Quantcast
Channel: Local – NBC10 Philadelphia
Viewing all 60435 articles
Browse latest View live

Hoilday Weekend at the Shore

0
0

The threat of rain is lingering at the shore for the long holiday weekend. NBC10’s Monique Braxton checked-out how the weather is impacting Sea Isle City in Cape May county.

Woman Allegedly Sexually Assaulted

0
0

A woman gets into, what she thinks is a cab, but quickly realizes her mistake when police say the men inside sexually assaulted her. NBC10's Na'eem Douglas reports from outside Special Victims Unit.

Environmentalist Press for Climate Change Consideration

0
0

As New Jersey continues to rebuild from Sandy, there are some differences on how to proceed.

Contending that the reconstruction is not taking climate change into account, environmental groups urge a strategic retreat from some storm-surge and flood risk areas.

Gov. Chris Christie, however, said he won't condemn shorefront properties to prevent rebuilding homes there.

"There are private property rights to respect here," the governor said. "And if folks are willing to comply with the law and make their structures more resilient and tougher against the weather, then I don't think there's any reason why I shouldn't let them rebuild."

Christie said that residents who voluntarily want to leave their homes in flood-prone neighborhoods may be eligible for a $100 million buyout program.

He says the state is prepared to take property along the coast to build an integrated dune system to provide protection from future storms.

About 1,100 shorefront property owners still haven't signed easements to allow that project, Christie said.

More News: 


This story was reported through a news coverage partnership between NBC10.com and NewsWorks.org



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Dealing With Cause of Wilmington Violence

0
0

Wilmington may be Delaware's largest city, but it's geographically small when compared to neighboring cities like Philadelphia that are riddled with crime. Yet Wilmington faces the same issue. A University of Delaware researcher may have the answer in a new report.

To get to the root of the problem, Dr. Yasser Payne of the University of Delaware decided to train a group of men and women who were either caught up in life on the streets or criminal justice system. He had them collect data from residents in two Wilmington poverty stricken neighborhoods. The study is called the Participatory Action Research project. It has been called an intervention experience, designed to direct some of those data collectors to better opportunities.

"I think by me being a part of the problem, now I wanted to be a part of the solution," said Dennis Watson, one of 15 men and women who hit the streets to observe and interview residents.

Now, after collecting more than 520 surveys from the street corners of Wilmington's Southbridge and Eastside neighborhoods, Watson has a different perspective on life.
"I spent most of my years, my youth, my adolescence, all the way up to my young adulthood incarcerated due to poor decision making," said Watson.

But thanks to the PAR project, Watson, who grew up in Southbridge, now wants to mentor at-risk youth. The PAR project proves to be more than a research experience, but about activism as well, requiring action in local communities.

"If we're going to help guys who are caught up in the streets, guys caught up in prisons, then we're going to actually have to come up with a robust program that provides new and fresh opportunity with livable wages," said Payne.

A different kind of survey

Payne says using data collectors who come from these neighborhoods, researchers were able to get information that would often be unavailable.

"You're not going to tell someone outside of your community that both of your parents are on drugs and that you're the breadwinner in the house and that you're only 18,19, 20 years old," said data collector Pat Gibbs.

It's that kind of information that Gibbs, a former loan shark and hustler, was able to get people to open up about.  What he learned even motivated him to get his life back on track and self publish two books.

Structural violence

"You have a community or neighborhoods that are under siege by the structural systems, so you have communities that are sustained in poverty or structural violence, and for us and what we found in the study is that structural violence is predicting the violence in the city," said Payne.

However, decreasing such structural violence is challenging, especially when one major thing in the community is missing according to Payne, and that is jobs.

"Often times, particularly older guys, understand the risks that are associated with the streets: jail, physical injury, and/or death. They're not actually blind to those consequences, given their situation in that context, those consequences are seen as worth it," said Payne.

It's "worth it" because there aren't enough jobs in the community, especially not for people with some type of criminal background, said Payne.  He believes minimum wage jobs like the ones often found at fast food restaurants and factories aren't working.  More often than not, more money can be made on the streets than in a minimum wage job, that's why Payne suggests the community needs to come together to find a solution.

"I think it is possible to develop a partnership between civic and political leadership and black youth and young adults caught up in the criminal justice system in Wilmington. I think Wilmington is small enough where all of those forces can converge," said Payne.

Report recommendations

In the report, there are 17 recommendations under multiple target areas, including structural opportunity, physical violence, and street outreach.

"Now they understand the communities in ways the experts don't, so that puts them in a unique position that allows them to have a certain level of power or cache, and our thing is let's just build on that momentum," said Payne.

For PAR data collectors like Watson, the project is a stepping stone. "I think the influence that Yasser gave me was more so the push I needed, because I could've got out of jail and with the things I learned in there still went for the negative," said Watson who's currently working on starting a non-profit organization to help at-risk youth.

The next steps

Most of the PAR team members changed their lives completely and are doing well since the research project ended. At least one is enrolled as an undergrad student at the University of Delaware, while another PAR member is working on a doctorate in criminal justice at UD. One former data collector is in graduate school at Wilmington University. Also, a former felon was hired for a university job, and another former felon was hired at another of the state's largest employers.  Those hirings are all examples of the project's success by showing people what opportunities are available to them.  More importantly, the project convinces employers that a felony conviction isn't the sum total of who someone is or what they're capable of.

Payne said no research in the state's history has the kind of data that was collected during this project that began in 2010. The report will be released online on thepeoplesreport.com on September 16th.
 


This story was reported through a news coverage partnership between NBC10.com and NewsWorks.org

MIA Reps Encourage Fans to Bring Water to Concert

0
0

There are restrictions, but reps from inside the venue are encouraging concertgoers to drink LOTS of water for day 2.

Photo Credit: Getty Images for Rebel Waltz

'MIA' Concertgoers Sexually Assaulted: Police

0
0

Police are investigating two alleged sexual assaults in the area surrounding the "Made in America" music festival.

Police say that around 6:30 p.m. Saturday, a 24-year-old woman got into a white four-door sedan on the 2200 block of Spring Garden Street near the "Made in America" venue.

The woman told police that she was under the impression that the vehicle was a taxi and got in.

It was then, the woman says, that a man in the backseat sexually assaulted her and stole $41 before dropping her off at 10th and Catherine streets, according to authorities.

The suspects are described as black men in their teens or early 20s.

Just a few hours later, a 22-year-old victim was sexually assaulted by a man she met at "Made in America," according to police.

They say the woman went with the man to his apartment on 20th and Arch to use his telephone.

While inside the apartment, the suspect, a Turkish national, allegedly sexually assaulted the woman.

She was able to escape and contact police.  Police arrested Ankara Demir shortly after.  He is charged with rape, sexual assault, and related charges.

The city prepared for the concert by assigning extra police and fire crews to the area.

Three Philadelphia Police beacons are positioned outside the festival. The beacons are located on the northeast corner of 17th Street and the Parkway, the southeast corner of 18th and the Parkway and the western entrance to Logan Circle between 19th and 20th Streets.

Concert organizers also took steps to minimize danger. They've banned cans, bottles, and no alcohol is allowed from beyond the gates.

The news alarmed concertgoers and made some more cautious in preparation for Sunday night's finale.

"Well I'm a Girl Scout. I make sure to check everything, I check my surroundings, I check people's faces...I check everything. I make sure my party sticks together," said one woman.

Both cases are under investigation.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

State to Renew Newark Schools Chief Deal

0
0

New Jersey's top education official has reportedly recommended that the state keep Newark Schools Superintendent Cami Anderson on the job.

Citing a letter it obtained, The Star-Ledger reports that Education Commissioner Christopher Cerf has recommended that Anderson's three-year contract be renewed for another three years, beginning next July.

The terms of the new deal have not been finalized, and the state Board of Education would have to approve the deal. Anderson now earns an annual salary of $247,500 and can receive a performance bonus worth up to $50,000.
 
Cerf and Gov. Chris Christie recently praised Anderson for brokering a landmark teacher contract that offers bonuses to top teachers for the first time.
 
But some community leaders in Newark have been sharply critical of Anderson's policies.

More news on NBC10.com:



Photo Credit: educationnext.org

Crews Continue to Battle Massive Blaze at Warehouse

0
0

Crews continue to battle a six-alarm fire more than nine hours after it ripped through a Burlington County, New Jersey food warehouse.

The fire broke out at the Dietz & Watson factory on Cooperstown Road in Delanco around 2 p.m. Sunday. Thick, black smoke could be seen billowing from the roof of the facility from miles away.

Fire officials say that the fire is about 30 percent under control and that they expect to battle the blaze into the morning.

There are over 200 firefighters from 28 fire companies across region working to get the fire completely under control. Camden Fire Boat crew also responded to the scene to help create a stretch of a pipeline for water to flow from the Rancocas Creek.

Officials say the fire is currently contained between the trusses and the solar panels on the roof. There have been two explosions so far and at least one wall has collapsed.

“It’s just an intense fire,” said Delanco Fire Chief Ron Holt. “It’s going to take some time and we don’t know what it’s going to do. The problem we have with this fire is the whole roof has solar panels on it, so we can't get on the roof to fight it.”

In 2010, the company installed more than 7,000 solar power modules, which officials claimed would reduce the facility's energy use by nearly 20 percent. Buildings with solar power systems “can present a variety of significant hazards" for firefighters including poor air quality and electrocution, according to the National Fire Protection Association.

"With all that power and energy up there, I can't jeopardize a guy’s life for that,” said Holt. 

Fire officials were concerned that the water and foam being using to fight the blaze would cause the roof to collapse. All firefighters were called out of the building as a safety precaution.

“The hazard right now I’m worried about is whether I will have a structural collapse,” said Holt. “If the building collapses, it collapses…it can be replaced I’m not sending a man in to lose a life.”

The Burlington County hazmat team was called to the scene to test the air quality and concluded that there is no hazard at this time. However, residents received a reverse 911 message from the Beverly and Edgewater Park Joint Office of Emergency Management which warned them to stay inside their homes, close their windows and to not breathe in the smoke.

“Unless you’re standing right there and breathing, its dissipating before it hits ground,” said Chief Holt. “That's why we called the health department and hazmat team... (if they say close your window) that's their expertise, that's what I go with.”

There have been no evacuations and no reports of injuries at this time.

Solar panels coupled with pumps that ran out of water also created major hurdles for fire crews. New Jersey American Water asked customers in Edgewater Park, Beverley, and Delanco to limit their water usage as crews battle the blaze.

"Due to the large volumes of water being used by firefighters to tackle the six-alarm blaze, we ask that customers restrict their home water usage until such time as the fire is successfully brought under control. Additionally, you may experience periods of low pressure as we try to direct as much water to the firefighting efforts as possible,” according to Communications Director Peter Eschbach.

“That’s major because (without water) you are not putting the fire out,” said Holt.

The Delanco Riverside Bridge was closed around 7 p.m. Officials did not indicate when it would reopen.

Sandy Iwanicki, who lives near the warehouse, said she initially thought a plane had crashed.

“It looked to me like the kind of scene you would see if a plane crashed the black smoke was immense it was amazing,” said Iwanicki.

Dietz & Watson officials released a statement regarding the fire on their Twitter page.

"Thanks for your thoughts and prayers everyone. Our Delanco, NJ distribution warehouse employees are safe," according to the statement.

The Mayor of Delano called the fire a loss for the town.

“This is a loss for Delanco for all the employees, the economy and what have you…we ‘re going to take care if the firefighters and I just want to thank them all,” said Mayor Kate Fitzpatrick.

Officials say the building was not in operation Sunday. Two security guards were working outside the building.

The distribution center is approximately 300,000 square feet, the size of five football fields.

The company, founded in 1939, opened the center in 2007. It is their main distribution center. They also have processing facilities in Philadelphia, Baltimore and Corfu, New York.


Concertgoers Sexually Assaulted: Police

0
0

Police are investigating two alleged sexual assaults in the area surrounding the "Made in America" music festival. One person has been arrested. NBC1's Na'eem Douglas reports.

Made in America Final Night

0
0

Rock band Nine Inch Nails is set to perform at the evening's Made in America music festival. NBC10's George Spencer has the story.

7 Shot, 2 Dead on Violent Night

0
0

Seven people were shot and two of them are dead during a violent night in the Philadelphia area.

Police say that two people are dead after a shooting around 11:30 Saturday night on the 500-block of Erie Street in Camden.   

So far, no details have been released.

About an hour later, two men, both in their 20s, were shot in the leg in Kensington.

The men were shot in the area of Mutter Street.

One ran to a restaurant at Lehigh and Mascher after being injured. The other showed up at Temple University Hospital a short time after the shooting.

Police are unsure if the men shot each other. Neither are cooperating with authorities.

Just before 2 a.m., three people were shot at a block party in North Philadelphia.

Police say a 26-year-old man was hit in the chest, arm and stomach. He is in critical condition.

A 57-year-old man and 26-year-old woman were shot in the arm. Both are stable, according to authorities.

All three were taken to Temple Hospital.

No suspects have been arrested.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Raw Video: Fire Rips Through Dietz & Watson Building

0
0

Crews are battling a six-alarm fire that ripped through the Dietz and Watson building in Burlington County, New Jersey.

Fire Burns at Dietz & Watson Warehouse

0
0

Thick, black smoke pours from the Dietz & Watson warehouse in Delanco, Burlington County. This is Dietz & Watson's main distribution center on the East Coast. The possibility of a collapse has sent firefigthers out of the building. NBC10's Cydney Long reports from the scene.

Street Closures as "Made in America" Cleanup Continues

0
0

NBC10's Matt DeLucia is live on the Ben Franklin Parkway where some roads remain closed as crews work to cleanup after the "Made in America" festival.

Photo Credit: NBC10

Suspect in Cabbie Stabbing Identified

0
0

Police have identified a man who was arrested in the stabbing of a Philadelphia cab driver overnight.

Luis Moreno, 21, and an unidentified man allegedly stabbed the city taxi driver nearly a dozen times during a robbery at Front Street and Washington Avenue in the Queen Village neighborhood, according to Philadelphia Police.

The attack left the driver in the hospital, Moreno under arrest and the other suspect on the loose.

Police say the cabdriver let the men out of his cab around 1:15 a.m. near Front and Washington. According to police, one of the men stood by the driver's window appearing to get money from his wallet when the other man took a knife and began stabbing the driver.

At that time the other man also took out a knife and began attacking the cabbie through the driver's side window.

The driver fought back, grabbing one of the men's knives and stabbing him. At that time the other suspect stabbed the cabbie in the head. The taxi driver also suffered wounds to his arm, side and chest in the process, according to investigators.

The suspects ran away. Originally it was reported that they took $20 but police later clarified that they actually took $205. 

After the attack, the 37-year-old cabbie, who investigators haven't identified, managed to drive about eight blocks to Front and South Streets because he knew there are normally police in that area.

"Someone outside saw him and called police, and they responded quickly," said police Capt. Frank Llewellyn.

Despite being stabbed, the driver was able to give a basic description of his attackers.

Police picked up Moreno at 4th and Federal Streets. He was arrested and charged with attempted murder, robbery and other related offenses. The other man got away, and police say it’s possible he was stabbed in the process of the attack.

The driver was taken to Jefferson University Hospital. He was believed to be in critical condition but police later said he was in stable condition with what investigators called "superficial" wounds.

Anyone with information on this incident should contact Philadelphia Police.



Photo Credit: NBC10

No Love Lost for "Labor"

0
0

Today is Labor Day. It is the oddest of American national holidays.

It honors an institution, the labor union, to which only about 1 in 10 Americans belongs. A higher percentage than that actively disdains the very idea of unions.

As if to underline the irony, unionized teachers in Philadelphia will observe the holiday by meeting to discuss how to respond to demands for major givebacks.

Public sector unions are becoming nearly all that's left of an ever-dwindling union movement. Unionization in the private sector has shrunk to 7 percent of the workforce.

That's a big reason why real wages for most Americans have stagnated even as the productivity of American labor hit an all time peak in 2012. Higher productivity creates wealth, but the top part of the income scale is grabbing most of the fruits.

In this landscape, public sector unions sit as a big, fat target. Why? Well, for one thing, they don't directly create wealth. Instead, they absorb tax revenues.

And the American taxpayer makes for a very crabby boss. This has been true ever since the original Tea Party. What's more, ever since the era-shaping rhetoric of Ronald Reagan, Americans have been trained to regard government primarily as an engine of waste and imposition, and public sector works as parasitic dullards.

Given all that, it's a wonder anyone willingly takes a public sector job these days. Government today would likely be far more effective if only we hadn't spent the last 30 years telling our brightest young people that only losers work in government.

Still, some mighty talented, dedicated people do bless the public sector, working to ensure our streets are safe, our water clean, our children taught.

Every workforce has its cheats and its nincompoops. But in the public sector, more than any other kind, the workforce's image gets defined by the worst in its ranks.

Thanks to this chronic disrespect, public workers tend to be touchy, resistant to change, crouching behind walls of defensive rhetoric.

But that hunkering down just compounds their alienation from potential allies, the people who believe in government, but see that it must adjust old reflexes to meet the demands of new times.

Public unions desperately need to find, at long last, a rhetoric persuasive enough to counter the lingering popular appeal of Reagan's formulations. As of yet, in Philly at least, they have not.


This story was reported through a news coverage partnership between NBC10.com and NewsWorks.org

Fire Burns at Philly Storage Facility

0
0

Philadelphia firefighters battled a blaze this morning at a hauling and storage facility in the city’s Frankford neighborhood.

The fire on Ruan Street quickly went to three alarms within an hour after breaking out around 10:30 a.m. Monday. It took nearly two hours to bring under control.

Luckily there were no reports of any injuries. Some neighbors were evacuated from their homes.

The building says SW Smith and Sons on it. Philadelphia Fire Department Executive Chief Richard Davison says the building is used to store people's furniture and items during a move.

PECO shut power to the immediate area. SEPTA bypassed the Market/Frankford Line's Church Station because of the fire nearby.

Davison said that License and Inspections would be inspecting the building to make sure nothing is hazardous.

This fire came as crews continued to battle an 11-alarm blaze at a food storage warehouse across the Delaware River in Delanco, N.J.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

Solar Panels Growing Hazard for Firefighters

0
0

Firefighters battling the massive 11-alarm blaze at the Dietz & Watson distribution center in South Jersey faced an unlikely foe during the fight -- solar panels.

A solar array with more than 7,000 photovoltaic panels lined the roof of the nearly 300,000 square-foot refrigeration facility which served as a temporary storage center for the company’s deli meats and cheeses. But the panels, while environmentally sustainable and cost-saving, may have led to the complete destruction of the warehouse.

Fighting the fire under bright blue skies Sunday, Delanco Fire Chief Ron Holt was forced to keep firefighters from attacking the blaze from the roof because of electrocution concerns.

"With all that power and energy up there, I can't jeopardize a guy’s life for that,” said Holt. Those electrocution fears combined with concerns of a collapse forced firefighters to simply spray the building with water and foam from afar.

Ken Willette from the National Fire Protection Association, a nonprofit that develops standards for firefighting, says electrocution is one of the hazards firefighters are increasingly facing fighting blazes at structures where solar panels are deployed.

“Those panels, as long as there’s any kind of light present, whether it’s daylight or it’s electronic lamp light, will generate electricity,” he said.

A 2011 study from the Underwriters Laboratory found solar panels, being individual energy producers, could not be easily de-energized from a single point like other electric sources. Researchers recommended throwing a tarp over the panels to block light, but only if crews could safely get to the area.

“Very often they’re not wired like your home, where you have a master breaker. Even if you turn the breaker off, the panels still generate electricity and you need to cover them and prevent any light from getting into them,” Willette said.

Flooding a roof with solar panels also presents access issues that can stop firefighters from making ventilation holes used to extinguish the fire.

Willette says the issues force firefighters to take a defensive approach to fighting the flames by staying away from the building – rather than going inside and attacking the fire source.

“It definitely impedes the firefighting operation and any time you impede firefighting operation, you slow down suppression efforts,” he said.

From 2010 through 2012, photovoltaic solar panel installations have jumped nearly 300-percent, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA). Forecasts show the trend will continue to increase sharply through 2017. The SEIA also says New Jersey has the second highest solar capacity in the United States.

With the continued growth of solar panels and other alternative energies, Willette says code officials, builders and developers need to work with local fire departments to ensure installations are designed with firefighting in mind.

“The new paradigm is firefighters might encounter building systems they have little or no knowledge of,” Willette said. “It used to be homes and commercial buildings had roofs and walls and heating and ventilation systems that the fire service was used to dealing with…modern technology, both in building construction and these other alternative energy systems, have changed that.”
 


Contact Vince Lattanzio at 610.668.5532, vince.lattanzio@nbcuni.com or follow @VinceLattanzio on Twitter.



Photo Credit: Owen Brennan/NBC10.com

Project to Make Philly's Vacant Spaces 'Lots of Power'

0
0

Philadelphia has more than 40,000 blighted, vacant lots across the city. Deciding how to develop and address the negative ripple effects they have on neighborhoods is complex.

But it's something Megan Barrett says Maryland-based wind power company Clean Currents sought to answer -- at least in the Kensington neighborhood -- when it opened its regional office here in January.

"In our conversations with people in the community, this issue of vacant lots and vacant properties kept coming up over and over again," Barrett said. "So, we decided that we wanted to do something that would be both impactful and something that would best support positive community change, and that's how we decided to develop this Lots of Power program."

Lots of Power, an initiative developed through partnerships with AIGA Philadelphia, the Delaware Valley Green Building Council, and various schools and community organizations in Kensington, pairs professional designers and architects (mentors) with high school youth (mentees). As teams, the pairs will take a creative approach to making sustainable transformations to vacant lots in the Kensington community.

"We wanted it to be a very educational opportunity for teens to get involved in their communities and we wanted them to hopefully come up with some creative solutions that maybe haven't been discovered yet," Barrett said.

Participating teams will submit proposals to Clean Currents next month and through a process of internal and public voting, two winners will be chosen to receive a $4,500 grant to implement their proposals later this fall.

Michael Sebright, founder of sustainable design firm Evolve Build, and Lammey & Giorgio architect Kelly Ball got the chance to mentor recent Frankford High School graduate Salina Santiago on one of the teams.

Both Sebright and Ball says the project was a great opportunity for them to help educate a future architecture and design student while also helping the Kensington.

"It gave me the opportunity to bring my experience to the table and then provide it to somebody who's a young, aspiring architect," Sebright said. "So being a part of that conversation, I can give her a window into something that is a really unique, and a really different way of looking at architecture. and at the end of the day its really something good to do; being able to give back to the community."

"I enjoy teaching and working with young people, but in my professional career, I don't always get the opportunity to do that. So I thought it was a great opportunity to introduce architecture to somebody who might be interested in it and who otherwise might not get the chance to kind of see the inside of what that's like," Ball said.

Santiago, 18, who hopes to pursue a career in architecture, says she soaked up a lot of knowledge working with the two veteran designers.

"They really helped me get a view of how architecture can work from the inside out," Santiago said. 

While the team is keeping its proposed project plans tightly under wraps so as not to spoil the competition, Sebright says he and Ball relied heavily on its student mentee Santiago, a lifelong resident of Kensington, to provide insight as to what type of project would be most beneficial to the community.

"As an outsider, I really let Salina tell me what was going on. I didn't assume that I knew anything about what would be best for the site. All I did was ask questions of her and let her explore the boundaries of what was happening in her community," Sebright said.

"Around where I'm from, everyone is always outside. So, I thought having our project there would be so much better than having just an empty lot with trash in it; and to have something there that people can use would be so much better for the community," Santiago said.

According to Barrett, six teams in total will be submitting their final project proposals in September. Winners will be announced on www.lotsofpower.net and www.cleancurrents.com.



Photo Credit: Jamie Moffatt

Police Officer Hurt in ATV Crash

0
0

A police officer responding to a call in Atlantic City is recovering after an ATV accident.

Investigators say Officer Mike Mayer, 51, was patrolling the beach on his all-terrain vehicle shortly after 7:30 p.m. when he received a call for backup. According to investigators, another officer as well as Taj Mahal Security were dealing with a Scores bar employee on the second floor of the hotel. The employee, identified as 48-year-old Jonathan James of Sicklerville, was allegedly behaving unruly and attacking both security and an Atlantic City Police Officer.

As Officer Mayer responded to the call, he somehow lost control of his vehicle and struck his lower right leg on the corner of the Taj Mahal on Pennsylvania Avenue.

Mayer was taken to AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center where he will undergo surgery. Police say his injury is not life-threatening.

Police later arrested James. He is charged with aggravated assault on police, resisting arrest and other related offenses.

Also on NBC10.com:

Water Floods Pa. Parking Lot, 20 Rescued

Naked Man Found Asleep in Car Accused of Attacking Officer

Limo Driver in Deadly Crash Suspected of Drug Use



Photo Credit: NBC
Viewing all 60435 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images