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Strawberry Mansion Shooting

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Police are investigating the shooting death of a man in the Strawberry Mansion section of the city.

The 23-year-old man was on the 2900 block of Ridge Avenue around 1:45 a.m. on Sunday when an unidentified gunman opened fire.

The victim was struck several times in the back, head and left leg. He was taken to Temple University Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 2:06 a.m.

Police have not yet identified the victim. No arrests have been made. Police have not released information on any suspects.

Stay with NBC10.com for more details on this developing story.

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Fiance of Matt Read Speaks on Flyers Wives Carnival

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NBC10's Vince Lattanzio goes one on one with Erin Cody, the fiance of Flyers right wing Matt Read.

Spotlight! Flyers Wives Carnival

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Meet your favorite Broad Street Bully while helping non-profit organizations in our area. Come on out to the Wells Fargo Center for the 37th annual Flyers Wives Carnival. Meet, take pictures, and play games with your favorite Flyers and alumni. Activities include: interactive games against players, Shot on Goal (take a shot on a Flyers Goalie), Dunk Tank and a host of other family fun activities.

All funds raised help support a multitude of worthy non-profit organizations that benefit everything from important health care initiatives such as heart health and stroke and cancer awareness to various youth recreation programs and plenty more.

Where: Wells Fargo Center
3601 South Broad Street
Philadelphia, PA
When: January 26
Time: 1:30pm - 6 p.m.
Tickets: Buy Now or call Comcast Tix at 800-298-4200

Adults and Kids: $40
Adults: $25
Kids: $20

Running in the Dangerous Cold

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Sunday's bitter cold temperatures didn't stop runners on Kelly Drive this morning. NBC10's Matt DeLucia has the details.

Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Schuylkill Expressway to Shutdown

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Motorists should be prepared for a Schuylkill Express detour Sunday afternoon.

PennDOT plans to shutdown I-76 in both directions Sunday afternoon to do work at the CSX derailment site near the South Street exit. 

According to State Police, the shutdown will take place between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. for 10-15 minutes. Motorists traveling westbound will get off at University Avenue and then back on I-76 at the South Street exit. For those traveling eastbound, the Schuylkill will be closed at South Street and motorists may get back on at the University Avenue exit. 

The highway will be shutdown shortly, but the specific time has not yet been provided. 

Stay with NBC10 for more details on this traffic alert. 

NAACP Leader Under Fire

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The leader of the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP Is under fire after three officers questioned whether or not he mismanaged money. 

NBC10 obtained documents confirming that Philly NAACP President J. Whyatt Mondesire is now under investigation.

The three NAACP officers, identified by the Philadelphia Daily News as Donald Birts, restaurant owner Sydney Booker and the Rev. Elisha Morris questioned whether money from the NAACP national office was funneled through the Next Generation Community Development Corp, before it reached the Philadelphia chapter. The Daily News reports that the IRS revoked tax-exempt status for Next Generation and that Mondesire was listed as its president at one point.

Gerard Egan, a lawyer representing the three officers, told the Daily News that it’s unclear whether all of the money made it to the Philadelphia NAACP and that it could prompt an investigation into mail fraud, wire fraud or theft if it didn’t.

The officers also called on the NAACP national board to take control of the Philadelphia chapter’s finances and conduct a financial audit going back to 10 years, according to The Daily News.

Mondesire claims the majority of the local board supports his leadership. He also denied that he mismanaged any NAACP money.

“Nothing has been taken from the NAACP and no NAACP money is missing,” Mondesire wrote in a letter to NAACP board members last month.

Mondesire also called the three officers a “gang of backstabbers” and “renegades.”

Mondesire, 64, was a reporter at the Philadelphia Inquirer before becoming the Philadelphia NAACP President. He is also the owner of the Philadelphia Sun.
 



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Dealing With the Cold

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The brutal winter continues with a week of dangerously cold temperatures ahead. On this week's NBC10@Issue, we discuss how long the brutal cold will last and what you can do to endure it.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Homes Evacuated After Gas Leak

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Officials say six homes were evacuated due to a gas main leak in South Philadelphia.

Residents living along the 1700 block of Snyder Avenue reported a smell of gas Sunday afternoon.
PGW workers arrived at the scene and determined there was a gas leak.

A total of 14 people from six homes were evacuated. Crews are currently at the scene.

Stay with NBC10.com for more details on this developing story.

Also on NBC10.com:


 



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Local Mayor on Cruise Ship

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Easton Mayor Sal Panto Jr. took the perfect mid-winter vacation on a cruise ship. Just so happens he's traveling on the same cruise ship that U.S. health officials are set to investigate a possible outbreak of the highly contagious norovirus. 

More than 300 passengers and crew members have become sick on the Royal Caribbean cruise ship, NBC News reported. Panto told The Morning Call that he and his wife are fine and did not get sick.

"We left on Tuesday in the snowstorm and right now we are in 92 degree weather in St. Thomas. So what's there to complain about?" said Panto in an interview with The Morning Call. He plans to return to work Friday midday.

"When you're on vacation you roll with the punches," said Panto. "And the punch hasn't been a knockout punch so we are OK."

Officials will be boarding the Explorer of the Seas Ship in the Virgin Islands on Sunday, after it stopped part way through a 10-day cruise from Cape Liberty, N.J., to the Caribbean island of St. Maarten amid reports of vomiting and diarrhea, according to the cruise line and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Some 281 of the 3,050 passengers and 22 of the 1,165 crew members showed symptoms of the fast-spreading infection, according to the CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program, which monitors cruise ships. A CDC Vessel Sanitation Program officer and an epidemiologist planned to board the ship in St. Thomas, will conduct an investigation and evaluate the outbreak and the response.



Photo Credit: AP

Heating System Causes School Delay

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Students at Chester High School get a few more hours before it's time to hit the books after two days off. The Chester Upland School District announced Chester High School is opening two hours late Monday morning. The school has heat, but a problem with the plumbing still needs attention.

"My kids won't be attending and I will be requesting they get an accused absence," said parent Nifate Williams. "We need a new system and they know it. They keep blaming it on the pipes."

Teens were sent home early from school on Thursday due to issues with the school's heating system. Chester High School was dismissed around 10:30 a.m. Thursday after parts of the school were left without heat, the school's principal told NBC10.

Sub-freezing temperatures, hovering in the single digits, were felt across the area Thursday into Friday as the latest arctic blast hits the area -- making the lack of heat a dangerous issue. There have been four confirmed cold weather deaths over the past two days.

The school is investigating the cause of the issue, but officials believe it is centered around a problem with pipes.

The students were dismissed after being given an early lunch Thursday. The principal said officials wanted to make sure the teens ate.

 

Scared Dog Rescued From Icy River

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A lost pit bull named Duke spent hours stranded and confused on the icy Delaware River Sunday afternoon near the Calhoun Street bridge in Trenton.

The dog roamed back and forth from the Trenton side to the Pennsylvania side as dozens of onlookers on both sides of the river tried to rescue the animal. The hopes of those looking on to rescue the dog were thwarted by the ice jam that took over the river, coupled with chilly temperatures, the feeling was one of desperation to get the dog on land.

The temperature was between 17-23 degrees in Trenton at that time, according to First Alert Weather meterologist Tedd Florendo.

A man working nearby the bridge, who did not want to be identified, shared that he got a call that a dog was walking along the ice just after 2 p.m.

"First he was on the Pennsylvania side, then he went toward the New Jersey side. The dog was about 10 feet from me, but wouldn't come any closer," the worker said. "He didn't look aggressive just scared. People looking on were almost to tears over this dog."

A frantic few hours passed as people tried unsuccessfully to call the dog ashore.

The Trenton Fire Department was at the scene, but determined it was not safe to send firefighters onto the river. Residents and onlookers nearby grew more concerned trying to figure out how to get the dog off the frozen body of water. Trenton emergency responders remained on the scene.

"At one time we thought we'd have to leave the animal at the river because it was getting dark," said rescuer Richard Hutchinson.

Hutchinson was one of the animal loving do-gooders who felt compelled to help. Two men risked their own safety, walked onto the river and rescued the dog. They brought the pooch to safety on the kayak. The dog was taken to the West Trenton Animal Shelter where it was reunited with its owner.

"I just want to thank the guys again for rescuing my dog and risking their lives to save his," said Keonna Wilson, Duke's grateful owner.


Contact Sarah Glover at 610-668-5580, sarah.glover@nbcuni.com or follow @skyphoto on Twitter.



Photo Credit: Twitter

Basketball Great Tom Gola Dies

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One of Philadelphia's greatest college athletes has passed away.

Tom Gola was a star basketball player at La Salle University. Gola led La Salle to a NCAA championship and an NIT title in the 1950s. He earned the MVP award in both tournaments.

Gola is a Hall of Famer and one of the best college basketball plays in the history of the Big 5. La Salle named its arena after Gola in 1988.

NBC10 sports reporter John Clark spoke to his widow Caroline last year. She described his health as detoriating over the past decade. Gola suffered a fall in which he hit his head, went into a coma and seizures followed. Gola was 81-years-old.

A Philadelphia native, Gola attended La Salle High School, where he won a Philadelphia Catholic League Championship, and declined numerous college scholarship offers from other schools to play college ball for the university. He is one of only two college players to score more than 2,000 points and grab more than 2,000 rebounds (George Washington's Joe Holup is the other). Gold holds the NCAA record with 2,201 rebounds and left La Salle with 2,461 points, third in school history. The Explorers went 102-19 during his playing career.

Gola also served Philadelphia as a politician. He represented Northeast Philadelphia in the Pennsylvania State House and later served as Philadelphia City Controller. He also was a member of many city and government committees.

More on Gola's life and career here.



Photo Credit: Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image

Teen Stole Car, Gun & Fired

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A 16-year-old boy allegedly stole a car and a gun and then fired once at a state trooper who stopped him on a Pennsylvania interstate Sunday morning, state police said.

Sean Patrick Sellers, of Mifflinburg, is being charged as an adult after police said he fired once at Trooper Michael Quinn around 7 a.m. Sunday on Interstate 81 near Chambersburg, about 50 miles southwest of Harrisburg. The trooper fired back, but neither man was injured.

Sellers was waiting to be arraigned Sunday night and it wasn't immediately clear if he had an attorney.

Sellers allegedly stole the .22-caliber pistol and Chevy Impala from a home in Mifflinburg Sunday morning, state police said, before he was stopped about 100 miles away on the southbound side of I-81 for failure to drive within a single lane. Sellers allegedly fired once at Quinn, police said, before the trooper returned fire after ducking for cover behind his vehicle. Sellers then surrendered to Quinn and other troopers.

The teen faces charges including criminal attempted homicide of a law enforcement officer, aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person, and theft charges.

Quinn was placed on limited duty pending an internal investigation, which police said is routine for any department-involved shooting.

The southbound side of the highway was closed until Sunday afternoon while police investigated.

Police said the shooting is not related to a road rage incident 15 miles further south on I-81 on Jan. 4 that left a 28-year-old Maine man dead. State police said this month that Timothy Davison was shot multiple times after he was followed from Maryland into Pennsylvania. No arrests have been made in that shooting. There was also a shooting seven hours earlier and 50 miles away from where Davison was killed, but police said it wasn't connected.
 

Police Shooting, Chase

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Police launched a manhunt early this morning for a man after they say a man he was with -- a suspect in a weekend homicide -- pointed a gun at officers.

The police search began after Philadelphia Housing Authority officers responded to the report of a shooting inside the lobby of a building at the Norman Blumberg Apartments near 24th and Jefferson Streets in North Philadelphia just before 3 a.m. Monday.

PHA police chased the man on foot as they called Philadelphia Police for backup. Those two housing officers along with a Philadelphia Police officer and an FBI agent in the area caught up with the suspect near a vacant lot along the 2400 block of Stewart Streets, according to Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small.

The man allegedly pointed a semi-automatic handgun at the officers and agent and possibly fired a shot. Police and the agent opened fire, striking the 31-year-old suspect four times.

That man, considered a suspect in a homicide from over the weekend, was rushed to Hahnemann Hospital where he remained in critical condition.

"We believe that there was s second male with the suspect that we had in custody," said Small.

That second man fled the scene towards Oxford Street. Police said that man is considered a person of interest.

"He was running with the initial suspect we caught but we're not really sure what he was involved in," said Small. "However he is a person of interest just because he ran from police and he was with our suspect."

Police remained on the scene for hours after the shooting.

This was the latest police-involved shooting in the city. Shootings involving officers have been under scrutiny including an internal review.

Small said there is "strong" video evidence that the injured man was involved in the deadly shooting of a 23-year-old man shot multiple times along the 2900 block of Ridge Avenue in the Strawberry Mansion section of the city early Sunday.

Small said a witness already identified the injured man as the shooter from inside the PHA building Monday.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

2 Hurt in Pickup Truck Crash

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Victims of a pickup truck crash were rushed to a hospital overnight.

Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Flames Destroy Market

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A fire was difficult to battle in Berks County.

Photo Credit: The Mercury

Mayfair Tire Slashing Trial Begins

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The outspoken, self-proclaimed neighborhood watchmen who once claimed he would break the hands of the person slashing tires in his Philadelphia neighborhood goes on trial today for those acts of vandalism.

David Toledo, the victim turned suspect in the Mayfair tire-slashing spree, faces dozens of charges related to the 2012 vandalism.

Toledo, 46, is accused of vandalizing dozens of cars on his own block and in the area surrounding his home.

Toledo spoke to NBC10 several times after coverage of tire slashings in the area of the 4000 block of Aldine Street -- where he lives -- and surrounding roads began to surface in February 2012.

"I hope the cops get them before the neighbors find out who it is because something bad is going to happen," said Toledo after some cars were vandalized in mid-March. "My wife said 'somebody is watching us watching the cops' because when they're here nothing happens."

Toledo is accused of causing sleepless nights for neighbors concerned that their cars would be vandalized while they slept. A town watch was formed and police even offered a big reward for an arrest in the case.

All along Toledo was there speaking out against the vandalism.

"This will be the last time that you're going to get my car because you will get caught," Toledo told NBC10 after just his tires were slashed on March 20. "The $10,000 reward, I don't want the money, all I want is their hands so I can smash them so they can never do it again."

Toledo's trial was set to begin last March but it was continued until Monday morning.

At Toledo's preliminary hearing, a police officer told the court that after Toledo was arrested, newspaper articles about the vandalism and heavy-duty razor blades were found inside his home.



Photo Credit: Philadelphia Police

Water Floods Veterans Center

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A broken valve sent water gushing from a local veterans center this morning.

Water began pouring out of the first floor of the Veterans Multi-Service Center at 4th and Florist Streets in the Old City section of Philadelphia around 5 a.m. With temps around freezing the water quickly became ice.

Folks from the services center said it appeared the leak was caused by a pump failure in the six-story building.

The ground floor, where the city’s first services center for women specifically opened earlier this month, is where the majority of damaged occurred.

"Having a six-story building with a flood in it that's a big problem for us as far as serving our clients," said Executive Director Tim Meserve.

The veterans charity opened in1980.

Meserve said that the upper floors of the building would be open Monday as they worked to assess the damage to the ground floor.

The cause of the pipe break remained under investigation Monday morning.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Potential Icy Flooding Concerns

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NBC10's Jesse Gary reports on the ice chunks floating along the Delaware River. With more extreme cold on the way, flooding may become an issue.

Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Apartment Complex Fire

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Christine Maddela is in SkyForce10 with the latest on a fire in a Lindenwold, Camden County, N.J. apartment complex.

Photo Credit: SkyForce10
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