners warned the situation was likely to get worse.

    The Federal Aviation Administration reported staffing issues at airports in Nashville, Boston, Dallas, Chicago and Philadelphia, and at its air traffic control centers in Atlanta, Houston and the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The agency temporarily slowed takeoffs of planes headed to the first three cities.

    Flight disruptions a day earlier also were tied to insufficient staffing during the shutdown, which began Oct. 1. The FAA reported issues on Monday at the airports in Burbank, California; Newark, New Jersey; and Denver.

    Despite the traffic snags, about 92% of the more than 23,600 flights departing from U.S. airports as of Tuesday afternoon took off on time, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.

    But the risk of wider impacts to the U.S. aviation system “is growing by the day” as federal workers whose jobs are deemed critical continue working without pay, travel industry analyst Henry Harteveldt said. The longer the shutdown drags on, the more likely it is to affect holiday travel plans in November, he said.

    “I’m gravely concerned that if the government remains shut down then, that it could disrupt, and possibly ruin, millions of Americans’ Thanksgiving holidays,” Harteveldt said in a statement.

    Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Monday that there has already been an uptick in air traffic controllers calling out sick at a few locations. When there aren’t enough controllers, the FAA must reduce the number of takeoffs and landings to maintain safety, which in turn causes flight delays and possible cancellations.

    That’s what happened Monday afternoon, when the control tower at Southern California’s Hollywood Burbank Airport shut down for several hours, leading to average delays of two-and-a-half hours.

    When a pilot preparing for takeoff radioed the tower, according to communications recorded by LiveATC.net, he was told: “The tower is closed due to staffing.”

    Nick Daniels, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, said the shutdown highlighted some issues his union’s members already face on a regular basis due to a national airspace system that is critically understaffed and relies on outdated equipment that tends to fail.

    A couple of controllers missing work can have a big impact at a small airport already operating with limited tower staffing, he said.

    “It’s not like we have other controllers that can suddenly come to that facility and staff them. There’s not enough people there,” Daniels said Tuesday. “There’s no overtime, and you have to be certified in that facility.”

    Air travel complications are likely to expand once a regularly scheduled payday arrives next week and air traffic controllers and TSA officers don’t receive any money, the union leader said. If the impasse between Republican and Democratic lawmakers on reopening the government persists, the workers will come under more pressure as their personal bills come due, Daniels said.

    “It’s completely unfair that an air traffic controller is the one that holds the burden of ‘see how long you can hang in there in order to allow this political process to play out,’” he said.

    Johnny Jones, secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Government Employees chapter that represents TSA workers, said he was hearing concerns from members about how they will be able to pay bills, including child support and mortgage payments, and if they’re at risk for termination if they have to miss work during the shutdown.

    “The employees are struggling. They’re assessing what they need to do and they’re assessing how this is all going to work out,” said Jones, who has worked as a screener since the TSA was established.

    Some TSA officers already have called in sick, but Jones said he did not think the numbers were big enough to cause significant problems and delays at airports.

    Aviation unions and U.S. airlines have called for the shutdown to end as soon as possible.

    The unions are also making appeals to food banks, grocery chains and airports to secure support for workers during the shutdown. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport was offering federal workers $15 food vouchers and allowing them to park in the terminal, according to Jones.

    John Tiliacos, the chief operating officer of Florida‘s Tampa International Airport, said the facility started preparing for the shutdown well before it began.

    Nicknamed “Operation Bald Eagle 2” among airport staff, the efforts center around pulling together resources for the roughly 11,000 federal employees who are working at the airport without pay, including security screeners and air traffic controllers.

    Tiliacos said the help would include a food pantry, free bus rides to work and a program with the local utility provider to keep the lights on at the homes of the workers.

    “Whatever we can do to make life a little easier for these federal employees that allows them to continue coming to work and focus on keeping our airport operational, that’s what we’re prepared to do,” he said.

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

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Overall enrollment at Pennsylvania’s state universities increases for the first time in over 10 years

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    Pennsylvania’s state universities reported the first system-wide enrollment increase in over a decade and its highest-ever student retention rate. 

    Seven of the 10 schools in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education, including West Chester University and Cheyney University, saw a rise in their student populationsEnrollment in the network has been at a steady decline since 2010, when it had 119,513 studentsThat figure fell all the way to 82,509 last year before the slight increase to 83,000 this fall. Meanwhile, the percentage of students in the system returning for a second year reached a record 81%.


    MORE: SEPTA’s City Hall Station is getting a face lift ahead of America’s 250th birthday celebrations


    “We are proud that Pennsylvania students are choosing PASSHE universities,” Cynthia Shapira, chair of the PASSHE Board of Governors, said in a statement. “These enrollment gains and record-setting retention rates demonstrate the value, affordability and career relevance of PASSHE education across the Commonwealth.” 

    Cheyney University, a historically Black college whose campus spans Chester and Delaware counties, went from 617 students last fall to 851 this year — a spike attributed to a 144% increase in freshman enrollment. West Chester University is the largest school in the network, with more than 3,000 first-year students, 1,040 transfers and a total population of around 17,400 this fall.

    PASSHE said the number of students transferring from a state community college increased by 14.3%, and 22% of students in its network identify as an underrepresented minority.

    But PASSHE is expecting a drop-off in high school graduates next fall, which could challenge future enrollment numbers.

    “We are focused on providing high-quality, affordable education that prepares students for real opportunities after graduation,” Chancellor Christopher Fiorentino said in a statement. “Pennsylvania needs more skilled workers in health care, STEM, business and education, and our universities are helping meet that demand. Our graduates are making a difference in communities and contributing to the strength of the state’s economy.” 

    In July, PASSHE introduced a pilot program that would increase students’ access to specialized or advanced courses by allowing them to take classes from other schools in the network at their home campus. 

    Tuesday’s announcement comes four months after the PASSHE raised tuition by $278 — the first increase since 2018. Three years ago, six schools merged into two regional campuses in an attempt to reverse declining enrollment.

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    Molly McVety

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  • Montgomery County official and day care owner now facing child sex abuse charges

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    A Montgomery County official, who also owns two day care facilities, is facing child sexual abuse-related charges in Pennsylvania after already facing charges of soliciting child pornography out of Maryland, court documents reveal.

    Nick Fountain, vice-chair of the Skippack Township Board of Supervisors, had been arrested last month on charges of sexual solicitation and solicitation of child pornography.

    Then on Sunday, October 5, 2025, while already in police custody, Fountain was charged with sexual abuse of a child in Pennsylvania.

    A police criminal complaint stated that the victim, reported that Fountain, who was an adult, sexually assaulted them of the course of years when they were between the ages of nine and 16-year-olds old.

    In an interview with detectives, the criminal complaint said that Fountain admitted to touching the victim, performing oral sex on the victim and having the victim perform oral sex on him. Fountain also admitted this happened on multiple occasions and that the last time it happened was just before the victim turned 16.

    Resources for victims of sexual assault are available through the National Sexual Violence Resources Center and the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 800-656-4673.

    After a town official in Skippack Township was arrested on child pornography charges, NBC10’s Deanna Durante obtained the court documents and has been asking questions about Nick Fountain. 

    For 12 years, Fountain has been the vice-chair of Skippack Township’s Board of Supervisors.

    He also runs a pair of daycare facilities in the area – The Magnolia Enrichment Center in Collegeville and Magnolia Children’s Academy in Gilbertsville.

    A note that was sent to parents and guardians read in part that Nick Fountain would no longer be affiliated with any Magnolia centers.

    NBC10 reached out to the daycares, they provided no comment.

    Additionally, a review of Fountain’s LinkedIn profile showed that he had been a kindergarten teacher at the Skippack Goddard School.

    Fountain is expected to be in court next week.

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    NBC10 Staff

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  • Unusual crime: Thieves steal used cooking oil from Pa. restaurant

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    Police in Delaware County said that they made an arrest in a very unusual crime after thieves stole cooking oil from a restaurant in Upper Darby last week.

    It’s a case that seems to be part of a growing trend nationally.

    It was a messy scene behind Wilson’s Secret Sauce on Saturday, Sept. 20 after two men were caught on camera getting out of a box truck and taking gallons of used cooking oil from a tank behind the restaurant.

    “I saw footprints from their feet all over my driveway which I keep relatively clean and I looked over at the oil tank and I saw that the lock was missing,” Steve Wilson, of Wilson’s Secret Sauce, said.

    Upper Darby police said they arrested one of the suspects seen in the video behind Wilson’s Secret Sauce but authorities are still looking for the second man.

    Industry leaders think this problem won’t stop without stronger regulations.

    The oil is supposed to be refined and then later sold as biofuel to companies across the region, but experts say that thieves make big money off the stolen cooking oil.

    The owners of D&W Alternative Energy told NBC10 that they see so many thefts that they have created an online map to track them.

    “We lose probably $7,000, $10,000 every week,” the owners of D&W said.

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    Isabel Sanchez and Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Scammer alert: Caller pretends to be Montgomery Co. sheriff’s deputy demands money

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    A warning for Montgomery County residents! Scammers are pretending to be law enforcement officials using fake phone numbers and scaring residents into giving them money.

    According to Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele and Sheriff Sean Kilkenny, scammers are calling residents from a “spoofed” phone number with the 610 area code.

    Once the scammer gets the resident on the phone, they claim to be a Montgomery County deputy sheriff and warn the resident that they owe money to pay off fines, missed jury duty or other violations, officials said.

    The scammer then directs the resident to pay them with gift cards, money transfers, cryptocurrency or other ways, according to the DA’s Office.

    Officials are stressing that they will never request payment in these ways and if you’re asked to pay someone like this it is a red flag.

    If you get a call like this make note of the date, time and phone number that shows up on your caller ID.

    If you are unsure if it’s real or fake, please call the main Montgomery County Courthouse number at 610-278-3000 and ask to speak to someone in the sheriff’s office.

    To report a scam call like this, call the Montgomery County Detective Bureau at 610-278-3368.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Philly police, FBI chase and capture armored car robbery suspects in Lower Merion

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    At least three suspects in an armored car robbery are in custody after a chase through Philadelphia and Montgomery County led to lockdowns at several schools, including Saint Joseph’s University, police said.

    A law enforcement source told NBC10 officers were getting coffee near City Avenue in the Philadelphia and Bala Cynwyd area late Friday morning when they spotted what they believed to be at least three men trying to break into an armored car. Lower Merion Police Superintendent Andy Block also told NBC10 that FBI agents were in the area searching for suspects in previous armored car robberies in Philly.

    Officials said the armed suspects then fled police and FBI agents when they were spotted.

    “These individuals fled from police on the city side,” Superintendent Block told NBC10. “They notified us for assistance.”

    Both Philadelphia Police and Lower Merion Police pursued the suspects who led them on a chase along City Avenue from Philly through Montgomery County. Block told NBC10 one of the suspects was located on Snowden Road in Bala Cynwyd but fled the area.

    SkyForce10 was over the scene as armed officers on foot searched through homes in Lower Merion. A shelter-in-place order went into effect in Lower Merion schools as well as the Bala Cynwyd community.

    “Scary,” one resident told NBC10. “I’m going in my house and I’m going to lock my door.”

    The chase also prompted a shelter-in-place order at Saint Joseph’s University’s Hawk Hill campus on 5600 City Avenue. Students received an alert telling them to shelter in place immediately, lock all doors and to not leave their location until further notice.

    Around noon, SkyForce10 captured a person being taken into custody by police on 52nd and Parrish streets in West Philadelphia.

    Around 12:45 p.m., Superintendent Block told NBC10 two suspects in the robbery were arrested in Philadelphia while a third suspect was arrested in Lower Merion. Block also said police were searching homes near City Avenue for a possible fourth suspect. However, police later said they believe they have all suspects involved in custody.

    The lockdowns were later lifted at Saint Joseph’s University as well as the Lower Merion schools.

    This story is developing. Check back for updates.

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    David Chang

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  • Swifties in the Philly area celebrate release of new Taylor Swift album and movie

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    Swifties rejoice! Music superstar and Berks County native Taylor Swift released her new album “The Life of a Showgirl” on Friday at midnight. While the album is available for streaming on all major platforms, fans across the country lined up at Target stores and other retailers to buy the physical copies and vinyl.

    NBC10 caught up with fans who waited on line for hours at the Target store in Deptford, New Jersey, to get their hands on the new album.

    “We downloaded it. We got the vinyls,” one fan said. “We preordered and we came to get a copy of the vinyl.”

    Some of the stores gave tickets to fans to hold their place on line.

    “She is so talented and she’s an amazing person and it was worth the three-hour wait,” one fan told NBC10.

    In addition to Target, local record stores also saw a boost from the new album, including Latchkey on East Passyunk Avenue in Philadelphia.

    “People are coming through to celebrate, to buy the album, they’re getting other albums, they’re getting her entire catalogue which we have here,” an employee at the store told NBC10. “So, we really appreciate when artists like Taylor make vinyl a priority.”

    Swift’s album release also includes a theatrical event featuring the premiere of the music video for her new single “The Fate of Ophelia.”

    “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl” will be in movie theaters across the globe on Friday through the weekend, including Landmark Ritz Five in Philly’s Old City neighborhood.

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    David Chang and Lili Zheng

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  • Armed man forced woman to drive, so she drove to police station, PA officials say

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    A man is accused of kidnapping a woman at gunpoint and forcing her to stay in the woods overnight, Pennsylvania officials said.

    A man is accused of kidnapping a woman at gunpoint and forcing her to stay in the woods overnight, Pennsylvania officials said.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    An accused kidnapper was “nodding off,” so he made a woman drive and she ended up driving to a police station, Pennsylvania officials said.

    On Oct. 1, Scottdale officers responded to the woman’s home to perform a welfare check following her family saying they hadn’t heard from her since a previous domestic violence incident with Shawn Prince, according to a news release by the Westmoreland County District Attorney’s Office.

    When officers arrived, the home was empty with the door open and the woman’s phone inside, officials said.

    During the check, officers learned the victim had called 911 and was at a police station, prosecutors said.

    She told officers Prince had kidnapped her on the morning of Sept. 29 and threatened to cut her friend’s child’s throat if she didn’t comply with his demands, officials said.

    That’s when Prince drove the woman to a rural area in the woods and held her at gunpoint as she got out of the car, officials said.

    The two stayed in the woods overnight until they began driving again the following morning, officials said.

    Prince started getting sleepy so he had the woman drive, officials said.

    She didn’t know where she was at first but after learning of her whereabouts near Ohiopyle she drove to the police station, prosecutors said.

    She escaped the car and ran to the police department while Prince drove away and began yelling that he would burn her home down, officials said.

    As of Oct. 2, Prince is on the run and anyone with information is asked to call 724-887-8220, according to a Facebook post by the police department.

    He faces charges of kidnapping, simple assault, terroristic threats and harassment.

    Scottdale is about a 45-mile drive south from Pittsburgh.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • Armed man forced woman to drive, so she drove to police station, PA officials say

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    A man is accused of kidnapping a woman at gunpoint and forcing her to stay in the woods overnight, Pennsylvania officials said.

    A man is accused of kidnapping a woman at gunpoint and forcing her to stay in the woods overnight, Pennsylvania officials said.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    An accused kidnapper was “nodding off,” so he made a woman drive and she ended up driving to a police station, Pennsylvania officials said.

    On Oct. 1, Scottdale officers responded to the woman’s home to perform a welfare check following her family saying they hadn’t heard from her since a previous domestic violence incident with Shawn Prince, according to a news release by the Westmoreland County District Attorney’s Office.

    When officers arrived, the home was empty with the door open and the woman’s phone inside, officials said.

    During the check, officers learned the victim had called 911 and was at a police station, prosecutors said.

    She told officers Prince had kidnapped her on the morning of Sept. 29 and threatened to cut her friend’s child’s throat if she didn’t comply with his demands, officials said.

    That’s when Prince drove the woman to a rural area in the woods and held her at gunpoint as she got out of the car, officials said.

    The two stayed in the woods overnight until they began driving again the following morning, officials said.

    Prince started getting sleepy so he had the woman drive, officials said.

    She didn’t know where she was at first but after learning of her whereabouts near Ohiopyle she drove to the police station, prosecutors said.

    She escaped the car and ran to the police department while Prince drove away and began yelling that he would burn her home down, officials said.

    As of Oct. 2, Prince is on the run and anyone with information is asked to call 724-887-8220, according to a Facebook post by the police department.

    He faces charges of kidnapping, simple assault, terroristic threats and harassment.

    Scottdale is about a 45-mile drive south from Pittsburgh.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • Pennsylvania Casino Smoking Ban Passes Health Committee

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    Posted on: October 2, 2025, 08:31h. 

    Last updated on: October 2, 2025, 08:31h.

    • Legislation to ban casino smoking in Pennsylvania is progressing in Harrisburg
    • Currently, casinos can designate half of their floor space for cigarettes and cigars

    Legislation to prohibit tobacco smoking on casino floors in Pennsylvania has once again cleared a House committee.

    Pennsylvania casino smoking Dan Frankel
    Pennsylvania Rep. Dan Frankel continues to seek a casino smoking ban at the state’s 17 casinos. Under current law, each casino can designate up to half of its gaming floor space for cigarettes and cigars. (Image: Rep. Dan Frankel)

    Pennsylvania Rep. Dan Frankel (D-Allegheny) has been leading the fight to extinguish casino smoking for many years. He’s once again crusading to force casino smokers to move outside to light up a cigarette or cigar.

    Frankel’s House Bill 880 — a proposed amendment to the Pennsylvania Clean Indoor Air Act to withdraw exemptions afforded to slot machine facilities — passed the House Health Committee on Tuesday with a 22-4 vote. While the Health Committee lent bipartisan support, there are zero Republicans among the bill’s 23 cosponsors.

    “Pennsylvanians should not have to choose between their jobs and their health,” Frankel said. “My legislation would eliminate loopholes that leave Pennsylvanian workers exposed to toxic smoke, expand the definition of smoking to include e-cigarettes, and give localities the ability to enact smoke-free ordinances that are more protective than state law.”

    Pennsylvania’s current smoking statute allows casinos to designate up to 50% of the gaming space for smoking.

    Bill Faces Long Odds

    Frankel contends there’s a growing body of evidence supporting the claim that smoke-free gaming is better for business. He cites Parx Casino north of Philadelphia as the top revenue-generating property among Pennsylvania’s 17 brick-and-mortar casinos, and Parx officials say their decision to go smoke-free has lessened employee healthcare costs, improved morale, and attracted new customers, both gaming and nongaming patrons.

    Research on trends in the casino business and consumer attitudes indicates that the conventional wisdom that smoking bans cause economic harm is severely outdated and unsupported by contemporary evidence,” Frankel said.

    That might be true, but many lawmakers continue to side with the gaming industry in the belief that a smoking ban would hurt play and lead to thousands of job layoffs. It’s why HB880 faces long odds of passing the General Assembly and moving to Gov. Josh Shapiro’s (D) desk.

    Last year, Frankel’s legislation to prohibit casino smoking passed the House Health Committee but stalled upon reaching the House floor.

    All but two of Pennsylvania’s 17 casinos permit indoor smoking. Parx and its satellite mini-casino, Parx Shippensburg, are the exceptions.

    Casino Smoking States

    In the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, Pennsylvania and New Jersey are outliers when it comes to allowing casino smoking. Gaming floors in Maryland, Delaware, New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut all prohibit indoor cigarettes and cigars.

    Opponents to smoke-free casinos in Atlantic City and Pennsylvania regularly claim that a ban would lead to smokers patronizing the other market where smoking remains. The drive from Philadelphia to Atlantic City is just an hour.

    Both markets are performing well. In 2025, in-person casino revenue in Atlantic City, from January through August, was up 2.8% to more than $1.97 billion. Pennsylvania casino revenue in the state’s 2024/25 fiscal year totaled $3.36 billion.

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    Devin O’Connor

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  • Pa. candy shop owner accused of sexually harassing, soliciting underage girls

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    The owner of a Bucks County candy and ice cream shop is accused of sexually harassing two underage girls who worked for him and offering them money and drugs in exchange for sex.

    Joseph Grossman, 36, of Warminster, Pennsylvania, was the owner of Poppy’s Peanuts, a shop at the Quakertown Farmer’s Market on 201 Station Road in Quakertown that sells peanuts, chocolate and ice cream. The investigation began in June 2025 when a 17-year-old girl who worked for Grossman told police that he frequently made inappropriate comments towards her and touched her legs and back.

    After the girl quit, Grossman allegedly continued to pursue her and message her on social media. During one occasion, Grossman pulled out cash and offered her $300 as well as marijuana for the girl to have sex with him, investigators said.

    Resources for victims of sexual assault are available through the National Sexual Violence Resources Center and the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 800-656-4673.

    The girl refused and told her mother which led to the investigation, according to officials. Grossman was then arrested on Aug. 15 and charged with promoting the prostitution of a minor and corruption of minors.

    Following his arrest, a second 17-year-old girl who once worked for Grossman came forward with similar allegations. The girl told police that while she worked for Grossman, he repeatedly made sexual comments towards her and grabbed her hips, back and shoulders. The girl said that while Grossman didn’t offer her money, he gave her drugs.

    Joseph Grossman, the owner of Poppy’s Peanuts in Quakertown, is accused of sexually harassing two of his underage employees and trying to get them to have sex with him by offering drugs and money. NBC10’s Deanna Durante has the details.

    “Not only did he continue to pursue her sexually and make the comments and physically touch her body, but he also provided her with drugs,” Bucks County District Attorney Jennifer Schorn said during a press conference on Thursday, Oct. 2. “On one occasion she said at the closing of the business for the evening, he lit up a pipe and had her ingest the contents of that pipe which smelled like marijuana but she said it was so potent that it made her feel very dizzy and it made her feel unsafe.”

    Schorn said Grossman continued to sexually pursue the girl on the social media app Snapchat after she quit her job. The girl then found out about his arrest.

    “When she and her mother learned of the arrest and victimization of another victim, they too came forward and an investigation followed into her victimization,” Schorn said.

    Joseph Grossman

    Grossman was then charged with additional counts of corruption of minors. A preliminary hearing for Grossman was held on Sept. 18, 2025, and all charges against him were held for trial.

    “We’re confident that once all of the facts are known, that the facts will prove that our client is innocent of the charges against him,” Grossman’s attorney, Thomas Joachim, told NBC10.

    Grossman is currently out on $25,000 bail with the provision of no contact with minors. Investigators are currently concerned that other victims are out there.

    “This is a business that largely caters to families, to children,” Schorn said. “It’s an ice cream shop. It’s an old-fashioned candy shop and he employs minors. His behavior was ongoing for several months, we have concerns there may be other victims and that’s why we’re appealing to the community.”

    If you were victimized by Grossman or know someone who was, please contact Richland Township Police Detective Matthew Lawhead at 215-536-9500. All calls can remain anonymous.

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    David Chang

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  • Republicans’ chances of defeating Josh Shapiro in Pennsylvania—Poll

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    Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro held a lead over potential Republican challengers in the first public poll of the state’s 2026 gubernatorial race.

    Newsweek reached out to Shapiro and the two Republicans included in the poll, Treasurer Stacy Garrity and state Senator Doug Mastriano, for comment via email.

    Why It Matters

    Pennsylvania is a critical battleground state roughly divided between Democrats and Republicans. It has swung between both parties in recent elections, backing President Donald Trump last November but voting for former President Joe Biden in 2020.

    Shapiro, first elected in 2022, remains popular in the state, but Republicans are hoping to make the race competitive. The new poll from Quinnipiac University, however, underscores Shapiro’s strong approval among the state’s voters and suggests he may be favored in the midterms.

    What To Know

    Shapiro will be up for reelection next November and has already drawn a challenge from Garrity, who has received the endorsement of the state’s Republican Party and has announced her candidacy. Mastriano, who lost to Shapiro in 2022, has also been floated as a potential candidate but has not officially made a campaign announcement.

    Shapiro defeated Mastriano by about 15 points in 2022 (57 percent to 42 percent), but Garrity is seen as a potentially stronger opponent, having already won statewide—including in 2020, when she eked out a victory despite Democrats winning other statewide races.

    The Quinnipiac University poll showed Shapiro up 16 points against Garrity (55 percent to 39 percent), while he led Mastriano by 17 points (56 percent to 39 percent).

    Shapiro enjoys a strong approval rating among Pennsylvanians, according to the poll. In total, 60 percent of the state’s voters view his tenure positively, while only 28 percent view him negatively. Among independents, a critical voting group in such a competitive state, 66 percent gave him positive marks, while only 20 percent disapprove of his time in office.

    The poll surveyed 1,579 registered voters from September 25 to September 29, 2025, and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

    Shapiro is viewed as a rising star in the party and is considered a potential 2028 presidential contender by Democrats, who see his strong electoral record in Pennsylvania, a must-win state in presidential elections, as a critical asset against a Republican. The poll found that he would lead Vice President JD Vance by 10 points in the state.

    Whether he can win over enough voters in the party’s presidential primary, however, is yet to be seen. Polls suggest that voters are considering other well-known options, such as California Governor Gavin Newsom or former Vice President Kamala Harris, both of whom are also considered potential candidates.

    What People Are Saying

    University Polling Analyst Tim Malloy wrote in the polling memo: “Governor Josh Shapiro clinches an enviable 60 percent job approval and leaves his two potential gubernatorial challengers in the rear-view mirror in a very early look at Pennsylvania’s 2026 gubernatorial race.”

    Democratic influencer Harry Sisson wrote on X: “Democratic Governor of PA Josh Shapiro remains wildly popular in his state. People love that he’s focused on hard working Americans. This is how we win people back and beat MAGA.”

    What Happens Next

    The Cook Political Report and Sabato’s Crystal Ball both classify the race as Likely Democratic.

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  • Wife, 2nd woman plead guilty after husband shot, killed outside Lehigh Valley store last year

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    Two women have pleaded guilty and a third person is awaiting trial after one of the women’s husbands was shot and killed outside of a store last year.

    Léelo en español aquí

    An investigation started back on Dec. 7, 2024, when officers found Hector Garcia Gomez, 46, with several gunshot wounds in the parking lot of Loco Hot Deals located at 1155 MacArthur Road in Whitehall Township just after 6 p.m., officials explained.

    Garcia Gomez had been shot multiple times in his stomach, police reported. He later died from the injuries and his death was ruled as a homicide.

    According to investigators, the entire incident was caught on nearby surveillance cameras.

    In the video, Garcia Gomez can be seen driving into the Loco Hot Deals parking lot and going into the store while his wife, Brenda Rodriguez, stays in the car, police said.

    Rodriguez appeared to be on her phone while he was inside the store, officials explained.

    Investigators would later discover that Rodriguez was sharing the information of her husband’s whereabouts to Liz Marie Pacheco.

    Pacheco then took that information and gave it to Christian Martinez-Ramos who showed up in the parking lot minutes later.

    As Garcia Gomez walked out of the store and got back into his car, Martinez-Ramos was seen on camera driving through the parking lot and parking behind Garcia Gomez’s car, officials said.

    Gunshots were fired from Martinez-Ramos’ car toward Garcia Gomez who was hit multiple times by the gunfire, investigators revealed.

    After her husband was shot, Rodriguez allegedly lingered inside the car for over 22 seconds, police said.

    When she got out of the vehicle, she was seen on camera adjusting her clothes and hair before she picked up items and then went into the store, investigators shared.

    On Sept. 22, 2025, Rodriguez pleaded guilty to conspiracy of aggravated assault. She is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 5 and could face a maximum of 20 years in prison.

    On Wednesday, Oct. 1, Pacheco pleaded guilty to murder in the third degree. She was sentenced to five to 10 years in state prison.

    Martinez-Ramos is awaiting his trial in this case.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • South Carolina Prosecutor Seeks Death Penalty in Murder Case After Biden Reduced Sentence to Life

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    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A local prosecutor in South Carolina said Tuesday he will seek the death penalty against a man whose federal death sentence for killing two bank employees in a robbery was commuted to life in prison by President Joe Biden at the end of his term.

    Brandon Council, 40, did not appear in state court in Horry County as prosecutors formally let the court know that if he is convicted of murder they will ask a jury to sentence him to death.

    State murder, armed robbery and other state charges against Council were dropped in 2019 after a federal jury found him guilty of similar charges and sentenced him to death.

    But in December, Biden reduced the death sentences of 37 federal inmates, including Council, to life in prison, saying he felt the federal use of the death penalty had to stop and he did not want the next administration to resume executions he had halted.

    That led Solicitor Jimmy Richardson to obtain new indictments against Council in Horry County in August which open the door to a state death penalty trial.


    A deadly bank robbery leads to a death sentence

    Council walked into the CresCom Bank in Conway in August 2017, waiting for a minute before shooting Donna Major as the stunned teller held papers in front of her face trying to protect herself. He then followed manager Katie Skeen into her office and shot her in the forehead as she hid under her desk, authorities said.

    Council left the bank with $15,000. He was arrested in North Carolina several days later after buying a Mercedes with the stolen money, according to his confession read in court.

    Families and law enforcement angry at Biden’s decision urged local officials to review cases. In Louisiana, prosecutors in Catahoula Parish were able to get a first-degree murder charge refiled against Thomas Steven Sanders in the 2010 death of a 12-year-old girl. That would allow the state to seek the death penalty against him.

    Richardson said prosecutors had dropped the state charges in case anything ever happened to change the outcome of the federal case, including commuting his sentence.

    “If there was a bump, we could always come in and try our case. And that’s why we dismissed them. So our powder could be dry,” Richardson told reporters after the hearing.


    Families and Bondi angry about the commu

    The other inmates who had their sentences reduced are being moved to Supermax prisons “where they will spend the rest of their lives in conditions that match their egregious crimes,” U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on social media last week.

    Bondi called the commutations a betrayal of the families of victims and a stain on the justice system, comments that Richardson echoed when Biden’s decision was announced.

    The bank teller’s daughter, Heather Turner, said the victims of the crimes weren’t considered.

    “The pain and trauma we have endured over the last 7 years has been indescribable,” Turner wrote on Facebook, describing weeks spent in court in search of justice as “now just a waste of time.”

    “Our judicial system is broken. Our government is a joke,” she said. “Joe Biden’s decision is a clear gross abuse of power. He, and his supporters, have blood on their hands.”


    Council’s lawyers said he was remorseful

    Attorneys for Council argued at his federal trial his life should be spared because of a troubled childhood, especially after the grandmother who raised him died. They said he showed remorse and cooperated with investigators.

    After his arrest, Council asked investigators if the women at the bank were still alive and cried when he found out they were dead, investigators said.

    “I’m a doofus. I’m an idiot,” Council told police. “I don’t deserve to live.”

    Horry County had a second inmate have a federal death sentence commuted. Chadrick Fulks was convicted of kidnapping a woman from the parking lot of a Conway Walmart and killing her during a series of crimes across several states. His state charges were dismissed and court records indicate they have not been reinstated.

    Biden did leave three men on federal death row.

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

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Former ‘Real Housewives’ star Yolanda Hadid puts Bucks County farm on market for $10.9 million

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    Yolanda Hadid, the former model and star on “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” has put her 32-acre New Hope farm on the market for $10.88 million.

    Hadid, the mother of supermodels Gigi and Bella, has owned the Bucks County property since 2017. She bought the lavender farm, which has a 19th-century stone home and two cottages, for $4 million following her divorce with ex-husband David Foster.


    MORE: Estate that was George Washington’s headquarters during Revolutionary War hits market for $3.3 million


    Hadid, 61, was living in Los Angeles at the time and said she fell in love with the property during a visit to Bucks County. New Hope, an artsy and bucolic town with a thriving Main Street, has increasingly become a preferred market for celebrities seeking havens outside New York. Hadid, who grew up in the Netherlands, was battling yearslong health problems stemming from Lyme disease and wanted to find a place reminiscent of her rural European childhood. 

    Hadid CourtyardKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    A courtyard area is surrounded by the stone home and cottages on the 32-acre New Hope farm.

    Hadid CottageHadid CottageKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    The New Hope property has three renovated cottages.

    Hadid PatioHadid PatioKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    The home at the 32-acre property in New Hope contains acres farmland and pasture for horses.

    “I longed for a sanctuary where I could heal and reconnect with Mother Earth,” Hadid said in a statement sent by her publicist.

    Daughters Gigi, 30, and Bella, 28, from Yolanda’s first marriage to real estate developer Mohamed Hadid, were fast-rising stars in New York City. Yolanda said she bought the farm to give her family a refuge from “the enormous pressure of being in the global spotlight.”

    Photos of the property show a luxurious retreat that underwent extensive renovations in the years since Hadid bought the farm. The property has a barn that Yolanda’s son Anwar, of the band HowVanish, converted into a music recording studio. The three-bedroom stone home was remodeled with a European aesthetic. Three other buildings on the property, including a corn crib, have a combined four additional bedrooms.

    Hadid Living RoomHadid Living RoomKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    The living room at the New Hope property is shown above.

    Hadid KitchenHadid KitchenKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    The kitchen in the 19th century stone home on the New Hope property is shown above.

    Hadid BR New HopeHadid BR New HopeKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    A bedroom with a fireplace at the New Hope property is shown above.

    Hadid said her daughters rode horses on the property during their visits — which increased during the COVID-19 pandemic — and the family put about 3,000 lavender plants on the farm with help from friends. The lavender inspired Bella Hadid to develop her Orebella fragrance line, which debuted last year.

    The New Hope property garnered attention in 2021 when former One Direction singer Zayn Malik was charged with harassment following an argument with the Hadid family at the farm. Gigi has a 5-year-old daughter with Malik, who pleaded no contest to the charges and served about a year of probation. The couple are no longer together, but Malik also owns a home in New Hope.

    Hadid Horse PastureHadid Horse PastureKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    Supermodels Gigi and Bella Hadid spent years riding horses at the New Hope property after their mother, Yolanda, purchased the farm in 2017.

    Hadid LavenderHadid LavenderProvided Image/Yolanda Hadid

    Yolanda Hadid planted lavender on the New Hope farm.

    Hadid Pool New HopeHadid Pool New HopeKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    The property in New Hope has an in-ground swimming pool.

    Gigi, one of the world’s highest-paid fashion models, has been in a new relationship with star actor and Jenkintown native Bradley Cooper since 2023. Last year, Cooper purchased a 33-acre New Hope farm with a seven-bedroom home and a private lake on the property for a reported $6.5 million.

    The sale of Hadid’s farm is being handled by Carl Gambino of Compass Real Estate and Revi Haviv of Addison Wolfe Real Estate. The agents told the Wall Street Journal another property in Bucks County sold for $12.98 million last year. Yolanda Hadid has already purchased another home in Bucks County and plans to stay in the area.

    Hadid Home AerialHadid Home AerialKeith Conrey/Tohickon Media

    Above, an aerial view of the farm property in New Hope.

    Gambino said Monday he expects Bucks County to attract more big names in the coming years.

    “We expanded to Bucks County to service our existing client base along with the influx of high net worth and entertainment clients who have been purchasing there,” he said. “I believe (this) will continue on because of its close proximity to NYC and exceptional rural living. It’s truly a magical place.”

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Pa. Supreme Court justices rarely lose seats in retention elections, so why is this year’s race so important?

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    Pennsylvania voters will decide in November whether to retain three state Supreme Court justices – all Democrats – in an election with major ramifications for the composition of the commonwealth’s top appellate court.

    Justices on the seven-member Supreme Court, which has a 5-2 Democratic majority, are each elected to serve 10-year terms. When justices already serving on the bench reach the end of their cycles, they face retention elections with simple “yes” or “no” votes on whether to give them another 10-year term. A judge needs a majority to retain the seat. Partisan judicial elections are only held when the court has vacancies, most often because a justice has reached the state’s age limit of 75 years old. Rarely do seats open up as a result of a justice losing a retention election, which has happened only once since 2000.


    MORE: Hundreds of people will sleep at the Phillies ballpark on Nov. 20. Here’s why.


    “Pennsylvania traditionally has between 25% and one-third of people vote no on judicial retention candidates,” said David Senoff, a Philadelphia-based attorney who has helped lead past retention campaigns for both Democrats and Republicans on the state Supreme Court. “If you have a really organized ‘vote no’ campaign, maybe you can get that number close to 50%.”

    The three justices up for retention this year – Kevin Dougherty, Christine Donohue and David Wecht – each were elected to the Supreme Court in 2015 in a historically unusual cycle with three vacancies. The three Democrats soundly outperformed their GOP opponents that year, capturing a majority on the court after Republicans had held the advantage for more than a decade.

    Campaign spending on the 2015 race topped $16 million, making it the most expensive state Supreme Court election in U.S. history at the time. When Justices Kevin Brobson, a Republican, and Daniel McCaffery, Democrat, were elected in races for single open seats in 2021 and 2023, respectively, spending in each surpassed $10 million.

    Retention elections typically don’t attract as much money or attention, in part because candidates are not running against opponents, but this year is viewed as an outlier because it presents a rare chance for Republicans to free up as many as three seats.

    With just over a month to go before the Nov. 4 election, filings from the three justices up for retention show they have already raised nearly $3 million combined. TV and online ads from interest groups have cast the races, normally a down-ballot issue, as an ideological moment of truth for Pennsylvania.

    “This year’s retention elections have certainly drawn increased attention because of the hyper-politicized environment that we are in generally,” said civil litigation lawyer John Hare, who co-chairs the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s Historical Commission and Commission on Judicial Independence. “If past is prologue, this court will be required to decide the most important issues that jurists are called upon to decide – civil rights, the death penalty, redistricting, issues of life and death.”

    ‘We want them in courthouses’ 

    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court was established in 1722 and is the oldest continuously operating appellate court in the Western Hemisphere. While justices were originally appointed by the governor with Senate confirmation, the switch to an electoral system was made in 1850 with an amendment to the state Constitution.

    “Whether appointed or elected judges are better has been debated by Pennsylvanians for decades,” Hare said.

    In the late 1950s, a state commission sought to reform judicial selection to an initial appointment system followed by retention votes. That effort was voted down by the public, but the search for a balanced approach led to the establishment of the current elections and retention cycles in 1968.

    “The more overt politicking required by an elective system is seen as distasteful for judges who generally are – and are supposed to be – above politics,” Hare said. “That has been the main criticism, the necessary interjection of political realities into judicial races.”

    One of the challenges for justices seeking retention is that they have to campaign in ways that don’t violate judicial ethics. This year, even though justices are barred from partisan campaigning and discussing cases, the three Democrats up for retention have jointly held public forums in Philadelphia to talk about the impartiality of the court system.

    “The collective wisdom is we don’t want our judges out on the campaign trail,” Senoff said. “It doesn’t matter what party they are. We want them in courthouses doing their work.”

    Pennsylvania has fewer campaign finance limitations on judicial candidates than races for any other statewide office. There are no caps on individual donations. Outside of ethics considerations, the only restriction for judges already on the bench is that they can’t start raising money until after the November election of the year prior to their retention vote.

    Senoff said many judges voluntarily make adjustments during and after their campaigns to account for taking money from lawyers and businesspeople, including those with pending cases. They may temporarily recuse themselves from cases connected to campaign donors to avoid the appearance of bias or impropriety.

    In the legal community, attorneys routinely support candidates from both parties and view retention elections as a nonpartisan procedure.

    “I know people don’t ever believe that,” Senoff said. “But on the ballot there will be no party identification. It’s just ‘yes’ or ‘no’ for a particular judge.”

    History favors justices up for retention

    The last time a Supreme Court justice in Pennsylvania lost a retention bid was in 2005, when Philadelphia-based Justice Russell Nigro, a Democrat, was voted off the court by a 51%-49% margin. Justice Sandra Schultz Newman, a Republican from Philadelphia, narrowly retained her seat with 54% of the vote that year.

    The retention election in 2005 is considered an odd case. Months earlier, the state legislature approved a pay raise for state lawmakers, judges and top elected officials during an early-morning session with minimal public notice. Lawmakers voting to give government officials raises was an unpopular move that many voters took out on judges who benefited but were not directly involved.

    “The governor signed it and the judges were part of that pay raise, and so it was easy to paint the judges as part of this ‘midnight pay raise,” Senoff said.

    Dougherty, Donohue and Wecht do not face an immediate uproar against state government and none of them are enveloped by scandal, which also has cost justices their seats in years past.

    Before his election to the Supreme Court, Dougherty spent 14 years on the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia specializing in family law cases. Donohue was a trial lawyer in Allegheny County for decades and served as state Superior Court judge before reaching the Supreme Court. Wecht similarly served as a Superior Court judge, also with a background in family law, before he was elected to the Supreme Court.

    Some of the “vote no” messaging about the three Democratic justices has lumped them together as part of a decade-long Supreme Court majority that authored contentious decisions regarding COVID-19 protocols, education, redistricting and other issues.

    “Those cases become magnified during campaign season, and they do tend to capture the public’s attention because they are so easily exploited by either side,” Hare said. “The ‘vote yes’ ads that are on TV focus on abortion and contraception. I think in a swing state like Pennsylvania, those hot-button national issues will always resonate because all you need to do is swing a couple percent of the electorate.”

    In the event that any of the three justices are not retained, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, would then be able to appoint interim judges that would require consent from the Republican-controlled Senate. A battle over replacements could disrupt the court’s operations until an open, partisan election would be held next year to fill the vacancy.

    The Democratic National Committee announced last week it will make a “six-figure investment” to protect Pennsylvania’s high court from “MAGA extremists” and the influence of “billionaires across the country” as their spending increases on the “vote no” campaign. 

    “I think with PACs, candidates and others, this race could easily reach $10 million,” said Deborah Gross, president of the nonprofit Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts, which educates the public about the judiciary and advocates for impartiality and fairness in the courts. “This will definitely be the most expensive retention race is PA history.”

    Gross noted that all three justices have been endorsed by the Pennsylvania Bar Association, the state’s influential professional association for lawyers. 

    Among the general voting public, Senoff said it’s common for people to tune out judicial elections. Many voters have difficulty remembering candidates’ names, and telling them to “vote no” could even end up impacting Republican judges in lower court races. 

    A spending blitz on ads may ramp up visibility and partisan antagonism, but Senoff is skeptical that it will significantly move the needle in November. He said it’s harder to motivate people to vote to remove a single candidate than it is to get them to choose between one or another.

    “You have to convince the voters to fire people,” he said. “If there’s not something that this particular justice has done that you think is so beyond the pale, generally it’s better to vote retain your judges. At a minimum, you retain consistency. If you lose three justices who have been there for 10 years, the combined institutional knowledge loss would be outrageous.”

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Cashless bail explained: What it is, how it works and why Trump is targeting it

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    When President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month threatening to withhold federal funding from states and localities that have adopted “cashless bail” policies, he escalated a national fight over how courts decide who should remain behind bars before trial.

    The move has already rippled into state capitols. In North Carolina, Republican lawmakers are considering legislation this week that would tighten pretrial release rules after a high-profile fatal stabbing on a commuter train last month.


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    The bill, which was first introduced in March and altered earlier this week with the title “Iryna’s Law,” would require people to post money bail for certain offenses and would restrict judicial discretion for violent and repeat offenders. The bill also would add a new category of violent offenses that require specific pretrial conditions, such as electronic monitoring. It passed the state Senate on Monday.

    “When we were looking at drafting this bill, a lot of it was looking at the situation that happened in Charlotte,” said North Carolina state Sen. Danny Britt, a Republican and criminal defense attorney, to WRAL-TV.

    In New York, Republican lawmakers are pushing to advance legislation that would further limit pretrial release and allow judges to weigh a defendant’s “dangerousness” in setting conditions. New York ended bail for most misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies in 2019, but has since scaled back the law at least three times to allow judges more discretion.

    And in Texas — where legislators passed new bail restrictions earlier this summer — voters in November will consider a constitutional amendment banning bail altogether in certain cases for violent offenses such as murder, aggravated assault and indecency with a child.

    Trump signed the cashless bail order three days after Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, was killed in a seemingly random stabbing in Charlotte, North Carolina. The suspect, who has a lengthy criminal record, had been released without bond last winter after being charged with misusing the 911 system.

    Trump’s order directs U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to identify which jurisdictions have “substantially eliminated cash bail,” though it does not define what that means — leaving its scope and enforcement unclear. Some legal experts say they expect challenges in court, as has happened with previous efforts to tie federal funding to state or local policies.

    Trump issued the directive alongside another order aimed at Washington, D.C., where he declared a “crime emergency” and sought to roll back the city’s decades-old bail law. The district did not fully eliminate cash bail when it passed its Bail Reform Act in 1992, but judges are required to consider nonfinancial conditions — such as electronic monitoring, curfews or check-ins — before setting a monetary bond.

    Trump’s orders are part of his broader crackdown on crime and public safety, which has also included deploying the National Guard to Memphis, Tennessee; Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles.

    Same charge, different outcomes

    Cash bail is a guarantee to show up to court: A defendant pays money and is allowed to go home. At the end of their case, they may get the money back. A judge or magistrate may set the amount based on the severity of the charge and whether the defendant is considered a flight or safety risk.

    But someone unable to pay the bail, even after being charged with a low-level misdemeanor, may remain in jail for days, weeks or months. Defendants by law are presumed innocent, but stuck behind bars, they can lose jobs or housing and be unable to care for their family.

    Dozens of jurisdictions, including some states, have taken steps to change their bail systems, but there is no single definition of what constitutes “bail reform” or how such changes are applied.

    Some states, counties and cities have moved toward fully or nearly eliminating, cash bail. Under these “cashless bail” systems, people may be released before trial without paying money unless a judge determines they pose a public safety risk or are unlikely to return to court. These decisions, experts say, are made intentionally, based on the facts of the case — including the charges involved — rather than on a defendant’s ability to pay.

    The policies can affect a large share of the people in the justice system. About 5 million felony cases and 13 million misdemeanor cases are resolved in state courts each year, according to the National Center for State Courts. Since misdemeanors make up the bulk of cases, state and local bail policies can shape outcomes for millions of people charged with lower-level offenses.

    Some opponents of cashless bail policies argue that lenient policies may result in the release of defendants who could reoffend or fail to appear. Supporters counter that keeping people in jail simply because they cannot afford bail is unfair and disproportionately affects Black, Latino and low-income defendants.

    The ongoing debate has fueled misconceptions, partly because some news coverage repeats unproven claims that cashless bail policies cause upticks in crime.

    Trump has frequently drawn that connection himself. In a July post on Truth Social, he wrote: “Crime in American Cities started to significantly rise when they went to CASHLESS BAIL. The WORST criminals are flooding our streets and endangering even our great law enforcement officers. It is a complete disaster, and must be ended, IMMEDIATELY!”

    Supporters of cash bail often raise concerns that released suspects might commit new, potentially more serious crimes. While that is possible in individual cases, some research suggests that eliminating cash bail does not lead to a widespread increase in crime. Some research also suggests that setting money bail isn’t effective in ensuring court appearances or improving public safety.

    How the bail system works

    Washington, D.C., the immediate target of Trump’s executive orders, largely eliminated the use of cash bail in 1992. Judges are required to first consider nonfinancial conditions, such as check-ins or curfews, though cash bail may still be used in serious cases.

    Several states also have adopted major changes. Alaska, California, Illinois, New Jersey and New York have passed laws scaling back or fully eliminating cash bail, though some of those laws have since been revised.

    In 2016, New Mexico voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment that limited the use of cash bail. Judges may impose a cash bond if they determine it is necessary either to ensure a defendant returns to court or because the person poses a public safety risk.

    In 2023, Illinois became the first state to fully abolish cash bail through the Pretrial Fairness Act, which also guarantees defendants legal representation at pretrial hearings.

    “Those early decisions about someone’s liberty are much more deliberative,” said Don Steman, a professor and co-director of the Center for Criminal Justice at Loyola University Chicago. The center’s team has been evaluating the implementation and impact of the Pretrial Fairness Act. “It’s about, ‘Is this person a threat to public safety or a threat to willful flight?’”

    In Houston, a 2019 settlement and consent decree resolved a lawsuit challenging Harris County’s misdemeanor bail practices as unconstitutional, requiring the county to release most people charged with misdemeanors on a personal promise to return to court.

    In the latest independent monitoring report, from 2024, observers wrote that the changes “have saved Harris County and residents many millions of dollars, improved the lives of tens of thousands of persons,” and resulted in “no increase in new offenses by persons arrested for misdemeanors.”

    In August, just a day after Trump issued his executive order, Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton asked a federal court to vacate the consent decree.

    He argued that the order conflicts with a Texas law passed in 2021 and another state bail law that took effect this month. Those laws require people charged with violent crimes in Texas to post cash bail in order to be released from jail, and expand the list of offenses for which defendants must post a cash bond, respectively.


    This story was originally produced by Stateline, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network which includes Pennsylvania Capital-Star, and is supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity.

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    Amanda Hernández, Pennsylvania Capital-Star

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  • SPS Technologies reveals what caused explosive fire, unveils plans to rebuild

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    Seven months after an explosive fire at SPS Technologies in Abington led to evacuations and lockdowns for the neighboring community, the company revealed the cause of the fire and unveiled their plans to rebuild.

    The SPS Technologies factory – that produced aerospace fasteners and fittings – caught fire on Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, as multiple explosions were reportedly heard throughout the facility.

    Officials said at least 60 employees were inside the building at the time. They were all evacuated and accounted for, officials said. No injuries were reported.

    Now, on Thursday, Sept. 25, the company met with the community to share their plans for a new building that will total 350,000 square feet.

    During the meeting, officials with SPS Technologies shared that 80% of the original building was destroyed by the blaze.

    Officials also revealed that the cause of the fire was an explosion inside a compressed air system and that explosion was captured on video. They explained that they don’t know what caused the explosion and are waiting on the Fire Marshal’s Office to release their report on the investigation.

    According to SPS Technologies’ website, the new space will have solar panels and green spaces to encourage conservation and sustainability.

    The company plans to open the building in 2028 and said they plan to share more of the details behind their plans soon.

    Hotline for concerned residents

    SPS Technologies launched a community hotline for “questions, comments or concerns” from the Jenkintown and Abington communities, officials said. People can call 215-572-3326 or email contactSPS@pccairframe.com.

    For more information and the latest updates from Abington Township, click here.

    If you’d like to receive notifications from the county, click here to sign up for the Ready Montco Alert System.

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    Emily Rose Grassi and NBC10 Staff

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  • Person dies after being hit by SEPTA train overnight in Delaware County

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    A person is dead after officials said they were struck by a SEPTA train overnight in Delaware County, Pennsylvania.

    According to SEPTA spokesperson Kelly Greene, around 11:30 p.m. on Wednesday, September 24, 2025, an inbound Media/Wawa Line train struck a person on the track in the area between Morton and Secane stations.

    The person was pronounced dead at the scene, Greene said.

    There were people on the train at the time of the incident and they were brought to Center City by a shuttle bus.

    “A shuttle bus accommodated passengers to Center City. Normal service will run on the line this morning,” shared Greene.

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    Cherise Lynch

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  • 3 men charged in Bucks County arson case that led to death of firefighter

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    Three men have been charged in connection to a house fire that happened back in August that was ruled as an arson, according to the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office.

    The fire was allegedly intentionally set on a van that was parked outside of a house on the 700 block of Cedar Avenue in the Croydon section of Bristol Township sometime before 5 a.m. on Aug. 8, police said.

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    Officials explained that once the van was set on fire, it spread to the side of the house very quickly.

    An investigation into the arson found that Gavin Ross Montoya, 27, was allegedly hired by Charles William Vandenberg, 50, to set the fire and Thomas J. Parker, 36, is accused of driving Montoya to the scene.

    A search warrant of Montoya’s phone found that he communicated with Vanderberg through text message who said “NEED THAT VAN TOURCHED” and “GET ROAD FLARE.”

    Montoya texted Vanderberg back saying, “CAN I GET 10GS IN 2 BAGS.”

    While reviewing nearby surveillance footage, Montoya was allegedly captured on camera throwing what looked like a flare into the parked van, investigators said.

    Parker allegedly gave Montoya a ride because he thought that Montoya was going to steal drugs from the resident who lived at the house, police said.

    According to investigators, Parker dropped Montoya off at the corner of Cedar Avenue and State Road and waited for him. When Montoya got back to the car, he told Parker that he set the van on fire.

    Montoya and Vanderberg were each charged with arson, criminal mischief and other related charges while Parker is charged with criminal conspiracy to commit robbery and other charges.

    Vanderberg was arraigned and is being held at Bucks County Correctional Facility under $350,000 bail. Montoya and Parker are waiting to be arraigned.

    Investigators working on figuring out the arson also looked into the death of a long time firefighter.

    Captain of Fire Police Ed Margavich of the Third District Volunteer Fire Company died a week after the fire when he suffered a thigh bone fracture after he fell at the fire station, officials said. The three men charged in connection to the arson are not going to be charged for Captain Margavich’s death.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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