Category: Crime & Justice

  • Second teen accused of killing Penn State student arrested on murder charge, authorities say

    Second teen accused of killing Penn State student arrested on murder charge, authorities say

    A teenager who authorities say killed a Penn State student surrendered to Philadelphia police on Thursday, one day after U.S. marshals captured a second teen wanted in the slaying more than 1,700 miles from the South Philadelphia street where the crime occurred.

    Kaiseem Smith, 16, turned himself in after a two-week, multiagency law enforcement search, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

    Smith and Azzubair Outen-Fleming, 16, are expected to face charges of murder, robbery, criminal conspiracy, illegal possession of a firearm, and related crimes in the June 6 death of William “Billy” Schmidt.

    Both teens had been on the run until Wednesday night, authorities said, when members of the U.S. Marshals Service arrested Outen-Fleming at a house in Colorado Springs, Colo.

    Smith remained at large until Thursday.

    Police have said Outen-Fleming and Smith killed Schmidt, 22, shortly after 1 a.m. as he walked toward his South Philadelphia home.

    According to prosecutors, surveillance video captured two masked people — identified by investigators as Outen-Fleming and Smith — robbing Schmidt of his cell phone, searching his pockets, and then, moments later, shooting him.

    Smith, they said, is accused of firing the fatal shot.

    The teenagers fled after the shooting, police said.

    On Wednesday, prosecutors also announced charges against Outen-Fleming’s stepfather, Donte Abdulmalik, who they said helped him evade authorities after the killing.

    Abdulmalik was charged with hindering apprehension, obstruction of justice, tampering with evidence, and related crimes.

    Deputies with the U.S. Marshals Service’s Violent Offender Task Force tracked Outen-Fleming this week to a house in southern Colorado Springs with “ties to his family in Philadelphia,” Supervisory Deputy U.S. Marshal Robert Clark said. After conducting surveillance, deputies arrested him there late Wednesday.

    Schmidt’s father, William, did not return a phone call Thursday afternoon, and attempts to reach other family members were unsuccessful.

    Philadelphia police spokesperson Sgt. Eric Gripp said it was not clear when Outen-Fleming would be returned to Philadelphia.

  • Police are searching for a man who shot and killed two men and injured a third near Hunting Park Rec Center

    Police are searching for a man who shot and killed two men and injured a third near Hunting Park Rec Center

    Police have identified a man who they say shot and killed two men near the Hunting Park Recreation Center within days last month and shot and wounded a third man in May in what investigators believe are linked crimes.

    Jahylin Melchur, 21, is wanted in connection with two homicides and the shooting near the large North Philadelphia park, according to police.

    He is accused of killing 45-year-old Martin Higgins in the park on June 20. Officers found Higgins on the bleachers of the baseball field around 10 p.m. that evening suffering from a gunshot wound to the torso, police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Less than a week later, police said, Melchur shot and killed 29-year-old Sharef Holman not far from where Higgins was killed.

    Officers responded there on June 26 just before 11 p.m. and found Holman suffering from multiple gunshot wounds near the basketball courts. He was taken to Temple University Hospital, where he died a short time later.

    And on May 29, investigators said, Melchur shot a 55-year-old man in Juniata Park, about two miles from the recreation center. The victim told police Melchur had attempted to rob him before shooting him in the elbow and torso.

    Police are seeking the public’s help in finding Melchur, who they say is considered armed and dangerous and whose image, captured on surveillance footage at a Broad Street Line station, was circulated widely last week in an effort to locate him.

    Law enforcement sources said the victims were found partially clothed, and that they were looking into whether they had met the suspect through a dating app.

    Deputy Police Commissioner Frank Vanore declined to address that aspect of the investigation in a news conference last week and said police were looking into whether the incidents were related to robberies.

    Who were the victims?

    Sharef Holman’s loved ones said the 29-year-old lived a life of faith and compassion, and that he was the life of any party he attended.

    His mother, Danielle, said her son was beloved on both sides of his large family.

    “He was tall in stature, and the children in our family loved to climb him,” she said. “The reason why I start there is because Sharef had a heart for the youth.”

    Sharef Holman, a 29-year-old man who was shot and killed near the Hunting Park Recreation Center in June.

    Holman, who was born in Philadelphia and graduated from Samuel Fels High School in Crescentville, loved playing the saxophone and dancing, his mother said. He excelled in his school’s musical theater program, and once played Ebenezer Scrooge, the lead role in A Christmas Carol.

    He had most recently worked at The Belvedere nursing home in Chester, where he assisted residents with recreational programs, and he tutored schoolchildren with the Greenhouse Project, a nearby Christian nonprofit.

    For a time, his mother said, Holman struggled with drug addiction, and she remembers the pride she felt when he graduated from a rehab program two years ago.

    “He had been fighting addiction for some years, and this last one was the one where he was the most successful,” she said, adding that her son’s progress allowed him to get an apartment of his own.

    Danielle Holman said she and her family are planning a celebration of her son’s life this weekend. As they prepare to honor and remember him, she said, they hope police will find and bring their son’s killer to justice.

    The family of Martin Higgins, who was shot and killed days before Holman, declined to be interviewed as they deal with their loss.

    Higgins, 45, was a graduate of Temple University’s business school and worked as an inspector for the city’s Community Life Improvement Program, according to his obituary.

    He had a “kind heart, generous spirit, and unwavering support for those he loved,” the obituary said, and he “was the person who showed up when someone needed him, always making time for family and friends no matter what was going on in his own life.”

    Police ask that anyone with information about Melchur contact the homicide unit at 215-686-3334 or submit an anonymous tip by calling 215-686-TIPS (8477).

  • Police searched Olney home last summer, but drugs — not missing women — were the focus

    Police searched Olney home last summer, but drugs — not missing women — were the focus

    About a year before police raided a crumbling Olney twin in connection to a missing woman last month, Philadelphia narcotics officers scoured Eugene Horsch’s basement and found telltale signs of a drug dealer.

    Firefighters had responded to a small blaze on the second floor of the property on May 18, 2025, alerting police to what they said was a sprawling marijuana grow operation. And when narcotics cops searched the home later that morning, court records show they recovered a modified fully automatic assault rifle with an obliterated serial number, a sawed-off shotgun, a pistol, and ammunition.

    The top floor was filled with cannabis plants, tents, and UV lights, with exposed wires running between the floors and into the basement, where vats of chemicals were stored, apparently to “cultivate marijuana,” the records said.

    The police report detailing the drug bust at the Olney house made no mention of missing women, despite the fact that concerned relatives and friends had told police years earlier that at least two women who stayed at the house had vanished.

    Now, the disappearance of one of those women, Blair Tonzelli, is central to an ongoing search at the property, where police found fake IDs and bank cards in her name, among other disturbing evidence.

    That law enforcement did not appear to connect the missing women to the search for drugs at the same address raises questions about whether the officers who searched the property last summer were aware of the two missing persons cases. The Philadelphia Police Department declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.

    Police began reexamining Tonzelli’s disappearance on June 19 after arresting Horsch, whose companion had a fake ID in her name. Investigators reinterviewed witnesses and viewed footage of a statement given in February 2023 by Tonzelli’s friend, who told officers Tonzelli was last seen at 417 W. Chew Ave. Police have also revisited the 2016 disappearance of Amy McHale — the ex-wife of Horsch’s father, erotic filmmaker Raymond C. Horsch — whose mother said she vanished from the Olney home.

    Gloria McHale, Amy’s mother, said she was surprised to learn that police had searched the property for drugs in 2025.

    “I wish they would have looked deeper,” she said.

    Police have not charged Horsch with any crimes linked to missing women. He has been jailed since his arrest last month on $500,000 bail for gun and drug charges, as federal and local police prepare to excavate the property in search of more evidence.

    His attorney, Jerome Brown, declined comment. Brown has previously said police had interviewed Raymond Horsch several times over the years about McHale’s disappearance.

    When local and federal law enforcement officers searched Horsch’s home last month in connection to the missing women, police said they again found guns, ammo, and drugs. More troubling, according to police records, is that they also found a “significant amount” of blood, a handwritten letter referencing serial killer Ted Bundy, and fake IDs and bank cards in Tonzelli’s name.

    The latest search began after police arrested Horsch in his black BMW with an array of weapons, drugs, and a woman donning a fake ID in Tonzelli’s name. A sworn affidavit to initiate the search includes witness testimony that suggested Horsch was a “sociopath” who knew how to dispose of human remains.

    But it was a fire that brought police to Horsch’s property one morning in May 2025.

    Eugene had been living in the twin with two other women, including his father’s longtime companion, Krista M. Killen. City firefighters said the small blaze was started by “careless smoking” on the second floor, according to Horsch’s arrest report. While extinguishing the fire, a fire marshal and police patrolman on the scene discovered a “marijuana grow operation” on the home’s third floor and basement.

    Officers with the PPD Narcotics Strike Force later searched the home and seized 26 pounds of marijuana, 131 grams of dried mushrooms, $1,200 worth of methamphetamine, $800 cash, and “numerous gold colored and silver” coins in a safe, records show.

    Police also recovered a BCI Defense AR-15 style rifle modified to be fully automatic, a 12-gauge Stevens Model 67 pump-action shotgun with a sawed-off barrel, a 9mm Girsan MC28 pistol and more than a hundred rounds of ammunition. The serial numbers had been destroyed on all three firearms, according to records.

    Horsch had previous felony convictions for drug manufacturing charges and was not legally allowed to own firearms. He was arrested and held on $750,000 bail for manufacturing drugs, illegal gun possession, and related crimes.

    Brown, the family attorney, told a judge that the weapons belonged to Horsch’s father, who had died just three days before the drug raid. Brown said Eugene Horsch was planning to properly dispose of the firearms, according to a spokesperson for District Attorney Larry Krasner.

    His health became a factor in determining an appropriate resolution to the case. Sources familiar with the case, who were granted anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the details publicly, said Horsch appeared frail at the time of his 2025 arrest and could barely walk into court.

    Horsch pled guilty to manufacturing drugs, and prosecutors withdrew the additional gun charges. He received three years probation.

    Within months of his release from jail, Horsch would be locked up again.

    In March, police arrested Horsch and charged him with stabbing a man at Eighth and Market Streets. Prosecutors dropped the charges after a witness failed to appear in court, records show, and he was released from lockup in May.

    Three weeks later, U.S. Park Police stopped him in his car near Independence Mall, where they recovered a fake ID in Tonzelli’s name.

    The search of the Olney property continued Wednesday.

  • 31 people arrested for running drug ring in Camden County Jail, prosecutors say

    31 people arrested for running drug ring in Camden County Jail, prosecutors say

    Thirty-one people were arrested for trafficking fentanyl and other illegal drugs inside the Camden County Jail, authorities said Wednesday, ending what they called a “complex and potentially far-reaching criminal enterprise.”

    The investigation, dubbed Operation Paper Trail, began in October 2025, prosecutors said, and led to the arrests of suspects both inside and outside the jail.

    “The takedown of Operation Paper Trail disrupted a dangerous network responsible for distributing illicit substances and facilitating criminal activity,” Camden County Prosecutor Grace C. MacAulay said in a statement.

    “This operation not only enhanced public safety but also helped prevent further harm, protecting our communities and sparing countless individuals from the devastating effects of substance abuse,” she said.

    The drug ring operations. prosecutors said, were run in part by Howard Dunns of Millville, N.J.

    Dunns, 50, who was incarcerated at the Cumberland County jail, was a lead organizer of the drug ring, coordinating with Camden inmates who peddled fentanyl, synthetic marijuana, PCP, and cocaine at the facility, prosecutors said.

    Dunns was charged with two counts of conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance. It was not immediately clear whether he had hired an attorney.

    Two Camden County Jail inmates, Wilfredo Santiago, 31, of Vineland, and Kyle Jones, 31, of Millville, were also accused of participating in the scheme by selling illegal substances to other inmates.

    That included at least 58 grams of synthetic marijuana, which investigators seized in March, according to prosecutors.

    The men were each charged with one count of conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance.

    The remaining 28 people were charged with drug crimes, many for possessing illegal substances.

    Prosecutors said Santiago and Jones managed to sneak the drugs into the jail using paper that had been laced with the substances and marked as confidential legal correspondence between inmates and attorneys.

    Detectives with the Camden County Department of Corrections learned of the drug ring in late 2025 after intercepting an envelope addressed to a 21-year-old man who was incarcerated in the jail, prosecutors said.

    Detectives found that the supposed legal correspondence was inauthentic, and the letter later tested positive for traces of cocaine.

    In addition to charging the inmate with a drug offense, detectives arrested the sender, a 32-year-old Camden man, and charged him with similar crimes.

    He was later placed in custody in the Camden County Jail, and within months, prosecutors said, he had instructed an associate to traffic drugs into the facility through similar means.

  • Teen accused of South Philly shooting death of Penn State student was captured in Colorado, 2nd teen remains at large

    Teen accused of South Philly shooting death of Penn State student was captured in Colorado, 2nd teen remains at large

    A teen wanted in the shooting death of Penn State student William “Billy” Schmidt in South Philadelphia last month was apprehended in Colorado, the U.S. Marshals Service said Wednesday night.

    Azzubair Outen-Fleming, 16, was taken into custody in Colorado Springs at the home of a distant relative, the U.S. Marshals Service said. The teen was being housed at the Zebulon Pike Youth Center awaiting extradition to Philadelphia.

    Earlier on Wednesday, District Attorney Larry Krasner announced the arrest of Outen-Fleming’s stepfather for allegedly hindering the police investigation into the slaying of Schmidt.

    Donte Abdulmalik, 35, was charged with hindering apprehension, obstruction of justice, tampering with evidence, and related crimes, Krasner said Wednesday.

    Authorities continue to search for Kaiseem Smith, also 16, who allegedly participated in the robbery and shooting of Schmidt, 22, just steps from his family’s South Philadelphia home on June 6.

    Prosecutors said Abulmalik helped his stepson leave the city. He is not accused of participating in the homicide.

    The teens will face charges of murder, robbery, criminal conspiracy, illegal possession of a firearm, and related offenses, Krasner said.

    He suggested that the investigation could involve others, describing the charges against the two teenagers and Abdulmalik as “a smaller part of a bigger picture.”

    “I am not telling you that these are the only people involved,” Krasner said during a news conference Wednesday. “I’m not telling you that this investigation is over or that we have all the answers yet.”

    Philadelphia police have said Schmidt was walking home when two masked people approached him. During what investigators say was an attempted robbery, one of the suspects — whom Krasner identified as Smith — shot Schmidt.

    Surveillance camera footage shows that one suspect took Schmidt’s phone, prosecutors said Wednesday, then rifled through his pockets before knocking him to the ground.

    Additional footage later shows Schmidt walking behind the suspects, before one throws a phone down the block and the other fires a bullet into Schmidt’s chest.

    Krasner declined to say whether the gun used to kill Schmidt had been recovered.

    Investigators say surveillance cameras captured the suspects before and after the shooting. One was wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt with a hand-drawn “KONFUSED” logo and a skull-and-crossbones sketched in black marker on the front, according to the footage. After the shooting, police said, both suspects fled wearing white T-shirts.

    Philadelphia police and the U.S. Marshals Service Fugitive Task Force are searching for the remaining teenager. Both agencies have offered rewards for information leading to the arrests of both teens. Krasner said Smith has ties to Philadelphia’s Point Breeze neighborhood and Delaware.

    Anyone with information may contact the U.S. Marshals Service at 1-866-865-8477 or submit a tip online through its website: usmarshals.gov. Tips can also be provided to Philadelphia police at 215-686-3334 or 215-686-8477.

  • 2 teens sought in shooting death of Penn State student in South Philly

    2 teens sought in shooting death of Penn State student in South Philly

    Two 16-year-olds are being sought for the fatal shooting of a 22-year-old Penn State student in South Philadelphia, police said Tuesday.

    Police obtained arrest warrants for Kaiseem Smith and Azzubair Outen-Fleming on charges of murder and related offenses in the death of William “Billy” Schmidt, said Deputy Commissioner Frank Vanore.

    On June 6, Schmidt was gunned down just footsteps from his home on the 2300 block of South 20th Street in an apparent robbery attempt.

    Schmidt was pronounced dead at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center a short time later. Schmidt was studying digital journalism and media at the Penn State World Campus, the university’s online campus.

    His father told 6abc that Schmidt was returning home after watching the NBA Finals at a nearby bar with friends.

    His two assailants were captured on security footage both approaching the scene and fleeing the area after the shooting.

    Anyone with information helpful to police in this case can call 215-686-TIPS-8477.

  • ‘Swarthmore 9’ protesters plead no contest to noise violation for pro-Palestinian encampment

    ‘Swarthmore 9’ protesters plead no contest to noise violation for pro-Palestinian encampment

    Nine protesters who were charged with trespassing for refusing to leave a pro-Palestinian encampment at Swarthmore College last year have entered no-contest pleas to summary noise violation offenses, ending a contentious legal case that had spanned more than a year.

    The so-called Swarthmore 9 entered the pleas late Monday, the day before their trial was expected to begin before Delaware County Court Judge Dominic Pileggi.

    As part of the plea negotiation, all nine agreed to perform eight hours of community service and pay court costs.

    The group had been charged with misdemeanor trespassing, and had refused to accept an earlier, similar plea offer made by District Attorney Tanner Rouse that would have had the same outcome. Doing so, they said at the time, could chill future student protests.

    In a statement Tuesday, members of the group said the decision to take the plea deal was “an incredibly difficult and far from unanimous decision.” They said they felt they had “no good options” and accepted the deal to avoid probation or jail time.

    “We are deeply grateful for the outpouring of support in solidarity with our case,” the statement said. “The community’s work in pressuring the DA and condemning Swarthmore’s repression and complicity only strengthens our upcoming fight for divestment and an end to the genocide.”

    Rouse, for his part, said the case came to a close in “the same way that every other defiant trespass case that we have handled during my time in the office has concluded.”

    “This offer had been on the table since the morning of their arrest, and in fact the case would have been withdrawn entirely, as they requested and as other protesters have had their cases withdrawn, if they had performed the same community service before formal arraignment,” he said in a statement Tuesday.

    The group was arrested and briefly detained outside the college’s Trotter Hall in May 2025 when officers from surrounding police departments dismantled their encampment protesting the war in Gaza and Swarthmore’s IT contract with Cisco, a company that does business with the Israeli government.

    Of the nine people arrested, only one, Jace Boland, is a student at the college. Another, Brendan Cook, is a former student who was suspended for participating in an earlier protest in 2024.

    The others — Jonathan Britt, Mara Helen Cahill, Daria C. Dressler, Thomas Falcone, Colin Buckley Malcarney, Riley J. McManus, and Andrew Thomas — are not affiliated with Swarthmore.

    Last week, Pileggi denied a motion to dismiss the charges against them, ruling that prosecutors had presented sufficient evidence for the case to proceed to trial.

    Swarthmore issued multiple orders to protesters last spring to leave the campus, citing concerns over vandalism and public safety. Many of the protesters wore masks, refused to identify themselves, and were not affiliated with the school, according to administrators at the college.

    Prosecutors noted that other protesters at the encampment avoided arrest by following an order to leave the area and were allowed to continue chanting and holding protest signs elsewhere on the campus.

  • Norristown man charged with running Ponzi scheme that bilked more than $3.8 million

    Norristown man charged with running Ponzi scheme that bilked more than $3.8 million

    A 59-year-old Norristown man has been charged with allegedly running a Ponzi scheme that cheated investors of more than $3.8 million, Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday said.

    Richard L. McNeil was charged Friday by the Pennsylvania State Police with felony theft by deception, dealing in proceeds of unlawful activity, violations of the Pennsylvania Securities Act, and related offenses.

    McNeil allegedly solicited funds from investors by promising he would invest their money in various opportunities that would generate steady returns, Sunday said. He turned himself in Monday and was released on a $250,00 unsecured bond after arraignment.

    The investors allegedly were told by McNeil that they would receive monthly interest payments and the eventual return of their full principal investment. However, he did not actually invest the victims’ money, according to Sunday.

    More than $1.8 million remains owed to 50 investors, Sunday said. Some investors did receive payouts, but others allegedly sustained six-figure losses, Sunday said.

    McNeil’s preliminary hearing is scheduled for Aug. 3. Court records did not list a lawyer representing McNeil.

    “This defendant duped dozens of people into investing substantial funds — victims who believed they were to see monthly gains, but instead were left with depleted bank accounts and unanswered pleas for their money,” Sunday said in a statement.

    “Investment fraud is obviously devastating to victims, and we will work hard to recover restitution as part of this prosecution,” Sunday said.

  • The Olney man being investigated for his connections to missing women will be held in federal custody

    The Olney man being investigated for his connections to missing women will be held in federal custody

    The Olney man at the center of a sprawling investigation into the disappearance of at least two women in recent years was taken into federal custody Tuesday and will be detained until trial.

    Eugene Albert Horsch, 44, was arraigned Tuesday on a federal firearms charge — a case that relates to his alleged actions on June 19, when a U.S. Park Police officer near Independence Hall reported seeing a black BMW parked in a restricted zone and next to a fire hydrant.

    The officer reported hearing a woman in the vehicle express fear of being injured and then seeing pairs of scissors in the front seat area. A search of the vehicle, in part based on Horsch’s actions, led to the discovery of a switchblade and a glass pipe in Horsch’s pants and two firearms under the car’s front seat.

    Horsch — who was not allowed to possess guns because of felony convictions — had been charged for that same conduct last week by the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office and he was being held in a city jail on $500,000 bail. City prosecutors also charged him with having cocaine, heroin, and marijuana in his car.

    But the federal gun charge — and the decision by U.S. Magistrate Judge Pamela A. Carlos to detain him until trial — effectively ensures that Horsch will not be able to post bail or secure his release as his case proceeds. And that will give authorities time to continue investigating him in connection with questions potentially far more serious than illegally possessing guns.

    In the days after Horsch was arrested with the firearms in Center City, investigators who searched his decrepit rowhouse in Olney found another gun and materials to grow marijuana.

    But more concerning, they also discovered a variety of more unusual materials — including barrels of chemicals in the basement, urns holding the cremated remains of at least one of his relatives, documents tied to at least two women who have been missing for years, and a handwritten letter that described hurting people and mentioned the serial killer Ted Bundy.

    Officials have said police have not discovered any human remains in the house. But investigators did find a significant amount of blood inside, sources told The Inquirer this week, although it was not clear whether it was human blood. And authorities have been testing a variety of materials they’ve recovered from the house, such as the chemicals in vats stored in his basement.

    The probe is also seeking to learn more about potential connections between Horsch and at least two missing women with ties to his home.

    One is Blair Tonzelli, who might have worked there as a home health aide and who was reported missing in Kensington in 2023. Some of Tonzelli’s friends told police after she disappeared that they worried that something bad had happened to her and that they had told police that Horsch was a “sociopath,” according to police documents obtained by The Inquirer.

    In addition, when Horsch was arrested in Center City earlier this month, a woman who was with him falsely identified herself as Tonzelli and later told police that she did so because Horsch had given her a fake identification with Tonzelli’s name.

    The other missing woman is Amy McHale, the ex-wife of Horsch’s father, who was last heard from at the Olney property in 2016. Horsch’s father, Raymond “R.C.” Horsch — now deceased — was an erotic photographer and drug manufacturer who had published several works of fiction, including one described as an “autobiographical memoir of a caring, empathetic serial killer.”

    Eugene Horsch, during his brief appearance in federal court Tuesday, said little beyond responding to routine legal questions. He will likely be held at Philadelphia’s Federal Detention Center as his case proceeds toward trial.

    His attorney, Jerome Brown, said afterward that he didn’t believe Horsch had harmed any of the women at the center of the investigation.

    “As far as I know, I’d be shocked if [police] found any harm related to those missing persons at that location,” Brown said.

  • Olney man charged with unlawful sexual contact with Cheltenham teen inside high school

    Olney man charged with unlawful sexual contact with Cheltenham teen inside high school

    An Olney man posing as a teenager groomed an underage student into a relationship, police said Tuesday, and persuaded her to enter Cheltenham High School after hours and have sexual contact.

    Jamaal Raheem, 21, has been charged with unlawful sexual contact with a minor, corruption of minors, and related crimes for the incident, which came to light late last week after Raheem’s preliminary hearing when administrators at Cheltenham School District sent a letter to parents about the case.

    Raheem was released on $100,000 unsecured bail. His attorney, Kenneth Carlton Edelin Jr., did not immediately return a request for comment.

    The letter to parents about the incident came days after Abington School District announced a review of its security protocols following the arrest of a man who, in a nearly identical case, repeatedly gained unauthorized access to the district’s high school from a female student.

    Cheltenham investigators say Raheem and a female Cheltenham High student were found inside the school on April 29. The two gained access to the building and walked throughout it until stopping at a stairwell, where the girl performed oral sex on him, according to the affidavit of probable cause for Raheem’s arrest

    District officials found them and asked them to leave, according to a letter from Cheltenham Superintendent Dr. Brian W. Scriven. The district filed a report with the state Department of Human Services ChildLine system and contacted local police as well as the girl’s parents.

    “While it’s unfortunate that this incident occurred, we are reassured that our recently updated building safety protocol prompted administration to respond in a timely manner,” Scriven said in his letter.

    Two days later, the girl’s parents met with Cheltenham Police, the affidavit said. In an interview with detectives, the girl said that she met Raheem through Snapchat and that he told her he was 17. He had sent her explicit images and asked her to send some of herself, which she declined to do.

    The two continued to talk through social media and eventually agreed to meet. Police found that Raheem also attempted to get a job at the restaurant where the girl worked but that his application was denied.

    After they were caught in the school, the girl tried to arrange a meeting between Raheem and her parents, according to the affidavit. He asked her whether they knew the two were dating.

    Later, when the girl’s mother texted Raheem using her daughter’s cell phone, telling him she was contacting the police, he lied and said he was 18, “is also a child,” and is still in high school.

    In the Abington case reported last week, Raeem Grange-Allen, 25, met a female Abington Senior High School student online and later asked the girl to let him into the school “and requested she perform oral sex on him behind a stairwell,” according to the affidavit of probable cause for his arrest.

    The girl told police that she “saw him or let him into the school approximately three to four times.”

    Grange-Allen later tried to rape the girl inside her home, according to police. His criminal trial on attempted rape by force and attempted statutory sexual assault is pending.