Category: Crime & Justice

  • ‘You are failing’: Residents berate Quakertown council for inaction after students’ arrest

    ‘You are failing’: Residents berate Quakertown council for inaction after students’ arrest

    Nearly two dozen residents and Quakertown taxpayers confronted the borough council at a public meeting Wednesday night, castigating its members for refusing to discipline the town’s police chief and demanding that they take action before leaving the room.

    The backlash was the latest fallout from a Feb. 20 student protest against federal immigration enforcement that began as a walkout from Quakertown Community High School and ended in a confrontation between Police Chief Scott McElree and a group of teenagers. The encounter, which was captured on video, led to the arrests of several teenagers and prompted an investigation by the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office.

    Wednesday’s meeting, which stretched to nearly two hours as speakers stepped to the podium one by one, laid bare a community in turmoil. Residents described fear, anger, and embarrassment that their small town had become a national flashpoint. By the end of the night, council members had made no motion and held no discussion about potential discipline for McElree.

    Council President Donald Rosenberger opened the meeting by telling the audience that the nine-member council — eight men and one woman — would not consider action against McElree or comment until the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office completes its investigation.

    McElree, 72, also serves as the borough’s manager, a role that includes overseeing the police department and managing public records.

    A parent holds a sign outside the Quakertown School Board meeting on Feb. 26 in Quakertown, Pa. Critics who addressed the board accused the district of not doing enough to support the students arrested during last week’s ICE protest.

    Outside the locked doors of the borough hall before the meeting, more than three dozen people — adults and teenagers — gathered holding handmade signs. One woman had scrawled “peaceful protester” across a flattened cardboard box in black marker. Beneath it she wrote: “Don’t put me in a chokehold, mmkay?”

    Inside the crowded chamber, speakers urged council members to reckon with the national attention now focused on the town and warned that their response — or lack of one — would shape voters’ decisions in November.

    Nearly every speaker who addressed the council called for McElree to be fired and criminally charged.

    Joseph Rittenhouse, who said his niece was among those arrested after the clash, told council members that images of her bloodied face were now among the first results people see when they search for “Quakertown” online.

    “We are national news. If you’re OK with that, I don’t think any of us are going to be OK with you sitting up there” when voters go to the polls, Rittenhouse said.

    Ileana Ramos of Quakertown speaks during a council meeting as members of the community speak out against the actions of Police Chief Scott McElree on Wednesday night in Quakertown.

    A handful of people who identified themselves as immigrants or women of color said the episode had shaken their sense of safety in the community, leaving them worried about how they or their children might be treated.

    “It leaves me breathless as to how this is possible in America,” said Illeana Ramos. “Everyone is scared.”

    Laura Foster, who leads Upper Bucks United, a civic group that has organized demonstrations since the altercation, said the council’s refusal to act had forced residents to step into a role that should belong to elected leaders.

    “You are failing to act as leaders in this community,” Foster said. “I don’t need to be doing this. You should be doing this.”

    Only one resident spoke in support of McElree.

    Caroline DeVenuto said officers had been “sent on a fool’s errand” when they were called to respond to a gathering of teenagers, and blamed parents for allowing the situation to spiral.

    “It’s time for parents to grow up and discipline their children like the rest of us,” she said.

    DeVenuto also criticized news coverage of the confrontation, calling portrayals of McElree and the police department “slander and deceit.”

    Residents and advocates first called for disciplinary action against McElree at a borough council meeting three days after the Feb. 20 confrontation. By Thursday, a petition seeking his resignation had drawn more than 12,000 signatures, though it was unclear how many of the signers live in the borough.

    Videos recorded by bystanders and reviewed by The Inquirer show McElree grappling with several students, at one point wrapping his arm around a teenage girl’s neck before taking her to the ground. McElree, who was not in uniform at the time, left the scene bleeding, the videos showed.

    Five teenagers were charged with aggravated assault, a felony, and related offenses. They are on house arrest with ankle monitors, their attorneys said.

    In the affidavit of probable cause for the arrest of one of the teenagers, officers wrote that McElree had been attempting to take a student into custody when the encounter escalated. A teenage boy struck him in the ear, the affidavit said, and others hit him in the shoulder and ribs.

    The document does not mention a chokehold.

    According to the affidavit, McElree sought medical treatment for undisclosed injuries. More than a week later, he began a workers’ compensation leave, the borough’s attorney said.

    The Bucks County District Attorney’s Office is investigating the encounter and has declined to comment.

    At least three defense attorneys have asked the Pennsylvania attorney general to assume control of both the investigation and the prosecution, and to dismiss the charges.

    In an email last week, lawyer Ed Angelo wrote that the affidavit “rendered only allegations that were damning to the children, but left out the assaultive behavior of the chief of police — behavior the children fought to protect themselves from.” He called the prosecution “an obvious and unacceptable conflict of interest.”

    On Friday, the attorney general’s office declined to intervene, saying in an email that “it would be inappropriate for our office to engage” in the investigation or the case.

  • Man fatally shot in Northeast Philly

    Man fatally shot in Northeast Philly

    A 35-year-old man was fatally shot while trying to drive away from an altercation with another man Wednesday night in the Castor section of Northeast Philadelphia, police said.

    Just after 7:10 p.m., police were called to the area of Summerdale and Magee Avenues and found the victim lying on the ground next to an SUV with the engine still running, said Chief Inspector Scott Small.

    The man, who had at least one gunshot wound to his back, was transported to Jefferson Torresdale Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 7:47 p.m., Small said.

    The SUV was parked outside a neighborhood store, and the victim and another man were inside the store when an argument occurred, Small said.

    The victim got into the driver’s seat of the SUV and the other man started shooting through the front passenger-side door, Small said.

    The shooter then ran from the scene.

    Police were told that both men were regular customers at the store, Small said.

    The victim was found lying next the front driver-side door with a handgun on the ground next to him.

    Police believe the gun belonged to the victim, Small said.

    Police recovered three spent shell casings next to the passenger door as well as three live rounds.

  • Former Bucks County man who voted twice for Trump convicted of voter fraud

    Former Bucks County man who voted twice for Trump convicted of voter fraud

    A former Bucks County man who claimed he was covered by pardons given by President Donald Trump to supporters who tried to overturn the 2020 election was found guilty Wednesday by a federal jury in Philadelphia of voting twice for Trump in 2020.

    Matthew Laiss, 32, was charged by indictment in September of one count of voting more than once in a federal election and one count of voter fraud. He is scheduled to be sentenced on June 10 and faces a maximum of five years in prison on both counts.

    Laiss, who prosecutors said is currently a resident of Bethehem, Pa., had been a resident of — and was registered to vote in — Ottsville, Bucks County, from at least 2012 to around August 2020, prosecutors said. Laiss then moved to Frostproof, Fla., where he obtained a driver’s license and registered to vote there.

    Around Oct. 31, 2020, Laiss filled out and returned a mail-in Pennsylvania ballot, then on Nov. 3, 2020, Laiss went to a polling place in Florida and voted again.

    “Today’s conviction reinforces a simple principle: our elections must be fair, secure, and lawful, ” U.S. Attorney David Metcalf said in a statement.

    “Casting a ballot in more than one jurisdiction undermines public trust and dilutes the votes of others. Our office will continue to protect the integrity of federal elections and hold accountable those who violate the law,” Metcalf said.

    The case was investigated by the FBI, with assistance from the Pennsylvania Department of State, and is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Dubnoff.

    Federal defenders who represented Laiss could not be reached for comment Wednesday night.

    Lawyers for Laiss had argued to U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Leeson Jr. that a pardon proclamation Trump issued last year on Nov. 7 applied to Laiss, and that Laiss had accepted it.

    Laiss was not among the 77 people Trump listed when specifying who would receive relief, but Laiss’ lawyers said the proclamation’s preamble included language making it applicable to “all United States citizens” for conduct, voting, or advocacy surrounding the contest.

    His lawyers wrote that Trump allies including Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, and Mark Meadows were all explicitly pardoned for “exponentially more egregious alleged conduct.” Extending relief to them while denying it to Laiss, his lawyers wrote, “would be outrageous.”

    Prosecutors said they checked with Trump’s Office of the Pardon Attorney and were told that the lawyers there did not believe the pardon proclamation applied to Laiss.

    In January, Leeson ruled against Laiss’ motion to dismiss the indictment, explaining that the court was without jurisdiction to decide the matter because Laiss had not applied to the Office of the Pardon Attorney, or had received a certificate of pardon.

  • Philly clerk shot during a robbery sues ‘skill games’ manufacturers for attracting crime

    Philly clerk shot during a robbery sues ‘skill games’ manufacturers for attracting crime

    A convenience store worker shot during a September armed robbery has sued a “skill games” manufacturer, alleging the casino-style devices on the premises motivated the attack.

    Ahmedine Maham, 27, was working the night shift at Philly Market in Frankford on Sept. 14, the suit says, when two armed men entered the store and shot Maham in the face, according to the complaint, which was filed Monday in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.

    “The robbers targeted the store because the high amount of cash required to be on hand for gambling machine payouts,” the lawsuit says.

    Banilla Gaming, a North Carolina-based skills game manufacturer, is aware of the dangers associated with its “gambling devices,” the suit says.

    The complaint also names Philly Market and associated businesses as defendants.

    Banilla did not respond to a request for comment. The Inquirer was unable to reach Philly Market’s owners based on publicly available records.

    The slot-like devices, commonly placed in bars and gas station convenience stores, have evaded Pennsylvania’s gambling regulations and exist in a gray area of the law. Manufacturers argue the games are based on skill, and are distinct from slot machines that are only legal within the walls of casinos.

    Because they do not fall under gaming laws they are untaxed and unregulated. But their status has been subject to debates in Harrisburg for years.

    Skill games regulations were on the table during last year’s prolonged budget negotiations but lawmakers again punted on the issue, despite bipartisan agreement that they are needed. Gov. Josh Shapiro called the matter “unfinished business,” leaving the door open for future action.

    Law enforcement officials have raised concerns over skill games for years, and earlier this month the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association sent a letter to Shapiro asking for the devices to be taxed and regulated in a way that would “ensure consumer protection, require security measures, and prevent underage gambling.”

    The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is considering a case challenging the status of the devices. In a November hearing, justices didn’t seem to view them as different from slot machines.

    Philadelphia enacted a ban on “skill games” in 2024 motivated by concerns the machines attract crime to low-income neighborhoods. Philadelphia Police Department officials testified in City Council in favor of the ban.

    But following an industry lawsuit, the Commonwealth Court lifted the prohibition.

    Matthew Haverstick, a lawyer for Pace-O-Matic who argued in front of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on behalf of the “skill games” company, said in 2024 that the games were “not crime magnets” but a revenue stream for “small businesses that survive on really thin profit margins.”

    Maham’s lawsuit is the latest in an effort to hold skill games manufacturers, distributors, and store owners accountable for the violence the devices allegedly draw.

    A Philadelphia jury awarded $15.3 million last year to the estate of Ashokkumar Patel, a Hazelton store clerk killed during a 2020 robbery. That suit similarly placed the blame for the violence at the feet of the “skill games” industry.

    Robert Zimmerman, a Saltz Mongeluzzi Bendesky lawyer who represents Maham and represented the Patel’s estate, said the devices force store clerks to act as casino operators without the security measures required in gaming regulations.

    Game manufacturers could improve safety without waiting for regulations, Zimmerman said, by placing terminals in stores that dispense payouts instead of relying on store clerks. But the industry has been resistant to changes that could bite into its profit stream, according to the attorney.

    “This is a danger not only for low-wage workers at these convenience stores, but they are a danger to everyone in the community,” Zimmerman said.

  • A Gladwyne man who misspent millions of dollars from some of Philly’s richest people will spend 9 years in prison

    A Gladwyne man who misspent millions of dollars from some of Philly’s richest people will spend 9 years in prison

    A Gladwyne furniture heir who duped some of the region’s wealthiest people into giving him millions of dollars intended to fund his startup companies — but who instead used the cash to pay for lavish personal expenses including private jet flights, country club dues, and his daughters’ bat mitzvahs — was sentenced Wednesday to more than nine years in federal prison.

    Josh Verne pleaded guilty last year to using forged financial documents and false statements about his net worth to persuade prominent business owners to invest in some of his proposed ventures. They included David Adelman, a billionaire entrepreneur and Sixers co-owner; Michael Rubin, CEO of the sports apparel behemoth Fanatics; and real estate developer Bart Blatstein, The Inquirer has reported.

    Part of Verne’s appeal, prosecutors said, was his gregarious and engaging persona, and his confident assurances that he was a visionary entrepreneur who would turn his investors’ money into lucrative returns. He said he’d sold a previous business for tens of millions of dollars — although he hadn’t — and assured his benefactors that he was worth nearly $100 million, though he wasn’t.

    In court Wednesday, Verne, 48, cut a far more humble figure, saying he’d “destroyed” his career, reputation, and relationships through his misconduct.

    “I alone am responsible for that,” he said. “Not the circumstances, not the pressure, but me.”

    Prosecutors said Verne’s misdeeds were part of a calculated, long-running scheme to “steal rather than earn.” In court documents, they described him as an “extraordinarily capable conman” whose fraud “was not an aberration — it was a business model.”

    “This wasn’t a poor man who was trying to feed his family,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jerome Maiatico said in court. “He wanted to live a lifestyle that he couldn’t otherwise afford. And he sustained that with deception.”

    U.S. District Judge John F. Murphy said Verne clearly had a knack for gaining people’s trust — but that in this case, he abused that trust in “profound” ways, day after day.

    “What makes this scheme so meaningful is the sheer persistence of all of the decisions,” Murphy said. “You don’t accomplish all of these things with a couple of light decisions.”

    The judge said Verne’s total term of incarceration would be 111 months. Afterward, he said, Verne will serve three years of supervised release.

    Verne was raised in Huntingdon Valley, and his family in the 1960s founded Chuck’s Bargain House, a furniture company that was later renamed Home Line Furniture Industries and grew to include factories in Philadelphia, North Carolina and Vietnam.

    Verne went to work for the business in the early 2000s, but it was forced to close because of financial difficulties in 2011.

    After that, Verne founded Workpays.me LLC, an employee payroll-deduction purchasing program. And in 2016, he persuaded Adelman to invest in FlockU, a digital media outlet focused on appealing to college students.

    In courting Adelman, prosecutors said, Verne lied about his net worth, his business background, and, to bolster his accounts, presented Adelman — referred to in court documents as “Investor A” — with forged financial documents he said were from Goldman Sachs.

    Once FlockU foundered, prosecutors said, Verne changed the LLC’s name to Ownable and pivoted its business model, seeking to make it an online marketplace that would lease laptops and smartphones to people who couldn’t afford to buy them.

    To persuade Adelman to invest more money, prosecutors said, Verne lied again, saying he was investing more than $2 million of his own money into Ownable, when in fact he never did so.

    Verne then went on to raise millions more from other boldfaced names, in part by touting his connection to Adelman and continuing to boast about his own wealth. All the while, prosecutors said, Ownable was struggling to get off the ground — but Verne was using the money to fund an extravagant life.

    He used his investors’ cash to renovate his Shore house, prosecutors said, and paid for private jet trips, his daughters’ bat mitzvahs, his country club dues, an interior decorator, and credit card and mortgage bills.

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office has not yet settled on a precise dollar figure for all that graft, but said it was likely between $12 million and $24 million.

    Prosecutors and Verne’s attorneys said in court Wednesday that they were continuing to try and finalize disputes about exactly how much Verne owes to his victims, although his federal public defenders said he is now “penniless.”

    In 2023, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a civil court filing that Verne had raised $31 million from investors — and misspent about half of it.

    More than $9 million went toward Verne’s personal expenses, the SEC said, and about $5 million was diverted to make “Ponzi-like payments” to some initial investors, an attempt by Verne to mislead his benefactors into thinking Ownable was in good financial health.

    By 2019, however, Ownable was in severe financial distress, prosecutors said. And in 2020, the company’s board learned of the issues and forced Verne to resign.

    Two years later, prosecutors said, when Verne knew he was under criminal investigation, he sent texts to a former Ownable employee who’d spoken to the FBI, as well as the man’s wife. Prosecutors said the texts amounted to witness intimidation.

    Verne’s attorneys disputed that, saying the texts were a one-time, “off-the-cuff” reaction made under duress, and did not contain any explicit threats against anyone.

    Murphy, the judge, disagreed.

    “Some would call it extortion,” he said. “It’s a threat.”

    Verne was indicted in 2024 on charges including securities fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft. He pleaded guilty last year to some of those charges as part of a plea agreement.

    Murphy said that although some of Verne’s victims were wealthy, others were less well-heeled and therefore devastated by his misuse of their money.

    And yet Verne continued making decisions to benefit himself at the expense of those who trusted him, the judge said.

    “What the next day brought every time,” Murphy said, “was more and more harmful decisions.”

  • Man arrested for killing one man and injuring another near Chickie’s & Pete’s last year

    Man arrested for killing one man and injuring another near Chickie’s & Pete’s last year

    A man has been arrested in connection with two shootings last year that left one person dead and another hospitalized.

    Nasir Brooks, 24, turned himself in to the Philadelphia Police Department on Tuesday for the killing of 23-year-old Hasan Mason. Brooks allegedly fatally shot Mason near Broad Street and Packer Avenue in October and shot another 23-year-old that same day in front of the Chickie’s and Pete’s nearby, police say.

    Police previously arrested Abou Keita, 22, a month after the shooting, charging him with murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault, and other offenses in relation to the Oct. 9 shooting.

    The shooting unfolded just after 6:10 p.m., when police responded to reports near Packer Avenue and Broad Street. What they found on scene was an Audi sedan filled with 15 bullet holes just south of the intersection, police said.

    Police found Mason lying on Broad Street just north of the intersection with multiple gunshot wounds. He was taken to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    The other 23-year-old, who police have not identified, was found in front of the Chickie’s & Pete’s near the sports complex on Packer Avenue, with gunshot wounds to the torso. He was taken to Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, where he was placed in stable condition.

    Nick Vadala contributed to this article.

  • K-9 Ivan makes 40-pound drug bust in Delco

    K-9 Ivan makes 40-pound drug bust in Delco

    A drug-sniffing K-9 dog helped the Pennsylvania State Police make a 40-pound marijuana bust during a traffic stop on I-95 in Delaware County, the law enforcement agency said Tuesday.

    Around 11:20 p.m. on Thursday, state troopers stopped a vehicle on southbound I-95 in Ridley Township for multiple alleged traffic offenses, state police said.

    Troopers suspected something was up and asked for consent to search the vehicle, but the driver allegedly refused, so troopers called for Ivan, a state police K-9 dog.

    Ivan was “alerted to the odor of narcotics in the vehicle,” and a search warrant was obtained while the driver was detained for the investigation, state police said.

    The vehicle was towed to the state police barracks in Media, where troopers allegedly discovered about 40 pounds of marijuana concealed in boxes and buckets, and around $6,000 cash.

    The driver, who was not identified, was arrested and charged with multiple offenses, state police said.

  • Montco school bus driver arrested with Tito’s vodka, charged with DUI for erratic driving

    Montco school bus driver arrested with Tito’s vodka, charged with DUI for erratic driving

    A Douglass Township school bus driver was charged with driving under the influence and related crimes after she drove more than 50 elementary school-age children while intoxicated, officials said.

    Kelly Weber, 46, of Boyertown, drove her school bus “erratically” on Feb. 6 while children were inside, narrowly missing vehicles and nearly hitting a telephone pole, the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office said.

    Police responded in the rural township north of Pottstown after receiving calls about Weber’s driving, officials said.

    They searched the bus and found an open 750ml bottle of Tito’s vodka, two empty Tito’s bottles, and a liquor store receipt for the alcohol from 9:22 a.m. that day.

    Investigators found that 54 children had ridden on Weber’s bus that day, and that multiple children had called or texted their parents expressing fear about the manner in which she was driving.

    One of the children got off the bus before arriving at school and was picked up by their parents, officials said.

    Police tested Weber’s blood-alcohol content and found it was 0.331, which is four times the legal threshold for intoxication in Pennsylvania.

    In addition to DUI, Weber was charged with 54 counts of endangering the welfare of children and 54 counts of reckless endangerment.

    Weber voluntarily entered a rehab facility after she was issued an arrest warrant, according to officials.

    She is working with police to arrange a time to turn herself in, when her bail will be set and she will be formally arraigned, officials said.

  • Man who assaulted Hatboro woman after she refused to abort his child is sentenced to prison

    Man who assaulted Hatboro woman after she refused to abort his child is sentenced to prison

    Last April, Raymond Bautista donned a ski mask and black clothing and waited for the mother of his unborn baby to leave her Hatboro apartment to head to work.

    Around 4:30 a.m., Bautista, 37, of Allentown, attacked the woman. He hit her from behind, and kicked her in the back and stomach. While she was on the ground, he got on top of her and punched her face. And when she began to scream, he ran.

    The woman, a coworker of Bautista’s who was 15 weeks pregnant with his child and had recently told him she planned to keep the baby, suffered nasal fractures and abrasions, according to police.

    On Tuesday, Bautista pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and no contest to aggravated assault of an unborn child.

    He was sentenced to four to six years in prison.

    The woman said in a statement read aloud by prosecutors the assault scars her to this day.

    “I lost my peace of leaving home every morning,” she said. “… No woman deserves to be treated this way.”

    After the assault, while the woman’s clothing was still soiled with blood, police asked whether she could think of anyone who would want to hurt her. The only person who came to mind, she said, was Bautista, a coworker at a Hatfield-based food processing company.

    According to the affidavit of probable cause for Bautista’s arrest, the woman said that after he learned that she was pregnant with his child, he told her to take an emergency contraceptive. He also said he “did not want any involvement with the child’s life,” the document said

    Bautista initially denied leaving his Allentown residence that morning and told police he had been sleeping.

    Investigators later recovered footage of Bautista’s vehicle being driven from Allentown to Hatboro that morning, as well as clothing resembling the attire worn by the woman’s assailant when he was captured in Ring doorbell camera footage of the assault.

    Presented with that evidence, police said, Bautista admitted to the crime. He told investigators he attacked the woman because she had been “talking [expletive]” about him at work.

    Montgomery County Court Judge Steven T. O’Neill accepted Bautista’s guilty plea and, in addition to sentencing him to years in prison, ordered him to have no contact with the woman and to attend domestic violence counseling.

    O’Neill commended the victim for facing Bautista in court and said that in her statement, he had “heard her courage.”

    “I hope you’ve heard the same,” the judge told Bautista.

  • Former Lumberton mayor pleads guilty to DUI, child endangerment charges

    Former Lumberton mayor pleads guilty to DUI, child endangerment charges

    A former Lumberton Township mayor admitted in court Monday that she drove drunk with her toddler in the car last St. Patrick’s Day, bringing to a close a case that prompted calls for her resignation.

    Gina LaPlaca, 46, who served as mayor until December and remains a member of the township committee, pleaded guilty before Burlington County Superior Court Judge Craig Ambrose to driving under the influence and child endangerment, according to Burlington County prosecutors.

    Under a plea agreement, LaPlaca will enter a three-year diversionary program for first-time offenders. She also agreed to attend regular Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and install an ignition interlock device in her vehicle. Over the last year, she has completed inpatient and outpatient treatment, prosecutors said Tuesday. LaPlaca told the judge Monday she had installed an interlock device in October.

    Prosecutors said a motorist captured LaPlaca on cell phone video driving a blue 2019 BMW erratically on Route 38, swerving across the center line and nearly striking a utility pole. After the driver alerted police, officers located LaPlaca and found an open container of alcohol in the vehicle, authorities said.

    LaPlaca told officers she had been drinking before picking up her 2-year-old son from daycare, prosecutors said. At the time, her blood-alcohol concentration measured 0.30% — more than three times New Jersey’s legal threshold for intoxication.

    In the weeks after her arrest, the township committee formally censured LaPlaca for alleged ethical violations. Despite public outcry and calls from state lawmakers to step down, she declined to resign as mayor and remained in office until her term ended in December.

    An attempt to reach LaPlaca on Tuesday was unsuccessful. After her arrest last year, her husband, Jason Carty, told The Inquirer that she was “on a path to recovery” and asked for privacy.