Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro says the partisan audits and pushing of legislation that puts limits on voting are the next chapter of the Big Lie, and says he will fight efforts by Republicans who try to bring them to his state
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A Lakewood man who managed a nursing home in Darby, Pennsylvania, pleaded no contest Wednesday to endangering three residents who died as a result of the understaffing of the facility, Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said.
Chaim “Charlie” Steg, 40, the former regional operations director of St. Francis Center for Rehabilitation and Healthcare, pleaded to three counts of recklessly endangering another person. Under the plea agreement, he will be sentenced to six to 23 months of house arrest followed by three years probation and will be required to pay $15,000 in restitution to the families of the victims, the Office of the Attorney General said.
Photo illustration by ProPublica; source image: Milton Hershey School, MHS 2018 IRS Form 990
Long ago, and to great fanfare, business tycoon Milton Hershey revealed that he had given away his world-famous chocolate company, a gift to the school for poor orphans that he had founded with his wife.
“Well, I have no children that is, no heirs,” he said in 1923. “So I decided to make the orphan boys of the United States my heirs.”
Hershey died in 1945, leaving a huge estate and a company that would grow to sell more than 250 million candy bars a year. His generosity, however, has created a dilemma for the Milton Hershey School that many charities would envy: too much money.
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Hershey died in 1945, leaving a huge estate and a company that would grow to sell more than 250 million candy bars a year. His generosity, however, has created a dilemma for the Milton Hershey School that many charities would envy: too much money.