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  • Tanking NBA teams should lose their lottery slot as ‘The Process’ leaves its rancid legacy

    Tanking NBA teams should lose their lottery slot as ‘The Process’ leaves its rancid legacy

    NBA commissioner Adam Silver last week fined the Utah Jazz $500,000 for tanking. He fined the Indiana Pacers $100,000 for doing the same.

    The Jazz paid Lauri Markkanen more than $500,000 for each of the games in which he was benched to ensure losses. The Pacers paid Pascal Siakam more than five times their fine for sitting him on Feb. 3. The teams literally paid the players more than the fines to not play. The fines were nothing more than performative outrage. The fines were a joke.

    The NBA is fast becoming a joke.

    For years, the NBA has faced the existential threat of dwindling interest because its uninteresting product is infected with the simultaneous practices of tanking, losing on purpose to secure a better draft position; and load management, not playing available players to better ensure their availability in the postseason. The Sixers have been on the vanguard of both of these reprehensible movements; first, by instituting “The Process” 13 years ago, and then by coddling premier players like current centerpiece Joel Embiid.

    Load management might never go away. After all, it kept Kawhi Leonard viable for the Raptors’ 2019 title run, and it’s keeping LeBron James viable at the age of 65, or however old he is (he’s now up to 41).

    Tanking? That’s another story. The NBA could fix that in a hot minute if it wanted to. It is a blight on the sport, a fraud perpetrated on fans, media partners, and sponsors on a nightly basis, all brazenly executed, and with no real penalty.

    It is a league descending into fringe status, one without a universally likable face this century besides, at its very beginning, Michael Jordan, and even he turned out to be kind of a jerk.

    Silver said at his All-Star Game press conference Saturday, “There is talk about every possible remedy now to stop this behavior.”

    There is a simple remedy to stop this behavior: Kick the cheaters out of the lottery and replace them with honestly mediocre teams.

    This penalizes the egregious tankers, but still gives them a reasonable chance to improve despite their crimes against basketball. It rewards non-tankers who played just well enough to miss the lottery.

    This is not the only solution.

    One thought: Silver could fine teams even more. ESPN’s Kendrick Perkins suggested $5 million per infraction.

    The problem: That’s still chump change. The Pacers owners have a combined net worth of about $16 billion; co-owner Steven Rales spends $5 million on biotech research and development every day.

    Another idea: The NBA could abolish the draft entirely. On Monday, David Aldridge of The Athletic wrote exhaustively about such a proposal.

    The problems:

    Teams that play in states without a state income tax, such Florida’s Heat and Magic and Texas’ Mavericks, Spurs, and Rockets, would have a significant financial advantage in attracting young talent. Similarly, big-market teams in Los Angeles and New York would attract big-endorsement players, whose endorsers would make it worth their while to be a Laker or a Knick.

    Ask any 19-year-old kid if he’d rather stay warm with the Heat and make more after-tax money, play for the Clippers in the epicenter of hedonism, or spend six months in frigid, turgid Milwaukee?

    The better solution:

    If you get caught tanking in the manner of the Sixers from 2013-16, when they won a total of 47 games in three seasons, then you lose your place in the lottery. Your chance at the top-tier players of the best draft in eight years — gone.

    In the NBA draft, the top 14 draft slots are lottery slots. That means teams with those picks have a chance for the No. 1 overall pick. Generally speaking, the worst teams have the best chances at the higher picks.

    If a team is found guilty of tanking, they’re out of the lottery. They move to the 15th slot in the draft, and the 15th team moves into 14th and therefore into the lottery.

    If a team has two lottery slots in the draft, their higher-slotted pick gets moved down.

    If a team is found guilty of tanking twice in the same season, they move from 15th to last, or 30th, and the other 15 non-lottery teams move up one slot.

    If a team has two lottery slots in the draft and is found guilty of tanking twice in the same season, that lottery slot is moved to 15th, which bumps their previous lottery slot from 15th to 16th, and it bumps the team with the original 16th slot into 14th, the team with the original 15th slot to 13th, etc.

    It might sound complicated but it’s not. You violate the spirit of the process (delicious usage there), you lose your privilege. It’s not as draconian as it might be.

    You still get to draft, and thereby get a little better.

    Unless you’re an idiot and offend repeatedly, you still get to draft at a decent spot. Tyrese Maxey, Siakam, Jarrett Allen, and Jalen Brunson all were drafted 16th or lower.

    Then again, so were Wade Baldwin, Justin Patton, and, of course, former Sixers prospect Zhaire Smith.

    That should be enough to scare off any would-be tankers.

  • Stetson Middle School was neglected for decades, district officials admit. Now, they’re trying to close the school.

    Stetson Middle School was neglected for decades, district officials admit. Now, they’re trying to close the school.

    As cars whizzed by on B Street, one student banged a drum and another struck a cymbal. Others waved signs and marched in circles.

    “Save our school!” the group of about 50 middle schoolers shouted outside Stetson Middle School in Kensington last week. “Save Stetson!”

    Stetson is one of 20 schools Superintendent Tony B. Watlington Sr. has proposed closing as part of a $2.8 billion facilities plan. Officials say closures are necessary to improve educational outcomes and equity system-wide, and to balance enrollment in a district that has 70,000 empty seats.

    Love Letters to Stetson decorate the hallway during a community meeting at John B. Stetson Middle School in Kensington last week. Stetson is one of 20 Philly public schools facing closure.

    But Stetson isn’t going down without a fight.

    The school is 59% occupied, by the district’s calculations, and its building is in “unsatisfactory” condition. Stetson also scored “poor” on program alignment, a measure that takes into account a school’s ability to offer “appropriate spaces” for things like art, music, physical education, and career and technical education.

    Its supporters say Stetson has been left to languish and that their neighborhood is overrepresented on the closure list. The district, they say, is taking away a community that’s been a constant for families in a struggling neighborhood at the center of the city’s opioid crisis.

    “You tell this community that they are not worth investment,” one Stetson student said at a meeting at the school last week. “How is it equitable to shut a school in a neighborhood that already lost so much? If this building needs repair, fix it for the children, not for the administration.”

    Twelve requests to fix a leaky roof

    The district has said it plans to hold on to the Stetson building and operate it as “swing space” — a building that can be used to relocate students from other schools that must temporarily shut down to accommodate repairs.

    Instead of closing soon, the district is proposing phasing Stetson out gradually. The school would stop accepting new fifth graders in 2028, and close in 2030.

    Students who previously would have gone to Stetson will go to Cramp and Elkin elementaries, which will grow to accommodate middle grades. Both schools are less than a mile from Stetson.

    Students, teachers and supporters rally before a community meeting at John B. Stetson Middle School on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026 in Philadelphia. Stetson is one of 20 Philly public schools facing closure.

    Officials have also said the move to shut down Stetson is part of a larger strategy of moving away from middle schools and focusing instead on K-8 schools.

    Community angst spilled over at the closing meeting last week, with audience members booing district officials who were there to present information and answer questions, and applauding for those who spoke up for Stetson.

    If the district has money to spend on fixing up buildings, why not spend on Stetson’s building, students asked.

    Students and attendees listen during a community meeting at John B. Stetson Middle School last week.

    “We have a fourth floor,” one sixth grader said. “Y’all could just fix that, y’all could fix the pipes, y’all could fix everything.”

    Another student said she was frustrated by mold in the school, and a leaky roof.

    “I heard that it’s your fault,” the student said.

    Later, at a Tuesday City Council hearing, Councilmember Quetcy Lozada told Superintendent Tony B. Watlington Sr. that Stetson staff have put in 12 separate requests to fix the leaking roof.

    “That roof is still leaking,” a frustrated Lozada said. “Can I have someone please today commit to going to Stetson and checking their leaking roof?”

    Watlington said he would “make that happen.”

    ‘The void that it’s going to leave behind’

    The district got the Stetson call wrong, said Kathryn Lajara, a special-education teacher at the school.

    “Our school is being penalized for allegedly lacking space — P.E., special education, art,” Lajara said. “These conclusions are based on incomplete and misleading information, not on lived reality of what happens in our building every single day.”

    Special ed coordinator Kathryn Lajara speaks during a community meeting at John B. Stetson Middle School last week. Lajara and others spoke out against the recommendation to close the school in Kensington.

    Stetson has an art lab, rooms for piano class, dance, a music room, and a photography room, Lajara said. And it serves 140 students with disabilities, despite the district saying it had inadequate special-education spaces.

    Lajara was also frustrated by the district’s upkeep of the building.

    “We fight the dripping water every day from the roof that you continue to neglect,” Lajara told district officials at the community meeting.

    “I’m going to admit to you: We have neglected this building over decades,” Deputy Superintendent Oz Hill told the audience.

    Lajara looked at Hill.

    “Instead of continuing to neglect, how about we decide that our community and our students are best to invest in?” she said.

    Deputy Superintendent Oz Hill speaks during a community meeting at John B. Stetson Middle School last week.

    Crystal Pritchett, another Stetson teacher, suggested the district’s decision to send students to Cramp and Elkin was not in tune with neighbors’ wishes about safety and comfort.

    Families have safety concerns about sending their kids to other schools, Pritchett said.

    “You know nothing about this community,” Pritchett said. “You aren’t listening.”

    Stetson opened in 1915 and was a district school for nearly 100 years. It turned into a charter school run by the nonprofit Aspira in 2010, but the district took it back in 2022 after Aspira failed to meet district standards.

    Abandoning it altogether is unthinkable, said the Rev. David Orellana, a pastor at CityReach Church in Kensington.

    “I don’t think we’re taking into account the negative impact and the void that it’s going to leave behind,” Orellana said. “Taking Stetson away is taking the heartbeat of this community.”

  • Members-only Philly cop bar has been linked to two DUIs — and a third crash kept secret, until now

    Members-only Philly cop bar has been linked to two DUIs — and a third crash kept secret, until now

    Raymond and Anna Wakeman had returned from dinner early on a Saturday night and were relaxing on the couch with their two rescue dogs in their Northeast Philadelphia home. Cricket, a pit bull, rested his head on Raymond’s shoulder. Jax, a miniature pinscher, was curled up next to Anna.

    In an instant, a 2014 Dodge Dart exploded through the front of the Wakemans’ home and into their living room.

    Firefighters arrived to find Anna in another room, pinned under the silver Dodge and gravely injured. Rescuers worked feverishly to free her from the wreckage and rush her to the hospital. Jax was dead. Cricket underwent emergency surgery, but died soon after.

    Anna Wakeman assembled a memorial to the family’s two rescue dogs, Jax and Cricket, who were killed by Gregory Campbell, a Philadelphia police officer who crashed his car into her home in 2021. Campbell spent hours consuming alcohol at a bar operated by the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 5.

    The driver, off-duty Philadelphia Police Officer Gregory Campbell, had been drinking since midafternoon on Feb. 6, 2021, and a lawsuit would later allege he had consumed as many as 20 alcoholic beverages. He had most of them where he ended his evening, at the 7C Lounge, a members-only club for active and retired cops operated by the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 5, inside the union’s headquarters.

    Campbell was arrested and fired from the police force after the crash. In June 2022, a Common Pleas Court judge sentenced him to 11½ to 23 months in prison.

    “I am so sorry,” Campbell told the Wakemans in court, “for everything I’ve put you and your family through.”

    Campbell’s accident and subsequent trial were widely covered at the time. But an Inquirer investigation has found troubling new details about that crash and the aftermath that were never made public, and identified two additional auto accidents tied to the 7C Lounge. The findings raise questions about how drunken-driving cases are investigated when they involve a powerful police union operating its own bar.

    Records show that after crashing into the Wakeman house — and while it was still unclear whether Anna Wakeman had survived — Campbell was allowed to confer with FOP representatives and delay a blood-alcohol test for nearly six hours.

    Gregory Campbell’s Dodge Dart sped from the parking lot outside the FOP’s 7C Lounge into the Wakemans’ home, killing the family’s two dogs and almost killing Anna Wakeman.

    The delay was an apparent violation of Pennsylvania law, which requires suspected drunk drivers to undergo testing within two hours of being behind the wheel unless good cause is given. The records include no explanation for the delay.

    An officer in the police department’s Crash Investigation District later testified in a deposition that he had never before encountered a person accused of driving under the influence who was allowed to seek guidance from his labor union before undergoing blood testing.

    When Campbell’s blood was finally tested, his alcohol level registered at 0.23%, almost three times the 0.08 legal threshold for drunken driving. A toxicologist later estimated Campbell’s blood-alcohol content at the time of the accident was as high as 0.351%, more than four times the legal limit.

    The Wakemans filed a lawsuit in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court against Campbell, the 7C Lounge, and Lodge 5. The couple’s attorney hired a liquor liability expert — a former police officer who had been an investigator for the New Jersey Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control for 11 years — who concluded that there was “overwhelming evidence” that the 7C Lounge had overserved Campbell and failed to monitor him or intervene.

    The “actions and inactions were negligent and reckless” and “contributed directly to the accident, damages and injuries sustained by the Wakeman family,” the expert, Donald J. Simonini, wrote in his 23-page report.

    On the night of the crash, a Philadelphia police accident investigator attempted to interview employees working at the 7C Lounge but was unable to do so because the bar had closed hours earlier than scheduled. The investigator said subsequent attempts to obtain information from the employees were also unsuccessful.

    A manager later testified that he was “following orders” when he shut down the bar early.

    An aerial view of Lodge 5’s headquarters, the 7C Lounge, and Anna and Raymond Wakeman’s home.

    At that time, Lodge 5 was led by its longtime president, John McNesby. His chief of staff, Roosevelt Poplar, was vice president of the union’s Home Association, a nonprofit that operates the 7C Lounge.

    McNesby resigned in 2023, and was succeeded by Poplar, who last year won a contentious reelection battle.

    Neither McNesby nor Poplar responded to requests for comment.

    State law grants regulators broad authority to crack down on bars found to have overserved customers, with sanctions ranging from fines to suspension or revocation of a liquor license. Yet the FOP’s bar has faced no regulatory repercussions during the 16 years it has operated at its Northeast Philadelphia headquarters.

    Paul Herron, a Philadelphia lawyer who specializes in liquor licenses and enforcement, said that the Pennsylvania State Police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement (BLCE) has “very stringent requirements” and that most establishments tend to have at least minor violations, such as improper recordkeeping. He said it is “very unusual” that the 7C Lounge has a clean slate given the severity of the Campbell case.

    Campbell “had consumed monumental amounts of liquor, and for that to just not show up anywhere is awfully strange,” Herron said. “I would expect that if this happened to another place, that this would come to light, to the knowledge of the bureau, and they would ultimately issue a citation.”

    In another incident tied to the 7C Lounge, regulators did not open an investigation because the union did not report what had happened.

    The Inquirer viewed two minutes and 40 seconds of surveillance footage of the 7C Lounge parking lot from the evening of Nov. 22, 2021. The recordings come from three separate cameras and show a patron walking out of the 7C Lounge and getting into the driver’s seat of a compact SUV. At 11:21 p.m., the driver backs up, then accelerates forward into a parked truck, hitting it hard enough to slam the truck into the front bumper of an SUV parked behind it.

    The motorist pauses a few seconds, reverses, then accelerates past the damaged vehicles and runs over two orange cones. The driver then plows through the FOP’s fence on Caroline Road, destroying a section of it, before disappearing from the camera’s view.

    A source with firsthand knowledge of the incident said Poplar reviewed the footage of the parking lot crashes and took notes, including “4 cars hit” and “fence,” with the time each object was hit.

    Roosevelt Poplar won a heated reelection battle for the FOP’s presidency in 2025. He previously served as the vice president of the union’s Home Association, a nonprofit that operates the 7C Lounge.

    A police spokesperson said there is no record that the crashes in the 7C Lounge parking lot had ever been reported to authorities.

    Herron said a typical bar would have almost certainly reported that type of incident.

    “It’s just not something that would have happened maybe if it didn’t involve the police or the FOP,” he said.

    ‘I was dizzy’

    There are potential conflicts of interest if law enforcement officers with arresting powers own establishments that serve alcohol. In fact, state law prohibits police officers from holding liquor licenses because they are responsible for enforcing liquor laws.

    But that restriction does not extend to the FOP’s Home Association because it is considered part of a fraternal, nonprofit organization. State law defines such entities as “catering clubs” — much like a VFW post or an Elks Lodge — and permits them liquor licenses.

    It’s a loophole in the law that Anna Wakeman, who barely survived the accident with Campbell’s Dodge, doesn’t understand.

    “The cops can drink as much as they want there,” Wakeman, now 58, said. “The bartenders serve them till they’re blackout drunk and let them leave.”

    When Campbell crashed into the Wakemans’ home, it was the second time the family’s property had been damaged by a patron who left the FOP’s bar impaired. Less than two years earlier, a former Philly cop had left the 7C Lounge, got into his car, and smashed into Anna Wakeman’s SUV, which was parked in her driveway.

    Anna Wakeman and her husband couldn’t stomach the idea of returning to their Northeast Philadelphia home after the 2021 car crash, fearing it could happen again. They moved instead to West Virginia.

    On a Sunday night in April 2019, an ex-Philly cop named Damien Walto worked as a DJ at the 7C Lounge, which has an expansive bar with gleaming dark wood and big-screen TVs. Walto was no longer an active member of Lodge 5: He had been fired from the police force in 2010 for allegedly assaulting a woman while off duty, and was later sentenced to three to six months in prison.

    Walto left the bar just after 10 p.m. in his GMC Envoy. Rain was falling, the roads were slick, and Walto told a reporter that he lost control of his SUV when he tried to steer past a tractor-trailer on Caroline Road. He careered through the intersection at Comly Road and smashed into Anna Wakeman’s Chevrolet Equinox, which was sitting in her driveway.

    The force of the impact crumpled the rear of the Equinox like an accordion and propelled it into Raymond Wakeman’s parked Chevrolet Silverado.

    The Wakemans watched Walto stumble out of his Envoy, dazed and disoriented, then stagger along the sidewalk while clutching an Easter basket.

    In a recent interview with The Inquirer, Walto said he does not remember if he drank any alcohol at the party, perhaps because he struck his head hard against the steering wheel.

    “I was dizzy and messed up,” he said. “I didn’t know what was going on.”

    Walto returned to his GMC and fumbled with a screwdriver in an attempt to remove an FOP-marked license plate from his SUV, the Wakemans said. He toppled over and the license plate remained in place, they said.

    Walto said he was not trying to hide his link to the police union. “My tag fell off and I was trying to put it back on,” he said.

    Police officers arrived at the scene and noted that Walto appeared to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol. They arrested him, and medics transported him to the hospital for chest pain, according to a police report. There is no mention in the report of Walto having suffered a head injury.

    At the time of crash, Walto was also facing DUI charges in Montgomery County, court records show. In August 2019, he pleaded guilty there to driving under the influence and was sentenced to up to six months in prison; he spent 72 hours behind bars, he says.

    His Philadelphia case was later dismissed.

    The fact that the 7C Lounge has been connected to multiple drunken-driving incidents is troubling, experts say.

    The 7C Lounge closed for business early the night Campbell crashed into the Wakemans’ house.

    “The more accidents that result from serving alcohol at any bar, owned by the police union or anyone else, the more the public would be ordinarily concerned about the continuing operations of that establishment,” said Mark Carter, a longtime employer-side labor attorney and a member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Labor Relations Committee.

    “Here, you’ve articulated a pattern of behavior that would create a legitimate interest by the city or the prosecutor’s office about the continuing operations of that establishment.”

    The state BLCE, which has the authority to issue sanctions, would not confirm or deny the existence of any investigation.

    ‘Watch our boy’

    Hours before the Wakemans were nearly killed in their home in 2021, off-duty Philly cops had gathered for what was supposed to have been a somber affair: paying tribute to James O’Connor IV, a police corporal who had been shot and killed in the line of duty in March 2020.

    The Crispin Tavern, a small bar on Holme Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia, staged a beef-and-beer fundraiser for O’Connor’s family that afternoon. Among the bar’s patrons was Campbell, who recalled drinking about six beers there before he climbed into his car and drove to the 7C Lounge, court records would later show.

    He arrived at the FOP’s bar just after 5:20 p.m. His next three hours inside the establishment are detailed in a report written by Simonini, the liquor liability expert, who watched video footage from the bar’s security feed.

    Campbell, who had been on the police force since March 2018, joined a table of five. Nearby, a man in a white shirt had trouble standing and nearly fell several times as he struggled to get his jacket on. He took a swing at another customer who tried to steady him.

    Simonini noted that a server walked by the stumbling man four times but did not once ask if he was OK.

    During a deposition, an attorney representing the Wakemans asked the 7C Lounge’s bar manager, Ernie Gallagher, about the stumbling man’s apparent intoxication.

    Gallagher theorized that instead of being drunk, the man might have suffered from a neurological disorder.

    “A lot of times we have a lot of people come in who don’t even drink, and, you know, they have [multiple sclerosis],” Gallagher said. “They fall and they go, ‘He wasn’t even drinking.’”

    When reached for comment recently, Gallagher said: “I have no recollection. I have no comment. I have nothing.”

    Simonini wrote that Campbell was drinking what appeared to be bottled beer, Twisted Tea, and mixed drinks out of plastic cups. In one 36-minute period, Campbell downed both his own drinks and others served to people at the table.

    This consumption went unnoticed by 7C staff, Simonini wrote.

    Gallagher said in his deposition that he considers “two drinks an hour” a safe amount to serve a patron.

    “Clearly, Campbell and his party were served far more than ‘two drinks an hour,’” Simonini wrote.

    At 7:40 p.m., Campbell returned to the bar, where it appeared Gallagher waved him off. Gallagher said in his deposition that he told Campbell, “Yo, you’ve had enough,” and he thought he told a bartender, “Watch our boy, Greg.” That bartender said in a deposition that he had no recollection of Gallagher’s comment.

    Simonini wrote in his report that the 7C bartenders “served Campbell and his party 6-7 drinks at a time, and never watched where the drinks were going and to whom.”

    Around 8:10 p.m., Campbell finished a bottle of beer and drank from a plastic cup at the bar. He headed to a bathroom but appeared unsteady, Simonini wrote.

    Campbell then went outside. Surveillance video appears to show him losing his balance while walking around a snow bank toward his Dodge Dart.

    Lawyers showed Campbell footage from the nearly three hours he spent at the 7C Lounge. Asked in his deposition whether he should have been refused alcohol, he answered, “Yes, based on my blood level of intoxication, yes.”

    “Could you safely operate a motor vehicle when you left that bar?” the Wakemans’ lawyer asked.

    “No,” he replied.

    ‘Gurgling on blood’

    Campbell got behind the wheel at 8:17 p.m. He pulled onto Caroline Road and drove north toward Comly Road.

    The posted speed limit in the area is 30 mph.

    Campbell’s Dodge rocketed to 82 mph.

    He zoomed past a stop sign, then crossed four lanes of traffic before striking a curb at 70 mph. The Dart thundered over the Wakemans’ snow-covered front yard.

    As smoke and dust filled his home, Raymond Wakeman stood up, in shock at the devastation that surrounded him. Shards of crushed glass cut his bare feet.

    “The car went right by my face and took my dog,” Raymond recalled. “It took Anna and Jax.”

    Campbell climbed out of his car, but didn’t seem to “know where he was or what happened,” Raymond said.

    Raymond couldn’t find his wife. But he heard faint sounds coming from the undercarriage of the car, which had come to rest in their son’s bedroom.

    “She was gurgling, breathing, but gurgling on blood or something,” he said.

    Raymond ripped vinyl siding off his house and used it to shovel rubble and debris from the front of Campbell’s car.

    Finally, he saw her battered face.

    “There was blood coming out of her ears, nose, and mouth,” he said. “Her leg was hanging off. She was barely breathing.”

    Medics transported the Wakemans to Jefferson Torresdale Hospital. When the couple’s 17-year-old son, Patrick, arrived at the hospital, a doctor told him his mother was unlikely to survive the night.

    “Honestly, I thought that was going to be the last time I’d ever see my mom,” he said.

    Police arrested Campbell outside the splintered remains of the Wakemans’ house and transported him to Jefferson Torresdale, where he was handcuffed to a bed and treated for a cut to his forehead. He was dazed and there was a stench of alcohol on his breath, the police report said.

    Then he received special visitors at his bedside, according to court records: unnamed FOP representatives.

    Poplar, in his deposition for the Wakemans’ lawsuit against the FOP, was asked how the union is notified after an officer is arrested.

    FOP President Roosevelt Poplar (right) said in a deposition that the union was contacted shortly after Gregory Campbell crashed into the Wakemans’ home.

    “So, this is just like an extra benefit that if you’re a cop that gets locked up, they call your union rep, 911 actually does?” the Wakemans’ lawyer asked.

    “Yeah, that’s the only way we could get notified,” Poplar replied.

    “I mean, look. There’s a lot of unions out there. Is there a 911 call going to the Teamsters if they get locked up to their union rep?” the lawyer asked.

    “I don’t know,” Poplar replied. “I doubt it.”

    Shortly after Campbell’s car bulldozed into the Wakemans’ home, a union representative called the 7C Lounge and told the staff to close for the night — even though closing time was not until 3 a.m. — because an officer had been involved in an accident after drinking there.

    “I was following orders,” 7C Lounge bartender Andrew Reardon said in a deposition.

    A.J. Thomson, the Wakemans’ attorney, alleged in court documents that the bar was closed to “prevent an investigation by Philadelphia Police and for any witnesses to be allowed to disperse prior to interviews. This was a possible homicide investigation that the FOP actively worked to torpedo.”

    The FOP denied those allegations in a response to the Wakemans’ lawsuit, and its attorneys argued that bartenders did not serve Campbell while he was visibly intoxicated and did not cause the crash. The union vehemently denied allegations of negligence, recklessness, or carelessness.

    At Jefferson Torresdale, Campbell conferred with Lodge 5 representatives and refused to take a blood-alcohol concentration (BAC) test.

    Accident investigators obtained a warrant to draw Campbell’s blood, a process that took four hours. His blood was finally drawn and tested at 2:34 a.m., nearly six hours after his arrest.

    Even with that delay, Campbell’s blood-alcohol level was almost three times the 0.08 legal threshold.

    Those with a level between 0.25% and 0.40% are considered in a “stupor,” meaning they may be unable to stand or walk, and could be in an impaired state of consciousness and possibly die, according to Michael J. McCabe Jr., a toxicologist and expert on the effects of alcohol, who filed a report in the Wakeman lawsuit.

    Herron, the liquor license lawyer, said in a case like this, he would expect the State Police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement to investigate and issue a citation. An administrative law judge would subsequently hear the case and decide what sanctions to impose.

    The minimum fine for serving a visibly intoxicated person is $1,000.

    “For more serious cases, if someone is injured, the administrative law judge has the discretion to impose larger fines or suspensions,” Herron said. “The problem with this case is that any investigation was sort of thwarted. It never really got to the point where there was an investigation.”

    ‘I should have died’

    Anna Wakeman spent more than two months in a coma.

    She had suffered a collapsed lung, a brain bleed, and a badly bruised heart muscle. Her spleen and her kidney were lacerated. Her sternum, thoracic vertebrae, collarbone, and 13 ribs were broken, along with her left leg.

    She remained hospitalized for several weeks, then needed physical therapy.

    Anna Wakeman spent more than two months in a coma after she was struck and dragged by Campbell’s car.

    “I should have died,” she said. “The only reason I’m here is God was breathing for me.”

    The Wakemans’ insurance company paid off the mortgage on their severely damaged home. The couple couldn’t stomach the idea of ever setting foot again inside, so they sold the property to a developer and moved to West Virginia.

    They each spoke at Campbell’s sentencing hearing in June 2022.

    “I was normal before this,” Anna said through tears, telling the judge she still suffers from a traumatic brain injury and lives in constant pain.

    Campbell spent about a year in prison, and then was placed on house arrest.

    “The man who did this to me walks free,” Anna Wakeman said in a recent interview “But I don’t have peace. We lost everything. I’m in pain all the time every single day. I’m in prison in my own body.”

    The Wakemans sued the FOP under Pennsylvania’s Dram Shop Law, which holds bars liable if they serve alcohol to a drunk patron and that decision leads to injuries or damages.

    In 2024, the case was settled for an undisclosed amount.

    Records the Home Association filed as a 501(c) nonprofit do not require the kind of specificity that would show how the organization paid the Campbell settlement, or whether any payments were made related to the 2019 Walto crash or the unreported 2021 parking lot incident. An August investigation by The Inquirer found that while the union controls an array of nonprofits — including the Survivors’ Fund, Lodge 5, and the Home Association — its finances are opaque and difficult to track, in part because large amounts of cash move through the organizations.

    Nearly five years after the accident that upended her life, Anna Wakeman still questions why 7C Lounge bartenders didn’t stop serving Campbell, or at least call him a cab, that evening.

    “They let him leave knowing he was going to get behind the wheel,” she said. “These are officers of the law. They should hold the law sacred. There shouldn’t be different rules for them.”

  • John Dunlap’s print shop in Old City deserves a blue historical marker — before this July 4

    John Dunlap’s print shop in Old City deserves a blue historical marker — before this July 4

    The most important printing job in American history took place in Philadelphia, on the corner of Second and High Streets, on the night of July 4, 1776.

    There, in the shop of John Dunlap, the Declaration of Independence was first printed and sent around the new United States. Yet today, no Pennsylvania Historical Marker commemorates the spot on Market Street where the declaration first emerged to tell the world about the birth of a new country.

    On the 250th anniversary of American independence, a marker should be erected as soon as possible by the city or state.

    Dunlap’s job was of the first importance. Congress, led by the Boston merchant John Hancock, knew that getting word of independence out to the rest of the colonies was critical to gaining support at home for a war that was not going well. Since the war started in Lexington and Concord up in Massachusetts in April 1775, the Americans had forced the British out of Boston, but lost ground in New York. Independence was just as crucial for trying to get arms and money from Great Britain’s adversary, France, for George Washington’s poorly equipped Continental Army.

    John Dunlap’s name — along with that of John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress — appears on the oversized declarations Dunlap printed on parchment or vellum.

    Sometime in the afternoon of July 4, Thomas Jefferson walked from the State House on Chestnut Street to the shop of Dunlap, a 29-year-old Irish immigrant and publisher of the Pennsylvania Packet. Jefferson handed Dunlap the original handwritten copy of the Declaration of Independence, adopted just hours earlier by the Continental Congress, and ordered several hundred copies to be printed as soon as possible.

    Working through the night, Dunlap and his assistants printed up at least two batches of “broadsides,” some on paper bearing the watermark of King George III. Dunlap had to rush, and some copies were printed slightly askew, while many were folded while still wet, leaving offset imprints.

    They were rushed back to Congress and given to dispatch riders to distribute to colonial assemblies and the army. Washington received his on July 9 and had it read that day at his headquarters in Manhattan.

    In their library on June 16, 2021, American Philosophical Society reference and digital services specialist Joe DiLullo holds its copy of a rare oversized Declaration of Independence printed by congressional printer John Dunlap on parchment or vellum in July 1776.

    It took weeks for the other Dunlap broadsides to reach their destinations, the last arriving in Savannah, Ga., on Aug. 10.

    One Dunlap broadside was used for the first public reading of the declaration, on July 8, in front of the State House, by Col. John Nixon. The scene was immortalized nearly a century later by Frederick Peter Rothermel, in a painting now hanging in the Union League Club.

    To this day, no one knows how many were printed, but only 26 original Dunlap broadsides are known to exist, making them among the rarest of American artifacts.

    The last one to come up for auction, in 2000, was bought for $8 million ($15 million in 2025 dollars) by the television producer and liberal activist Norman Lear. Most are held by museums or universities, but whenever they are displayed, the Dunlap broadsides draw crowds who are just as fascinated to see the words that declared a sovereign state as were those a quarter millennium ago.

    The only known copy of the Declaration of Independence printed on vellum by John Dunlap is on display at the Museum of the American Revolution.

    Yet, few passersby, if any, stop to look at a tarnished, old plaque affixed to a rundown building at Market and Second. Put there 50 years ago by the Society of Professional Journalists, it is the only acknowledgment of one of the most important sites of the American Revolution.

    Next to a shuttered diner, the plaque is likely all but ignored by any but the most dedicated history buff.

    There is not enough time to go through the formal Pennsylvania State Historic Preservation Office process, but given the historic importance of the site, an ad hoc or special exemption by the city or state should be made, and a proper blue historical marker should be put up before July 4.

    It is the least that can be done to commemorate a site where actions that still reverberate around the world took place.

    Michael Auslin is a historian at Stanford’s Hoover Institution and is the author of the forthcoming “National Treasure: How the Declaration of Independence Made America.”

  • Yes, there are older Chinatown gates in the country. But Philadelphia’s is the real deal.

    Yes, there are older Chinatown gates in the country. But Philadelphia’s is the real deal.

    By the early 1980s, Philadelphia’s Chinatown was more than 100 years old and struggling to survive.

    Boxed in by the Vine Street Expressway, Market Street, the old Metropolitan Hospital, and the Convention Center, the neighborhood had no space to grow and no way to shine.

    In 1982, executive director of the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corp. Cecilia Moy Yep — well-known for stopping the razing of Holy Redeemer Chinese Catholic Church — and architect James Guo went to China and formalized a Sister City agreement between Philadelphia and the northern Chinese city of Tianjin.

    Anh Ly’s “One” sculpture unites Philly’s Friendship Gate and Tianjin’s Ferris wheel bridge. The supporting legs resemble two people holding hands across culture and distance. The Chinese dragon’s spirit reinforces this connection with resilience and reverence.

    Plans for an ornate Chinatown entryway followed. In October 1983, 12 artisans from Tianjin and Beijing arrived in Philadelphia and spent three months building a 88-ton, 40-foot-tall gate with wood, tiles, stone bases, and a special material that incorporates pig’s blood that’s painted over the wood to stop it from fading and shipped from China.

    The San Francisco Chinatown Gate had been built in the 1970s and Boston’s was finished in 1982. But Philly’s Friendship Gate, erected at the intersection of 10th and Arch Streets, is the first Chinese American archway built with materials from Asia, making Philly’s gate the “authentic” deal.

    That first authentic Chinese gate built in America will be feted Saturday in Chinatown at the Crane Community Center, this week’s Philadelphia Historic District’s Firstival celebration. Firstivals are a year’s worth of parties marking America’s 250th birthday, noting events that happened in Philadelphia before anywhere else in America and often the world.

    The Friendship Gate, built in traditional Qing Dynasty style, cost more than $200,000 in city funds to construct. The ribbon-cutting ceremony in January 1984 featured the ceremonial dance of the Chinese lion known as Wushi, performed for good luck and to chase away evil spirits, and speeches from city officials in both Mandarin and English.

    “We needed something to attract people into Chinatown,” Yep told The Inquirer, shortly after its Jan. 31, 1984, unveiling.

    Its mud brown roof, square beams, dazzling green and gold patterns, and birds and dragons outlining the sky, mark the point where Center City meets the Chinese community.

    A Daily News clipping from Jan. 23, 1984, shows Chinatown’s Friendship Gate during construction.

    Five months after the Friendship Gate was completed, a fire — then the biggest in Center City history — raced north from 10th and Filbert Streets and stopped, almost magically, at the Friendship Gate.

    “I am so glad the gate was not damaged,” T.T. Chang, then president of the Chinese Cultural Society — and unofficial mayor of Chinatown — told The Inquirer.

    In September 1984, the Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corporation introduced the first official postcard with the Friendship Gate’s image, marking it as a bona fide tourist attraction. (Although its real goal was to raise $55,000 to pay for the portion of the gate the city refused to pay for.)

    In 2008, in its 24th year as a recognized Philadelphia monument, the gate was rededicated after a yearlong, $200,000 renovation project.

    Community organizers hold a “No Arena” block party near the Friendship Gate in Chinatown on Feb. 2, 2025, as the neighborhood celebrates the Lunar New Year with a parade, lion dancers, and fireworks.

    Chinatown has had its challenges over the last decades, but it continues to thrive. For 41 years, the Friendship Gate has stood proudly, a welcoming archway rooted in resistance.

    This week’s Firstival is Saturday, Feb. 21, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Crane Community Center, 1001 Vine St. The Inquirer will highlight a “first” from the Philadelphia Historic District’s 52 Weeks of Firsts program every week. A “52 Weeks of Firsts” podcast, produced by All That’s Good Productions, drops every Tuesday.

  • Letters to the Editor | Feb. 19, 2026

    Letters to the Editor | Feb. 19, 2026

    Courage exemplified

    Ukrainian skeleton athlete Vladyslav Heraskevych was disqualified by the International Olympic Committee at the Winter Olympics for wearing a helmet in remembrance of Ukraine’s war dead. He is considered one of the best in this sport and had a good chance of winning a medal.

    This patriot summarized things precisely by saying that there are things “more important than medals.” As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said, “Having courage is worth more than any medal.”

    The IOC should be condemned for failing to realize that remembrance is not political propaganda. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha hit the nail on the head by saying that it is “Russians who must be banned, not the commemoration of their victims.”

    Leo Iwaskiw, Philadelphia

    . . .

    The Winter Olympics in Italy are spectacular — as always, a world stage celebrating extraordinary human skill and potential — within the realms of good sportsmanship. How inspiring it is to witness the best athletes not only perform but also encourage and congratulate each other, sometimes despite their own personal ambitions as well as disappointments.

    Yet, how disheartening that, as the fourth anniversary of the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine approaches, an issue has developed. Ukrainian skeleton competitor Vladyslav Heraskevych has been disqualified from the 2026 Winter Olympics by the International Olympic Committee for refusing to remove his “helmet of memory” with images of athletes who have been tragically killed as a direct result of Russia’s war on his nation — even as American men’s figure skating competitor Maxim Naumov continues to show a picture of his parents who were tragically killed in the plane crash over Washington, D.C., a year ago. What a double standard for these young people grieving heavy losses. Shame on the IOC for its blatantly biased ruling and its failure to honor basic humanity in each one of us.

    Christine Fylypovych, Blue Bell

    Ingrained images

    The Vietnam War and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Minneapolis War are forever linked by their utter depravity by three photographs seared in the soul of America.

    Saigon Execution. During the Tet Offensive on a Saigon street, a South Vietnamese police chief standing arm’s length from a handcuffed Viet Cong prisoner pulls the trigger. The photo was snapped simultaneously with the gun firing, showing the prisoner’s head beginning to explode.

    Napalm Girl. A 9-year-old girl is running naked, with third-degree napalm burns on a third of her body, arms outstretched, mouth wide open, a terrorized look on her face as if she were attacked by some unimaginable horror. Four other children are running in the same direction, one crying, all followed by soldiers strolling behind, seemingly unconcerned.

    Lost in America. Liam Conejo Ramos, 5 years old, wears a blue and white bunny hat with a Spider-Man backpack, standing next to a dirty vehicle, looking hopelessly forlorn. A man in black stands directly behind Liam with a hand on his backpack, apparently proud that he captured a hardened criminal.

    The pictures encapsulate how both wars are rotten to the core. The Saigon execution and the napalm girl photos helped stir a nation. Liam’s photo and Renee Good’s and Alex Pretti’s executions, along with the courageous Minnesotans, have done the same.

    Gary Goldman, Newtown

    Join the conversation: Send letters to letters@inquirer.com. Limit length to 150 words and include home address and day and evening phone number. Letters run in The Inquirer six days a week on the editorial pages and online.

  • Horoscopes: Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026

    ARIES (March 21-April 19). Stress doesn’t automatically mean something is wrong. Some stress is healthy, and some hard situations are worth sticking with if you know why you’re there. Check back in with your reasons and see if they still make sense.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You know what it’s like to have unappealing options: bad or worse, rock or hard place, lesser of two evils. That’s what makes today’s choices feel luxurious. You’ll appreciate, celebrate and attract even more good fortune with your attitude of gratitude.

    GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You have allies in every area of life — professional, personal, spiritual and more. Call on them before you need them. You may never need them at all, and that’s what makes the relationship real. Otherwise, it’s just transactional.

    CANCER (June 22-July 22). You don’t need to disconnect from the world to connect with yourself again. You just need a little quiet. Two hours of real focus will be enough to finish something that’s been hanging over you and remember that you’re brilliantly competent.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). A riddle you’ll easy guess: What do your loved ones crave when you’re not there, but sometimes take for granted when you are? Your presence. Warm, all-in, so you. Presence is a paradox: invisible in the moment, yet unforgettable in absence.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your vision energizes you. Bringing a fantasy to life — or even failing to do so — is far more interesting to you than working for the approval of others. You’ll be guided by an internal logic akin to appetite.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Desire and availability are intertwined. When something is rare, it draws the eye and quickens the pulse. Some people, in certain moods, find that the risk of missing out awakens decisiveness they didn’t know they had.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’re feeling some uncertainty about the rules, your strategy or how to play the game in general. This is your subconscious nudging you to reevaluate. Go back to the beginning. Is this game even worth playing? What are your odds of winning?

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). When someone is defensive, resistant or closed off, new information can’t go in. People don’t learn with their arms crossed. Go where the teachers and students are receptive like you, hearts and minds open, and you’ll learn quickly.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The second easiest way to keep your promises is to make promises that are easy to keep. The top easiest way is not to make them in the first place. You’ll deliver more than expected today because you didn’t tell them what to expect.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). What happens right before becoming? Exposure. Awkwardness. Uncertainty. So in a way, you can see those uncomfortable feelings as a sign of imminent arrival. At the very least, discomfort is the herald of improvement, and at most, transformation.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your mind is open and your curiosity strong. Ideas are everywhere, but some are worth more than others, and you sense right away what’s worth moving on. A small choice today slowly opens a bigger adventure in the future.

    TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Feb. 19). It’s your Year of Buried Gold when “X” will mark the actual spot on the map where you should start digging. You’ll get the map through solid relationships, a mentorship and your own steady work and continuing education. Your curiosity and follow through are deservedly and richly rewarded. More highlights: a reunion, recognition for unseen efforts, and love that fits on multiple levels. Taurus and Pisces adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 12, 3, 44, 31 and 19.

  • Dear Abby | Daughter levels with mother about her future plans

    DEAR ABBY: I am 67, and my husband is 68. For the past six years, we have been caring for aging parents. My father-in-law, who had Alzheimer’s, passed away a few years ago. We went through a lot with him as his illness progressed. My mother-in-law is 87 and does not want to go into a nursing home. She still lives by herself, but my sister-in-law and I take turns cooking and bringing her food, and my husband works his tail off cutting the grass and doing maintenance and repairs she can no longer do. Although we are retired, our lives revolve around her needs.

    I recently had a conversation with my daughter, my only child. She has three sets of parents — us, my ex and his wife and her husband’s parents. She said she loves us, but she doesn’t want to take care of any of us. When she retires, she wants to enjoy her retirement, travel and not have to worry about caring for anybody.

    Having gone through it myself, I understand her feelings. Nobody WANTS to do this. At the same time, I’m a little hurt. All that we have — money, cars, house — is set up to go to her after we pass. Now it looks like we may need it to pay for assisted living. Abby, is it normal for kids these days to refuse to help aging parents?

    — REVISING PLANS IN MISSOURI

    DEAR REVISING: I don’t know whether it has become “normal,” but it is not unusual. Woe to any parent who assumes their children will take care of them, because it doesn’t always turn out that way. Be glad your daughter is speaking up now, so you can plan accordingly.

    ** ** **

    DEAR ABBY: I lost my beloved mother-in-law five years ago. Since then, my father-in-law has become engaged to a woman who, frankly, is not liked by anyone in our family. She’s unkind and dismissive, and her presence creates tension at family gatherings.

    They have now announced their wedding date, which happens to fall on my birthday. This has hit me hard. My parents have both passed away, and my birthday has always been a cherished day, filled with memories and meaning. It was one of the few days I felt truly celebrated. Now, I worry that every future birthday will be overshadowed by their anniversary and the complicated emotions tied to it.

    Would it be selfish or inappropriate to ask them to consider a different date? I don’t want to cause drama, but I also feel deeply hurt. How do I navigate this without making things worse?

    — TORN BETWEEN GRACE AND GRIEF

    DEAR TORN: I am sorry for your disappointment, but the date of your birth does not belong solely to you. It’s clear that you disapprove of your father-in-law’s choice of a second wife, and I sincerely hope you will be able to adjust. I do not think it will go over well if you approach the happy couple and ask them to change the date of their nuptials to accommodate you.

  • State police ID teen killed in Montgomery County crash while allegedly fleeing in stolen vehicle

    State police ID teen killed in Montgomery County crash while allegedly fleeing in stolen vehicle

    Pennsylvania State Police identified the teen who died in a crash while allegedly fleeing from troopers in a stolen vehicle in Montgomery County early Saturday.

    Zachery Carbo, 18, of Norristown, was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash, which happened around 12:10 a.m. on Route 422 eastbound at Route 202 in Upper Merion Township, state police said.

    Two 19-year-old men and one 20-year-old man who were passengers in the Kia Soul, which had been reported stolen in West Norriton Township, were transported to Paoli Hospital for treatment, state police said.

    Troopers had attempted to stop the Kia for traffic violations on eastbound 422 near Lewis Road in Limerick Township.

    The vehicle did not stop and a pursuit ensued, state police said.

    The pursuit ended when the Kia hit a concrete barrier on the right side of the road.

    State police said Wednesday that no charges had been filed and the investigation was continuing.

  • Union open 2026 season with 5-0 rout of Trinidad’s Defence Force in the Champions Cup

    Union open 2026 season with 5-0 rout of Trinidad’s Defence Force in the Champions Cup

    The Union opened their 2026 season with a win on Wednesday night, defeating Defence Force FC, 5-0, in the first of a two-game Concacaf Champions Cup first round series at Hasely Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain, Trinidad.

    Milan Iloski opened the scoring for the Union in the 29th minute, scoring on a free kick from just outside the 18-yard box. Ezekiel Alladoh added a second shortly after, heading a Frankie Westfield cross into the back of the net in the 32nd minute.

    The Union added three more goals in the second half. Olwethu Makhanya scored the Union’s third goal in the 64th minute from a corner set-piece. Bruno Damiani added a fourth off an assist from Cavan Sullivan in the 69th. Damiani added another from the penalty spot to put the Union up, 5-0, in the 81st minute.

    The Union also avoided injuries during their match with Defence Force, something Union manager Bradley Carnell noted in his postgame conference.

    “Playing away from home, It’s always a tough challenge,” Carnell said. “We always have to sort out a few things.”

    Iloski’s free kick was set up by a Defence Force foul on Jesús Bueno. Iloski lined up to take the kick and sent a right-footed strike up and over the Defence Force wall into the right side of the net.

    Alladoh’s goal came afterthe forward made a frantic run to get on the end of a cross from Westfield. Alladoh arrived from Swedish club Brommapojkarna for $4.5 million in December.

    On the third goal, Iloski played a cross from the right corner flag that Makhanya was able to head into the net.

    On Damiani’s first goal, the forward came on as a substitute alongside Sullivan and Japhet Sery Larsen in the 65th minute. Sullivan, 17, played a centering pass to Damiani, who laced a left-footed strike into the net to put the Union up, 4-0.

    Sullivan earned a penalty for the Union in the 81st after being tripped by Defence Force’s Sheldon Bateau inside the 18-yard box. Damiani slotted the penalty past Defence Force goalie Isaiah Williams to put the Union up, 5-0.

    After Wednesday night’s win, the Union lead the series’ aggregate score by five goals. The Union will host Defence Force at Subaru Park for the second game of the series on Feb. 26 (7 p.m., Fox Sports 2).

    If the Union lead the series’ combined score after the second leg, they will advance to face Liga MX’s Club América in the tournament’s round of 16.

    Up next

    The Union will visit D.C. United on Saturday for their MLS season opener (7:30 p.m., Apple TV).

    D.C. finished at the bottom of the Eastern Conference last season but made significant additions in the offseason, which included adding Tai Baribo, who was the leading goal scorer for the Union last season.