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KOP Kidnapping Suspect Posts Bail

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Nearly a week after after she was sent to jail on federal kidnapping charges, Cherie Amoore was released after posting bail.

Amoore is accused of abducting a 7-week-old baby from the King of Prussia Mall on March 31 after befriending the child's mother, Malika Hunter.

Hunter told NBC10 the ordeal began Thursday when she took her children, including 7-week-old Ahsir, to the King of Prussia Mall. She says she met 32-year-old Cherie Amoore at a jewelry store and the two quickly bonded.

"She was so polite," Hunter said. "Nice, calm and energetic. Like the normal, average person."

Hunter says Amoore asked her about Ahsir and the two bonded over being mothers.

"She was just stressed and she just had a new baby and the father is in the military so that puts all the work on her," Hunter said. "It was relatable. She ain't been out in a while."

The two continued talking as they headed to the food court. During their conversation, Amoore asked Hunter if she could hold Ahsir. While police initially said Hunter let Amoore hold him, they later said Hunter told her "no" and never handed him to her. Hunter told NBC10 she began tending to her 2-year-old son who was growing irritable. That's when Amoore took Ahsir from his stroller and walked away, according to police.

"When I realized it was really happening it was like my heart could just bust open at any moment," Hunter said. "At any moment I could just hit that floor. It was the worst feeling I ever felt in my life." 

Police said Amoore walked up a set of stairs and then walked by the Bonefish Grill before exiting the mall. Surveillance video shows Amoore with Ahsir in her arms leaving the mall around 5:30 p.m., according to investigators. 

Hunter alerted police and an extensive search began.

Police stopped cars as they left the mall as well as SEPTA buses. The FBI assisted with the search and an Amber Alert was issued both on television and through push notifications Thursday night. Police searched for the baby in Montgomery and Chester counties.

Around 10:30 p.m., police announced the good news that the boy had been found safe and Amoore was in custody. Police said they found Amoore and the baby inside a home on the 900 block of Upper Gulph Road in Tredyffrin Township. Friends say the man who lives at the home had a relationship with Amoore. While the man declined to comment, his mother spoke to NBC10, telling us her son had no idea about the kidnapping.

"All he knew is when he got home from work," said Gladys Biggers. "She was there too." 

The baby's family dealt with a roller coaster of emotions throughout the ordeal.

"I was like hysterical I was going through it," said Burdette Lewis, the boy's grandfather. "We all prayed in there together."

Their prayers were answered as they had him back in their arms at the Upper Merion Police headquarters late Thursday night.

"I'm glad he's in my arms at this moment," said Malika Hunter. "I didn't know what the outcome of this situation would be." 

Amoore is the daughter of Republican Party of Pennsylvania Deputy Chairman Renee Amoore, a longtime GOP advocate.

Amoore is charged with felony kidnapping, unlawful restraint, false imprisonment and other related offenses following a formal arraignment Friday afternoon where her bail was set at $500,000.



Photo Credit: Upper Merion Township Police
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2 West Chester Students Sexually Assaulted on Campus

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A West Chester University student’s screams led her friend to the very place she was being raped, choked and robbed.

The victim was attacked during her walk home from an off-campus party around 2 a.m. Friday. A man she didn’t know came up to her inside the New Street Parking Garage and asked her to perform oral sex on him. When she refused, he pushed her down on the concrete and forced her into the act. She was punched, choked, shoved into a parked car and raped, the woman told police.

About half an hour later, another student came into the parking lot to get her car, heard screaming and recognized her friend, half naked, being held down now on the hood of a car and yelling at a man, “Can I have my phone back?!”

The friend shouted at the guy, “What are you doing?”

He took off running with the victim’s phone and wallet.

Police arrested West Chester student Eaddy Austin later that same day and charged him with multiple sex and assault-related crimes.

The second, unrelated assault took place Saturday in a residential facility. Police are searching for that attacker, who is not a student.

"Our hearts go out to the victims of these heinous crimes," said Interim President for the school, Dr. Christopher Fiorentino, in a letter to the school's community.

Students were encouraged to take advantage of the school's counseling services and to understand how the Green Dot Bystander Intervention Program works. The campuswide initiative urges students to be proactive anytime they see or suspect "power-based personal violence."



Photo Credit: West Chester University

Pa. Attorney General Profile: Stephen Zappala

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The three Democratic candidates for Attorney General will duke it out in a debate hosted by NBC10 on Thursday. Lisa Sylvester takes a closer look at one of the candidates, Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala.

Pa. Attorney General Candidate Profile: Josh Shapiro

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Three democrats are vying for their party's nomination for Pennsylvania Attorney General. NBC10 will host a debate between the three candidates Thursday. Take a look at our profile of one of the candidates, Montgomery County Commissioner Josh Shapiro.

Caribbean Food Week

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Blane Stoddart from the Young Caribbean Professionals Network talks Caribbean Cuisine Week and how its helping young athletes compete in the Penn Relays.

Less Wait for Saturday PATCO Customers

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Saturday PATCO riders can look forward to a better schedule for their commute.

Beginning April 9, PATCO Saturday trains are scheduled to run every 20 minutes. Currently, Saturday service runs every 25. 

PATCO reported the new schedule does not change frequency of trains Monday through Friday, with service every 4 minutes during rush periods and every 12 minutes during mid-days.

The recently completed Ben Franklin Bridge Track Rehabilitation Project has made more frequent trains possible. 

For schedules and more information, you can visit PATCO's website.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Clinton-Sanders Campaign Analysis

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J.J. Balaban from the Campaign Group tells us what he thinks about the back and forth between Sanders and Clinton.

NBC10 Hosts Heroin Forum Feat. Nat'l Drug Policy Director

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NBC10 is hosting a community forum in Philadelphia next week that will feature White House National Drug Control Policy Director Michael Botticelli. The forum, the first of its kind to take place in Philadelphia, is part of Generation Addicted, NBC10's in-depth examination of the heroin epidemic in the Delaware Valley and beyond.

Philadelphia's community forum, set to take place at the National Constitution Center at 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 12, is one of a series of similar discussions that the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy is holding across the United States in an effort to continue the Obama Administration's commitment to talking about -- and finding solutions for -- the heroin and opioid epidemic.

Botticelli, who spoke with NBC10 for Generation Addicted about a shift toward handling addiction with more healing than handcuffs, will join state and local leaders and other stakeholders from Pennsylvania and New Jersey for a panel discussion on the fight against addiction.

NBC10's Denise Nakano, who worked on Generation Addicted and won an Emmy last year for her coverage of heroin's impact in Camden, NJ, will moderate the panel discussion.

Other panelists include Patty DiRenzo, a South Jersey mother who lost her son, Sal, to a heroin overdose in 2010 and has since joined the Camden County Heroin Task Force; Dr. Arthur Evans, the commissioner of Philadelphia's Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual Disability Services; Fred Harran, Bensalem Township's Public Safety Director; NBC10 reporter Vince Lattanzio, who worked on Generation Addicted; and Devin Reaves, a clinical outreach coordinator with Life of Purpose Treatment who also runs Brotherly Love House, a recovery house for young men in Philadelphia. Viewers will recognize most of the panelists as people who appeared in Generation Addicted.

Other speakers will include U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania Zane David Memeger; Gary Tennis, secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs; Dr. Rachel Levine, physician general of the Pennsylvania Department of Health; and Thomas Cain, president of Mirmont Treatment Centers.

Generation Addicted was the culmination of nearly half a year of reporting on the heroin epidemic by NBC10's Lattanzio, Nakano and Morgan Zalot. The exclusive report, which included a half-hour television special that aired in March, as well as an extensive multimedia presentation, extended to 18 cities and towns across four states and the District of Columbia. Supported by Main Line Health's Mirmont Treatment Center, Generation Addicted chronicled the experiences of dozens of people involved with addiction -- from parents fighting to keep their children alive, to police on the front lines saving lives, to young adults struggling to stop using and get their lives back on track.

Tuesday's community forum will be live-streamed on NBC10.com and the NBC10 app. Viewers are encouraged to continue sharing their own stories and experiences with addiction via the NBC10 app and on social media using the hashtag #AddictionIs.

Watch the half-hour Generation Addicted special here and view the digital presentation here.



Photo Credit: NBC10
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PA, NJ Centers Get $2.7M to Fight Heroin Addiction

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More than $2.7 million in federal funding to fight opioid and heroin addiction will go to health centers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey -- including one in Philadelphia and another in Camden -- as part of $94 million recently awarded by the federal government to combat the heroin epidemic across the nation.

The funding, provided by the Affordable Care Act, is administered through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and will be spread among 271 health centers in 45 states, according to the department. The funding is aimed at supporting substance-abuse treatment among under-served populations.

In Philadelphia, Public Health Management Corporation, a nonprofit public-health institute that runs intensive outpatient programs and a recovery residence in West Philadelphia, will be awarded $325,000 in funding. Another $379,000 each will go to Berks Community Health Center in Reading and Community Health and Dental Care Inc. in Pottstown, while centers in York and Chambersburg will receive the other roughly $650,000 in funding given to Pennsylvania. Project Hope in Camden will also receive about $324,000, while AtlantiCare Health Services in Egg Harbor Township will receive $325,000. Henry J. Austin Health Center in Trenton will be awarded about $352,000.

The funding is among a number of recent pushes by the federal government in the fight against the heroin and opioid addiction epidemic.


NBC10 recently took an in-depth look at heroin and opioid addiction in the Delaware Valley and beyond in Generation Addicted, an exclusive special report. Watch the half-hour Generation Addicted television special here and explore the digital presentation here.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Heckler Hounds Pet Store Owner

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A New Jersey town is set to discuss whether to shut down a pet store where 67 puppies were found in near-freezing locations.

Paramus Mayor Richard LaBarbiera said that the town's board of health will convene on Monday to determine whether to revoke a business license from Vincent LoSacco, the owner of Just Pups. The store, which has been closed since the puppies were found early on Monday, has also been issued hundreds of summonses. 

"We want this business brought to justice," said LaBarbiera. "What happened here in the gravity abuse is incomprehensible."

LoSacco, whose Just Pups location was closed down in East Brunswick after he was charged with 267 counts of animal cruelty in February, said that he wants the hearing pushed back 30 days and that his Paramus store should be allowed to operate in the meantime. He said the outcry comes from people who don't understand how the puppy business works.

LoSacco owns three other Just Pups locations in the Garden state. On Wednesday, he said that the puppies found Monday were in a customized, insulated van when they were found and that police had let a door stay open for hours before taking a 38-degree reading. 

"Those charges are all bogus," said LoSacco. "I'm going to be exonerated."

While speaking to the press, LoSacco was interrupted by a heckler who said that the pet store owner "should be ashamed."

"What this guy is doing is taking animals that are kept in very small cages...they're not taking good care of the animals," the heckler said. 

The dogs found in the van were checked out at Oradell Animal Hospital, and half checked out healthy, officials say. Four remain in the hospital with a stomach bug and kennel cough. 

Hundreds of people have called Oradell to adopt the puppies, staffers there say. But the puppies are not yet available for adoption as the investigation continues. 



Photo Credit: Paramus Police

YOUR PHOTOS: Double Rainbow

President Obama Calls Jay Wright

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Villanova’s head basketball coach gets a personal call from President Obama. Also, find out what you what you need to know about the celebration parade.

Bill Clinton Takes on Philly Protestors

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Former President Bill Clinton admonished protestors in the middle of a campaign stop in Philly -- addressing accusations he and Hillary supported a crime bill that was detrimental to blacks.

Living with Lead: Enforcing Philly's Lead Law

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On Thursday Philadelphia’s city council called for hearings in response to NBC10’s Mitch Blacher’s investigative reporting, which has revealed no one is enforcing the city’s landlord lead law.

AG Debate: Protect Kids, Fight Heroin & Injustice

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Protecting children, cracking down on heroin traffickers and expanding investigations and prosecutions around fracking and consumer scams were among the issues the Democratic candidates for Pennsylvania Attorney General said they’d take on if elected. Each candidate made their case in a live televised debate Thursday night.

John Morganelli, Northampton County District Attorney, Montgomery County Commissioner Josh Shapiro and Stephen Zappala, Jr., the district attorney of Allegheny County, spent an hour answering questions in NBC10 and Telemundo62’s Bala Cynwyd studios. NBC affiliates across the state carried the live matchup moderated by NBC10's Tracy Davidson and WPXI 11's Lisa Sylvester.

The first question went to both Morganelli and Zappala asking whether they secretly orchestrated a plan to team up against Shapiro, who has not spent time a criminal attorney. Both candidates sharply denied a plan, but later took shots at Shapiro’s career.

Morganelli suggested Shapiro’s history as a self-described "career politician," county commissioner and corporate attorney gave him no depth for prosecuting criminal cases.

Shapiro rebuked the criticism saying his differing resume can expand the attorney general’s office's focus beyond primarily criminal cases.

No surprises came from the candidates during the hour-long debate. All said they supported legalizing medical marijuana, term limits for the office and none would keep the position of Solicitor General – a new post created by embattled current attorney general Kathleen Kane. Bruce Castor, the former Montgomery County district attorney who chose not to prosecute comedian Bill Cosby a decade ago, is currently in the role.

Each candidate was asked what their signature issue would be should they be elected. All said they seek to expand prosecutions in many areas, and each spent time speaking about one issue in-depth.

Morganelli seeks to expand the office’s role in combating the heroin crisis. He’s calling for increased prosecutions for drug dealers and the creation of a transnational task force to seek out and arrest international drug traffickers. The district attorney would also expand investigations into health care providers supplying prescription painkillers to patients. Painkillers are a major gateway to heroin addiction, research shows.

Increasing fairness in the criminal justice system is a major initiative for commissioner Shapiro. Shapiro also took a shot at attorneys and judges embroiled in a porn email scandal that’s unfolded under the past few months.

Zappala cited his record on protecting child victims of abuse, whether physically or sexually, and said he’d like to ensure the office is investigating and prosecuting those types of cases properly across the state.

All three candidates called for increased gun control either through increased background checks or strengthening prosecution of straw purchasers — when a person buys a gun intended for a third-party. Morganelli said, if elected, he’d advocate for a law holding parents and caregivers of children and the mentally ill criminally and civilly liable if their dependents commit a crime with their gun.

Fracking is an issue where Morganelli agreed with Shapiro’s plan to beef up the office’s environmental crimes unit, start a task force on the issue and expand legislation regulating the fuel drilling industry. Zappala said he’d put attorneys on the ground to inspect fracking procedures before and when they begin to ensure compliance of the laws.

The candidates agreed that they’d like to expand prosecutions around consumer scams, especially schemes that target senior citizens.

Thursday’s debate is the only live, televised event ahead of Pennsylvania’s April 26th primary. The winner will face the victor of the Republican Attorney General primary race between Montgomery County-based State Sen. John Rafferty Jr. (44th District) and former police officer and current Lackawanna County resident Joe Peters.



Photo Credit: NBC10

Ocean City Fire House Condemned

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Some Ocean City firefighters are worried that shutting down an damaged Ocean City fire house will sacrifice public safety. NBC10’s Jersey Shore Bureau reporter Ted Greenberg shows us why local leaders disagree.

Fans Not Allowed to Attend Iron Pigs Game

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The Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs were set to open up on the road against the Syracuse Chiefs. But bad weather is forcing them to open up at Coca-Cola Park instead, costing them fans.

Camden County Police Go Through Autism Training

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Officers in the Camden County Police Department are learning how to handle emergencies involving people with autism. NBC10’s Aundrea Cline-Thomas was there for training and joins us live from Camden.

Lawmakers Trying to Prevent Atlantic City Shutdown

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Thursday afternoon lawmakers are considering a new plan to keep the cash-strapped city from shutting down. But the Governor Christie is not going for it.

Delaware Students Experience Active Shooter Drill

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Some students in Delaware came face to face with an active shooter training scenario today. NBC10’s Tim Furlong tells us more.
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