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'Murder Town USA' Title Infuriates Mayor

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The first slap came in March when the real estate blog Movoto listed Wilmington as the country's most dangerous small city with more than 1,700 violent crimes per 100,000 residents. But now the distinction by Newsweek as 'Murder Town USA' must feel more like a left hook.

Mayor Dennis Williams said the image of his city of law-abiding citizens is being distorted even though Wilmington this year has tied its own 2007 record with 27 homicides.

"Unfortunately the violent and unlawful acts of a few are what continues to be publicized. To refer to Wilmington as ‘murder town’ is a grossly inaccurate characterization that severely misrepresents the many good-natured residents within our community," Williams said in a statement Wednesday.

Wilmington, which is home to DuPont, is characterized in the article as a city of haves and have-nots that hasn't been able to overcome the challenges brought on by increased crime and poverty.

Newsweek also likens Wilmington to Ferguson, Missouri — two cities where the racial makeup of law enforcement doesn't come close to representing the general population: 

When you ask people in Wilmington about the root causes of the city’s crime epidemic, their answers read like the devil’s Christmas list: poverty, racism, lack of economic opportunities, drug and alcohol abuse, gun violence, high dropout rates, teenage pregnancy, stressed families and more. In the U.S., homicide is the leading cause of death for black men between 15 and 34. In Wilmington, where 58 percent of residents are African-American, crime and violence disproportionately affect poor black families, especially boys and young men. Exacerbating tensions between residents and law enforcement is the fact that the police department is 70 percent white and 21 percent black.

Mayor Williams is quoted in the article as blaming the city's crime problems on the state-run school system.

In March when Movoto listed Wilmington as the country's most violent small city, it looked at more than 200 cities with populations between 50,000 and 75,000. Wilmington has just over 71,500 residents. Cities were ranked according to the number of major crimes in the FBI's uniform crime report from 2012.

The categories of crime included murder, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, theft and motor vehicle theft. Wilmington had 1,703 violent crimes per 100K people. It was the only city in the tri-state area to make the top 10 list.

In case you're wondering, Camden's population is closer to 77,000. So far this year, they've had 42 homicides, according to the county prosecutor's website.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com - Tim Furlong

NJ Voters Oppose Gas Tax Hike: Poll

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New Jersey voters want to see transit improvement, but drivers fighting a proposed gas tax, according to a new poll.

Photo Credit: NBC Bay Area

3 Injured in Crash on Icy Bucks County Road

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Icy conditions may have played a role in a crash involving three cars that injured multiple people in Bucks County Weds. night.

The crash happened on the 1400 block of North West End Blvd. in Quakertown just before 9 p.m., officials said.

Three vehicles -- including a pickup truck -- were involved in the crash. Three people were taken to a nearby hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

The circumstances surrounding the accident are unclear at this time, however, police have requested that PennDOT send salt trucks to the area which is slick with ice, said officials.

The accident has been cleared.



Photo Credit: NBC10

NBC10 First Alert Weather: Snowy, Windy Night

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NBC10 First Alert Chief Meteorologist Glenn "Hurricane" Schwartz says snow showers, wind and cold will stick around tonight.

Pizza Delivery Woman Shot, Paralyzed

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A family is reeling after a young pizza delivery woman was shot and paralyzed Tuesday night in Chester, Delaware County.

Nikki Williams, 23, was making what she thought was a food delivery for Gino's Pizza around midnight in the area of 9th and Ward when she was shot once in her side, said police. The bullet pierced her spinal cord and her lungs, leaving her paralyzed from the waist down, according to her family.

"The have really shattered my family," said the victim's mother, Stacy Moton. "I don't know why they decided to shoot my baby..."

Williams was found inside her car and rushed to Crozer-Chester Medical Center.

The call for the delivery, police say, was a set-up to rob the delivery person.

The victim had worked for Gino's for three years before she was shot. She was working there part-time to pay for her education at a technical school, said Moton.

Moton says she begged her daughter to stop delivering pizza because it was unsafe.

"My daughter could have died in those streets."

Police are asking that anyone with information on the shooting to call Chester Police.

"Do the right thing," said Moton. "We will forgive."



Photo Credit: Family Photo

Big Jump in Grad Rates for Camden

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There's been a big increase in the graduation rate in Camden -- and the dropout rate is the lowest in three years.

Counterfeit Cash Has Businesses on Alert

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Counterfeit cash is changing hands at big shopping centers as well as small businesses in the area this holiday season. NBC10's Rosemary Connors reports from the Christmas Village in Center City where vendors are keeping a watchful eye.

Flu Season: When You Should See the Doctor

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A nationwide program called Choose Wisely has doctors refusing to give patients antibiotics. The goal is to reduce antibiotic resistance. NBC10 has tips on when you should visit the doctor.

Female Firefighters Mourn Hero

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After the first loss of a female Philadelphia firefighter, women firefighters across the area are mourning the life of Joyce Craig and say the understand what her family is going through. NBC10's Deanna Durante has the story.

Program Helps Teens Stay Safe After School

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The After School Activities Partnerships, ASAP, was given a $25,000 grant from NBCUniversal's 21st Century Solutions. The program helps teens stay out of trouble during the time of day known as the "danger zone."

SJ Community Supports Family of Plane Crash Victims

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Federal investigators are still looking for clues into the cause of a deadly plane crash in suburban Washington that killed a mother from Brick Township, N.J. and her sons when it slammed into their home. Three people on board were also killed. NBC10's Ted Greenberg reports.

Thursday's Icy Morning Commute

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Drivers beware, temperatures have dropped below freezing causing icy conditions north and west of Philadelphia -- and they'll stay slick for Thursday's morning commute, according to NBC10 First Alert Meteorologist Sheena Parveen.

Those areas saw snow showers Wednesday and they continued overnight causing accidents on untreated roads -- including an accident that injured three people on an icy road in Quakertown, Bucks County.

With temperatures already below freezing and snow showers still falling they'll add to the slippery conditions overnight and for Thursday's early commute.

Some towns have asked PennDOT to come salt untreated streets in preparation for Thursday's morning rush.

Thursday will be windy and cold with a high around 40. More snow showers are also expected before a weekend dry-out.



Photo Credit: Stephanie Burke

Questions in Fatal West Oak Lane Fire Investigation

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Fire investigators are working to figure out what caused the West Oak Lane fire that killed a Philadelphia firefighter.

Icy Spots, Snow Showers

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NBC10 First Alert meteorologist Sheena Parveen warns of icy spots on the roads overnight and into the morning as temperatures -- and snow showers -- fall.

Oil Slick Threatens NJ Bay Seals

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A large oil slick threatened New Jersey's Sandy Hook Bay Thursday, and authorities worried the sheen could endanger the population of seals that migrate there each winter, the U.S. Coast Guard and parks officials told NBC 4 New York Thursday.

Oil from the 2-mile-long, 400-foot-wide slick started washing up on parts of the shoreline Thursday afternoon, though the source of the spill is unclear.

The Coast Guard worked into the night setting up a boom over a culvert in an effort to catch the oil before it could reach the environmentally sensitive, and popular horseshoe cove tidal marsh. 

A spokesman for the agency said Friday that most of the remaining oil was expected to break up or evaporate by the day's first light because of the light nature of the petroleum involved in the slick.

Great and harbor seals are known to migrate to Sandy Hook Bay, and the National Park Service says the animals have already moved there for the season.

Officials at the Marine Mammal Stranding Center in Brigantine said the food supply for the seals could be compromised. If fish ingest the oil, the officials explained, and a seal eats enough of those fish, the seal could die.

Officials said the oil sheen also threatens the sea water intake pipe for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Fisheries lab on Sandy Hook.

The cause of the oil slick is under investigation.



Photo Credit: NBC 4 New York

Drexel Alerts Students of Knife-Wielding Rapist

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A day after a Drexel student was raped by a robber who threatened her with a knife, the school shared the information with other students and asked for help in identifying her attacker.

The 21-year old woman woke up around 4:15 a.m. Wednesday after hearing noise in her West Philly apartment. She got up to investigate and stumbled upon a stranger holding the large kitchen knife.

The man demanded money and the woman's cellphone. He sexually assaulted her before fleeing her apartment in the 3400 block of Spring Garden.

Investigators with Philadelphia's Special Victims Unit do not have enough definitive information to identify the attack, according to the safety advisory issued by the school. Drexel asked anyone with information that might be helpful in this investigation, to contact the Special Victims Unit at 215-685-3251 or the Drexel University Public Safety Department by telephone at 215-895-2222.

The school also alerted students of an incident in the same off-campus neighborhood Thursday morning. A drunk man groped two female students. He's described as a 6’ tall, black male, intoxicated, wearing a gray and blue jacket and gray hat. One incident occurred at 34th and Powelton, the second a block away at 35th and Powelton.

On Wednesday, another student was slashed during a fight over a girl.

Wife Killer Rafael Robb Wants $124M Award Reduced

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Wife killer and former UPenn professor Rafael Robb doesn't want all that money  — $124M — going to his murdered wife's estate. The couple's only child, a daughter who is now 20, is the beneficiary of that estate.

Robb bludgeoned his wife Ellen to death in the couple's King of Prussia home in 2006, and after pleading guilty to voluntary manslaughter was sentenced to a minimum of 5 and maximum of 10 years in prison.

Last month, in a civil trial, the evidence in the case was presented publicly for the first time and jurors awarded Ellen's estate $124.26 million in compensatory and punitive damages. It's believed to be the largest contested personal injury verdict in Pennsylvania history. Prosecutors believe Rafael Robb still has millions in assets.

Robb was back in court Thursday — via prison video — asking a Montgomery County judge to reduce the punitive portion of the award, which was $100 million. Robb's attorney, Eric D. Levin, argued some of the evidence presented by the plaintiff's attorneys prejudiced jurors and should not have been allowed. Autopsy photographs revealed Ellen's head was beaten so viciously, investigators initially believed she'd been shot in the face. Other crime scene photographs depicted what attorney Bob Mongeluzzi likened during the trial to a horror movie, due to the amount of blood Ellen lost on the floor and walls of her kitchen.

"This is a desperate murderer who is trying to cling to any money he has and making a last ditch, desperate attempt to exert control over a daughter who doesn't want to have anything to do with him," said Andrew Duffy, an attorney for Ellen Robb's estate.

Rafael Robb's attorney also argued the court should have granted a mistrial when Robb's daughter was escorted out of the courtroom by a "gauntlet" of people after testifying against her father because the scene left jurors with the impression Robb was a "monster."

Attorneys for Ellen Robb's estate argued the award was not excessive and served to keep others from committing such heinous crimes.

"So an award like this deters not only people who have a little amount of money, but also deters people who have a lot of money," said Mongeluzzi.

Judge Thomas Del Ricci told both sides he would issue a ruling in writing.

Attempts to reach Rafael Robb's attorney for comment were unsuccessful.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Man Caught Mid-Attack Near UPenn's Campus

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Less than an hour after a Philadelphia university issued an alert warning students of several assaults on female students in the University City area, a man was arrested – mid-attack.

James Barrett, 55, was taken into custody around 6:30 Thursday night after police officers caught him assaulting a 38-year-old graduate student near the school’s campus, in the area of 41st and Pine sts.

"As she's walking, she gets struck in the back of the head with a bicycle lock," said Philadelphia Police Lt. John Walker. "She struggled with the offender and he drags her approximately 50 yards down the street before trying to take her items."

The victim was rushed to the hospital where she was treated for minor cuts on her head.

They believe Barrett may be behind four other attacks on female students walking alone in University City over the last five days.

UPenn sent out an alert via email to its students around 5 p.m. Thursday warning of the possible danger – just a day after a Drexel student was raped by a robber who threatened her with a knife in her off-campus apartment on 34th and Spring Garden.

"Penn Police, Drexel Police and Philadelphia Police have received reports of four assaults committed over the past five days in the University City area. The suspect in all four assaults targeted females walking alone. The description of the suspect in all four assaults meets the same description."

An alert was also sent to the Drexel Community Thursday morning after an intoxicated man allegedly groped two female students on 34th and 35th and Powelton, according to officials.

Barrett matches the attacker’s description in all five assaults, although he has not been charged. The attacker is accused of preying on young women walking alone in the areas of Penn and Drexel Universities.

They have not connected Barrett to the violent off-campus rape.

Students are urged to walk in groups and Penn and Drexel have amped up police and security presence to ensure the safety of their students, according to the alert.

Police ID Men Wanted in Coin Store Robbery

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Bensalem police are looking for two men, David Piergrossi and Daniel Leflar, in connection with an armed heist at a coin store.

Veterans Parade Blocks Traffic in Del. Town

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Part of the main road through the small Delaware town of Middletown is blocked for a veterans parade. NBC10's Tim Furlong says despite the traffic issues, town residents wanted to honor vets.
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