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Woman Dies as Vehicle Plunges 70 Feet From Rail Bridge

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A woman died after her vehicle plunged 70 feet into the Ohio River from a railroad bridge in Pittsburgh, leaving authorities to investigate how and why she drove it there.

The Allegheny County medical examiner has yet to release the name of the woman whose body was found in the vehicle after she drove off the Norfolk Southern bridge about 2 p.m. Thursday. A spokesman says the vehicle didn't belong to the railroad and wasn't authorized to drive on the bridge.

Pittsburgh River Rescue Chief Raymond Everitt says the vehicle was found in water about 20 feet deep. A cat believed to have also been in the vehicle was found swimming nearby and rescued.

The bridge is normally used only by freight trains.


President Trump Embarks on 1st International Trip

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President Donald Trump will embark on his first international trip as commander-in-chief. NBC10's Pamela Osborne has the details on his itinerary.

America's Favorite Pizza Chain, Mexican Spot, More Revealed

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Five Guys dethrones In-N-Out Burger, Starbucks narrowly defeats Dunkin' Donuts and more trends revealed in Harris Poll's latest EquiTrend Study on brand health longevity. This year, more than 100,000 U.S. consumers assessed more than 4,000 brands (including 90 restaurant brands) across more than 450 categories. Click here for details on the methodology and scroll through the photos to see the top restaurant brands of the year in eight major categories.

Photo Credit: Marco Ugarte/AP

NBC10 Investigators: Tracing the Opioid Epidemic

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NBC10 Investigators reporter Mitch Blacher traces the opioid epidemic to its sources, after finding doctors over-prescribing medicine, with no care for the consequences.

Opioid Task Force Recommendations for Battling Addiction

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As Philadelphia continues to confront a deadly opioid epidemic, the city is taking steps to battle addiction.

Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney and Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf will be joined by health officials Friday morning to announce recommendations from the Mayor's Task Force to Combat the Opioid Epidemic in Philadelphia.

You can WATCH the announcement LIVE on this page at 10:30 a.m.

Kenney’s opioid task force launched earlier this year.

The mayoral task force includes 16 dozen public health experts, local and federal law enforcement, state administrators and advocates charged with recommending an attack plan for Philadelphia's ever-growing heroin and opioid epidemic. It held its first meeting in January and originally hoped to get recommendations to Kenney in 90 days. 

Advocates have long prodded the city to declare the drug epidemic a public health crisis and form such a task force to coordinate efforts to address it.

Expediency is vital, Dr. Arthur Evans, the city’s mental and behavioral health commissioner, says, to saving lives. “This is a crisis and we need to get to the issues.”

The city had around 900 overdoses last year – three times the city’s homicide rate.

Worse, the grim statistic, continues to rise every year, as NBC10 found in its recent special report, Generation Addicted. The more than year-long project followed those in the throes of addiction, family and community members affected by it and health officials and law enforcement trying to fight it.

Supermarket Chain Expands Free Fruit Program

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ShopRite’s Free Fruit Program, launched earlier this year, is expanding to more stores.

The Free Fruit Program allows children under the age of 12 who enter a ShopRite store to receive free fruit while they are shopping with a parent or guardian. The free fruits are located in the produce isle.

The goal for ShopRite is to help kids enjoy eating healthy snacks.

"We’re proud to launch the free fruit program in our stores," Brett Ravitz, vice president of merchandising at Ravitz Family Markets, said.

Ravitz Family Markets owns five ShopRite stores in South Jersey.

There are now 40 ShopRite stores that are a part of this program. The expansion includes some New Jersey ShopRites: ShopRite of Marlton, ShopRite of Union Mill Road, ShopRite of Evesham Road, ShopRite of Mt. Laurel and ShopRite of Garden State Pavilion. 




Photo Credit: ShopRite

Abby Lee Miller Suggests Show's Moms Brought Money Into US

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Former "Dance Moms" reality TV star Abby Lee Miller says the $120,000 she’s accused of smuggling into the United States was not hers and that “she hasn’t seen it since it's come back.”

“My attorney said if i haven’t seen it in three years, it’s not mine,” Miller said Friday in an interview on the “Wendy Williams Show.”

According to Miller, several dancers from the show, along with their equally famous mothers, were in Australia for a publicity event. She said tickets to attend the “Master Class” conference were purchased electronically online during the registration process, “and that goes straight to a bank.”

“The moms were out in the lobby area, they are selling the merchandise, taking pictures,” Miller said, noting those transactions were made in cash because they were told “you can’t get a credit card machine in other countries unless you have a bank account in that country, and you rent them from the bank.”

Miller, who was sentenced Tuesday to a year and a day in prison for bankruptcy fraud and for bringing the Australian currency into the U.S., alleged that she personally was carrying less than $10,000. By law, all travelers carrying in excess of $10,000 must declare it at customs. Asked if people in her group traveling for the event were carrying money for her, Miller said “that’s debatable.” 

“I can show you all the moms’ 1099s for what they made,” Miller said.

The reality star also said she regrets filing for bankruptcy after the 2008 financial crash. Miller explained that she opened the studio at a time when the community was “thriving” and most of the student were from the area. But several years later, “not a good neighborhood anymore.”

“Not one kid in that zip code went to my studio,” Miller said. “Everyone was driving in hours to get to me.”

Miller filed for bankruptcy after defaulting on a $245,000 Florida condominium mortgage and a $96,000 mortgage on her dance studio in Penn Hills, a Pittsburgh suburb, her bankruptcy lawyer said. She said keeping up with the bills in a down economy became difficult.

“But what really happened, when I refinanced the [dance studio] building, they didn’t put the taxes into escarole and I did not know that. I was not aware of that,” Miller explained. “And they always had been because when you build a building they are automatically included. So I owed $37,000. So this whole entire thing, and me going to jail, is over $37,000.”

Prosecutors said Miller repeatedly hid her true income and contracts for future income from her TV shows until her channel-surfing bankruptcy judge saw her on TV and concluded she must be making far more than the $8,899 in monthly income she initially declared. She told Williams the bankruptcy was filed before she was ever on the show “Dance Moms,” and didn’t understand why the two cases were conflated.

The "Dance Moms" star was known for her brash behavior and pursuit of perfectionism from her dance students. The show follows a class of Miller's elite students and the perilous relationship she has with the girls' mothers. Critics of "Dance Moms" accuse Miller of being emotionally abusive toward the girls, and many episodes show her students dissolving into tears after a harsh critique.

Miller also accused Lifetime of conning her into signing a 4-year contract “in the dark.” She said she started off as a choreographer on “Dance Moms,” and allowed the network to use her building “for free” to film the show. According to Miller, producers from the show told her she had to sign an appearance release during one of the dance competitions and said the other parents had already signed it.

“I was a 4-year contract with a 4-year option,” she said.

Miller said she regrets ever being on TV and revealed where she is eating her last meal before she begins her prison sentence.

"Red Lobster," she said. "Because I like the biscuits."



Photo Credit: Rich Fury/Invision/AP
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Driveway Hit-and-Run Leaves Toddler Hurt: Police

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Delaware police took a man into custody after they say he drove away after striking a 15-month-old girl.

The incident happened around 10:30 a.m. Friday along Roosevelt Avenue in the Tuxedo Park neighborhood of Newport. The child is currently in stable condition at Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, New Castle County Police said.

The driver of a silver Mazda sedan was leaving a home on the block when he struck the child, investigators said.

Police caught up to the driver shortly before noon on Lancaster Pike in Hockessin. He was taken into custody without incident, police said. It was unclear what charges that man might face.

Accident investigators sorted through clues at the scene.




Photo Credit: NBC10

Hackers Could Target Your Home Devices

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NBC10's Matt DeLucia explains what steps you should take after purchasing WiFi-enabled home devices.

Area Beaches Are Top Summer Hot Spots: TripAdvisor

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TripAdvisor released its 2017 Summer Vacation Value Report. The report lists 50 summer hot spots in the United States based on costs and increased hotel booking interest.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Here's How Much Cash Your School District Has Saved Up

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Lower Merion School District isn't yet ready to give up the fight for about $4 million in new taxes that a judge has ruled it should return to taxpayers.

The afluent district lost an appeal before a panel of judges in Commonwealth Court, but it's asking the court to reconsider the ruling, the district's attorney for the case told NBC10 Friday.

At stake is a tax increase approved last year by the local school board, but then thrown out after a group of taxpayers successfully argued that Lower Merion had no business asking for more money when it already has more than $50 million in reserve accounts.

All along, it appears, those accounts got bigger. A conservative Pennsylvania think tank, the Commonwealth Foundation, found Lower Merion had $56 million in its "general fund balance" during the 2015-2016 school year, up about $100,000 from its 2014-2015 total. 

Hundreds of districts across the state also have millions in reserve. The overall amount reached $4.4 billion for 2015-2016, according to the Commonwealth Foundation.

"More than double what the state spent on teacher pensions last year alone," according to an email from the organization's spokeswoman, who said new findings will be released next week. "In fact, district reserve fund balances grew by $126 million over the previous year."

For taxpayers interested in seeing how their district stacks up, or wants to compare with other towns and cities, the Commonwealth Foundation has an arrangeable list of every district in Pennsylvania.

It should be noted that Philadelphia's fund balance grew from a negative $10 million in 2014-2015 to $87 million the next year, accounting for a large majority of the entire state's increase.

Lower Merion, which previously was second to Pittsburgh, had the third-largest reserve total in 2015-2016.

District officials have argued throughout the public legal battle that its reserves are not only a safety net in case of financial crisis, but also dedicated in part to special education spending, employee pensions and school construction.

FBI Raids Several Properties in Allentown

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Several properties in Allentown were raided by the FBI on Friday, and neighbors are now asking questions. Agents left one property with ATVs and other materials.

Crowds Hit the Beach To Escape the Heat

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New Jersey beaches were packed this week with people trying to escape the heat and enjoy the sun, sand, and water. NBC10's Ted Greenberg caught up with some beach-goers to see what they were up to.

Fans Camp Out in Hopes of Snatching SNL Finale Ticket

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How excited are you for the season finale of SNL? Some people took their excitement to the streets, where they have camped out in hopes of getting a ticket.

School Students Rally Around Classmate

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Students in Bethlehem are hosting charity events to raise money for a fellow student with a deadly disease. Now, as the clock is ticking, students are rallying around the student.


Fattah Jr. Heads Back to Court

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Chaka Fattah Jr. is headed back to court, this time for a different reason. Fattah Jr. is the son of former Congressman Chaka Fattah.

Malcolm Jenkins Visits University City School

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Some students in University City got a surprise visitor on Friday when Malcolm Jenkins visited their school. Jenkins spoke to the students about social issues, Congress, and other subjects.

NBC10 First Alert Weather: A Rainy Monday

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Friday's temperatures kept the heat in our region, but a big cool down is headed our way for the weekend. NBC10 meteorologist Tammie Souza has the details.

NBC10 Responds: Service Cancellation Troubles

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One local woman says canceling her home trash pickup service was easy. The refund she was supposed to get, on the other hand, was a little more difficult. NBC10's Harry Hairston has her story.

A Link Between Senators and Landlords?

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The NBC10 Investigators found a link between State Senators, their landlords, and donation money. So, the investigators got answers on whether it was a coincidence or something more

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