Author: Brett Sholtis

  • A Montco Army veteran was indicted alongside journalist Don Lemon for anti-ICE protest at a St. Paul church

    A Montco Army veteran was indicted alongside journalist Don Lemon for anti-ICE protest at a St. Paul church

    A decorated U.S. Army veteran from Montgomery County was arrested Friday for participating in a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church, just two days after a video of him speaking out against the Trump administration went viral.

    Ian Austin, 35, of Bryn Athyn, is one of nine people facing felony charges for their involvement in a Jan. 18 protest at Cities Church in St. Paul. Former CNN host Don Lemon, who was covering the protest, is also a defendant. Lemon’s arrest, and that of another journalist who attended the protest, has brought criticism from media and civil rights advocates.

    The Department of Justice indicted Austin for conspiring to interrupt a church service and “injure, intimidate, and interfere with exercise of right of religious freedom” at a place of worship, federal court documents state.

    But Austin’s parents in Bryn Athyn say their son’s actions are in keeping with his sense of duty to his country, and his determination to help others however he can.

    “Those are things he cares about more than political party,” his mother, Paige Austin, said. “It’s more about what does it mean to be human, and to treat people justly and kindly, regardless of where you live.”

    In a video clip dated Jan. 20 and posted online days before his arrest, Austin said that he believed as an Army veteran it was his duty to travel to Minnesota.

    “We took an oath to the Constitution, and it’s just being shredded right now,” Austin said in the video, which racked up hundreds of thousands of likes across multiple social media platforms.

    “This has all of the signs from every fascist movement in history that we’re going to lose the opportunity to resist,” he said. “So that’s why I’m here.”

    The protesters said they targeted the church because one of its pastors, David Easterwood, leads the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) St. Paul field office. The church’s website lists David Easterwood as a pastor, and news outlets have reported that his personal information appears to match that of the David Easterwood identified in court filings as the acting director of the ICE St. Paul field office.

    In the video, Austin said he’d previously been detained for protesting outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building before being released without charges. It was during that detainment, he said, that a Department of Homeland Security officer questioned him about why someone “from Philadelphia” would be in Minneapolis.

    “And I’m like, ‘Well, because the nation that I was willing to die for is being systematically oppressed with men in military uniforms, a private army told by the president that they have no other laws to follow than his, and they’re systematically attacking and even killing our neighbors — in the United States of America,” Austin said.

    This undated photo shows Ian Austin and other U.S. Army soldiers.

    Valorous service

    Austin grew up in Huntingdon Valley, a couple miles outside of Philly in Montgomery County. His parents, Kenneth and Paige Austin, said he went to Academy of the New Church high school, where he excelled at baseball and wrestling, earning a spot in the J. Robinson Intensive Wrestling Camp in Minnesota.

    “It’s brutally hard,” Kenneth Austin said in an interview with The Inquirer. “It’s like boot camp. He did very well. I think that planted a seed for the military.”

    Austin graduated from high school in 2008, celebrated the Phillies’ World Series win with family and friends, and weeks later, shipped out to Army basic training.

    His parents confirmed that as a member of the U.S. Army’s elite 1st Ranger Battalion, Austin served six combat deployments in Afghanistan. In 2013, he was awarded a Joint Commendation Medal with Valor device, according to a news report.

    The valor device is given to soldiers who displayed “an act or acts of heroism by an individual above what is normally expected while engaged in direct combat with an enemy of the United States, or an opposing foreign or armed force, with exposure to enemy hostilities and personal risk,” according to a military website.

    This detail shot of an undated family photo shows Ian Austin while serving in the U.S. Army 1st Ranger Battalion.

    After his Army contract ended in 2014, Austin returned home, his parents said. He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, and he threw himself into his recovery process with the same passion he put into his training, Kenneth Austin said. He had his share of setbacks; in 2021, Austin pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and fighting after refusing to leave a local bar, his parents noted.

    But as Austin took college classes at La Salle University and elsewhere, he became increasingly interested in social justice and helping others.

    During the 2020 George Floyd protests in Philly, Austin packed his backpack with medical supplies and water, Paige Austin said. “He would go down there and sort of join the protest, but he was there also to help, because part of the Ranger training was emergency medical training.”

    Kenneth Austin recounted that his son even carried a backpack full of water, snacks, and first aid supplies during the parade after the Philadelphia Eagles’ 2025 Super Bowl victory, earning him the nickname “headquarters” from some of those out celebrating.

    “It was a little much for me,” his father said. “But it really struck me, like, he’s … here to have fun, but he’s also looking out for everyone, and becoming buddies with everyone, and making sure everyone’s OK.”

    A protest in a church

    A few weeks after ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Good in Minneapolis, Austin told his parents he was going to Minnesota. Three hours later, his truck was packed, and after a 17-hour drive, he was out protesting.

    Austin is being held in the Sherburne County Jail in Minnesota, county records show. His attorney, Sarah Gad, said that she took on his case pro bono after seeing agents arrest him Friday. Gad said that based on what she’s seen in similar cases, she expects him to be released on his own recognizance as early as Monday.

    Video of the protest shows protesters in the church chanting “Renee Good,” “Don’t shoot,” and “ICE out,” while a pastor shouted “shame on you” into a microphone. As the protest continued, many congregants can be seen leaving the church, while others stayed put or filmed the takeover. A few church attendees struck up conversations with protesters.

    “I understand that what has happened is wrong, and I agree with that,” one congregant said to the person filming. “But this can’t happen. This is the house of the Lord.”

    The federal indictment states that between 20 and 40 “agitators” occupied the main aisle and front of the church and yelled at the pastor and congregants. The indictment alleges that some protesters intimidated church members and prevented them from moving about freely in the church.

    Austin, the indictment states, stood with other protesters, “approached the pastor and congregants in a menacing manner, and near the end of the operation, loudly berated the pastor with questions about Christian nationalism and Christians wanting their faith to be the law of the land.”

    News reports have noted that Cities Church has ties to prominent Christian nationalists and powerful figures in the MAGA movement. Slate reported that its founder, Joe Rigney, is now a pastor at Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. That church is run by Doug Wilson, who wants America to become a theocracy, according to a New York Times interview. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth attends an affiliated church.

    Austin’s attorney said this is a unique case, but it doesn’t surprise her that the Department of Justice would want to make an example of anti-ICE protesters who were allegedly disrupting a place of worship.

    “I think that this is being taken very seriously by the United States attorney,” Gad said, though she added, “federal cases often look much more alarming at the front end than they turn out to be.”

  • ‘Philly started it’: Eve finally gets her Grammy, 27 years after her verse on The Roots’ ‘You Got Me’

    ‘Philly started it’: Eve finally gets her Grammy, 27 years after her verse on The Roots’ ‘You Got Me’

    Rapper and actor Eve finally got recognition for her contribution to a Grammy Award-winning song by The Roots, and she had kind words for her hometown.

    “I will say Philly started it,” Eve told a reporter at the Recording Academy Honors, presented by the Black Music Collective. “I came from Philadelphia. I think we’re used to being the underdogs in that city. And we also like to prove to you that you can underestimate me, but I’m going to show you.”

    Rapper Eve Jeffers outside Martin Luther King High School in Philadelphia in 1999.

    Eve grew up in West Philly and Germantown. In 1999, when she was a 19-year-old rapper going by “Eve of Destruction,” she laid down the essential second verse for The Roots’ “You Got Me.”

    A year later, the song earned the Philly hip-hop group a Grammy for Best Rap Performance By a Duo or Group. Erykah Badu, who sang the hook, also won the award.

    But Eve, who was not signed with a recording label, was not listed as a contributing artist on the song’s 1999 release and was overlooked by the awards committee.

    That didn’t stop her from launching a successful solo career and winning a Grammy in 2002 for “Let Me Blow Ya Mind,” a Gwen Stefani collaboration that drips with early aughts vibes.

    Eve’s memoir is titled ‘Who’s That Girl?’

    At the ceremony Thursday in Los Angeles, Eve told the crowd that “this is actually for little Eve from Philly” on stage.

    “What is yours never can miss you,” she said.

    Addressing the crowd, Eve gave a shout-out to broadcaster Ebro Darden, who discussed the song at length on his podcast, The Message. She credited him for keeping people interested in seeing her receive a Grammy for the song.

    Eve said she found success through being determined and understanding what kind of life she wanted to live. She encouraged other Black women to be there for themselves and fight for their dreams.

    “I think, you know, we owe it to ourselves to show up for ourselves, to fight for ourselves, to be our own champion,” she said. “We deserve it. We are always the strongest for everyone else. We need to be the strongest for ourselves.”

  • With ‘extreme cold’ expected Saturday, one Mummers band has already pulled out of the String Band Spectacular

    With ‘extreme cold’ expected Saturday, one Mummers band has already pulled out of the String Band Spectacular

    A month after dangerous winds led Mummers string bands to cancel their New Year’s Day Parade competition, one string band says it’ll be too cold to play a makeup show Saturday.

    “With extreme cold predicted for this weekend, our top priority is the health and safety of our members, and the forecasted conditions may put them at risk,” the Avalon String Band said on Facebook.

    The band was set to join other groups at the 2026 String Band Spectacular at Lincoln Financial Field Saturday afternoon.

    The Philadelphia Mummers String Band Association scheduled the event after the string bands canceled their New Year’s Day performances this year, when high winds destroyed props and sent five people to the hospital.

    Musicians with the Uptown String Band arrive on buses for the Mummers Parade Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026, after the String Band competition was suspended because of high winds that destroyed props and caused injuries during morning setup. The bands still marched and played their music, but did not carry props, and were not judged. The Uptown theme was “From Script to Screen.”

    Saturday a coastal “bomb cyclone” is expected to douse New Jersey and Delaware with snowfall, though forecasting models say Philadelphia won’t get hit. However, stinging winds and Arctic air will push temperatures down to zero Saturday morning, with windchills dipping as low as 10 degrees below 0.

    It’s unclear whether other bands will follow the Avalon String Band’s lead. A total of 14 bands make up the Philadelphia Mummers String Band Association, according to its website.

    Twelve organizations are set to perform Saturday, said Philadelphia Mummers String Band Association President Sam Regalbuto Friday afternoon. He said workers are getting the stages and props ready.

    “Everyone’s on board,” Regalbuto said. “Everyone’s here. We’re good to go.”

    The event will begin a 2 p.m. Saturday with the Philadelphia Gay Men’s Chorus singing the national anthem. The event will be broadcast on WDPN-TV (MeTV2) at 8 p.m. and will be streamed on WFMZ.

  • Gov. Josh Shapiro promised fair elections, condemned ICE at his book tour launch in Philly Saturday afternoon

    Gov. Josh Shapiro promised fair elections, condemned ICE at his book tour launch in Philly Saturday afternoon

    Gov. Josh Shapiro recounted Saturday to a crowd of nearly 500 in Philadelphia how he found himself struggling as a father weeks after his family survived an arson attempt at the governor’s mansion on Passover last year.

    That’s when the proudly Jewish governor went to Salem Baptist Church in his hometown of Abington for counsel and support from Pastor Marshall Mitchell.

    “I could feel the power of their prayers,” Shapiro recalled. “I think that’s helped me be a better, more compassionate governor for all.”

    Mitchell, a longtime Shapiro friend who served on his transition team, joined the governor onstage at the Central Library of the Free Library of Philadelphia to discuss his memoir, Where We Keep The Light, set for release Tuesday.

    The conversation focused on the governor’s spiritual journey and family, but it also offered critiques of both parties and promises to the community.

    “There’s a lot more that unites us,” Shapiro said during the hour-long conversation. “There’s a lot more common bonds that we have. And we have to find our way back to that.”

    Shapiro opined that the city’s Quaker founder, William Penn, “would have never imagined a Jewish governor and a Black preacher sitting up here, but I bet he’d be proud of that.”

    The Philadelphia event kicked off a flurry of promotional events as Shapiro plans to travel to New York, Boston, and Washington in the coming week. A CBS interview focused on the book is also slated to air Sunday.

    The release of the memoir comes as Shapiro is seeking a second term as governor, but it has fueled speculation about his potential presidential ambitions in 2028.

    “I think people want authenticity from our leadership, and I think he’s providing it,” said State Rep. Sharif Street, a Philadelphia Democrat running for Congress, who attended the event. “I think Josh Shapiro would make an excellent president.”

    The book, which has been shared with The Inquirer and other outlets, includes details on what Shapiro called an “offensive” vetting process to be Kamala Harris’ running mate when she took over the Democratic presidential ticket for President Joe Biden in 2024. Shapiro said he was being unfairly scrutinized as the only Jewish person in the running for the vice presidency.

    Harris did not come up during the conversation with Mitchell.

    Diana Robinson, of East Kensington, Codirector with Make the Road Pennsylvania, chants with fellow protestors outside the Free Library at Governor Josh Shapiro’s new book “Where We Keep The Light” author event in Philadelphia, Pa., on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026.

    Shapiro weighs in on ICE’s crackdown as protesters gather outside

    Shapiro answered several submitted questions after the discussion. He said that he expects President Donald Trump to attempt to disrupt the 2026 election, as he did in 2020.

    “We are on it. We are prepared. We will do everything in our power to protect your vote.”

    Shapiro also said that his team was prepared to handle a Minneapolis-style Immigration and Customs Enforcement action in Pennsylvania.

    “What we are seeing in Minnesota is absolutely unacceptable,” Shapiro told the crowd. “What we are seeing is lawlessness by these federal agents.”

    The conversation took place just hours after a U.S. Border Patrol agent shot and killed a man in Minneapolis, which Shapiro decried as an atrocity.

    Outside the book event, roughly 100 protesters gathered in the bitter cold to demand that Shapiro “stop working with ICE.”

    Pennsylvania has no sanctuary policy limiting cooperation with ICE — though Philadelphia and several other jurisdictions in the state do.

    Immigration advocates contend Shapiro is collaborating by allowing ICE access to state databases that they said provide the agency with facial recognition and personal information that can put immigrants in Pennsylvania at risk.

    “As the governor, he has an opportunity to step up and lead with conviction, especially at a moment when people are dying in ICE custody,” said Jasmine Rivera, executive director of the Pennsylvania Immigration Coalition. “Instead, he is arming ICE with the information they need to attack his own people.”

    Will Simons, a spokesperson for the governor, said in a statement after the rally that outside agencies “do not have unfettered access to state databases,” but rather Pennsylvania State Police share information when it’s necessary for an investigation.

    “There are legitimate investigations that involve foreign nationals who have committed crimes in PA or elsewhere that would require immigration enforcement agencies to seek access to information contained in Commonwealth-run databases,” Simons said.

    Democrats are likely to be grappling with how best to respond to Trump’s immigration crackdown and other policies as they head into this year’s midterms and the next presidential cycle.

    But Shapiro warned the party risks alienating voters with too much of a focus on Trump.

    “I think we can’t be a party that is defined by being negative on Donald Trump all the time,” Shapiro said.

    This story was updated to include Shapiro’s spokesperson’s statement on state databases.

  • A fatal crash in Glouco kills two, including a beloved track coach remembered as a ‘second father figure’ to his students

    A fatal crash in Glouco kills two, including a beloved track coach remembered as a ‘second father figure’ to his students

    Officials say a medical emergency or an issue with the gas pedal may have led the driver of an SUV to accelerate into a neighbor’s yard and crash into a house in Mullica Hill, N.J., on Saturday, killing the husband and wife in the vehicle and causing a house fire.

    Thomas Hengel, 72, and his wife, Lisa Hengel, 61, both died after their vehicle became trapped in the neighbor’s house on Banff Drive, according to Harrison Township Police Chief Ronald Cundey.

    “The family in the house, by the grace of God, were in the kitchen, and they weren’t injured,” Cundey said. The home is uninhabitable as a result of the fire, and the family has been temporarily relocated, he said.

    Officials are working to determine whether the driver suffered a “medical event” or if the gas pedal “got stuck,” Cundey added.

    Harrison Township Mayor Adam Wingate and the police chief both applauded the quick response from the Harrison Township Fire District and other first responder agencies throughout the county.

    “It’s a real shock, and it’s sad,” Cundey said. “I’m sure lots of people will have thoughts and prayers for both families.”

    Thomas Hengel was a retired teacher from Clearview Regional High School, Cundey noted. He was also a longtime track coach, according to NJ.com.

    “It’s just a tragedy,” said Wingate. He described the township, in Gloucester County, about a half hour outside Philadelphia, as a tight-knit community of about 14,000 people, where everyone knows everyone.

    Wingate said at the high school, Hengel had a “Mr. Feeny way about him.” He compared him to the Boy Meets World character, played by actor William Daniels, because of Hengel’s passion for students’ success outside the sport.

    “At the time, you might not have realized the lesson he was teaching, but even in gym class or as athletes on his teams, he pushed students to be the best version of themselves,” Wingate said. “Preparing them for success far beyond the classroom or track.”

    Former student Kevin Walsh said Hengel was an “old-school coach,” who motivated and supported his student athletes even beyond their playing days. “He was almost like a second father figure to a lot of us,” Walsh said. “He really helped mold us during those impressionable years.”

    Walsh recalled a time when Hengel showed up to his community college track meet on one of his days off from work. He remembers hearing Hengel’s motivational words from the crowd, pushing him past his physical limits — a moment and lesson he’s carried with him into adulthood.

    Walsh said he and Hengel’s other students were “completely devastated” by his loss.

    “It was just horrific, the nature of the accident. You just feel for him, his wife, and his family,” he said.

    In a written tribute to the Hengel family on Facebook, Clearview graduate Andrea Eppehimer said, “Rest easy, Coach. You’ve earned it. And tell Lisa we’re grateful she was by your side every mile. We love you. We miss you. And we’ll keep running for you.”

    Gus Ostrum, president of the Gloucester County Sports Hall of Fame, where Hengel was voted into back in 2018, also expressed his condolences.

    ”We are deeply saddened by the sudden passing of Coach Tom Hengel and his wife Lisa on January 18,“ Ostrum wrote in a statement. ”Mr. Hengel was a highly respected coach within the South Jersey cross country and track communities who was elected to the Gloucester County Sports Hall of Fame in 2018. He and his wife will be missed greatly not only among their Clearview Regional High School colleagues but all around South Jersey for their wonderful commitment to our local students, athletes and their families.“

    Staff photographer Elizabeth Robertson also contributed to this article.

  • Bruce Springsteen said ICE should leave Minneapolis at New Jersey charity show Saturday

    Bruce Springsteen said ICE should leave Minneapolis at New Jersey charity show Saturday

    At a charity concert Saturday night in Red Bank, N.J., rock legend Bruce Springsteen said ICE needs to get out of Minneapolis — only he didn’t say it quite that nicely.

    Well into his set, Springsteen introduced the song “The Promised Land,” from his 1978 album Darkness on the Edge of Town, which he said he wrote “as an ode to American possibility.” Springsteen said American values and ideals of the past 250 years are being tested like never before.

    “Those values, those ideals, have never been as endangered as they are right now,” Springsteen, 76, told the crowd at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in a video posted by NJ.com.

    “If you believe in the power of the law and that no one stands above it,” Springsteen continued, “if you stand against heavily armed, masked federal troops invading an American city, using gestapo tactics against our fellow citizens, if you believe you don’t deserve to be murdered for exercising your American right to protest, then send a message to this president, and as the mayor of that city has said, ‘ICE should get the f— out of Minneapolis.”

    To a cheering crowed, Springsteen dedicated the song to the memory of Renee Good, calling her “a mother of three, and American citizen.” Good, 37, was killed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan Ross on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis — a moment, widely seen on video, that has inflamed tensions over the Trump administration’s use of the federal agency.

    High school students protest federal agents and the fatal shooting of Renee Good in St. Paul.

    Springsteen was not on the official performers’ list for the “Bob’s Birthday Bash” concert, which raises money for research to help people living with Parkinson’s, ALS, and other diseases. But he’s been a frequent “surprise” guest at the annual event, as New Jersey music reporter Bobby Olivier noted.

    Springsteen has long found himself involved in political discourse, including in 1984 when he called out Republican President Ronald Reagan for misunderstanding the point of his hit song, “Born in the U.S.A.” while on the campaign trail.

    Kicking off his 2025 European tour in Manchester, England, he called the Trump administration “corrupt, incompetent, and treasonous.”

    That time around, President Donald Trump responded in kind.

    “I see that Highly Overrated Bruce Springsteen goes to a Foreign Country to speak badly about the President of the United States,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

  • Asked about anti-ICE protests, McCormick says ‘dehumanizing language’ is leading to violence

    Asked about anti-ICE protests, McCormick says ‘dehumanizing language’ is leading to violence

    In an interview with Pennsylvania’s two U.S. senators, CBS Evening News anchor Tony Dokoupil asked about “extreme rhetoric” in Minneapolis.

    “Where is the line,” Dokoupil asked, “between protected demonstrations, civil disobedience … and impeding ICE, which is breaking the law?”

    He did not specifically mention the Jan. 7 fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent.

    “The moment you start dehumanizing people, the moment you start calling people Hitler, the moment you start doing that, it’s a slippery slope to violence,” Republican U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick said during the exchange, which was telecast Friday. “So there’s a direct connection between the violent language, the dehumanizing language, and the actual violence.”

    The Trump administration has defended Good’s killing as an act of self-defense by ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who shot Good four times as she drove away from him, video of the incident showed.

    The Department of Justice has since signaled it will not investigate the shooting; rather, it has launched a probe into Democratic elected officials in Minneapolis.

    Federal immigration officers confront protesters outside Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

    McCormick said that ICE agents have a responsibility to enforce the law.

    “The moment the protesters get in the way of the ICE officials actually enforcing the law … the moment that it starts to become physical, I think the risk of violence goes up,” he said.

    The exchange was part of a wide-ranging interview, billed as a “lesson in bipartisanship,” that found McCormick and Democratic U.S. Sen. John Fetterman often agreeing on divisive topics.

    “I reject the extreme on both sides right now,” Fetterman said. “It was a tragedy. We all wish that woman was alive. But also, ICE has a job to do as well,” and everyone doesn’t need to agree on its tactics.

    Here are other moments that stood out from the 16-minute conversation held at U.S. Steel’s Mon Valley Works in West Mifflin, about 10 miles south of Pittsburgh.

    Acquiring Greenland

    Fetterman and McCormick both rejected the idea, proposed by President Donald Trump, that the U.S. may use military force to acquire Greenland. But both senators agreed that it makes sense for the U.S. to increase its presence there.

    “It’s also undeniable, that, one, this is not a brand-new conversation,” Fetterman said, adding that President Harry Truman and others had tried to buy Greenland. “So it’s not an absurd idea.”

    McCormick said he recently met the prime minister of Denmark, “and they are welcoming the United States playing a more active role.” He doesn’t believe the U.S. should use military force, he added, but “we ought to have a strategic foothold.”

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell

    The Justice Department, led by Attorney General Pam Bondi, recently subpoenaed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, head of the independent body that determines U.S. monetary policy. The inquiry is looking into Powell’s comments related to renovations of Federal Reserve buildings. Powell has said the probe was opened because Trump was angry that Powell would not cut interest rates when the president wanted him to.

    McCormick defended Trump’s right to criticize Powell, and said Powell should have raised rates faster and lowered them sooner. However, he emphasized Powell’s “mandate” to control federal interest rates.

    “The Fed has to be independent,” McCormick said. “It’s absolutely critical for our financial system.” He added that he does not believe Powell is “involved in any criminal activity.”

    Regulating social media

    Both of Pennsylvania’s U.S. senators support legislation to rein in social media companies, which have faced broad criticism for negatively impacting children and teens.

    “If there’s a friend who’s spending four or five hours a day with your kid, you really want to know who that friend is,” Fetterman said, “and that is social media right now, and it can be incredibly poisonous.”

    Pennsylvania Sens. Dave McCormick, left, and John Fetterman play with Fetterman’s three-legged dog, Artie, at Fetterman’s home in Braddock, Pa., on Feb. 2. (MUST CREDIT: Justin Merriman for The Washington Post)

    Fetterman won his 2022 Senate race against Republican Mehmet Oz after relentlessly trolling his opponent on social media, but he said he has seen the negative effect social media has had on his own family.

    Fetterman said Congress is not doing enough — and he would like to see a social media ban for children similar to what Australia recently implemented.

    Fetterman said he and Republican U.S. Sen. Katie Britt of Alabama are pushing the “Stop The Scroll Act,” which would create a mental health warning label for social media platforms.

    McCormick’s wife, Dina Powell McCormick, recently became president and CEO of Meta, Facebook’s parent company. But McCormick said he agrees that Congress needs to do more. He wants to eliminate social media for children under 14, make social media platform data available to researchers, and ban phones in schools that are funded by the federal government.

    Data centers

    Despite public skepticism over artificial intelligence data centers and their potential impact on energy prices, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro has been a vocal supporter of companies building the centers in the state.

    McCormick said Pennsylvania is the country’s second-largest energy exporter, making the state “uniquely positioned to be the AI energy leader.”

    “But, yes, as we develop this huge infrastructure, we need to make sure that consumers aren’t stuck with raising energy increases,” McCormick added.

    The two senators also spoke about energy and healthcare costs, the steel industry, and other topics. The full interview can be viewed here:

  • Three arrested in Bucks County after stealing GLP-1 weight-loss drugs near pharmacy, police say

    Three arrested in Bucks County after stealing GLP-1 weight-loss drugs near pharmacy, police say

    Two men and a 17-year-old boy are in custody after they allegedly assaulted a delivery driver and stole $16,000 worth of weight-loss drugs outside a pharmacy in Bucks County, Bensalem Township police said.

    On Wednesday, a delivery driver was dropping off two boxes containing the GLP-1 weight-loss medications Mounjaro, Ozempic, and Trulicity at the Smart Choice Pharmacy at 1941 Street Rd., Bensalem, when the “strong-arm robbery” occurred, police said in a news release.

    The trio drove away in a gold Toyota, nearly striking a bystander recording the robbery on video, police said.

    After 911 dispatchers were notified of the car’s location, Bensalem Township police stopped the vehicle a few blocks away, police said.

    Police said they found the boxes of stolen drugs in the car and arrested Joshua Dupree, 41, of Tamaqua, Schuylkill County; Jahnoi Dawkins, 21, of Albany, N.Y.; and a 17-year-old male from New York City.

    “Further investigation revealed that the suspects, Dupree, Dawkins, and the juvenile male, had traveled from New York to commit the crime,” police said. “Pharmacy staff reported that they had received suspicious phone calls and emails in the days leading up to the incident requesting information about the delivery order.”

    The three were charged with robbery, theft, receiving stolen property, simple assault, and related offenses, police said.

    District Judge Michael Gallagher set bail at 10% of $150,000 for Dupree and of $250,000 for Dawkins; the men were taken to the Bucks County Correctional Facility. The juvenile was taken to the Bucks County Youth Detention Center.

  • For Ben Franklin’s birthday, Franklin Institute to unveil ‘immersive multimedia show’ as part of America’s 250th celebration

    For Ben Franklin’s birthday, Franklin Institute to unveil ‘immersive multimedia show’ as part of America’s 250th celebration

    America’s favorite multitalented Founding Father is celebrating his — checks parchment — 320th birthday Saturday, and the Franklin Institute wants everyone to join the party.

    On Saturday the science museum will debut a new “immersive multimedia show,” about Franklin, according to Franklin Institute President and CEO Larry Dubinski. The massive audiovisual display will kick off a day of family-friendly learning activities centered on science and creativity.

    The new installation is called “Franklin’s Spark,” Dubinski said, and the theme is curiosity — the kind that led Franklin to fly a kite to learn that lightning is electricity, invent everything from bifocal glasses to a more efficient cast-iron heating stove, and help establish the nation’s first postal system and lending library.

    “The message is: curiosity drives progress,“ Dubinski said. ”Benjamin Franklin showed how important it is to ask questions, try things, learn, fail, and learn from those failures. It’s what drives society.”

    Dubinski declined to say what the project cost, but noted that it was made possible by a donation from entrepreneur Ed Satell and the Satell Family Foundation.

    Friday the Franklin Institute provided a preview of the four-minute presentation at the already impressive Franklin National Memorial, where a 30-ton, 20-foot statue of the former statesman resides under an 82-foot-high domed ceiling.

    Seven high-resolution Panasonic projectors lit up the dome with animations and images detailing Franklin’s life and times.

    “We think he would have liked it a lot,” said Brad Baer, whose design studio, Crafted Action, produced the display. “He was a tinkerer. He was an experimenter.”

    At left is Larry Dubinski, president and CEO, The Franklin Institute. At right is Brad Baer, founder and CEO of Crafted Action, designer of multimedia show.

    To make it work, the Philly-based company had to conduct some experiments of its own. It created Franklin’s silhouette by combining photography with “AI-style transfer techniques,” he said. It developed a 3D rendering of the 1,600-ton dome, and some of the dome’s many square “coffers” were incorporated into the visual display.

    “We wanted to create something that’s equal parts experience and education,” Baer said. “It’s kind of a little gift to the city.”

    Saturday at 11 a.m., the installation will commence “Ben’s Bash,” a birthday celebration tailored toward learning and fun. The event is open to anyone who has purchased a general admission ticket to the museum.

    Other events include demonstrations on a replica of Franklin’s “glass armonica” musical instrument, a museumwide scavenger hunt with prizes, a lesson on electricity, a birthday card-making activity using a printing press, games, and a dance party.

    Dubinski said he’s excited that the new installation will be in place as Philadelphia celebrates the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, which, of course, Franklin signed.

    “Philadelphia is the place,” he said. “All these institutions are coming together to say, ‘Philadelphia is an amazing city.’”

  • SEPTA says two people stabbed at 40th Street Station on Saturday

    SEPTA says two people stabbed at 40th Street Station on Saturday

    A man is in critical condition after being stabbed at 40th St. Station Saturday evening, SEPTA said.

    Around 7:30 p.m. Saturday, a woman stabbed the man as he entered the train station in the University City area of West Philadelphia, SEPTA said.

    “She also stabbed another woman on the eastbound platform after a confrontation,” the transit agency said.

    Sunday morning, SEPTA said the suspect was taken into custody, but didn’t provide further details.

    The woman who was stabbed is stable condition, SEPTA said..

    The station, located a few blocks north of University of Pennsylvania, serves the Market-Frankford Line.

    For about an hour after the incident, the Market-Frankford Line bypassed 40th Street Station to avoid police activity, SEPTA said.