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Families Seeking Asylum Held Indefinitely at Pa. ICE Center

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At an ICE family detention center in Pennsylvania, one 10-year-old girl’s medical records tell two different stories. 

The Berks County Residential Center’s contracted psychologist held several check-ins with the child and her mother while they were detained between December 2015 and May 2016. In his notes, the psychologist described a woman who could not discipline her daughter and a girl who threw tantrums when she didn’t get her way. He wrote that he "politely reminded" the mom that she could "set boundaries." 

As to the child's bedwetting, he suggested that she visit a urologist, just in case. But he wrote, "the impression she left on me and the interpreter was that her enuresis was related to nothing more than laziness." 

While at Berks, the girl's condition dramatically worsened. She visited an adult urologist during the last month of her stay and never saw a pediatrician.

She was hospitalized in mid-March, 10 months after her release. She has potassium in her urine, and her doctors told her that her disease is incurable. A transplant would prove too difficult, and both her kidneys are failing. 

"Now, she has permanent damage," said Bridget Cambria, one of the pro-bono lawyers who represent detainees at Berks. 

For 14 families, all without criminal records, life at Berks County Residential Center has become a long-term reality. In phone interviews, three current detainees told NBC they've grown tired of an education system that barely teaches, a medical unit that doesn't meet their needs, a cafeteria with inedible food, and a staff with no comprehension of their culture. But mostly, they're sick of lingering in limbo. 

“I think the bottom line is the facility’s not meant for people to be there for 18 months,” Cambria said. “It’s not a place where you live.”

She and her associates, who are based in Reading, Pennsylvania, connected NBC with the mothers, who spoke under the condition that they remain anonymous for fear of retaliation from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the facility’s staff, and their abusers back home. 

The center is run by county employees and contractors who advocates say lack fundamental aptitudes for their jobs. The children at Berks could be better served in the open, where more qualified and diverse individuals would see to their needs.

When the 10-year-old girl continually had nighttime accidents at Berks, not all medical professionals missed her warning signs.

One of the lawyers brought in someone from the outside to re-assess her. Kathryn S. Miller, a registered clinical social worker and play therapist-supervisor, noticed how close the family was -- how when the mother began to cry, her daughter quickly handed her a tissue and later affectionately plucked a piece of lint from her shirt. Miller asked them why they had left El Salvador, and they told her about the gang activity that had forced them to run. They had often heard gunshots around their home, and their neighbors would be robbed or disappear.

In Miller’s notes, she wrote that the girl said gang members would “do bad things, and that’s why I’m so scared.” One had broken into her house to hide from the police. When he was in her home, she had been afraid for her life and her loved ones.

While Berks' psychologist questioned whether the child had wished to flee El Salvador in the first place, Miller thought she had post-traumatic stress disorder. That didn’t necessarily explain the bedwetting, though, so she recommended a “comprehensive physical examination by a pediatrician who specializes in the care of children in order to determine the root cause of her chronic enuresis and develop a plan for treating this condition.”

The psychologist declined comment to NBC on his work at Berks and directed contact through ICE, which has not granted an interview with him.

Tucked among the backroads of Leesport, Pennsylvania, Berks County Residential Center exclusively hosts immigrant parents and children as they wait to learn their fate. It is one of three ICE facilities that hold families; the other two are used for short-term detention in Texas. It’s hidden, and locals might be surprised to find out it’s even there.

At the two-floor center that holds up to 96 people, stark white walls surround detainees day and night in dorm-style rooms that, for some, become their home for years.

“It’s such a creepy place,” said Karen Hoffmann, a legal advocate for immigrants at Berks.

Beginning in November 2015, over two dozen immigrant families filed habeas corpus lawsuits that collectively comprise Castro v. Department of Homeland Security. Fourteen of the families are still at Berks. In the case, detainees who had failed their credible fear interviews for asylum decried the U.S. immigration system because of its lack of external review and asked for another chance to remain in the United States. The American Civil Liberties Union spearheaded the suit and has pushed it all the way to the Supreme Court.

All of the families involved in Castro were detained after crossing the southern border. Their confidential interview and habeas documents indicate that they were primarily asked “yes” or “no” questions, sometimes not even in their native languages, and they were often cut off mid-sentence during the interview process, according to their attorneys. After they had failed their interviews, immigration judges rubber-stamped those decisions during five-minute hearings. All of the immigrants were assigned to expedited removal and put in detention while awaiting deportation.

The asylum interviews took place under President Barack Obama's administration. Our former commander in chief cracked down on undocumented families after the 2014 immigration crisis, when women and children flocked to the United States seeking refuge from violence in El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala.

Since taking office, President Donald Trump has revamped expedited removal to apply to undocumented residents who have lived in the United States for up to two years, a dramatic extension of the policy.

“This is what Trump wants to do,” said Reading-based immigration attorney Jackie Kline. “He wants to expand expedited removal so that every single person who touches U.S. soil, at an airport, at a border, every one of them is put into expedited removal, every one of them is put into a detention center until their case is over. So they’re already taking this Castro [case] and just blowing it up.”

In the early 2010s, a majority of asylum cases were granted, but numbers plunged after 2014. Last year, more than 56 percent of cases were denied, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University. Given Trump’s platform, they may continue to drop.

Both Obama and Trump said that undocumented criminals were their priority for deportation, but none of the immigrants in the Castro case have a criminal record, according to Hoffmann. 

“Help us," begged one detainee from El Salvador. "We’re paying for a crime. We’re not criminals. We’re single mothers searching for refuge.”

The Third Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Philadelphia ruled against the immigrant families in August, refusing them the capacity to challenge their deportation. That decision meant that “enemy combatants in Guantanamo who are not even on U.S. soil have more rights than asylum seekers,” Kline said.

“How can that be, that people that you say are terrorists, who are trying to blow up the United States, who haven’t even touched U.S. soil, have more rights to court procedure than a mom and child who are fleeing for their lives?” she asked.

The Supreme Court is expected to decide if it will hear the case in mid- to late-April. If it does hear Castro, the detainees’ attorneys hope their clients will be set free until the scheduled court date, which could be set for years from now. If they win the case, they will be able to re-interview for asylum.

But if the appeal is denied in the next few weeks, all of the families will most likely be deported.

Since the lawsuit was filed almost a year and a half ago, ICE has maintained that everyone involved must remain in detention until a final ruling, according to the families’ attorneys. Still, about half have been released because of medical issues or outside pressure, upon the discretion of ICE officials. The rest wonder why their illnesses — diabetes, or their children’s ever-declining weight, or crippling depression — do not qualify them for discharge.

While the families wait to learn the Supreme Court’s decision, their kids are growing up in confinement, and advocates say the center is not equipped for years-long stays.

"ICE is committed to ensuring that residents at the Center are provided a safe, secure and humane environment as they go through the immigration process, which also includes those who remain at the Center for extended periods of time," officials said in a statement.

In August, some of the mothers went on a hunger strike to demand their release, so fed up with the system that they were willing to forgo basic nutrition for weeks. Many of them are still at Berks. Amnesty International USA launched a campaign in March to free four children who all have Special Immigrant Juvenile Status and who have been in detention for over 500 days.

One of the mothers in the Castro case is from Honduras and has a 3-year-old son. When they crossed the border, he was only 22 months old. After getting picked up and transferred from Karnes County Residential Center in Texas, they have spent 18 months at Berks while her parents and siblings wait for them on the outside.

“Half of his life has been locked up,” she told NBC. “He’s learned everything here.”

She said that the children aren’t allowed to run around, and that her son spends all his time by her side, always monitored and controlled. Staffers tell her that he should be seated, and that he has no need to run and explore, she said.

The Berks Resident Handbook, which was included as evidence in a court case, says that children under 10 "are expected to be under the direct supervision of their parent at all times" unless there's an organized activity, or they're in school. Kids over 10 can get free movement passes, if their parents agree.

ICE officials said in a statement to NBC that "similar to other child care facilities and schools" detainees are allowed to run in the center's recreational areas. 

School-aged children attend classes during the morning and early afternoon, for five hours each day, according to ICE. While they study, their moms wipe down almost the entire facility — the kitchen, lobby, phone areas, bathrooms, practically everything but the ICE offices.

“Once you drop your kids off, out comes the cleaning cart and you start cleaning,” Cambria said.

Though the work program is technically voluntary and pays one dollar a day, mothers take part because if they are assigned to the kitchen shift, they’re given juices and ice cream for their kids, who they say won’t eat most of the other food in the cafeteria because it's gross. Menus from May and June 2016 show that residents had access to rice, beans and tortillas, but main courses tended more toward carb-loaded American favorites like pizza, chicken tenders, and hot pockets.

In class, three teachers and two assistants cover five subjects -- including physical education -- for all grade levels. In a statement to NBC, ICE wrote that "the curriculum is individualized for students based on their learning profiles and academic needs." In practice, kids are doled out worksheets or handed books for self-study.

Some detainees and their representatives indicated that the education is inadequate. When Hoffmann, the legal advocate, visited an 11-year-old at Berks, the girl asked if they could watch “Barbie: Princess Charm School.” It was what they were doing in class, she said.

Most kids "really want to go to school and really want to learn," said Kline, one of the attorneys. "And then here’s this school where they are doing worksheets and no one’s teaching them anything." 

Loulou, a young Syrian woman who was detained with her father for six months when she was 15 and 16 before being granted asylum, has deferred an offer of admission from Rutgers University, where she plans to study mathematics, to work for a year. She asked to use her nickname without her last name because members of her family are still waiting to come to the United States.

Loulou said that while at Berks, she didn't feel discriminated against by her teachers, but she added, “I never learned anything new.” All of the assignments were “primary school level,” and her instructors struggled to teach her. They would give her a vocabulary list each day that she would have to define, “and that was basically it” for language arts, she said.

Sometimes, when the English teacher taught her math, she would just read from a textbook. If she had any questions about a problem, she was told to skip it.

Loulou thinks the Berks education would hold back most people. When she was released two years ago and attended public high school, she said, “I had to work really hard to catch up with everybody else.”

Art projects are popular among the teachers. On the walls near the visitation area, crafty assignments for the season ask the children to describe where they hope to travel in the summer, or what they want for Christmas in December. For St. Patrick’s Day this year, the attorneys said the kids had to fill out prompts about why they were lucky.

”What they want to write is ‘I’m lucky because... I’m not. I’m stuck in this place, and I can’t leave,’” Cambria said.

Some children ask their advocates for supplementary books. Before Donald Trump was elected, a 12-year-old boy requested a copy of "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich" in Spanish, Hoffmann said. The kid's mother complained in Flores v. Holder, another case that involved Berks, that her son "gets bored" in class. Inn a June 2016 declaration, Joshua G. Reid, ICE assistant field office director in Philadelphia, responded by saying that the boy had been moved from the third- to sixth-grade classroom to a seventh- to tenth-grade level, where he appeared to be "challenged, yet doing well."

One of the mothers from El Salvador has a 16-year-old son, and they’ve both been at Berks for 18 months. He was excited to come to the United States, where he could study English and take classes in all different subjects. 

“He says, ‘Mom, I want to leave here so I can learn more,’” she told NBC. 

Her son has slept next to her for a year and a half, through puberty. While other teenagers occasionally circle through Berks, he is usually the only boy his age. 

“He looks out the window and asks, ‘When will I get to leave through that door?’ And I can’t answer him because I don’t know,” she said.

Now, he has gotten so depressed that he skips lunch and takes a nap between classes. He doesn’t like the cafeteria food, and like many of the other kids, he longs for dishes that reflect the cuisine from his country.

Another mother from El Salvador, who has a 7-year-old son, said that adolescents often get desperate, grabbing ropes and threatening to hang themselves, or wishing they would die.

“It’s not just, that kids spend their childhoods locked in four walls,” she said.

The counselors, childcare professionals who watch over detainees, are supposed to look out for their well being. But, according to the attorneys and some immigrant mothers, they lack essential qualifications, like Spanish fluency and cultural understanding, and their misconceptions can sometimes turn into racism.

“The dynamic at Berks is very weird, because it’s this rural, mostly white county…with this immigration detention center,” said Hoffmann. “And so you can see the people that work there are from the local area. A lot of them have certain political ideas and treat them accordingly.”

“You always hear comments about how we should go back to our country and how we’re not from here. How we’re illegals,” one of the mothers said. “We’re not from here, but we came here just asking for help.” 

One counselor often talked about his support for Trump during the campaign, according to an internal declaration that a former detainee filed against him. When the woman asked him to stop saying that Trump “will make sure all immigrants get out of this country,” he “started picking the hairs out of his beard and throwing them at me,” she wrote in the complaint, which was sent directly to the facility's executive director, Diane Edwards.

She also accused him of telling her daughter that “he only liked white women because Latinas were very ugly and that we did not like to take showers.”

That same Saturday, he approached her daughter and two other children. “He asked the girls to let their hair down and to start dancing” to hard rock, she wrote, and whoever danced the best would be rewarded with candy.

“I don’t like to see anyone getting my child to do anything with her body in exchange of candy,” the former detainee wrote. “I wonder, if right in front of us he will ask them to dance for candy, what else would he ask them to do when the moms [are] not around?”

The complaint was filed in November, and attorneys were told that there would be an investigation. When they followed up in January, they did not receive a response.

“He’s taking care of children,” Hoffmann said. “They sit on his lap.”

In a separate ChildLine report, a 6-year-old boy told Miller, the Pennsylvania social worker, that he had witnessed the same counselor refuse to help a 16-year-old detainee carry a 13-year-old, who had collapsed from lack of oxygen, to the medical center. ChildLine is the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services' (PDHS) child protective services program that sorts tips and sends them to a relevant investigative body. 

NBC asked to speak to the counselor, who as of March still worked at Berks, but ICE has yet to grant the request. Officials would not confirm whether he is still employed by them, or whether they have ever looked into his behavior. ICE said in a statement that they "are committed to ensuring that residents at the Center are treated in a safe, secure and humane manner" and "allegations of possible misconduct are thoroughly reviewed and investigated."

The mothers also criticized the staff’s routine bed checks, which take place every 15 minutes in compliance with the facility’s agreement with PDHS.

According to Reid's declaration for Flores v. Holder, last summer his team was in negotiations with PDHS to change the frequency of bed checks to once per hour. ICE declined to discuss "matters of pending litigation" with NBC and the detainees say the policy has yet to be revised. Because of the constant nighttime intrusions, they’re always exhausted. 

“The kids are suffering a lot,” said one of the mothers from El Salvador. “They don’t sleep, because every 15 minutes they [staffers] open the door and shine lights on them.” 

In January, during a room check in the early morning, one detainee saw a staff member approach her daughter's bed. The move triggered her PTSD, and she screamed four or five times out of fear that her child would be attacked. When she visited the Berks psychologist, he wrote in his notes that "she acknowledged that she loudly screamed repeatedly, and indicated that she was 'ashamed' of her behavior." 

Some mothers worry that they’re failing their children. When the mom from Honduras’ infant was shaking with a high fever, she tried to go to the medical wing to get him help (detainees aren’t allowed to keep most medication, including aspirin, in their rooms). She was told to return in the morning, but when she showed up before 7 a.m., the medical staff said they couldn’t see her son until 4 p.m., during walk-in hours.

ICE officials confirmed that Berks holds walk-in hours from 9-10 a.m. and 4-5 p.m. daily but disputed mothers' allegations that they didn't have true access to around the clock care. They said that residents with urgent needs "will receive treatment at the medical clinic 24 hours a day, 7 days a week." 

“I felt incompetent because I couldn’t take care of my child,” said the mother from Honduras. “It hurt me that he had to wait all day when the check-up only took five minutes.” 

Cambria said that the only thing the Berks moms care about is their children. 

“It’s their whole life,” she added. “And they put them in this place where the place’s whole job is to take away the ability to be a parent. You can’t cook. You don’t decide when your kid wakes up, when they go to sleep. How they learn. What they learn, what they read, what they see. Everything’s taken from them.” 

Many of the mothers have refused deportation because they fear their children will be hurt or killed if they return home. They’re willing to endure a drawn out court process even if it means staying indefinitely in detention, putting their lives on pause.

“I want to keep fighting, for my son,” one said.



Photo Credit: ALDEA
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PPA's Parking App Gets Impounded

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If you're hoping to pay for street parking in Philadelphia with your smartphone, you're now out of luck. The Philadelphia Parking Authority has shut down its mobile payment app.

MeterUP, the mobile payment service, was impounded at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday.

PPA officials said the company that designed and maintains the app, Pango USA, is having financial difficulties and has been unable to pay its credit card processing service. A request for comment from Pango USA was not immediately answered.

Drivers can still use credit cards for parking payment at the large green kiosks, as well as cash and coins.

Clarena Tolson, the PPA's executive director, apologized for the shut down calling the decision "unavoidable."

The app was launched in November 2015. It is heavily-promoted on PPA property with signs and stickers for the app posted on parking kiosks and parking signs.

Pango USA was sold in October 2016 and then began to run into financial trouble, the PPA said.

Tolson said the parking authority is putting out a request for proposal to replace Pango USA as the service provider, but believes it could be several months before a new company is brought online.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Firefighters Battle Brush Fire in Cheltenham

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Firefighters battled a brush fire in Cheltenham Township Tuesday afternoon.

The fire started near Tookany Creek Parkway and Johns Road around 2:50 p.m. Firefighters were able to bring the fire under control. No injuries have been reported.

SEPTA suspended its Fox Chase Train Line as a result of the fire. Service later resumed around 4 p.m.



Photo Credit: Google Maps

Several Hurt in Multi-Vehicle Crash on Route 1 in Avondale

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Several people were hurt in a multi-vehicle accident on Route 1 in Avondale, Chester County Tuesday afternoon.

A multi-vehicle accident shut down a section of Route 1 in Avondale, Chester County Tuesday afternoon.

The crash occurred on Route 1 between Route 41 and Newark Road. Officials say several people suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

Both northbound and southbound lanes were closed at the scene of the crash. They later reopened however. Officials have not yet revealed the cause of the accident.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Jewish Community Reacts to Spicer’s Hitler Comments

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Press Secretary Sean Spicer made a controversial comment, incorrectly stating that Nazi leader Adolf Hitler did not "sink to the level of using chemical weapons" when asked about Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons in a bombing of their people. Spicer has since apologized for his comment.

NBC10’s Lauren Mayk got the reaction from members of the Jewish community in Old City on Tuesday.

 

 

Air Conditioner Thieves Put Artifacts in Danger

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Air conditioning units were stolen outside the Vineland Historical and Antiquarian Society in New Jersey. This put historic artifacts in danger. NBC10 Jersey Shore Bureau Reporter Ted Greenberg reveals how this may be part of a string of recent crimes targeting local businesses.

A.C. Moore Opens In Center City Philadelphia

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In a major move for A.C. Moore, the arts and crafts chain opened its first urban location in Philadelphia.

The store held its grand opening Tuesday at its new Center City store on Philadelphia’s Avenue of the Arts on Broad Street and opened up at 7 a.m.

Along with arts and crafts products, the new 27,0000-square-foot store will have a multi-purpose classroom.

This week, to celebrate their opening, A.C. Moore will be hosting a different discount for customers each day until Saturday.

Tuesday, April 11th Free $10 gift cards to the first 500 customers

Wednesday, April 12th 60% off any one regular priced item

Thursday, April 13th 55% off any one regular priced item

Friday, April 14th 15% off your entire purchase

Saturday, April 15th 15% percent off your entire purchase

Former Philly Detective Found Not Guilty of Assault

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A jury acquitted a former Philadelphia police detective who was accused of assaulting a man while escorting him out of the Special Victims Unit.

Adam O’Donnell was found not guilty on all charges Tuesday. Those charges included aggravated assault, simple assault, kidnapping and unlawful restraint. 

O’Donnell, 44, was accused of kicking Theodore Life, Jr., 46, in the knee as he escorted him out of the Philadelphia Police Department’s Special Victims Unit on 300 E. Hunting Park Avenue back on February 3, 2015. Life claimed they were out of the view of security cameras at the time. Life said O’Donnell then placed him in an unmarked police vehicle, drove him to the Hunting Park section of the city and dropped him off on a random roadside.

Life said he was unable to walk due to the pain and he had to call his father to pick him up and drive him to the hospital. Life was then treated for a non-displaced femur fracture.

O’Donnell denied the allegations against him and claimed Life had lunged at him which forced him to step aside and trip him, causing him to fall to the ground, according to Philly.com.

O’Donnell was arrested on February 17, 2016 and suspended from the police department as a result of the charges against him. Now that he’s been acquitted, O’Donnell hopes to rejoin the force, according to Philly.com.

O’Donnell was a nine-year veteran of the department assigned to the Special Victims Unit. He was well known for surviving a shooting back on New Year’s Eve in 2010. O’Donnell and his partner at the time stopped a van for a traffic violation. As they approached the van, the driver pointed a .38 caliber revolver out of the window and opened fire. O’Donnell was struck in his ballistic vest, suffering blunt force trauma to the chest, but managed to return fire. His partner was also injured.



Photo Credit: Philadelphia Police Department

Atlantic City Budget Proposal Includes 5% Tax Decrease

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Atlantic City officials presented a $206 million budget proposal Tuesday, the first since the state takeover in November, which includes a 5% decrease in municipal property taxes.

“Over the past three years, my staff and I have been working hard to reduce costs, streamline government, and still provide the best services possible to our residents,” Atlantic City Mayor Don Guardian said. “Today we are seeing the fruits of our labor. People said it could not be done – but today we are presenting the budget with a 5% decrease in municipal property taxes.”

According to officials, under the new budget, the average homeowner in Atlantic City would pay local taxes of $2.547 per year, a 5% decrease from last year. The tax decrease would be Atlantic City’s first since 2008.

“From the beginning, I have said that we need to work with the State of New Jersey to stabilize Atlantic City and to reduce the outrageous property taxes that we inherited from years of reckless spending,” Guardian said. “These are the results we expected and worked hard for.”

Officials say they will focus on reducing the tax rate, reducing department budgets, increasing revenues, reducing health care costs, outsourcing services, reducing staff and settling with Borgata Casino under the budget. They also said there will be no tax increase, reduction of services or structural deficit under the new budget.

“This has been a collective effort over the past three years,” Guardian said. “Members of City Council and I have worked together making some tough choices over the past three years and have brought about considerable change.”

The Press of Atlantic City reports City Council members unanimously voted to introduce the budget at a special meeting. A public hearing for the budget will be held on May 17.

Despite the good news for Atlantic City, officials also said Atlantic County won’t receive 13.5 percent of casino payments in lieu of property taxes which was promised last year before legislation was passed. The county will instead receive 10.4 percent of casino payments in lieu of taxes, according to the Press of Atlantic City. Officials say this could result in a big increase in taxes for Atlantic County residents.

“Unfortunately, the county has not lived up to its commitments to the state to help Atlantic City achieve efficiencies and savings,” Brian Murray, Press Secretary for Governor Chris Christie, told NBC10. “As a result, those failures make it unfair and impossible to provide the increased level of aid requested by the county and which the state had hoped to be able to provide.”

Man's 20-Year ID Theft Thwarted by Ancestry.com: Police

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A Lansdale man’s 20-year run of using a fake identity came to an end, thanks to Ancestry.com, according to investigators.

Jon Vincent, 44, was charged Monday with Social Security fraud and identity theft. Police say that since 1996, he had been living under the identity of the long deceased “Nathan Laskoski.”

The jig was up when a relative of Laskoski was on Ancestry.com and discovered information that suggested someone was impersonating him, officials said.

According to authorities, in 1996, Vincent was convicted of a crime in Texas and served his time. Upon his release, he escaped from a halfway house and began a new life under a new identity, officials said.

Vincent allegedly stole the identity of “Nathan Laskoski" after acquiring Laskoski’s birth certificate, which he used to apply for a social security card in Laskoski’s name.

If convicted, Vincent could face substantial jail time, a three year period of supervised release, and a fine of up to $500,000.



Photo Credit: Google Maps

Custom Doughnut Shop, Burger Joint Coming to KOP Town Center

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Upper Merion residents and visitors can add customizable doughnuts and chargrilled burgers to the King of Prussia Town Center's growing list of food-and-beverage operators.

The King of Prussia Town Center, developed by Maryland-based JBG Cos., has continued to add more eateries to its roster over the past few months since the first restaurant opened in summer 2016.

Most recently, JBG Cos. signed on three food-and-beverage tenants like California-based MidiCi The Neapolitan Pizza Company.

Two more tenants have signed on to open up Philadelphia-area outposts: Duck Donuts and The Habit Burger Grill.

Duck Donuts is slated to open in July, and Habit Burger is slated to open in October. The Town Center is now 86 percent leased with these additions.

Duck Donuts, which originated in the Outer Banks and is named after Duck, N.C., is known for its made-to-order doughnuts that include 11 coating choices, seven topping choices and four drizzle choices.

To read the full story, click here.

 


For more business news, visit Philadelphia Business Journal. 



Photo Credit: Duck Donuts

Visual Guide to NFL Draft Closures on Parkway

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Phase 1 of closures on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway for the upcoming NFL Draft in Philadelphia is underway. Check out our visual guide to all of the closures.

Photo Credit: City of Philadelphia

Jersey Shore Town Proposes Pricey Parking Permit

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The sign says public access, but a pricey parking permit could keep out-of-towners off the beach in one affluent New Jersey town. Brian Thompson reports.

Men Unhappy About McDonald's Order Attack Employees: Cops

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Police are looking for two men who allegedly complained about their McDonald's order and then attacked the store manager, throwing a bag of food in his face and possibly causing him to break his wrist as he tried to get away. 

Authorities got a call about the attack at the fast-food restaurant in New Jersey's Berkeley Township shortly after 11:30 p.m. Sunday. When police arrived, the 19-year-old manager told them the two suspects had walked up to the drive-thru and ordered, then complained their food was wrong and started to bang on the window. 

The store is supposed to close at 11 p.m. and had shut down at some point between when the men ordered and when they complained. The manager told the men he would credit them if they came back Monday, and one of the suspects threw the food in his face and grabbed him, police say. 

The manager said he was punched in the face and, as he tried to close the window, his hand got slammed in it and he couldn't pull it out. Another employee at the McDonald's chased the suspects out to the parking lot and one of the suspects pulled out a knife, police say. That worker, who is 21, ended up with a cut on his wrist. 

He and the manager were both taken to a hospital, where the manager was treated for a possible broken wrist and the other worker got stitches. 

Police have not released surveillance images or video of the suspects, but anyone with information about the attack is asked to call the Berkeley Township Tip Line at 732-341-1132 x611.



Photo Credit: AP

Students Rehearsing Play Get Sick, Prompting Evacuation

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A New Jersey elementary school was briefly evacuated when three fourth-grade students each reported feeling ill within moments of one another.

The students were rehearsing their end-of-year play at Valley View School in Lebanon when they all began to feel nauseous and light-headed, according to police. 

Their teachers called 911 and evacuated the school, and responding firefighters checked the building. The students were taken next door to Catholic Church during the evacuation, according to school officials. 

No carbon monoxide was registered. An all-clear was issued within about a half-hour, police say. The students were evaluated on scene and turned over to their parents.

"It could have been nerves, or there's apparently a stomach virus going around, and that could have been a pre-cursor," the chief of the police department told News 4. 

The boilers were turned off at the school Tuesday because of the warm weather. 



Photo Credit: Getty Images/Blend Images RM

NBC10 Responds: Fridge Problems Persist

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NBC10’s Harry Hairston helps a Sears customer who has had her refrigerator unsuccessfully repaired not once, or twice, but six times.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Armed Home Invaders Swipe Elderly Man's Classic Cadillac

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Robbers took a safe, a gun and a classic car from an elderly widower’s Northeast Philadelphia home overnight. And, police said the victim may have been set up.

The attack inside the Korean War veteran's home on Chapelcroft Street in the Bustleton neighborhood early Wednesday left Pete Labuda, 88, with some scrapes, police said.

Labuda told reporters outside his home of 40 years Wednesday morning that he feared for his life during the attack.

"I thought they were gonna kill me in there," Labuda said.

Police responded around 3:30 a.m. after Labuda managed to free himself. Investigators say the ordeal began when Labuda's acquaintance who ran errands for him greeted him at the door around 3 a.m. 

"He knew a female that was at the door and he was kind of surprised by her visit that early in the morning," Philadelphia Police Lieutenant Dennis Rosenbaum said.

When Labuda answered the door, two men armed with guns pushed him into the home and tied his wrists and ankles to a kitchen chair, using tape as well as a phone cord, police said.

"They had guns and handcuffed me," Labuda said. "Threw me on the floor. I couldn't get up."

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Labuda had his gun on him when he answered the door but didn't have time to draw it. 

Once the man was tied up, the robbers took the gun and a safe that contained the victim's dead wife's jewelry and between $25,000 to $30,000 dollars worth of cash, police said. The burglars then went to the garage and took the man’s mint-condition classic car.

"It's a 1985 Fleetwood Chrome Cadillac, it's baby blue in color and it has a dark blue vinyl top," Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small said. "It also has spoked hubcaps."

The car turned up later Wednesday on Emerald Street in Port Richmond.

"They set up a surveillance on the car," Rosenbaum said. "Shortly thereafter a male was caught going into the car. They saw him come from a house. Myself and other detectives arrived on location. We tried to knock on that door. A male tried to flee from that house."

Police took two men from the house into custody. They are considered persons of interest. Labuda said he didn't recognize the men however. 

"It happened so fast and with his age they kind of overtook him so fast," Rosenbaum said.

Police searched the Emerald Street home Wednesday night.

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Investigators are now searching for the woman who initially greeted Labuda at the door. They believe she could have been involved in the robbery.

"He may have been setup," Small said.

Labuda's neighbor Abdul Maaf described him as a watchful eye in the community who is always quick to share a story.

"He's an older man and they took advantage of that," Maaf said. "He served for our country and I thank him for that. He always tells me his war stories. He always tells me about how he grew up here."

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Later Wednesday, the Veterans group Warriors' Watch Riders organized a large show of support outside Labuda's home. Residents greeted Labuda at his door and showed their appreciation.

"What happened today should never happen to any veteran or anybody," Bob Crawford, one of the organizers, said. "He's overwhelmed seeing everybody out here."



Photo Credit: NBC10

Montco Needs Your Help to Battle Mosquitoes

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With warmer weather comes the threat a potentially dangerous pest that Montgomery County officials want to help you combat.

The Montgomery County Health Department gave recommendations Wednesday on how residents can curb mosquito breeding near their homes.

"With the onset of warmer weather and the peak mosquito season approaching, MCHD is reminding residents that they can help prevent the spread of WNV and other reemerging mosquito-borne diseases, such as the Zika Virus, by eliminating standing water from their property," the health department said in a news release. "West Nile Virus remains an unpredictable disease, and it is difficult to tell how severe a problem it will be this year."

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The goal is for residents to mosquito-proof their homes by also replacing screen doors and windows and cleaning out gutters besides eliminating standing water from any containers. They also suggest that residents take precautions when outside around dusk and dawn.

Here are the county’s tips to reduce exposure to mosquitoes:

  • Check and repair windows and screens to prevent mosquitoes from entering your home. 
  • Eliminate any standing water that collects on your property. 
  • Survey your property and dispose of containers that can collect standing water such as old tires, cans, bottles, buckets, and toys. 
  • After it rains, empty any plant containers, bird baths, flowerpots, kiddie pools, and pool covers to keep water from collecting in these items. 
  • Make sure roof gutters drain properly and rooftops are free of standing water. 
  • Clean and chlorinate swimming pools, outdoor saunas, and hot tubs. Keep them empty and covered if not in use; drain water that collects in pool covers. 
  • Drill several holes in the bottom of recycling buckets so water can drain from them. Trash containers should be covered so no rain can accumulate in them. 
  • Use an approved mosquito repellent when outdoors in areas where mosquitoes are active. Apply insect repellent sparingly to exposed skin. Follow the label directions carefully. Do NOT apply to the face.  
  • Never allow children to apply repellents. Parents should avoid applying repellents to the hands of children. 
  • Check with a physician before applying repellents to very young children (less than three years old).
  • Avoid mosquito-breeding areas during peak periods of mosquito activity. 
  • Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants, making sure to cover feet and ankles. 
  • Discuss any concerns with your physician.

If mosquitoes pose a risk to people later this year, the county could spray targeted areas, the health department said.



Photo Credit: AP

This Is How Peeps Are Made

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Peeps, the delicious marshmallow treats, are an Easter holiday staple. Learn how the colorful chicks and bunnies are made.

Grand Opening of Museum of the American Revolution Nears

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Philadelphia is getting ready for the grand opening of its newest attraction, the Museum of the American Revolution. Vice President of collections, exhibitions and programming Dr. Scott Stephenson is in our NBC10 studios to tell us more about what it took to get the museum up and running.

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