vimarsana.com

Page 6 - வடக்கு லான்காஸ்டர் கவுண்டி பிராந்திய போலீஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Warwick Township man facing felony charges after hours-long armed standoff: police

Denver woman charged after driving car into ex-husband: police

A Denver woman was charged with reckless endangerment after she drove her car into her ex-husband, police said. Melanie Shaver, 28, of Denver, was charged after the 9:30 p.m. incident Feb. 21 along Willow Drive in Clay Township, according to the Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department. After dropping off their child, Shaver drove to the end of the block to turn around where she appeared to strike a parked car, prompting her ex-husband to move in front of the car as she tried to drive away, according to a criminal complaint police filed in the case. Instead of stopping, Shaver kept driving, causing her ex-husband to grab onto the hood of the car while Shaver continued driving to the next intersection – a distance of around 100 feet – where he got off, suffering a minor leg injury, the complaint said.

Hate and extremist groups emboldened across Pa last year

Hate and extremist groups emboldened across Pa. last year Updated Feb 22, 2021; Posted Feb 22, 2021 The National Socialist Movement, one of the largest and most prominent neo-Nazi groups in the United States, was one of 36 hate groups active in Pennsylvania last year. Members of the group last summer gathered at a downtown Williamsport park. Facebook Share Last summer, a band of the National Socialist Movement, one of the largest and most prominent neo-Nazi groups in the United States, gathered at a downtown Williamsport park - swastika flags in hand- to spew profanity and white nationalist ideology over a battery-powered bullhorn. Weeks later, the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan targeted several Erie County communities with two-page typed letters containing racist, homophobic, Islamophobic and anti-Semitic language. The same group distributed more notes a few days later, urging residents to “Pray for white Americans in 2020,” directing them to the KKK’s website

Central Pa woman, 59, who gave brother-in-law fatal dose of heroin can t beat 14- to 30-year jail term

Central Pa. woman, 59, who gave brother-in-law fatal dose of heroin can’t beat 14- to 30-year jail term Updated Feb 18, 2021; A midstate woman convicted of causing her brother-in-law’s heroin overdose death has failed to convince a state appeals court to overturn a prison sentence that could conceivably keep her behind bars for the rest of her life. In upholding Justina Heisey’s 14- to 30-year prison term, the Superior Court judges rejected the 59-year-old Lancaster County woman’s argument that she shouldn’t have been found guilty of a drug delivery resulting in death charge. Heisey stressed that she and an accomplice warned her brother-in-law not to take so much of the “Cloud 9” heroin they bought for him in Philadelphia. Instead, he snorted two bags of the drug, four times the amount the pair recommended that he use, Heisey contended.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.