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Overturned Big Rig Blocks Ramp From I-95 to Blue Route

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A tractor-trailer overturned overnight, blocking the ramp between two of the Philadelphia area’s busiest highways.

The big rig flipped on the ramp from southbound Interstate 95 to northbound Interstate 476 (the Blue Route) in Woodlyn, Delaware County around 3:45 a.m. Wednesday.

No word yet on the condition of the driver, said Pennsylvania State Police.

The wreck closed the ramp for hours as crews investigated and worked on a plan to unload the trailer. As the morning rush picked up, traffic began to backup along I-95.

If you need to go north on the Blue Route, you can access the roadway from MacDade Boulevard.

The ramp from northbound I-95 remained open.



Photo Credit: SkyForce10
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Missing NJ Woman Found Dead in Trunk of Car: Prosecutor

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A missing 41-year-old New Jersey woman has been found dead in the trunk on her car in Newark, authorities say. 

The Essex County prosecutor's office says Diana Boggio was killed, though it's not clear where that happened. 

Boggio's body was found in the trunk of her Honda Accord at about 9 a.m. Tuesday at 25 Verona Ave., the prosecutor's office says. 

The medical examiner will determine the cause and manner of death. 

Boggio, of Belleville, had been reported missing Saturday afternoon. 

The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to contact 877-847-7432. 



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Some Democrats Vow to Challenge Trump's Supreme Court Pick

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President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court pick, Appeals Court Judge Neil Gorsuch, heads to Capitol Hill Wednesday to begin meeting with lawmakers. NBC10’s Pamela Osborne is in our Digital Operations Center with a closer look at the nominee and what hurdles he could face.

Car Flips, 3 Hurt in Montco Crash

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A crash Tuesday night injured three people and left a car overturned in a parking lot along a busy Montgomery County road.

A 2010 Ford Fusion and a Honda Accord collided around 7 p.m. along Bethlehem Pike (Route 309) and Line Lexington Road in Hatfield, Pennsylvania, said Hatfield police.

The wreck left the Fusion with heavy front-end damage and left the Accord upside down in a nearby parking lot, said investigators.

Medics rushed the Ford Fusion driver to Abington Memorial Hospital by ambulance and the passenger of the Accord to Abington by medivac. Medics took the Accord driver to Lehigh Valley Hospital by ambulance, said police.

Police didn’t immediately identify the crash victim and didn’t reveal exact conditions.

Crews investigated the crash for hours as investigators attempted to figure out what caused the wreck.

Police asked anyone with information concerning this crash to call Cpl. Michael Sloan at 215-855-0903, ext. 245, or Sgt. Jeffrey Boyd at 215-855-0903, ext. 241.



Photo Credit: SkyForce10

NBC10 Responds: Gift Card Problems

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Janice Lindsey shopped for a holiday gift and says she ended up being charged not once, not twice but four times. When the company supposedly corrected the issue she was still shortchanged and that is when she contacted NBC10 Responds and Harry Hairston.

2 Chair Models Pulled in Massive Recalls

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Two separate furniture recalls announced Tuesday pull a vast number of chairs over the risk of them breaking and causing falls. 

About two million patio chairs sold at Home Depot and about 315,000 bar chairs sold at Lowe's are involved in the recall, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced.

Casual Living Worldwide manufactured the two million chairs sold at Home Depot stores in the U.S., Mexico and Canada. The recall includes Hampton Bay Anselmo, Calabria, Dana Point chairs as well as Martha Stewart Living-branded Cardona, Grand Bank and Wellington swivel patio chairs, the safety commission announced.

There have been 25 reports of the chairs breaking, causing injuries from falls. 

The chair set was sold from January 2007 to February 2016 for about $190 for two-piece patio set and $500 for a seven-piece patio set.

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled chairs and contact Casual Living Worldwide for a free repair kit.

Separately, 3i corporation manufactured 315,000 swivel chairs sold at Lowe's department stores that are now being recalled. 

Allen + roth-brand Safford model and Garden Treasures-brand Lakeview model bar chairs are affected by the recall, according to the safety commission.

The company has received 457 reports of the bar chairs breaking, resulting in broken ribs, head injuries and scrapes and bruises. 

The chairs were sold through Lowe's from November 2008 to August 2016 and cost approximately $700 for the set.

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled chairs and contact 3i Corporation for a free replacement base and a repair kit.



Photo Credit: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission

Gun at Delco School Leads to Arrest of 2 Students

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Police in Delaware County praised school administration, fellow students and officers on the scene after a gun was confiscated at Upper Darby High School Wednesday morning.

No students at the Lansdowne Avenue school were hurt and Upper Darby police officers arrested two UDHS students, said police.

“UDHS administration received information about the weapon possession and acted quickly and decisively along with police on scene to administer a safe arrest,” said UD police in a Facebook post.

The students made no direct threats to do harm, said police.

“We would like to thank the UDHS for their efforts and for constantly working with police to insure the safety of all students,” said police. “There are also a number of students that came forward with information and we thank them for their courage.”

Police hoped that this story will help others come forward when faced with a potentially dangerous situation.

“We believe this to be an isolated incident and not reflective of the wonderful students we have at UDHS,” said police.

More details are expected to be revealed at an 11 a.m. news conference you can WATCH LIVE on this page.



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Details on Delco Teacher Accused of Assaulting Student

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Police in Delaware County planned to reveal details Wednesday about a teacher facing charges of assaulting a juvenile student.

Radnor Township Police planned an 11:30 a.m. news conference about the arrest of a Radnor school teacher accused in the assault. Police didn't immediately reveal the teacher's identity.

WATCH the announcement LIVE on this page.

The goal of getting information out to the public is to make sure the teacher has no other allegations against him or her, said police.


Man Accused of Murder After Missing Woman Found in Trunk

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A 42-year-old man has been charged with murder in the death of a missing 41-year-old New Jersey woman whose body was found in the trunk of her own car. 

Pedro Lora-Pena, of Belleville, also faces charges of unlawful possession of a handgun and moving or concealing human remains in the death of his girlfriend Diana Boggio. The Belleville woman was found in her Honda Accord on Verona Avenue in Newark Tuesday, three days after she was reported missing. 

Prosecutors say a preliminary investigation indicates Boggio was killed somewhere else and then brought to Newark. 

The medical examiner is working to determine how she died. 

It wasn't immediately clear if Lora-Pena had an attorney who could comment on his behalf.



Photo Credit: Handout

Save the Bacon: Pork Belly Reserves Hit 50-Year Low

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Warning: Some may find the content of this story disturbing. 

U.S. bacon reserves have hit a 50-year low, sending prices for the scrumptious breakfast meat upward as pig farmers struggle to keep up with demand, according to a recent report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. 

Frozen pork belly, where bacon comes from, totaled 17.8 million pounds at the end of 2016, a decrease of 35.6 million pounds from 2015, per USDA data. In the month of December alone, the drop in total pork inventories totaled 41 million pounds from the end of November. It's the lowest amount in storage since records began in 1957.

The Ohio Pork Council, which works to benefit all Ohio pork producers, is sounding the alarm. 

“Today’s pig farmers are setting historic records by producing more pigs than ever. Yet our reserves are still depleting,” said Rich Deaton, the group's president. 

But Deaton vowed the pork industry would not run out of supply. 

"Ohio farmers will continue to work hard to ensure consumers receive the products they crave," he said. 

The USDA also says heightened demand for U.S. pork products, particularly pork belly, among consumers domestically and abroad may be to blame for the declining inventory. Because demand is outpacing supply, consumers can expect the price of pork belly to keep going up, which would mean paying more for bacon. In the first three weeks of January alone, pork belly prices have risen 20 percent, according to Ohio's Country Journal.

Garth Brooks to Bring Country to South Philly

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Country music legend Garth Brooks fans can rejoice.

The music icon is returning to Philadelphia for the first time in nearly two decades.

Brooks announced Wednesday that he will be performing at the Wells Fargo Center Saturday, March 25. His wife, Trisha Yearwood, is set to open the show. 

The spring concert -- Brooks' first since 1998, according to organizers -- will mark the best-selling solo artist's last Pennsylvania appearance of his World Tour.

Tickets will go on sale Friday, Feb. 10 at 10 a.m. on the Wells Fargo Center website. The tickets, which are priced at $74.98 with fees, may also be purchased by phone at 1-844-442-7842.



Photo Credit: AP

5 Foods to Keep Your Heart Healthy

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The Today Show’s health and nutrition expert, Joy Bauer, gives insight to foods you can eat to keep your cholesterol low.

New Fertility Test Helps Women With Trouble Conceiving

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A newfertility test called ERA can dramatically improve the odds that in vitro fertilization will work. NBC10 has more.

Voters React to President’s Supreme Court Pick

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President Trump selected Neil Gorsuch to fill the vacant Supreme Court seat. NBC10’s Lauren Mayk found out how voters feel about the President’s pick.

Work Begins to Dismantle Huge Jersey Shore Antenna Field

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Work started this week to dismantle a huge antenna field that used to be crucial in providing communication with ships at sea. NBC10 Jersey Shore Bureau Reporter Ted Greenberg tells us why it’s being removed from the shore landscape.

NJ School Bus Driver Dies After Crashing Into Trees

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A school bus driver died from his injuries after he crashed into trees while students were on board in West Windsor, New Jersey.

The 73-year-old man was driving seven West Windsor-Plainsboro High School students on Zaitz Farm Road around 3 p.m. Wednesday when he lost control of the vehicle. The school bus struck a tree branch and then struck another tree before finally stopping off the roadway.

Responding medics took the driver to the University Medical Center at Princeton Plainsboro where he later died from his injuries. Police have not released the driver’s identity but say he was a resident of Monroe Township, New Jersey. They also say he may have had a medical issue that caused him to lose control of the school bus.

One of the students on the bus, a 14-year-old girl, said she felt pain in her wrist and hand area but declined medical attention at the scene. No other students were injured.

President Visits Dover Air Force Base to Honor Fallen Navy SEAL

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President Trump made an unannounced visit to the Dover Airforce Base in Delaware on Wednesday. He paid his respects to a fallen Navy SEAL. NBC10’s Randy Gyllenhaal has the details.

NBC10 First Alert Weather: Temperatures Dropping

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When will colder air move into our region? NBC10 First Alert Weather Chief Meteorologist Glenn “Hurricane” Schwartz has your most accurate forecast.

Girl on NJ Boys Basketball Team?

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The New Jersey girl who sued her school in a bid to play on the boys basketball team has been expelled, her family learning the news as his daughter was meeting the New York Liberty at Madison Square Garden training center Wednesday night. 

Sydney Phillips, a seventh-grader with WNBA dreams, was invited to try out with the pro women's basketball team after they learned she wasn't being allowed to play hoops with the boys at her school. 

Sydney, her sister Katie and friend Grace got to meet Liberty players and Olympic medalist Teresa Weatherspoon.

"It is all about girls having the opportunity," said Weatherspoon. 

For Sydney, the tour was a night to remember. 

"They told me they play with boys all the time," said Sydney. 

Sydney had no opportunity to play at St. Theresa's School in Kenilworth. There aren't enough girls to form a girls team, and the school wouldn't let her play with boys. 

When Sydney’s dad Scott Phillips asked why his daughter couldn’t play on the boys team, he says he was told, “Boys play with boys, girls play with girls.”

“It has to start being more equal. We have to come with the times,” Scott Phillips told NBC 4 previously.

Sydney's family sued for a chance to play on the boys' team, arguing she was being discriminated against because she is a girl and the school, which is part of the Newark Archdiocese, does not have a specific rule prohibiting girls from playing on boys teams.

But a judge said the family could not prove that their daughter had a legally established right to play basketball with the boys.

The family was appealing the judge's Jan. 5 ruling. They said they're not satisfied with the school's offer to find her another team. 

"I'm bummed I couldn't play," Sydney told NBC 4 New York Wednesday. "I'm better than them." 

Knicks legend Herb Williams complimented Sydney on her game at the MSG Training Center in Tarrytown, and her night was made. But just as quickly, the family's spirit was crushed: her father, Scott Phillips, got word from the family's attorney during the tour that both his daughters were expelled from the school.

"I was baptized here, I got married here, and this is what the church does?" said Phillips. 

It's not clear why the girls were kicked out. The archdiocese of Newark told NBC 4 it does not comment on individual student matters. 

"These girls did nothing wrong," said Scott Phillips. "The church should be ashamed." 

Scott Phillips refrained from sharing the news with his daughters while at the MSG Training Center, not wanting to sour their exciting night. He said he doesn't know how he'll find another school for them on Thursday.



Photo Credit: NBC 4 NY

Doctor's Death in Montco Jail Custody Is 25th Since '07

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The death of Dr. David Kennedy while imprisoned at Montgomery County Correctional Facility last month remains under investigation, with county officials waiting for final tests to come back before they announce a cause.

Kennedy, 48, was found dead inside the hilltop jail in Eagleville in the early morning hours of Dec. 18. The Pennsburg pediatrician was awaiting a preliminary hearing on child pornography charges after he was unable to post $250,000 bail.

For Montgomery County, his death is not an isolated incident over the last decade, according to records obtained by NBC10.com through a right-to-know request.

Kennedy is the 25th county inmate to die in custody since 2007.

In two of those deaths, resulting lawsuits led to $462,500 in settlements, the county said. An assistant county solicitor refused to identify which inmates' deaths prompted the lawsuits. But federal court records indicate that one of the settlements was for $325,000 in the death of Patricia Pollock. The 25-year-old woman died Sept. 27, 2011 from "acute fulminant verrucous endocarditis," or sudden and severe inflammation of the heart, according to the county.

Before she died, Pollock had been in custody on $10,000 bail for theft and DUI charges, according to a published report. The lawsuit contended that the jail's medical staff ignored Pollock's symptoms for more than four days before she was eventually transported to Mercy Suburban Hospital in East Norriton, where she died. It remains unclear how much of that settlement was paid by the county, since the contractor that handled the jail's medical services at the time was also a defendant in the lawsuit.

That contractor, Correctional Medical Care, was paid $4 million a year, Newsworks reported in 2013. The county since switched to another medical provider for the facility, the website reported.

In addition to Pollock's death, 17 other inmates died from medical emergencies or illnesses, county records show.

Five of the inmate deaths were by "suicide, hanging," with a sixth described as "hanging in cell."

Montgomery County Correctional Facility Warden Julio Algarin defended his jail's ability to "screen for mental health problems" and noted that his staff oversees a suicide watch program.

"Unlike the national trends, we have not seen an increase in suicides in our prison. In fact, we only had one suicide in the last three years," Algarin said in a statement.

He added, "I am very proud to note that we prevented 38 suicides in 2016."

The 18 deaths ruled to be from various medical conditions included two heart attacks and two cases of live cancer. None of the 25 death records provided included names of the inmates, including Kennedy's, whose record includes "pending investigation" for reason of death. An assistant Montgomery County solicitor cited healthcare privacy laws in refusing to identify the inmates. Some of the inmates have been identified in previously published reports, however.

David Minnich, who was awaiting charges of aggravated indecent assault of a child, died Dec. 20, 2012 by hanging himself in his cell. His wife sued the county for in excess of $175,000, according to an online news report. Federal court records indicate a settlement was reached, but the amount was sealed.

Another reported inmate death was that of a former finance director for the Valley Forge Convention and Visitor's Bureau. William T. Barnes, 72, was the oldest of the 25 inmates to die. He died at the prison from heart decease, May 27, 2012.

Algarin said the county's inmate population averages about 11,000 inmates each year and with such a large number of people comes medical emergencies and illnesses.

"We take the health and welfare of those in our custody very seriously. And like any community, members of our prison population suffer from heart disease, kidney disease, cancer and other illnesses," Algarin said. "The Correctional Facility offers ongoing medical care and treatment for those inmates with health problems and we are quick to respond in medical emergencies."

Some details to the inmate deaths include:

- Fourteen of the deaths occurred inside the jail, nine occurred at Mercy Suburban Hospital, one occurred at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and one occurred at the now-closed Montgomery Hospital in Norristown.

- The youngest inmate to die in custody was a 22-year-old found dead in his jail cell, Oct. 7, 2012. The cause of death was ruled "hanging in cell." He was in custody for what the county described only as "Drug Act X." 

- After Barnes, the second-oldest inmate to die was a 64-year-old on June 19, 2011. The cause was "metastatic lung cancer."

- Since the beginning of 2014, five inmates have died in custody, including Kennedy. The three previous years, 2011 to 2013, 13 inmates died.

County funding for the correctional facility has increased more than $8 million from 2011 to 2016, according to budget figures.

Algarin said an additional $2 million has been invested in psychiatric services and medical professional staffing at the jail.

"We increased medical professional staffing hours by around 43 percent," he said.

A deputy county coroner said Tuesday that the last tests of the autopsy are pending final review by a pathologist.
"We did some tests beyond toxicology," he said.


Photo Credit: Brian X. McCrone/NBC10
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