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Stolen Flatbed Truck Drags Police Car With NJ Officer Inside

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A police car with an officer inside accidentally got hooked to a stolen flatbed truck and was dragged along the New York State Thruway Monday morning.

The Suffern Police Department said the debacle started when officers in East Rutherford, New Jersey, spotted a stolen flatbed truck out of Hackensack.

They tried to stop the truck but it fled on Route 17 with police in hot pursuit.

 

As the truck neared the New York State Thruway in Suffern, one of the East Rutherford police cars in chase "inadvertently" became hooked onto the rear of the flatbed with the police officer inside, Suffern Police said.

Dispatcher audio captured the high-speed chase as it happened. 

"Speed approximately 55 miles per hour…vehicle’s not stopping," an officer tells the dispatcher. 

One minute later, the officer sends an urgent update: "We got a crash…we got a crash… still going… still going…going 17 north…17 northbound…"

The truck chase continued on the Thruway until the flatbed was stopped on Route 59 near the Suffern border. 

Police said the driver of the flatbed was arrested and no one was injured. 



Photo Credit: Suffern Police Department

Name Adventure Aquarium's Loggerhead Sea Turtle Hatchling

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As hospitals around the Philadelphia region welcomed the first babies of 2017, the Adventure Aquarium in Camden, New Jersey welcomed its own new arrival: a baby loggerhead sea turtle.

The yet-to-be-named turtle hatched in August at the North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores, said the Adventure Aquarium.

The Camden aquarium revealed the turtle as part of its "Baby New Year" initiative. The turtle will spend most of its year at the New Jersey Aquarium’s Sea Turtle Cove exhibit going through a "survival school" program before being released off the coast of North Carolina.

"The hatchling came to us weighing 86 grams and is now over 226 grams," said Nikki Grandinetti, curator of fish and invertebrates at Adventure Aquarium. "He loves jellies and shrimp. He’s also very active and investigates anything with his mouth."

Throughout the month of January, visitors can vote on the hatchling’s name – the finalists are Darwin, Griswold, Groot and Tina – by dropping spare change into a voting booth in the Main Lobby, said the aquarium. [[26343834, C]]



Photo Credit: Adventure Aquarium

NBC10 @Issue: Curing Holiday Debt Hangover

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NBC10’s Tracy Davidson gets expert tips from Patricia Hasson, president & executive director of Calrifi, on how to knock down debt that might have piled up over the holidays.

Photo Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Philadelphia Christmas Tree Recyling Program

Rainy, Warmer Start to 2017 But Cold End to Week

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The New Year is beginning soggy. Gray skies and on-off showers will continue throughout the region Monday afternoon and evening, as well as Tuesday. Wednesday will act as a transitional day, before cooler air filters into the region and high temperatures take a nosedive.

Wet But Warm Beginning to Week

Rain began falling across the region in the early hours of Monday, with some spots sitting below the freezing mark. As a result, a Freezing Rain Advisory was in place for parts of the region early in the morning. The changeover to primarily rain was quick through all zones except the Lehigh Valley and Berks County.

Temperatures climbed above freezing for most throughout the morning, and will remain that way straight through Tuesday. Highs in the low to mid 40s are expected Monday, but temperatures will actually begin climbing through the night into Tuesday morning due to a warm front that will shift into the area. So, lows in Philadelphia Tuesday morning will not even drop into the 30s. By Tuesday afternoon the temperatures will climb to the low-50s.

The moisture push from the southwest will allow for continued rain to fall on and off across the region, especially over New Jersey and Delaware through Monday and Monday evening.  In fact, some steadier rain or pockets of heavier showers are possible Monday afternoon until about 7 p.m. Much lighter and spotty rain will continue through the night and into Tuesday morning. The rain may break altogether briefly overnight (especially in areas to the north and west of Philadelphia), but will return. Here’s a look at one model prediction for 5 a.m. Tuesday indicating light and spotty rain.

While Tuesday morning rain will start light for the morning commute, the day will be gray and soggy again. By Noon the rain should pick back up across the region as the system starts to pass, which will provide pockets of heavier rain the area, too. There’s a higher potential for heavy rain in portions of Delaware and South Jersey. Take a look at the image below:

The steadier rain will move out in the later afternoon and early evening. Some lingering light rain may stick after sunset, but dry out overnight into Wednesday.

Shifting to a Colder January

Wednesday will act as a transitional day. Temperatures will peak in the morning or early afternoon and then begin to fall due to a cold front passage. Highs are expected in the upper-40s to near 50 degrees. Winds will also be stronger, with gusts up to 30 mph.

Once the colder air behind the front moves in, temperatures will drop. Thursday high temperatures will only move into the mid to upper-30s. Take a look at the comparison between the temperature anomaly maps from Tuesday afternoon and Thursday afternoon:


A polar air mass will sink across the area, which will keep temperatures near or below freezing each afternoon Friday through Monday. In fact, this weekend temperatures may never climb above freezing (even in the middle of the afternoon!).

With cold enough air, models are pulling a system into the region that could produce snow. Right now, they are not in agreement with the strength or timing of the system. That means there is still some uncertainty on its actual path and the impact we’ll see. Currently, the NBC10 First Alert Weather Team is calling for a chance of snow showers Friday. This will continue to be monitored and updated over the next several days. 



Photo Credit: Getty Images
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Prosecutor in Pa. Tackles Heroin Scourge That Claimed Son

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The phone at Bruce Brandler's home rang at 3:37 a.m. It was the local hospital. His 16-year-old son was there, and he was in really bad shape.

A suspected heroin overdose, the nurse said.

Brandler didn't believe it. Erik had his problems, but heroin? It seemed impossible.

Nearly 10 years later, the nation is gripped by a spiraling crisis of opioid and heroin abuse — and Brandler, a veteran federal prosecutor recently promoted to interim U.S. attorney, suddenly finds himself in a position to do something about the scourge that claimed his youngest son's life.

Until now, he has never publicly discussed Erik's overdose death. It was private and just too painful. But Brandler, now the chief federal law enforcement officer for a sprawling judicial district that covers half of Pennsylvania, said he felt a responsibility that came with his new, higher-profile job.

"It's easier to cope with the passage of time, but it never goes away," Brandler told The Associated Press in an interview. "And, frankly, this whole heroin epidemic has brought it to the forefront."

Deadly heroin overdoses have more than quintupled in the years since Brandler lost his son. The illicit drug, along with highly addictive prescription pain relievers like oxycodone and fentanyl — a substance more powerful than heroin — now rival car crashes as the leading cause of accidental death in the U.S.

Erik's death proved that heroin doesn't discriminate, Brandler said. He urged parents to "open their eyes" to the threat and talk to their kids.

"I want to evaporate the myth that heroin addicts are just homeless derelicts," said Brandler, who, before his son's overdose, held that impression himself. "This epidemic hits everybody, and I think my situation exemplifies that."

The opioid crisis was already taking root when Brandler began having problems with Erik, the youngest of his three children. The teenager's grades dropped, his friends changed and he began keeping irregular hours. Brandler found marijuana in his room and talked to him about it, figuring that was the extent of his drug use.

Then, in spring 2007, Erik overdosed on Ecstasy and had to be treated at a hospital.

"That elevated it to a different level as far as I was concerned, a much more serious level, and I took what I thought were appropriate steps," Brandler said.

He called the police on his son's dealer, who was prosecuted. That summer, Erik completed an intensive treatment program that included frequent drug testing. Brandler thought his son had turned a corner.

He was mistaken.

On the night of Aug. 18, 2007, Erik and an older friend paid $60 for three bags of heroin. After shooting up, Erik passed out. His breathing became labored, his lips pale. But his companions didn't seek medical treatment, not then and not for hours. Finally, around 3 a.m., they dropped him off at the hospital.

At 5:40 a.m., he was pronounced dead.

Five people were charged criminally, including Erik's friend, who received more than five years in prison.

Brandler still doesn't know why his son, who excelled at tennis, went to a good school and had loads of friends, turned to heroin.

"I thought about that, of course, but it's really a waste of energy and emotions to go down that road because I'll never know the answer," Brandler said from his office near the Pennsylvania Capitol, where a framed photo of Erik — strapping, shaggy-haired and swinging a tennis racket — sits on a credenza.

What he can do is join his fellow prosecutors in tackling the problem.

In September, the Justice Department ordered all 93 U.S. attorneys across the country to come up with a strategy for combating overdose deaths from heroin and painkillers. Brandler released his plan, covering 3.2 million people in central and northeastern Pennsylvania, last month. Like others, it focuses on prevention, enforcement and treatment.

He said his office will prioritize opioid cases resulting in death, and aggressively prosecute doctors who overprescribe pain pills.

Additionally, prosecutors will hit the road — bringing physicians, recovering addicts, family members of overdose victims and others with them — to talk to schools and hard-hit communities.

Parents need to know that "if you think it can't happen to you, it can," Brandler said. "If it happened to me as a federal prosecutor, I think it can happen to anyone, and that's really the message I want to get out."

Federal appeals Judge Thomas Vanaskie said it's a message that needs to be heard.

"Education is the most important thing to me," said Vanaskie, who helps run a court program that gets federal convicts back on their feet and who has been working with a former heroin addict who robbed a bank to feed his addiction. "We've got to prevent people from becoming users."

Vanaskie, who has known Brandler for years, commended him for speaking out.

"Hearing it from him becomes so much more powerful," Vanaskie said. "I know it causes great personal pain on his part, but he personalizes, humanizes this matter."



Photo Credit: AP

NBC10 @Issue: Improve Your Time Management

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NBC10’s Tracy Davidson gets expert tips on how use your time better in the New Year from "I Know How She Does It' author Laura Venderkam.

Photo Credit: NBC10

Bullet Nearly Strikes Baby Sleeping in Crib on New Year's

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It was almost a tragic start to 2017 for a Berks County couple after a bullet entered their home and nearly struck their baby girl.

Josh and Gina Katrinak were inside their Mount Penn home shortly after midnight Sunday while their three young children slept. The couple stood at their window to try and see the New Year’s Eve fireworks show in Reading near the Pagoda when the glass suddenly shattered.

“A couple shards blew up and they were on my shirt,” Josh Katrinak told NBC10. “It hit my face.”

Gina Katrinak said they first thought kids had thrown something through the window. As her husband ran outside to check, Gina saw a bullet on the floor next to her sleeping daughter’s crib.

“It was a life changing moment there,” Josh said.

Police say someone likely fired a rifle to celebrate the New Year and the bullet traveled through the couple’s home.

“The trajectory of this bullet came from the city side of the other side of the mountain,” said Central Berks Regional Police Chief Raymond Serfin. “What people don’t realize is that when you fire a weapon those projectiles return back to earth. They don’t stay up in the sky or go nowhere.”

The couple called police right away. Investigators took the bullet and are currently running tests on it while figuring out who fired the shot. Josh and Gina, meanwhile, are shaken by the incident but grateful no one was hurt.

“Clearly there’s no thought involved,” Gina said. “They think that they’re celebrating. They think that it’s fun to make a lot of noise and the bullets end up somewhere. What goes up comes down and innocent people can be affected and hurt or killed by that.”



Photo Credit: Central Berks Regional Police

NBC10 @Issue: Political Year in Review

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As we enter 2017, NBC10 is taking a look back at the year in politics. NBC10's Tracy Davidson speaks with Villanova University professor Matthew Kerbel and Rutgers University professor Shauna Shames about how 2016's political events will shape 2017.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

New Year Marks a Fresh Start for Pennsylvania Lawmakers

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The New Year marks a fresh beginning for Pennsylvania state lawmakers, who head back to work in Harrisburg on Tuesday. NBC10's Lauren Mayk has the details on what some of those politicians hope to leave behind in 2016.

Photo Credit: WikiMedia Commons

Naked Man Involved in 3 Lewdness Incidents in NJ

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Police are searching for a man who they say was involved in at least three lewdness incidents in Burlington County, New Jersey.

Investigators say a 15-year-old girl and 14-year-old girl were walking to a basketball court on Westerly Drive in Evesham Township Friday shortly before 1 p.m. when they noticed a black Jeep drive by them. They then noticed that the driver, an unidentified man, did not have a shirt on.

A few minutes later the man stopped his vehicle and got out. The girls told police the man was fully naked and ran towards them. The girls ran home and the naked man got back into his vehicle and drove toward Ravens Row, police said. The girls told investigators the man didn’t say anything to them during the incident.

Police also believe the same suspect was involved in a similar incident in Medford Township back on December 21, 2016. A woman told police she was walking on Huntington Circle Drive at 2 p.m. when she saw the suspect exiting an older model Jeep Patriot with a white sticker on the left side of the rear window. The man was completely nude except for a pair of tennis shoes, police say. He exited the vehicle, walked to the back, opened the rear hatch, went back inside his jeep and then drove away without speaking to anyone, according to investigators.

After Medford Police posted about the December 21 incident, another woman came forward and said the same man left his vehicle while naked and stared at a trashcan in Medford back on November 30, 2016.

The suspect is described as a clean shaven, heavyset white male with a faded style haircut in his late 30s to early 40s with pale skin, brown hair and an excessive amount of body hair. If you have any information on his identity, please call Evesham Police at 856-983-1116 or Medford Police Central Dispatch at 609-267-8300.



Photo Credit: NBC10
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Peeping Tom Stares Into Bathroom of NJ Home: Police

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A man who police say was caught on camera staring into the bathroom of a Glassboro, New Jersey home was arrested over the weekend, according to investigators.

On December 28 around 4:50 a.m. a man peered into the bathroom of a house on Pomona Avenue. The suspect, who police later identified as Darnell Harold, was captured on home surveillance video.

Harold was located and taken into police Saturday. He was arrested and charged with peering into a dwelling/window.

Owner Leaves After Dog Attacks Man and German Shepherd

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Police are searching for a woman who they say left a park without identifying herself after her pit bull attacked a man and his German Shepherd, leaving the dog severely injured and his owners knee deep in medical bills.

Vincent Granton was walking his 4-year-old German Shepherd Bruno at Memorial Park on Cooper Road and Carl Hasselhan Drive in Waterford Township, New Jersey back on December 22 around 3 p.m. While Granton and Bruno were walking they saw an unidentified woman with a medium-sized brown Pit Bull Terrier coming towards them. Granton said the Pit Bull then got off its leash and attacked both him and Bruno.

“I was reaching down to try and get the other dog away,” Granton said. “I was actually punching the dog to get him away. He would back up and then he’d come forward again. This was going on like three, four times.”

Granton told NBC10 the attack lasted around ten minutes. He suffered gashes on his arm while Bruno suffered more severe injuries, including a puncture wound on his right side and a two-inch gash in the back of his mouth.

“Blood pouring out of Bruno’s mouth,” Granton said. “I thought he was going to die because the dog would not let go.”

Granton said the woman grabbed her pit bull and left without identifying herself. Since the attack, Bruno has spent several days in the hospital.

Granton and his wife Maria say treatment for Bruno’s injuries has cost them more than $5,000 so far. They’re also not sure whether or not the pit bull that attacked Bruno had rabies.

“It’s just been really difficult on the family too. Not just him being injured but also my husband and then, you know, the stress on both of us,” Maria said while in tears.

The pit bull’s owner is described as a medium-built white woman in her early 50s with shoulder length, dirty blonde hair standing 5-foot-8. Police also say her dog may have bit her during the incident and she may have an injury as a result.

If you have any information on her identity, please call Waterford Township Police at 856-783-4900. Vincent and Maria are also offering a $500 reward to anyone who can help them find the woman and the pit bull.

“This is a dangerous dog to come after a man and a dog who’s in a sitting position, unprovoked,” Maria said. “This is a dog that shouldn’t be out in the street.”

Gas Prices Rise in Our Region

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A new year brings rising gas prices to Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. NBC10's Jim Rosenfield has the details.

Police Arrest NJ Man Accused of Killing Wife

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A man who was on the run after he allegedly murdered his wife in front of their children was arrested, according to police.

A witness spotted Jeremiah Monell, 32, in Folsom, New Jersey Monday around 2:45 p.m. and contacted the New Jersey State Police Buena Vista Barracks, according to investigators. Responding troopers then found Monell hiding in a wooded area off US Highway 322, police said. He was then arrested and taken into custody without incident.

Monell is accused of stabbing his estranged wife, Tara O'Shea-Watson, 35, inside her home on Raymond Drive in Commercial Township on the morning of December 19, 2016.

O'Shea-Watson was found unresponsive and unconscious at the home and was later pronounced dead. Police said the estranged couple's 12-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter were inside the home at the time of the stabbing. Child protective services cared for the children. 

"He just had pure hatred in his heart to do something like this," said O'Shea-Watson's cousin Bryan Dunn. "Especially with the kids in the house."

Investigators said Monell fled the scene in the same 1994 blue Chevrolet S10 pickup truck that they later found on December 20. Troopers later announced a $1,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

Monell, who was taken to an area hospital for a medical evaluation following his arrest, faces murder and weapons charges.

O'Shea-Watson's best friend Jen Messek told NBC10 if not for custody issues regarding the couple's pending divorce, Tara would have left New Jersey for good and moved to Tennessee.

"I didn't see the restraining order but she did have one," Messek said. "This is a tragedy. Not just for the family and the children but for the community."



Photo Credit: New Jersey State Police
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Penn State Stumbles in 4th, Falls to USC in Rose Bowl

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Trace McSorley picked a bad time to start throwing interceptions.

The Penn State quarterback had been nearly flawless in protecting the ball during a nine-game winning streak, but three interceptions in the Rose Bowl, including a pick with 27 seconds remaining that USC safety Leon McQuay returned to the Nittany Lions’ 33-yard line, proved to be the difference in a wild 103rd Rose Bowl.

Despite harnessing its vaunted second-half magic for touchdowns from Saquan Barkley, Chris Godwin and McSorley on the first three offensive plays of the second half, Matt Boermeester kicked a 46-yard field goal as time expired and No. 9 USC rallied to hand No. 5 Penn State a crushing 52-49 defeat in the Rose Bowl on Monday.

McSorley threw consecutive hanging deep balls that McQuay was able to break on — the senior able to collect the second and return it 32 yards — wasting a magnificent charge from Penn State (11-3) behind 193 yards rushing and two touchdowns from Barkley and nine receptions for 187 yards and two touchdowns from Godwin.

Barkley and Godwin accounted for 381 of Penn State’s 465 yards.

It looked as if USC (10-3) would pick up where it left off when these two teams met in 2009 by bombarding the Penn State secondary and cruising to an easy win. McSorley was picked off on Penn State’s first play from scrimmage after Miles Sanders misjudged the opening kickoff and was lucky to fall on it at the 3-yard line, and threw another interception following a missed USC field goal, leading to an early Trojan touchdown.

Sam Darnold threw for 263 yards and three touchdowns in the first half, as USC opened up double-digit leads at 13-0, 20-7 and 27-14. But a third-down face mask penalty on defensive tackle Stevie Tu’ikolovatu while tackling McSorley kept a Nittany Lion drive alive, and a twisting 11-yard touchdown catch by Mike Gesicki sent Penn State into the locker room down just 27-21.   

After propelling itself to a Big Ten title largely on the strength of its adjustments in the second half, Penn State took that advantage to the extreme with Barkley’s 79-yard touchdown run where he juked four USC defenders and broke two tackles while darting across the field, Godwin’s juggling 72-yard touchdown reception, and McSorley’s 3-yard touchdown run after Brandon Bell intercepted Darnold to take a 42-27 lead.  

USC responded with a 25-7 run, tying the game at 49-49 on a 27-yard touchdown pass from Darnold to Burnett with 1:20 left. 

Defense? What Defense
The highest-scoring Rose Bowl in history was a thoroughly entertaining and utterly unpredictable affair, serving as the perfect antidote to two blowouts in the College Football Playoff semifinals. The two teams combined for 1,040 yards, with McSorley throwing for 254 yards and four touchdowns and his USC counterpart Darnold 453 yards and five touchdowns.

Penn State and USC had each allowed less than 20 points per game during winning streaks of nine and eight games, respectively, to end the season.

Glue on Godwin’s Gloves
USC cornerback Adoree’ Jackson dominated the conversation during the week leading up to the game, but Godwin was every bit the equal of the unanimous All-American, if not better. It would be hard to rank the array of impressive receptions Godwin made, but the standout was likely a grab on the final drive of the first half where the junior reached back with his left hand to catch and tuck the ball away on third down to move the chains. 



Photo Credit: CSN Philly

Video of Officer Swinging at Teen Girl Sparks Investigation

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An investigation is underway after two videos were posted on social media showing a Philadelphia police officer swinging at a teen girl following an out of control brawl between two groups. 

Takeema Bundy told NBC10 the incident occurred between 3:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Monday on 54th Street and Springfield Avenue in Southwest Philadelphia. Bundy says a group of about 30 people confronted another family at the location to fight. The family inside the house then called police, according to Bundy.

When police arrived, a large brawl ensued between the two groups in the street which responding police officers attempted to break up, according to Bundy. That’s when witnesses began recording.

A video posted on Instagram first shows the groups fighting. It then shows a police officer grabbing a teen girl and pushing her away. The teen girl yells at the officer who continues to push her back. As the officer and teen girl confront each other the camera briefly turns away. It then turns back and shows the officer throwing the teen girl to the ground. The officer then repeatedly swings at the teen while on top of her as the teen girl swings back. The officer then pulls the teen girl up by her hair and the video ends.

“They threw me against the car and they slammed her on the ground,” the teen’s legal guardian, who did not want to be identified, told NBC10.

Another video posted on Facebook also shows the incident between the officer and the teen though it does not show the large brawl that occurred right before.

Bundy, who is also a friend of the teen, claimed the girl was actually trying to break up the brawl but threw a punch at someone before she was confronted by the police officer. She also told NBC10 the teen's mother died two weeks ago.

“I just feel like she didn’t deserve it,” Bundy said while in tears. “She lost her mom. She don’t got nobody and I feel she was there for me and look where she’s at.”

The teen girl is currently in police custody and being processed. As for the video, Philadelphia Police say they’re aware of it and its being investigated by the Internal Affairs Division.

“She’s 16-years-old,” Bundy said. “I don’t think she deserves that. The cop shouldn’t have done that. That lady was like 30 something.”

Police have not revealed what led to the confrontation between the officer and the teen and they have not confirmed Bundy’s account.

Warning: These videos contain violence and strong language


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10 at 7: What You Need to Know Today

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Here are the 10 things you need to know to start your day from your friends at NBC10.

TODAY'S TOP STORY

Video of Officer Swinging at Teen Girl Sparks Investigation: An investigation is underway after two videos were posted on social media showing a Philadelphia police  officer swinging at a teen girl following an out of control brawl between two groups. Takeema Bundy told NBC10 the incident occurred between 3:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Monday on 54th Street and Springfield Avenue in Southwest Philadelphia. Bundy says a group of about 30 people confronted another family at the location to fight. The family inside the house then called police, according to Bundy. When police arrived, a large brawl ensued between the two groups in the street which responding police officers attempted to break up, according to Bundy. That’s when witnesses began recording. A video posted on Instagram first shows the groups fighting. It then shows a police officer grabbing a teen girl and pushing her away. The teen girl yells at the officer who continues to push her back. As the officer and teen girl confront each other the camera briefly turns away. It then turns back and shows the officer throwing the teen girl to the ground. The officer then repeatedly swings at the teen while on top of her as the teen girl swings back. The officer then pulls the teen girl up by her hair and the video ends.

YOUR FIRST ALERT FORECAST  

Rain is expected for much of Tuesday. But Wednesday is expected to be dry with temperatures in the 50s. The cold air should return by Thursday and snow is possible for late Thursday night into Friday. Saturday and Sunday are expected to be cold but dry. High Temp: 48 Degrees. Get your full NBC10 First Alert forecast here.

WHAT YOU MISSED YESTERDAY

Police Arrest NJ Man Accused of Stabbing Wife to Death: A man who was on the run after he allegedly murdered his wife in front of their children was arrested, according to police. A witness spotted Jeremiah Monell, 32, in Folsom, New Jersey Monday around 2:45 p.m. and contacted the New Jersey State Police Buena Vista Barracks, according to investigators. Responding troopers then found Monell hiding in a wooded area off US Highway 322, police said. He was then arrested and taken into custody without incident. Monell is accused of stabbing his estranged wife, Tara O'Shea-Watson, 35, inside her home on Raymond Drive in Commercial Township on the morning of December 19, 2016. O'Shea-Watson was found unresponsive and unconscious at the home and was later pronounced dead. Police said the estranged couple's 12-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter were inside the home at the time of the stabbing. Child protective services cared for the children.

AROUND THE WORLD

Nationwide Customs Outage Over, But Airports Clogged With Travelers: A four-hour outage for U.S. Customs and Border Protection left throngs of angry passengers dealing with significant delays from South Florida to Boston to Los Angeles for several hours Monday afternoon and evening. Customs and Border Protection, or CBP, said the "technology disruption" began about 5 p.m. ET and was resolved by 9 p.m. All airports were back up and running late Monday, CBP said. "At this time, there is no indication the service disruption was malicious in nature," the agency said. Passengers on more than 30 international flights were affected in Miami, an airport official told NBC Miami. One traveler told the station that two people passed out waiting in line.

TODAY'S TALKER

Gas Prices Rise in Our Region: A new year brings rising gas prices to Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.

SPORTS SPOT

PSU Loses Rose Bowl: Penn State lost 49 to 52 against USC in the Rose Bowl. Get your full sports news at CSNPhilly.

PHOTO OF THE DAY

See more Top News Photos here.

THROUGH IGER'S EYES

@unitefitness captured this cool photo of some people excited for exercise.

Have an awesome Instagram photo you'd like to share? Tag it with #NBC10Buzz.

TODAY'S VIRAL VIDEO

Where is the best hot dog? Watch more here.

A LITTLE SWEETENER 

Philly-Area Hospitals Welcome First Babies of 2017: Several hospitals in the local area welcomed the first babies of 2017. Take a look at the new families. Read more.


That's what you need to know. We've got more stories worthy of your time in the Breakfast Buzz section. Click here to check them out


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Delaware & National Politicians Get Working

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Members of the 115th Congress as well as Wilmington's new mayor will be sworn-in Tuesday.

Son Faces Murder Charges

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Police have charged a man with murder following the suspicious death of a 69-year-old woman found dead inside her apartment, a spokesperson for the Hudson County Prosecutor's Office said. 

Micahel Metro, the woman's son, has been charged with murder. He is currently in custody and being treated at the Jersey City Medical Center.

There were reports that a person had jumped from the building at the corner of East 50th Street and Avenue E Saturday. Neighbors initially believed it was a tragic New Year's accident when they spotted Michael Metro bloodied and bruised, lying in the courtyard of the Bayonne public housing complex. 

"Honestly thought he fell off the gate truthfully until I looked up and saw the window open," said neighbor Aailiyah Ingram. "I heard a thump, looked out, head a man screaming for help. He was lying on the ground."

Some people called 911. Neighbor Francisco Batista came to his aid. He said he climbed a fence and saw him lying on the ground until police arrived.

Officers broke through the front door of Metro's third floor apartment, where they discovered the body of his 69-year-old mother, Cathy Metro. A neighbor who spoke with News 4 under the condition of anonymity said she is shocked.

"I asked a police officer 'is she okay?' because he lives with his mother," she said. "He looked at me and was like, 'No, she's not. He killed her.'"

Sources told News 4 that housing authority had issued a restraining order to keep him off the property, despite neighbors claims that her son always appeared to be well-mannered.



Photo Credit: NBC 4 New York
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