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Baby Killed by Stray Bullet

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A 15-month-old baby girl was shot and killed by a stray bullet while she was with her parents in their New Jersey apartment Saturday, authorities said.

The girl, Sania Cunningham, was in a bedroom with her parents and was bouncing on a bed when she was struck by a single bullet that passed through the wall, Essex County Acting Prosecutor Carolyn Murray said at a briefing Sunday.

Authorities are searching for three people who opened fire as they moved down Ellis Avenue in Irvington shortly after 4:30 p.m., Murray said. All three individuals wore hooded sweatshirts but apparently were not wearing masks, she said.

The little girl's parents had moved in with family on the block just two days ago, Murray said. They took the child to the hospital when they realized she had been hit but she did not survive.

The shooters' intended target was not known.

An award of up to $10,000 is being offered for credible information leading to significant advances in the case. Authorities are urging anyone with information to call their tip line at 877-847-7432. 


West Philly Home Goes Up in Flames

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Everyone made it out safe after fire broke out around 1:30 a.m. inside a home on Harlan Street in West Philadelphia.

Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Delaware Man Charged in Deadly DUI Crash

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A Delaware man was arrested after he allegedly struck and killed a man and injured another while driving drunk. 

On Sunday around 1 a.m., Stephen Daverio, 19, of Avondale, Pennsylvania, Kevin Wiercyski, 20, of Wilmington, Delaware and four other friends were walking on Milltown Road in Wilmington. As they were walking, Daverio and Wiercyski were struck by a 2009 Nissan Altima that was traveling south on Milltown.

Both men were taken to Christiana Hospital. Daverio was later pronounced dead while Wiercyski was treated for minor injuries and released.

A preliminary investigation revealed that the driver of the striking vehicle, identified as Robert Hickson, 55, of Newark, Delaware, was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident, according to police. Hickson was taken into custody. The charges against him are pending.

Officials continue to investigate the accident. If you have any information on the crash please call the New Castle County Police Traffic Services Unit at (302) 395-3604.
 



Photo Credit: Delaware State Police

Dance Studio Arson Leaves Firefighter Hurt

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One firefighter suffered an injury while battling a blaze at a Bucks County dance studio Monday morning and investigators believe someone intentionally set the fire.

The blaze broke out around 4:30 a.m. at the Bucks County Dance Center along Street Road in Bensalem, Pennsylvania.

Firefighters arrived to find heavy fire in the back of the building -- which is also attached to a residence, according to Bucks County dispatchers.

A firefighter suffered a minor injury at the scene, said dispatchers. No one else was hurt.

Eventually firefighters got the blaze under control and began to investigate inside the building.

Bensalem Township fire investigators and the ATF determined that fire to be an arson. They asked anyone with information to contact Bensalem Fire Rescue at 215-633-3617 or Bensalem Police at 215-633-3719.

The family-run studio opened 30 years ago, according to its website.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Woman Dies After Being Thrown From Car

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A 29-year-old woman died after her car slammed into a parked car and flipped over along a Northeast Philadelphia road early Monday morning.

The woman lost control of her car as she drove along Willits Road near Welsh Road shortly after midnight, according to Philadelphia Police.

The out-of-control car then smashed into a parked car and flipped over – ejecting the driver.

The unidentified woman died at the scene.

The exact cause of the crash remained under investigation Monday.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

PennDOT Paying More for Road Salt

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NBC10's Katy Zachry reports that the cost of road salt is going up, but not until next year for PennDOT.

Photo Credit: NBC10.com

In Case You Missed It: Yesterday's Top Stories

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Didn't have a chance to catch the news? Here are yesterday's top stories.

14 More Philly Archdiocese Churches Under Review for Possible Merger or Closure
Over a dozen more catholic churches in the Philadelphia Archdiocese are under review for a potential closure or merger. The Archdiocese announced Sunday the continuation of its Parish Area Pastoral Planning Initiative with 14 parishes in Philadelphia, Delaware and Montgomery counties entering the process.

2 Local ACME Supermarkets Set to Close
Officials announced the ACME store on West Butler Avenue in Chalfont, Pennsylvania as well as the store on East Street Road in Warminster, Pennsylvania will close Nov. 13.

Underage Driver Flees Scene After Causing Multi-Vehicle Crash in North Philly: Police
Witnesses told police they spotted a young boy driving a white sedan when it struck another car at the intersection of 19th Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue Saturday night. The boy then crashed into another car parked on the street and nearly slammed into a nearby apartment building.

'Bucket List Baby' Shane Facebook Page Hacked
Two days after the family of 'Bucket List Baby' Shane experienced the emotional birth — and soon thereafter loss of the newborn — a hacker broke into the parents' Facebook page and began posting explicit images.

Man Shoots Knife-Wielding Man in Pathmark Parking Lot: Police
An argument over a man looking at another man for no reason led to a shooting in the parking lot of a Philadelphia Pathmark, according to investigators.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Police Cars Crash in Center City, Officer Hurt

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A chain-reaction crash in Center City Philadelphia involved two police cruisers and left one officer hurt.

A pickup truck traveling southbound on 21st Street Street struck a police cruiser responding to a previous call at the corner with Spruce Street around 9 a.m., according to Philadelphia Police.

The cruiser then slammed into an unoccupied police cruiser, said investigators.

The crash left three people hospitalized with what police described as minor injuries -- at least one of those injured is an officer who complained of pain after suffering some scrapes, said investigators.

As SkyForce10 hovered overhead a short time later you could see the two police cars -- one sandwiched between the other and pickup truck. You could also see officers investigating the scene.



Photo Credit: SkyForce10

Dump Truck Wreck on NJ Turnpike

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A mess on the New Jersey Turnpike Monday included not only a deadly truck crash but also a dump truck crash that left the truck’s load on the roadway and shoulder.

The dump truck overturned around 6:45 a.m. in the southbound lanes approaching the previous closure at Exit 4 (Route 73 – Philadelphia/Camden) in South Jersey caused by the earlier deadly crash.

The dump truck driver suffered a minor injury.

Traffic, slowly got by the crash in one lane while crews worked to clean up the mess of what appeared to be ash of small rocks that spilled onto the roadway and onto the shoulder.

No word on what caused the wreck.



Photo Credit: SkyForce10

Funeral for Legendary Philly Sportscaster

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Friends and family gathered in South Jersey Monday to mourn legendary Philadelphia sports analyst and commentator Bill Campbell who died last week at the age of 91.

A funeral mass was held for Campbell Monday at Christ the King Parish on the 200 block of Windsor Avenue in Haddonfield, New Jersey.

On Sunday, loved ones gathered at the Blake-Doyle Funeral Home on Collings Avenue in Collingswood, New Jersey to remember Campbell.

Born in Atlantic City in 1923, Campbell began his career in broadcasting in 1940 as a spot and general announcer at WFPG Radio in Atlantic City. In the following two years he worked as a general radio announcer and covered minor league baseball for WGAL in Lancaster and as a spot and general announcer for WIP Radio in Philadelphia.

After serving a tour of duty in the Armed Services, Campbell became Sports Director of WCAU Radio in 1946 which later became NBC10. As Sports Director, Campbell produced and broadcasted a daily sports program and was in charge of scheduling and negotiating college and professional games.

Campbell would eventually become an icon in Philadelphia sports as the play-by-play commentator for the Philadelphia Eagles from 1956 to 1964. He also served as the play-by-play broadcaster for the Phillies from 1962 to 1971 as well as the Philadelphia Warriors and 76ers in basketball.

Campbell also did play-by-play of basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game in Hershey, Pennsylvania on March 2, 1962. Chamberlain’s game for Philadelphia, who were named the Warriors at the time, is still an NBA record.

Campbell was named Director of Broadcasting for the Philadelphia 76ers in 1972, a position he held until 1981.

Campbell is perhaps best remembered by Philly sports fans for his radio call of the Eagles’ 1960 NFL Championship win over the Green Bay Packers.

“The game’s over,” Campbell screamed in the famous call. “The game’s over! The Eagles are the champions of the world! LISTEN!”

Campbell received several awards during his prolific career. He was named Broadcaster of the Year by the National Sports Broadcasters Association in 1961, 1962 and 1963. He also received the Philadelphia Sportswriters Award for outstanding service in 1989 and was a member of the Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Sports Halls of Fame.

Campbell also received the Curt Gowdy Broadcaster Award at the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2005.

Merrill Reese, who has been the radio play-by-play commentator for the Eagles since 1977, called Campbell the “greatest in the history of Philadelphia broadcasting.”

“He did every sport in Philadelphia – the Warriors and the Sixers in basketball, the Phillies, the Eagles of course, college basketball, the Penn Relays, hosted talk shows – and he was great. The Dean,” Reese said. “He was also the single greatest interviewer I ever heard.”

Eagles president Don Smolenski called Campbell a “legend.”

"Being the voice of the Phillies, 76ers, and Eagles throughout his career, it was clear that Philadelphia sports were in his blood,” Smolenski said. “His call of the 1960 NFL Championship and of Wilt Chamberlain’s historic 100-point game will never be forgotten. On behalf of the Philadelphia Eagles and our legion of fans, we send our condolences to the Campbell family on their loss."

Donations in Campbell's memory can be made to St. Joseph's University, Athletics Communications, 5600 City Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 19131.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Garbage Collector Gunned Down Before Shift

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The Allegheny County medical examiner has identified a Pittsburgh garbage collector who was gunned down as began his shift.

Monday's shooting occurred about 7 a.m. as 29-year-old Omar Hodges waited in a car for his crew to pick him up for work. He was parked in an area where refuse employees waited to begin their shifts.

Garbage collection was scheduled normally despite the Columbus Day holiday, which closed state and federal courts and some other government offices. Public safety spokeswoman Sonya Toler says the victim had worked for the city since January 2013.

Police were searching for a car they believed was involved in the shooting. Officials didn't immediately say whether they believed the worker was the target of the shooting, or whether he was struck by shots intended for another target.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Mo'ne Davis Lands on 'Influential Teens' List

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Philadelphia’s baseball superstar Mo’Ne Davis already made history when she became the first Little Leaguer to grace the cover of Sports illustrated but now the 13-year-old can add another magazine honor to her accolades.

Mo’Ne lands on Time’s list of the “25 Most Influential Teens of 2014.”

Time explained why the Philadelphia teen made the list:

“It’s not every day that a black female athlete appears on the cover of Sports Illustrated -- let alone one who’s 13. So Mo’ne Davis made quite a splash in August when she landed that spot (cover line: 'Remember Her Name') after pitching a shutout game in the Little League World Series."

The Taney Dragons pitcher has some impressive company of the list including first children Sasha and Malia Obama; Philly star Will Smith’s son Jaden Smith; Nobel Prize-recipient Malala Yousafzai; and singing sensation Lorde.

Mo’Ne yet again stands out for she is joins Sasha Obama as the only 13-year-olds on the list.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Philly Team Rescues Children, Infants From Predators

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Editor's Note: This special project features explicit content that may be disturbing to some readers. NBC10 does not identify victims of sexual abuse. To protect against further victimization, names -- including those convicted -- have been changed. Because of the nature of their work, NBC10 agreed to only use the first names of Homeland Security agents.


PHILADELPHIA -- The photos are disturbing.

Children as young as infants forced to undergo sexual acts. Their assaults captured in time and then traded over the internet.

The videos are horrifying.

But it’s the audio that’s haunting.

“It makes you almost want to cry,” said Joe, a veteran special agent with Homeland Security Investigations’ Child Exploitation Unit in Philadelphia.

Part of a virtually unknown arm of the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) division, the unit granted NBC10 exclusive and unprecedented access revealing how they bring to justice the worst-of-the-worst pedophiles operating online and identify and rescue their victims -- wherever they may be.

Their fight is relentless.

CP, as the unit is nicknamed, receives new leads every week at its offices inside the U.S. Customs House in historic Philadelphia about people consuming, distributing and producing child porn in Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia.

The unit’s six male and three female federal investigators are broken into two types: Case Agents, who are similar to traditional detectives and Computer Forensic Agents, who scour computers, smartphones and other electronic devices for evidence.

As agents work one case, they often find leads that can turn into a handful of others.

“You get one guy’s [email] account and he’s talking to 15 guys. If each one of those guys is talking to 15 guys, the list just keeps growing,” said Special Agent Jim, one of the computer forensic agents whose been with the agency for nine years.

While mostly men, the online predator profile ends there. Perpetrators of these crimes range in age, race and socioeconomic status.

“When you’re dealing with child exploitation, you don’t know who that person is. That person is any of the people you know around you,” says Special Agent Chris, another computer forensics agent with five years in CP. “That accountant that you think is your friend, that policeman, that teacher, that elected official, that priest. Those are the people you find.”

Ben and Jenny Smith

In 2006, the Smith family hit a rough patch.

Ben and Jenny’s relationship was strained. There were questions about infidelity and deceit in the 20-somethings’ marriage. Jenny started working a night time shift at the hospital, while Ben would go off and do his own thing in the evenings.

The troubled arrangement presented a dilemma: Who would watch their two young daughters?

That’s when Ryan stepped in. It was a no-brainer. The men were friends since high school and Ryan, was the best man in Ben and Jenny’s wedding. Plus, he was great with kids.

But the couple would later find out that their friend deceived them to feed his urge.

"Any parent would miss this," said Special Agent Emily, who assisted on the case. “Unless you had a camera installed in your house, you probably wouldn't see this because the victims couldn't talk."

Ryan would wait until bedtime.

Once the Smith’s 3-year-old and infant daughters were asleep, he would pull aside their underwear to fondle them and take photos of their genitals.

Ryan’s secret assaults continued for months. They were uncovered nearly two years later when a child porn bust in Germany netted an IP address that traced back to the Lehigh Valley ranch-style house, where Ryan still lived with his parents.

When HSI agents and state police showed up to search for evidence on Feb. 10, 2009, the PennDOT mechanic was at work. His dumbfounded stepmother at first doubted the allegations, but agreed to call her son and ask him to come home.

By the time Ryan arrived, HSI agents had already begun searching the house and located child porn on his computer.

“He appeared disturbed. He appeared like he wasn’t all there. His eyes were everywhere. His focus wasn’t there,” said Special Agent Danny, the lead agent on the case. “He admitted to viewing child pornography, but he denied ever touching anybody.”

Danny didn’t believe him.

“I did reach out to the U.S. Attorney’s Office when we were done the interview and did express my concern that [Ryan] either was molesting kids or he was going to,” he said. But it was just the 43-year-old agent's gut, one based on his two years of experience investigating these types of cases. There was no evidence of assault.

Computer forensic agents confiscated Ryans’ computers and cameras. Back at their lab at the unit’s headquarters in Philadelphia, they scanned the electronics finding thousands of pictures and videos -- including one of another man raping an infant.

As Danny and Emily, both with several years experience investigating these cases, poured through the images, they came across a set taken with Ryan’s camera. Embedded in the digital photos’ code was the camera’s serial number.

Danny finally had the evidence that proved Ryan had molested children.

The agents returned to Ryan's home two days later to bring him into custody.

It was around 6 a.m. on Good Friday when Danny and state police banged on the front door. Ryan was still in bed in the back of the house.

Danny opened the door and stepped into the dark, claustrophobic bedroom -- only faint light seeped in from the hallway. He moved in to arrest Ryan.

“When he saw me, he jumped up and grabbed a hunting knife that was right next to him and then he just slashed his throat,” Danny said.

It took only seconds. Ryan ran the blade back and forth across his neck like a saw. Blood poured from ear-to-ear and onto the floor of the cluttered bedroom, Danny said.

“I threw the handcuffs down, I drew my weapon,” Danny said. “I started yelling ‘Don’t do it! Don’t do it! as I started to back away.”

The bedroom door slammed shut.

Out in the hallway, Danny, state troopers and Ryan’s father pleaded with him to surrender. The standoff went on for 30 minutes until, on the verge of death, Ryan cracked open the door and collapsed.

Paramedics rushed in to stop the bleeding and take him to a nearby hospital.

“The weird thing I’ll never forget as the paramedics were taking him away on a stretcher, he asked them to stop when they got to me and he just started asking for forgiveness,” Danny said. “I said, ‘You don’t have to say sorry to me, you should say sorry to the children and family members and all the children you caused harm to.’”

Colleagues asked Danny why he didn’t immediately shoot Ryan when he pulled the knife. His reply is simple, “It’s just not the right thing to do. I’m not the executioner. My job is just to bring people to justice.”

Ryan was in custody, but the case wasn't closed. They still didn’t know who the girls captured in the man’s photos were.

“We interviewed [Ryan’s stepmother], we interviewed the dad and they gave us information that he had a best friend who also had minor children.”

That was the Smith family.

The agents cropped the photos, showing only background details like sofas and blankets, and went to the Smiths’ house. Once Ben and Jenny confirmed it was their home, the children in the Ryan’s pictures were identified.

Four months after the arrest, Ryan, now 28, pled guilty to producing and possessing child pornography. He is serving out a 20-year sentence in federal prison.

Not Your Neighborhood Police Precinct

Heavy oak doors flanked by black security boxes form blockades around HSI’s Old City offices. Tapping an ID and entering a code grants access to a maze of florescent-lit hallways and offices.

In a large room on the building’s northwest corner, rows of 8-foot-by-8-foot cubicles are where the CP unit’s agents perform their work. Each beige cube’s pin board-covered walls reach nearly 6-feet tall and include a small plaque with the agent’s name.

A few family keepsakes dot desks and walls, but emptiness persists and deafening silence commands the room for long stretches. When they are not running to meetings at the U.S. Attorney’s Office to prepare for arrests or trials, agents spend their time in the office reviewing case evidence or paperwork.

Will Crogan, Supervisory Special Agent, oversees the CP unit. At 34, he’s one of the youngest and newest members to this team. He’s been an HSI agent for the past decade. With red hair and fair skin, the Massachusetts native is laid back, giving his agents autonomy over their investigations.

His office, in the front of the room, features an oversized wooden desk and a chair for visitors. Above them hangs a painting of fishermen at sea. One of the only personal items in sight is a Father’s Day card, handpainted on orange construction paper by Crogan’s son.

The agents on his team range in age from mid-30s to mid-40s. Almost all are married and have kids. Those who don’t are doting aunts and uncles. While some of the men may mention their coaching of little league and helping out with Girl Scouts, there’s not a lot of personal conversation.

Leads constantly flow into the unit and Crogan doles them out to Case Agents, such as Emily, Danny and Joe. They’re assisted by Computer Forensic Agents like Jim and Chris. There’s also an analyst, investigative assistant and seize property specialist.

The leads come in from the regional internet crime task force, through hotlines, from internet service providers, and local and international law enforcement agencies. They appear in many forms -- a hit from a malicious website, or a pornographic email attachment intercepted by legally mandated filters. Rarely, however, are they simply a person’s name.

“We’re not talking about Joe Smith, who lives on Chestnut Street, we’re talking about an IP address or some other identifier like an email account. And we’re working backwards,” Crogan said.


PART TWO: Saving Sophie
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Woman Snatches Eagles Fan's Prosthetic Leg

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Philadelphia Police found a missing prosthetic leg after a local musician claimed a woman stole it from him outside Sunday night's Eagles-Giants game at Lincoln Financial Field.

Sonny Forriest Jr., a Vietnam veteran and musician who performs outside of Phillies and Eagles games, told NBC10 he was singing in the parking lot around 8:30 p.m. when the theft took place.

Forriest Jr., who began using a motorized wheelchair after losing his leg, said he had taken off his prosthetic leg during his performance. He was packing up his car to get going when a group of people danced around him.

"There were some friends who were partying with the leg, then they put it back," Forriest Jr. said.

As he continued to sing, Forriest Jr. said he was then approached by a woman in her 20's who was wearing Eagles gear.

“She jumped in my lap,” Forriest Jr. said. “She gripped my leg and I didn’t even know it. I looked down and she took my leg! Then she disappeared! A young lady came up, snatched my leg off my chair and took off!”

This wasn't the first time Forriest Jr. had his leg stolen -- it also happened in the 90s, he said.

Despite the theft, Forriest Jr. remained in good spirits when he spoke to NBC10 and even performed a few songs. He also had a message for the person who snatched his leg.

“It’s a shaaaame, the way you mess around with old men!” he sang. “It’s a shaaaame the way you hurt me!”

Forriest Jr. filed a police report as police searched for clues. On Monday around 1 a.m., a SEPTA conductor found the prosthetic leg on a train at the other end of the Broad Street Line Subway at the Fern Rock Transportation Center in Olney and then contacted police.

Police reached out to Forriest Jr. to return the leg. Reunited with the leg, Forriest Jr. said he doesn't wish for the woman who snagged his leg gets help.

"Somebody need to talk to her, she don't need to go to jail."

Investigators said that it appeared in total that three women took part in the heist.

Tattooed-Man Attacks Officers During Barricade: Police

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A man with face tattoos of bullet holes threw objects at police officers during a multi-hour barricade situation inside a South Jersey home, according to Medford Township police.

Officers arrived at a home along Jackson Road shortly after 11:30 p.m. Sunday to investigate a man rampaging through the house while acting disorderly, according to investigators.

Officers got several family members out of the home as Jeffrey Douglas, 35, barricaded himself in the basement and refused to exit, police said. As officers attempted to talk to him, investigators said that Douglas burst out of the room and began throwing objects at officers.

He even tried to strike officers with a ceramic statue, said police.

Douglas -- who has various facial tattoos including bullet holes, icicle tears and the word “thug” -- then ran up to the second floor and refused to come down, said investigators.

SWAT teams, assisting with the barricade situation, eventually found Douglas sleeping in a second-floor bedroom around 6:30 a.m. Monday.

Police arrested Douglas on charges including aggravated assault on police, resisting arrest and criminal mischief.



Photo Credit: Medford Township Police

Swastika Rings on Sears Website Spark Outrage

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A jewelry manufacturing company is at the center of controversy after rings with a swastika symbol were listed on several websites.

Jennifer Steinberg of Delaware told NBC10 she was browsing the Sears marketplace website when she spotted the item.

“I was more incredulous because Sears was a company that was founded by Jews,” Steinberg said.

The description for the swastika ring, manufactured by jewelry company CET Domain, said the following:

This gothic jewelry item in particular features a Swastika ring that’s made of .925 Thai silver. Not for Neo Nazi or any Nazi implication. These jewelry items are going to make you look beautiful at your next dinner date.

The swastika ring was also listed on Amazon.com. Rabbi Ellen Bernhard of the Jewish Foundation of Delaware told NBC10 she was “horrified” when she saw the rings.

“I can’t even imagine in my wildest dreams,” she said. “I don’t know what anyone was thinking when they produced this or marketed this. It’s so insensitive.”

Sears Marketplace is not the official Sears website but is instead described as a “community of sellers working with Sears.”

A spokesperson for Sears told NBC10 the company removed the item from the website once they were made aware of it.

“The offensive item, which was listed by independent third-parties on Sears Marketplace, violates our guidelines, and was removed as soon as we became aware of its existence on our site,” the spokesman said. “We are contacting the sellers to strongly voice our concern over their lack of judgment.”

Rabbi Bernhard doesn’t believe Sears did enough however.

“It’s absolutely not good enough,” Bernhard said. “There needs to be an explanation and there needs to be an apology.”

NBC10 reached out to CET Domain for comment. We have not yet heard back from them.
 



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Eagles Employee Accused of Cheering Cruz Injury

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From booing Santa Claus to pelting baseball players with batteries, Philly sports fans don’t exactly have the most stellar reputation. Yet the latest accusation of bad etiquette has led to some fans claiming they were unfairly criticized.

After the Eagles dominated the Giants in a 27-0 shutout victory Sunday night, the New York Daily News posted a story claiming an Eagles staff member as well as 97.5 the Fanatic Sports Talk Host Mike Missanelli cheered when Giants receiver Victor Cruz injured his patellar tendon.

The newspaper posted a photo of the employee pumping his fist as Cruz was on the ground as their front page photo. They also showed a screenshot of a tweet Missanelli posted moments after Cruz went down which read, “Hey Giants fans: Victor Cruz is over. Dance to that.”

After getting backlash from both Giants and Eagles fans, Missanelli deleted the tweet and then explained himself:

As for the Eagles employee, he claimed he was merely cheering the fact that Cruz dropped the pass and didn’t initially know he was hurt. Once he realized Cruz was injured, the employee said he stopped cheering, got on his knees and prayed for Cruz. NBC10 obtained video showing the employee as well as several Eagles players on their knees in prayer as medical staff checked on Cruz. 

CSN Philly’s John Clark also denied allegations that other fans at the Linc were cheering Cruz’s injury.

“I was there in the press box,” Clark said. “The Linc cheered when Cruz dropped the ball. Then when fans saw Cruz down in serious pain the Linc went quiet. They cheered him as he was carted off. It was very classy.”



Photo Credit: NBC10.com
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Temple University Landlords Face Harsh Penalties

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Landlords with properties surrounding Temple University's North Philly campus could face strong penalties now that the off-campus student community is considered an "educational housing district" in Philadelphia.

The Philadelphia City Council passed an ordinance Thursday to add Philly's 5th district, which covers the residential blocks surrounding Temple, to the list of educational housing districts

The educational housing districts are defined to control tenant behavior. Other districts already on the list impact students living near St. Joseph’s University and Philadelphia University.

Improper student behavior could cause the city's Dept of Licenses and Inspections to revoke property managers' and owners' licenses and certificates, according to the updated ordinance.

The updated code also stipulates that students are required to have at least one “supervisor” – someone older than 21 – in the housing unit.

Philadelphia approved the legislation in 2002 to regulate codes more strictly in educational housing districts. At the time, the ordinance impacted just one district -- the 4th which covers Manayunk and Overbrook.

The legislation was updated in 2010 and landlords officially assumed the responsibility of careless student tenants’ actions.

About 82% of Temple's students live off campus and the college's Student Affairs Dept. carefully outlines the university's expectations for student living off-campus, as well as  the responsibilities of landlords.



Photo Credit: Lauren Hertzler

Woman Stabs Herself After Threatening Dog With Knife

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Medics airlifted a woman to the hospital Sunday after she stabbed herself in the stomach in South Jersey.

Police responded to reports of a woman trying to stab a dog in the Villas Section of Lower Township, Cape May County around 1:30 p.m. Sunday and found 48-year-old Roni Hamann with a black-handled knife with an approximately 6-inch long blade near the intersection of Bayshore Road and Carolina Avenue.

The officers ordered Hamann, of the 100 block of Evergreen Avenue, to drop the weapon, but the woman immediately wrapped both her hands around the knife and stabbed herself in the stomach, authorities said.

The officers began treating Hamann's self-inflicted wound as medics rushed to the scene, officials said.

The rescuers transported her to the Cape May County Airport, where she was flow to the Altantic City Medical Center for her injuries, which were not life threatening, police said.

Hamann is facing weapons and trespassing charges for her actions.

Badly Malnourished Dog Rescued From Backyard

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A severely malnourished dog began the road to recovery after being rescued from a Delaware County yard.

The adult female pit bull terrier mix, with white fur and black spots, weighed barely more than 20 pounds -- its ribs protruding -- when humane Investigators plucked it from the backyard of home on Thomas Street in Chester, Pennsylvania on Friday, according to the Delco SPCA.

Despite barely being able to stand and constantly falling over when it tried, the dog would show affection towards people and constantly wagged her tail, according to the SPCA. The SPCA staff named her Pearl “because of her beautiful disposition despite the adversity she has undergone,” said rescuers.

The SPCA put Pearl on a regiment of feeding every two hours as well as giving the dog supplements and proper veterinary care as it recovers.

The investigation into how Pearl wound up so malnourished continued Tuesday. The SPCA said no charges were immediately filed.

The SPCA asked for donations to help care for Pearl as she recovers. No word yet on when she might be available for adoption.

The SPCA asked that anyone with information on the case call 610-566-1370 x214.



Photo Credit: Delaware County SPCA
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