Jones
WILKES-BARRE – City police arrested a guy they said was wanted for violating state probation when a vehicle crashed in a chase Friday night.
Ryan A. Jones, 32, a man listed as homeless, walked away from traffic prevention on South Main Street and filed a lawsuit that ended when he crashed into a pole, fence and outdoor vehicle in an apartment in the Hazle neighborhood. and Jones Streets, according to court records.
Police said Jones abandoned the crashed vehicle and was arrested when police saw him running down Essex Lane.
Jones learned when police discovered the internal mail of the crashed vehicle he sent him while he was incarcerated at the Dallas State Correctional Facility in Jackson Township.
Pennsylvania Department of Corrections records show that Jones was released on February 20 after serving a break-in sentence.
Police said Jones searched through state probation officers in Harrisburg.
According to the complaint:
Police arrested Jones for driving a Chevrolet Impala with an inspection sticker on the windshield around 7:20 p.m. Friday.
Jones stopped at South Main Street near Parrish Street, where he met with a fake call and date of birth.
When an officer informed Jones that he would get his fingerprints electronically to locate his true identity, Jones the Chevrolet and introduced a chase on South Main Street, Dana Street, Park Avenue and Hazle Street, where he collided in the Jones Street neighborhood.
Jones police left the vehicle and stopped at Essex Lane.
After Jones’ arrest, he threatened the police by saying, “I’ll swear you at headquarters when you take off your handcuffs (insults, insults, and racists). You’re everything (sexual sledd). Yes, I gave you a fake name. I’ll let you know right away, take off my handcuffs and knock you out,” the complaint says.
Jones prosecuted through District Judge Donald Whittaker in Nanticoke on 4 counts of terrorist threats, two counts of fleeing to avoid arrest, and one charge each for fleeing or attempting to evade police, reckless danger, misidentification of police, false police reports, evasion and 10 traffic and vehicle violations. He was imprisoned at the State County Correctional Center without the right to bail.
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PITTSTON – A former police sergeant in Duryea was arrested Sunday on domestic violence charges, claiming he smothered and knocked his ex-wife unconscious.
Michael Rosemellia, 35, of New Street, Duryea, is detained without bail at Luzerne County Correctional Center for strangulation, attack and harassment.
Pittston police filed a complaint against Rosemellia after investigating domestic disturbances on Chapel Street on Sunday afternoon.
According to the complaint:
Police responded to the Chapel Street home where they discovered a damaged table and glass and spoke to Michelle Wroblewski.
Wroblewski knew Rosemellia as her husband.
He said Rosemellia showed up at the house looking for a cushion for his outdoor dining kit. Wroblewski told Rosemellia not to enter space because it was a disaster.
Wroblewski claimed that Rosemellia threw her on a table and punched her in the face. When she began retaliating, she told police that Rosemellia had strangled her, cutting off her ability to breathe.
Wroblewski continued to fight by biting, scraping and tearing the shorts Rosemellia wore, according to the complaint.
While Wroblewski was suffocating, he told police that his 4-year-old daughter had beaten Rosemellia with a cane and shouted, “Stop Dad, stop,” according to her report.
Rosemellia dropped Wroblewski and punched her in the face, to the complaint, knocking her unconscious on the kitchen floor.
When Wroblewski woke up, Rosemellia was gone with her children.
Police said Wroblewski called his mother, claiming that Rosemellia strangled and beat her and that they took their children through him.
Rosemellia arrested at his house.
Wroblewski police had neck injuries.
Rosemellia resigned from duryea Police Department in January 2019 after being accused of interfering with the twisting of the fate of his ex-wife’s vehicle in Old Forge in May 2018. At the time, his wife’s driver’s license was suspended.
Forensic records imply that Rosemellia showed up at the scene of the turn of fate and waved her badge to the other driver. Rosemellia filed a claim with Erie Insurance saying his in-law was driving the vehicle and won a check for $3,686.08 for damages.
Rosemellia pleaded guilty in Lackawanna County Court for obstruction of law enforcement and was sentenced to one year of probation in April 2019, according to court records.
Nanticoke District Judge Donald Whittaker accused Rosemellia of violence.
EXETER TWP. Wyoming State Police alleges that Glenn William Davis, 27, got drunk when he crashed into a motorcycle and sent two other people to the hospital Thursday night.
Davis reportedly had a blood alcohol of 0.181% when he won a blood alcohol test, state police said.
State police said Davis, operating a 2013 Dodge Dart, hit the back of a 2018 Harley Davidson Street Glide operated through Charles Saypack, 49 West Nanticoke, on Highway 92 near Sutton Creek Road just after 8:30 p.m.
Saypack told state police that he was slowing down due to an animal on the road when he was hit from a vehicle, according to court records.
Saypack and a female passenger, Melissa Rynkiewicz, 45, of Sweet Valley, were transported to Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center in Plains Township.
State police said in court records that Davis had a smell of alcoholic drink in his breath and had his eyes injected in blood and glassy at the scene.
Davis resisted arrest because an officer in Exeter Township had to handcuff a soldier, according to court records.
State police alleged that Davis had threatened to kill the soldier and continually stated that he would be punched in the face.
Davis prosecuted through District Judge Donald Whittaker of Nanticoke on two counts of annoying attack through the vehicle while driving under the influence, driving under the influence and reckless danger, and one of each for resisting arrest, disorderly driving, public drunkenness and three road subpoenas. Array spent at Luzerne County Correctional Center for a $75,000 bond.
WILKES-BAR TWP. – Cantonal police accused a Moosic guy of perjury when he falsely testified before a Justice of the Peace about the damage to his truck.
Joseph Colarusso, 64, of Glenmaura Drive, was cited through the town borough police with several vehicle fines that traffic prevented on Wilkes-Barre Township Boulevard on January 10.
Police allege that Colarusso’s Ford F250 had several device violations, inspection tags and expired emissions, expired registration and uninsured.
In an abstract trial before District Judge Michael Dotzel on August 4, a hearing in which Colarusso was sworn in, claimed that the vehicle had been “undone”, according to court records.
Colarusso allegedly told the officer before the abstract trial and procedures began when Dotzel asked him to dispose of the vehicle.
The officer withdrew the vehicular violations opposed to Colarusso on the basis of his sworn testimony, from court records.
After the abstract trial, the officer made a search showing that Ford had an active record.
The officer went to Moosic at 2 a.m. on August 10 when he saw the Ford stationed at Colarusso’s residence, showing the same plaque and expired decals from the January 10 traffic stop, in court records.
Colarusso proceeded Thursday through District Judge Ferris Webthrough in Luzerne County Central Court for perjury and false testimony. He was freed by his own commitment.
WILKES-BARRE – A sentence handed down by a Butler Township district was acquitted of an abstract harassment offence following a hearing in Luzerne County Courthouse on Friday.
Daniel O’Donnell, 51, of Drums, cited through state police on June 19 on allegations that he had driven his stepfather, Francis Petrovich.
The citation alleged that O’Donnell had led 80-year-old Petrovich to an internal verbal discussion at the district judge’s apartment on June 16, 2019.
Nearly a year after the alleged incident, Petrovich filed a complaint with the district attorney’s office, which referred the case to Hazleton State Police.
The complaint came after O’Donnell filed for divorce from his wife, Petrovich’s daughter.
After O’Donnell was charged with harassment, he filed an affidavit for a cover order opposed to abuse against his ex-wife.
In his PFA request, which he withdrew, O’Donnell alleged that he had been attacked through Petrovich and harassed via phone calls and text messages and that a relative of his ex-wife had followed him.
When O’Donnell quoted him, Presiding Judge Michael T. Vough barred him from presiding over criminal cases. O’Donnell may assume the position of president of criminal cases.
On Friday, Bradford County District Judge Timothy M. Clark presided over the hearing ignoring O’Donnell’s harassment quote.
JENKINS TWP. A Wyoming woman had a blood alcohol grade nearly 4 times the legal limit when it crashed head-on into a vehicle and killed an elderly couple on River Road in October 2019, according to court records filed Friday.
Zabrina Marie Burge, 28, of East Seventh Street, prosecuted through district judge Alexandra Kokura Kravitz in Pittston for involuntary manslaughter with a vehicle while intoxicated in the October 10, 2019 turn of fate, which claimed the lives of Joseph Lyons, 83, and his wife, Gloria Lyons, 80, of Forty Fort.
Jenkins Township police alleged that Burge was driving a 2016 Hyundai Sonata when he crashed head-on with a 2010 Hyundai Sonata.
According to court records, police said Burge’s alcohol point was above 30%. An adult driving force in Pennsylvania is considered legally intoxicated with an alcoholic strength of 0.08 percent.
After the accident, Burge and a female passenger in her vehicle were transported to Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center.
According to the complaint:
An officer, when asked Burge at the hospital about the accident, detected an alcoholic beverage smell in her. Burge told the officer that he had fed on several alcoholic beverages at his workplace, a place to eat at Arena Hub Plaza in Wilkes-Barre Township.
Police said Burge was upset, crying and proceeding to ask questions about the other people in the other vehicle they collided, according to the complaint.
Burge reportedly told police that he would go to Pittston’s house but that he did nothing about the accident.
Police estimated that Burge was travelling at 56 mph at the time of the head-on crash, according to the report.
Burge was charged with two counts of vehicle murder while driving under the influence of alcohol and driving under the influence of alcohol, an annoying attack charge through the vehicle while driving under the influence of alcohol and 4 traffic summonses. She released with an un guaranteed bond of $100,000.
KINGSTON – Detectives from the Kingston County District Attorney’s Office and Luzerne arrested a Wilkes-Barre guy after he allegedly arranged a sexual date with a fictional 15-year-old woguy on Thursday.
Robert Michael Montigney, 27, was arrested outside his Grove Street home on charges that he had sent a picture of his genitals to the teenager.
According to the complaint:
Detectives on a social media site won a message from a guy known as Montigney just before 6 p.m. Montigney’s first “Hello” message.
A reply message sent to Montigney with a phone number to chat by SMS.
In a series of text messages, Montigney asked how old the woman was and asked her for a photo.
When Montigney won a girl image, she said “Very sexy” and asked, “Why do you like sex?” The complaint.
Montigney asked the woman if she could see her in the room by texting her and would have sent her a picture of her genitals.
The woman asked Montigney what he was doing with his genitals and his answer: “You were there, I show you what I can do; Do I have a sexy picture?” the complaint said.
Detectives told Montigney that the woman was not driving and Montigney replied that she might not pass anywhere and that she would have to walk to Wilkes-Barre to see him provide her Grove Street address.
Montigney told the girl, “To let her know that I live with my mother, but she doesn’t come into my room and my room has a back door,” the complaint says.
Montigney wrote that he would wear a gray shirt.
The detectives went to Montigney’s house and saw him outside dressed in a gray blouse when he was arrested.
During an interview, Montigney admitted to sending a photo of his genitals and seeking to find out who he believed a 15-year-old woman had, according to the complaint.
Montigney ruled Friday through District Judge Donald Whittaker in Nanticoke on 3 counts of illegal contact with a minor and a single charge of illegal use of a media outlet. He was jailed at the county correctional facility on a $250,000 bail.
WILKES-BARRE – A lawyer at Mount Zion Baptist Church believes there is circumstantial evidence of racial discrimination in the Wilkes-Barre City Council vote not to replace land zoning with a planned church and networking room.
Attorney Michael Melnick, on behalf of Mount Zion, filed a reaction to the municipality’s request to dismiss a request through the church to overturn the council’s resolution to preserve land along South Sherman Street, zoned for heavy industries.
Mount Zion, a small church with limited parking on Hill Street in Wilkes-Barre, plans to build a new church and network corridor along South Empire Street in the borough. The location is a forest in front of the Mayflower apartments in Wilkes-Barre.
Although the Municipality Planning Commission changed the zoning of an M-3 heavy business district to an R-3 residential domain under the municipality’s zoning ordinance, the council rejected the zoning request at an assembly in April 2019.
Melnick in court records said the council had announced the April 2019 assembly and had invited church officials prior to its vote.
Melnick filed a lawsuit in Luzerne County Court last year for the council’s resolution to be overturned.
Last month, the town attorney, John Rodgers, filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, the Luzerne County court had no jurisdiction to rule on an appeal.
Rodgers argues that the court has the strength to interfere with the council’s legislative process.
Melnick responded by arguing that the April 2019 council vote violated the church’s right to a fair hearing by inviting them to the assembly when the board voted.
“This is circumstantial of racial discrimination in the sense that the wil-white Wilkes-Barre Municipality Council has refused to replace the zoning of Mount Sion Black Baptist Church,” Melnick wrote in his reply.
Melnick noted that the board voted to reject the replacement for zoning in April 2019 following the objection of his own lawyer, late attorney Bruce Phillips.
Phillips then postponed the hearing to the board, which “approved” his previous resolution on May 28, 2019, Melnick wrote.
Melnick believes he has jurisdiction to rule on the trial.
Rodgers can be contacted to comment Thursday on Melnick’s response.
WILKES-BARRE – A woman from the canton of Hanover accused of coughing and coughing up saliva in food products in a supermarket will undergo an assessment of her psychiatric abilities.
Attorney Thomas S. Cometa requested the evaluation on behalf of his client, Margaret Cirko, 36, who faces a rate of weapons of mass destruction by adding terrorist threats, criminal offences and criminals in the theft of shops in Luzerne County Courthouse.
Earlier this week, President Judge Michael T. Vough’s request comet.
Hanover cantonal police alleged that Cirko had entered the Gerrity supermarket on Sans Souci Drive on March 25 and shouted, “I have the virus, everyone is going to get sick,” spitting and coughing on foot.
Joe Fasula, co-owner of Gerrity’s, said at the time that about $35,000 in food had to be disposed of.
The alleged incident occurred shortly after Gov. Tom Wolf ordered a state of emergency due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Comet requested psychiatric competition after reuniting Cirko for formal indictment on August 10.
According to Comet’s movement, Cirko “presented a mind and behavior that gave the impression of demonstrating the symptoms of an intellectual fitness disorder.”
Cirko rejected that of a social employee in the county public defender’s office, Comet said in the motion.
Comet said a Psychiatric assessment of Cirko is mandatory for his competence and intellectual ability to perceive criminal proceedings and lend a hand in his defense.
In a similar question, Comet attempted to have the rate of weapons of mass destruction ignored by arguing that the law came with physical fluids.
First Deputy District Attorney Sam Sanguedolce and Deputy District Attorney Drew McLaughlin argued at Cirko’s initial hearing on June 25 that they needed a “threat” to prosecute the rate of weapons of mass destruction that opposed it.
A hearing is scheduled for October 6 at Cometa’s to dismiss the charge.
Cirko negative for coronavirus as a result of the alleged incident. She remains free on bail of $50,000.
PLYMOUTH – A guy from Nanticoke tried to escape capture through police in Plymouth by swimming on the Susquehanna River, according to court records.
Thomas Painter, 25, of Coal Street, swam across the river to arrest him through Plymouth police after a turn of the fate hit and run down on West Main Street near Washington Avenue at around 4:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Police allege that the painter, a motorcycle, took off after colliding with a vehicle.
The painter abandoned the motorcycle in an apartment on Moss Street and ran to an apartment, police said in court records.
Police in court records said Painter later noticed walking down Moss Street, where he had introduced a foot chase.
The painter is said to have crossed a courtyard on Beade Street.
Police allege that Painter obeyed the orders of the officers to prevent and jumped into the river.
An officer saw Painter in the middle of the river swimming in the canton of Hanover, where officials arrested him, according to court records.
Police said Painter’s driver’s license had been suspended. He reportedly found out he had eight packs of heroin in his pocket.
The painter arrested through District Judge Joseph Halesey in Hanover Township for resisting arrest, injuries involving damage to a controlled vehicle, owned by a controlled substance, owned by drug parapers, driving with a suspended license and 3 traffic subpoenas. He spent at Luzerne County Correctional Center for a $50,000 bond.
BEAR CREEK TWP. State police arrested three men on charges that they were transporting methamphetamine to a client in Wilkes-Barre on Wednesday.
Cristian Inzillo, 50, of Stroudsburg, Paul Michael Rivera, 57, of Effort, and Nicholas Forment, 28, of Emmaus, were arrested when they stopped their 2005 Chevrolet Suburban for rushing and polarized glass on Highway 115 just before 8 p.m.
The infantrymen knew the three men were carrying methamphetamine when they stopped the vehicle, according to court records.
According to complaints:
Infantrymen learned that Inzillo provided methamphetamine to clients and prostitutes in the Wilkes-Barre area, and hid the drug in a hidden compartment of a black Suburban Chevrolet while traveling.
Inzillo reportedly knew himself as a member of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and The U.S. Army.
The marines knew Inzillo would make a delivery on Wednesday and put Chevrolet surveillance.
While Inzillo, Rivera and Forment were Highway 115, they feared a strong police presence on the national road.
A soldier stopped traffic when the Chevrolet, driven by Rivera, traveled 10 mph above the speed limit.
A State Police dog summoned to preventive traffic when a soldier denied a request to search for the vehicle. The dog made a positive alert on the vehicle, complaints say.
A probable cause search was conducted, resulting in the discovery of 28 grams of suspicious methamphetamine on the central board, according to complaints.
Inzillo allegedly admitted to knowing that methamphetamine provided in the vehicle and was about to obtain a payment for delivery.
Both Inzillo, Rivera and Forment were charged with property with the intention of handing over a controlled substance, conspiracy of criminals to deliver a controlled substance, owned by a controlled substance and owned drug-related accessories.
District Judge Ferris Webby charged the 3 incarcerated Inzillo and Fort for a $175,000 bond and Rivera for a $50,000 bond at Luzerne County Correctional Center.
WILKES-BARRE – A woman was arrested in a traffic impediment when local police reportedly discovered bags filled with alleged marijuana inside the vehicle.
Destiny Tanya Thomas, 24, of Parkview Circle, Sherman Hills, arrested in the domain of East Northampton and South Diamond streets when an officer saw his vehicle leaving a rear light unusable at approximately 11:45 p.m. Tuesday, the police said.
During the traffic stop, police learned that Thomas was looking for him for vandalism, claiming that he had broken a vehicle in Sherman Hills on March 27.
When Thomas was arrested, she said, “Will this be my ACS case because I left my children at home because I was running fast in the store?” according to court records.
Later, two young men were discovered unattended in Thomas’ apartment.
Police said that when a passenger picked up parts of the vehicle, a police officer discovered marijuana in a bag in the driver’s seat. A search of the vehicle allegedly exposed 4 bags filled with suspicious marijuana, a virtual scale, packaging fabrics and more than $300 in cash.
When officials arrived at Thomas’ apartment, Diamond Davis and Djonate Tucker were the children.
Davis knew herself as Thomas’ aunt and Tucker claimed to be the children’s godmother, according to court records.
A social employee for children and youth in Luzerne County decided that Davis was not eligible to care for the youth and that Tucker was allowed to take over custody of the youth.
In an unrelated case, Thomas accused city police of vandalizing Davis’ vehicle in March.
Thomas prosecuted through District Judge Joseph Halesey in Hanover Township on two counts of endangering the welfare of the youth and one of each of the property charges with the intention of handing over a controlled substance, owned by a controlled substance, drug ownership for props, driving with a license suspension. and a violation of the vehicle code. She was also accused of evil and disorderly conduct.
She locked up at Luzerne County Correctional Center for $25,000 bail.
On Wednesday, a state appeals court upheld the conviction of Michael Sansone, 33, a former Nanticoke volunteer firefighter convicted by a Luzerne County jury for endangering and illegally touching a minor.
Sansone challenged his conviction and criminal conviction for six to 12 years, which Judge Michael T.
According to Sansone’s appeal, he believed that C-Y’s files, if Vough had allowed his defense to suggest providing them with the trial, would have clarified all the allegations. Records indicated that a Sansone woman had been accused of sexual assault, had seen pornography on the Internet, and acquired wisdom to fabricate the accusations that opposed her.
Vough rejected the C-Y files, forbidding Sansone’s lawyer at trial.
Nanticoke police arrested Sansone in May 2016, alleging that he had abused an 8-year-old woman and a 10-year-old boy between July 2015 and April 2016.
A jury deliberated for about nine hours, and blamed Sansone for fees for illegal contact with a minor, bribery of minors and endangering the welfare of children.
Sansone was acquitted of charges of rape of a child, gross indecent assault, involuntary sexual sex and other charges of illegal contact and endangering children.
Upon his release, Sansone will have to sign his contract with the state police for 25 years as a sex offender.
In his appeal, Sansone stated that he believed Vough deserved C-Y recordings to be legal during the trial and allowed his lawyer to ask the woman if he was watching pornography.
“We consider that the argument (of Sansone) has no value. If the trial court was wrong to conclude that the CYS files involved exculpatory evidence is irrelevant,” said a three-member panel of the state High Court.
The High Court also noted that Vough had kindly prevented Sansone’s attorney from asking the woman about pornography in her testimony.
TWP PLAINS. A guy accused of stealing lottery tickets from a Wilkes-Barre Township business that led police to discover a motel room full of illegal drugs was arrested by Plains Township police on allegations that he tried to break into mohegan Sun Casino outdoor cars early Wednesday. Morning.
Kevin Lee Green, 30, was charged through Plains Town Borough police with attempted theft of a vehicle and property of drug owners.
According to complaints:
Plains Township police responded to the casino around 2:40 a.m. in a report that Green had attempted to enter locked vehicles, accessing a BMW X5.
After Green, an officer saw a knife coming out of his pocket.
During a search, police alleged that Green had two syringes, a glass jar containing a piece of wet cotton and two commonly used packages to buy heroin. Green admitted he’s using syringes to inject heroin, according to reports.
Wilkes-Barre town police met Green as the culpable user of the theft of lottery tickets at the Citgo gas station in Wilkes-Barre Township Boulevard on August 4.
Lottery ticket theft led police to a motel in Dupont, where a Wilkes-Barre township police officer in motel uniform knocked on the door of the venue on August 6.
Authorities reportedly discovered more than 1,100 packs of heroin and fentanyl, nearly $1,000 in cash, methamphetamine, marijuana and packaging fabrics inside the motel room, adding 50 bags of heroin and fentanyl to Green’s shoe, according to complaints.
Green, Brady Charles Hall, 31, Anthony Deluca, 31, George Raap, 39 and Michelle Houser, of unknown age, were inside the motel room when he searched the authorities.
Union County’s online court records imply that Buffalo Valley Regional Police accused Hall of delivering drugs that resulted in death and other crimes, alleging that the drugs were illegal to a user who died of an overdose on May 29.
Green, of Grove Street, Wilkes-Barre, charged with property with the intention of handing over a controlled substance, conspiracy of criminals to deliver a controlled substance, property of a controlled substance and property of drug-related accessories.
Green processed Wednesday through Hanover Township District Judge Joseph Halesey for fees filed through Plains Township and Dupont police. He spent at Luzerne County Correctional Center for a total bond of $100,000.
Hall, of Milton, is charged with two counts of ownership with the intention of handing over a controlled substance and a charge of ownership of a controlled substance and drug-related accessories.
Raab, of Hazleton, charged with two counts of ownership with the intention of handing over a controlled substance and one of each owned a controlled substance and owned by drug parapers.
Houser, of Bloomsburg, is charged with two counts of ownership with the intention of handing over a controlled substance and a charge of ownership of a controlled substance and property of drug accessories.
Hall, Raap and Houser were brought to justice for drug trafficking.
Deluca, a person facing an indexed as homeless index, is imprisoned at the county correctional facility for failing to pay a $75,000 bond per property with the intention of delivering a controlled substance, conspiracy of criminals with the intention of delivering a controlled substance, owned by a controlled substance and owned drug paraphernalia.
PLYMOUTH – Borough police arrested a guy who was urinated on a World War II memorial on West Main Street.
Police saw a man, known as John A. Wolfe, 50, passed out near the monument near Wyoming Valley West High School just after 6 p.m. Monday.
Wolfe was not dressed in a blouse and his trousers reached his ankles, according to court records.
According to the police, in the court records, Wolfe was very and had trouble keeping his balance.
Another user passing through the domain observed Wolfe leaning opposite the monument with one hand and the other near his crotch, according to court records.
An officer in a dark, damp spot of the monument.
Wolfe, a homeless- indexed confrontation, prosecuted through District Judge Rick Cronauer at Wilkes-Barre on charges of intentional desecration of a public monument, disorderly conduct, and public drunkenness. He spent a $2,500 bond at Luzerne County Correctional Center.
LARKSVILLE – A painting discovered in a garbage bag is believed to be in a Larksville home last week is Patricia Walski, the wife of Richard Walski, who, according to state police, is wanted for questioning in connection with the murder.
Registration orders filed as part of the investigation imply that Patricia Walski’s body was decomposing and a welfare check was discovered in a garbage bag at the couple’s home at 195 Schrader Street on Thursday. An autopsy revealed that Patricia Walski died of a gunshot wound to her head, according to search warrants.
A Chevrolet Colorado pickup truck belonging to Richard Walski was discovered Friday in a wooded domain along the Susquehanna River near the Nanticoke-West Nanticoke Bridge.
Investigators say they’re still looking for 46-year-old Richard Walski for his wife’s murder.
Under court orders signed through District Judge David Barilla, Larksville police conducted a home welfare check on August 5nd when they were contacted through a relative in Suffolk County, New York.An officer gained no reaction when he knocked on the door and a neighbor told the officer had to fish For The , the boat and a dog were on the property.
On August 10, police conducted a welfare review of the home at one point with data from the Suffolk County New York Police Department. The truck, the boat and the dog weren’t in the residence.
A neighbor told the officer on August 10 that he won a text message from Richard Walski on August 2, stating that they were fine and that they were going to camp for several days. Richard Walski stated in the text that he had poor cellular service, according to search warrants.
The painting was discovered when police returned to the apartment for a third welfare check on Thursday, when a relative of Richard Walski said it was emanating a strong, fetid smell from space. An agent entered space and promptly detected a strong smell of human decomposition and insects.
During the search for the residence, police discovered the frame in a garbage bag inside a bathroom on the first floor. Lots of laundry in the most sensitive part of the bag.
Police searched and did not find Richard Walski, whose truck, boat and dog were still missing.
Search warrants involve a garbage bag tied around the woman’s head.
A concerned citizen contacted state police Thursday after seeing an article on social media about the missing couple who also referred to a Chevrolet Colorado pickup truck. The concerned citizen told investigators that he ran into the Chevrolet while fishing on August 11 near the Nanticoke-West Nanticoke Bridge and the seat keys in clothing.
“Patricia Walski is believed to be the victim of a murder by criminals and Richard Walski’s whereabouts are not been known lately,” according to search warrants.
During the search for the residence, investigators discovered blank checks issued to the couple and a $70,000 deposit made on April 11, 2018 on an account that only had the call from Richard Walski.
Downloaded investigators look for orders to legally search for the truck and unload the couple’s bank statements.
According to a stock receipt, investigators seized weapons, ammunition, writing books, a toothbrush and a hairbrush, as well as glasses with overlaps from the residence.
Anyone with information about Richard Walski’s location should call the Wyoming State Police at 570-697-2000.
WILKES-BARRE – City police arrested a guy they say knew himself as the Messiah after he allegedly sought to turn him into a woguy’s room on Sunday night.
Police responded to the Wilkes-Barre Inn and Lodge on Kidder Street after 10:30 p.m. where they discovered a 31-year-old Mathew Ryan Yost, shirtless, in the courtyard.
A woman in a room told police that Yost had tried to enter her room seeking to force an adjacent interior door and then a brick to break the front room door, according to court records.
Police said Yost gave the impression that he was under the influence of a controlled substance and knew himself as the Messiah. Yost continued to complain to police that her friend in the room had been sexually assaulted, according to court records.
Police searched the room and did not locate the woman.
According to the complaint:
Officers responded to the attempted robbery at the hotel, locating Yost’s condition in front of a room he rented.
You yelled at the officers, “Help! She’s being raped right now,” she says.
An officer stood near Yost, who continued to shout that her friend was inside the room.
The officers arrested Yost who fought.
An officer entered the room and after attempting to touch the woman inside, he partially opened the door fearing Yost was still outside.
She told police that Yost had tried to forcibly open a door between her rooms and used a brick opposite to the front door, according to the complaint.
Police allege Yost opened the door when he hit her with a brick.
A hotel worker told police that Yost asked him how much he would charge if he broke the window of the woman’s bedroom. When the worker told him to break the window, Yost knocked on the door with a brick, prompting the worker to call 911, according to the complaint.
Yost, of Scott Street, Wilkes-Barre, prosecuted through District Judge Rick Cronauer in Wilkes-Barre on charges of attempted criminals, criminal mischief, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and public drunkenness. He released with an un guaranteed bond of $10,000.
HANOVER TWP – Police are investigating shots fired in a space in the Korn Krest segment of the municipality in the early hours of Saturday.
According to a police report:
Several shots hit a space on Elk Street around 1:16 a.m. The shots could have been fired from a gray pickup truck.
Anyone is asked to contact the Hanover Township Police Department at 570-825-1254 or call 9-1-1 Luzerne County.
LARKSVILLE – State police are looking for a guy who says it hasn’t been detected for several days after a woguy’s body was discovered in a Schrader Street apartment.
Investigators say they are looking to locate 46-year-old Richard Walski living at 195 Schrader Street, where the painting was discovered Thursday.
State police said the woman was known and the investigation was a homicide. Your call is retained pending family notification.
Walski has been noticed for several days, state police said.
Investigators spent several hours in the Schrader Street apartment after the woman’s body was discovered in a welfare check.
Soldiers from the Judicial Services Unit at the scene.
An open red plastic bag of dangerous fabrics observed in the backyard with a police warning tape around the assets on Friday morning.
A Larksville police officer parked at the house on Friday when investigators returned to the residence.
Schrader Street is one and leaves Mountain Road.
The investigation led to the search for densely forested domain along the Susquehanna River in Nanticoke, near the Nanticoke-West Nanticoke Bridge.
The researchers, adding state rangers, were observed from the bridge focusing their search on a railway bridge.
A post on Wilkes-Barre Crime Watch’s Facebook page draws public attention to the lack of people naming Richard and Patricia Walski of Larksville. The message says they were last noticed on July 31 and were traveling in a Colorado Chevrolet with a Pennsylvania license plate and a green towed boat, and may only be with a dog named Yukon, according to Facebook’s message.
Anyone with information about Walski’s murder or fate should call the Wyoming State Police at 570-697-2000.
HANOVER TWP. A state police deputy fire chief is investigating the cause of a fire that severely damaged beer bellies on Dexter Street early Friday morning.
The municipality’s fire chief, Joe Temerantz, said firefighters responded shortly after 3 a.m. and discovered a thick smoke inside the two-story building. 26 Dexter St.
Firefighters temporarily put out the fire, blowing up several windows on the first floor.
Temerantz said the first ground where the tavern and place to eat were had been damaged.
It was not reported.
Temerantz said the construction was unoccupied because he thought the second-floor apartments were unoccupied.
Deputy State Police Deputy Chief of Police Kerri Dodson at the scene to investigate Friday morning.
Dodson and Temerantz were examining the building.
A few hours after firefighters left the site, there was a strong smell of accelerator near the building.
Luzerne County asset records list 26 Dexter LLC as assets.
Your liquor license is indexed as a “guard” with the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board.
Beer Bellies closed her in 2019.
WILKES-BAR TWP. – The canton police arrested Thomas Matthew Filip on allegations that he threatened to “take” metcalf street neighbors on Wednesday night.
Filip’s arrest is similar to an ongoing community dispute involving Patricia Griffith and her son, Michael Griffith, of whom they were arrested this month after riots.
According to the complaint:
Patricia Griffith 911 and said that her neighbor, Filip, had yelled at her around 8:15 p.m.
Police said Patricia Griffith showed a mobile phone video in which Filip shouted, “Hey, I’ll give you your image or I’ll take you for a walk in your yard. You (swear) with the guy when you (swear) tommy.” Filip, ” says the complaint.
Patricia Griffith told police that she felt threatened by “Pick you off” as Filip intended to use a firearm.
Police went to Filip’s house, where he first refused to open the door.
He cracks a knife in a holster tied to Filip’s waist.
After several minutes, Filip opened the front door and refused to leave, but invited the officers in.
Officers asked Filip to remove the knife, which he placed in a cabinet in his residence.
After officers entered the residence, Filip learned that he had to move to the police station because of the alleged threat.
Filip strained and resisted arrest when officers handcuffed him, according to the complaint.
Filip prosecuted Thursday through District Judge Thomas F. Malloy Sr. in Luzerne County Central Court for threats of terrorism, resistance to arrest, and disorderly conduct. He released with an un guaranteed bond of $10,000.
Patricia Griffith accused Borough Police on August 3 when she approached officers holding a knife when Michael Griffith was arrested in the garden of her home on Metcalf Street.
Police were at Griffith’s house that day with an arrest warrant for Michael Griffith after he allegedly threatened to “beat Filip to death in the street” on August 2, according to court records.
Patricia Griffith and Michael Griffith face terrorist threats and arrest rates in central court.
WILKES-BARRE – A woman who served a criminal sentence for pushing a 12-year-old girl, an incident that was recorded through the store’s surveillance cameras in 2017, was arrested when she refused to leave Kistler Elementary School’s personal property on Thursday morning.
Marleena Ann Uravage, 33, a homeless woman classified as homeless, allegedly called 911 city police to order her to leave the area.
According to the complaint:
Police responded to the Old River Road around 8:20 a.m. in a report that a woman, known as Uravage, refused to leave the property.
Uravage sitting on a bench in a domain that is shown with a signal informing others of the intrusion.
Officials asked Uravage what she was doing and she replied that she was sitting there.
Uravage told the police that he had no position to pass and refused to leave.
Officials gave Uravage orders to leave, which she continued to refuse.
Police in the complaint said Uravage called 911 and remained on the assets when she was arrested.
A school official told police he arrived at the school around 7:30 a.m. and froze that a woman had asked him if he wanted help. When the woman told the school official she did want help, the school official told Uravage that she had to leave, according to the complaint.
Uravage prosecuted through District Judge Rick Cronauer in Wilkes-Barre on a charge of provocative transgression. She released with an unassured bond of $2,500, according to court records.
Uravage spent several months in prison after pleading guilty to the attack for pushing the woman out of the Quick Stop store in Wilkes-Barre on May 28, 2017.
Uravage also pleaded guilty to the harassment resulting from spitting spit on a nurse and a security guard at Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center in Plains Township on August 22, 2019. Fine with $160 plus court costs.
WILKES-BARRE – Luzerne County Judge David W. Lupas, the trial of former Wilkes-Barre attorney Robert Matthew Collins would take place at Mohegan Sun Arena.
Lupas made the announcement at the end of Thursday’s movement hearing on notable legal issues.
And there’s trouble.
Collins, 55, twice arrested by state police in 2019 on accusations of 8 women who say he sexually assaulted them while on duty as a city police officer. Collins resigned from force in February 2019 after being arrested for the first time.
A 26-year-old boy who made accusations died in December of an accidental drug overdose.
Lupas said the arena would provide enough space for jurors to move away from others, adding witnesses, lawyers, a stenographer and a clerk.
The opinion ruled that microphones and a loudspeaker formula will be installed and that lawyers should remain on a podium when addressing the jury with opening and final arguments and questions to witnesses.
All trial attendees must wear a mask, except for witnesses who bear testimony.
The state’s deputy attorney general, Bernard A. Anderson, would like jurors to see the witnesses’ facial expressions.
Lupas said efforts are being made for jurors to wear masks.
Collins’ sexual assault crime trial is scheduled to begin on October 19.
A few days before the trial began, Lupas stated that everyone involved in the process could go to the courtroom and offer suggestions, such as seat layout and podium location.
Details of the jury variety have been discussed, or whether it will take place in court or in the arena.
Regarding legal matters, Lupas said he would conduct a face-to-face camera review of the investigation files of state police criminals.
Lupas first rejected a request to reconsider its previous resolution which the defence suggests Evan T.L. Hughes can’t download state police records.
After a personal meeting between Lupas and Hughes in which Collins’ lawyer discussed the defense’s strategy, Lupas said he would conduct a closed-door review of the archives to determine whether state police would be ordered to turn the documents over to Hughes.
Stevan Kip Portman, associate counseling for the state police, said the files are similar to investigations involving members of the city’s police.
Anderson said the investigating soldier opened a separate investigative record, but included Collins with other officials, and added the arrest of two city police officers for bank fraud offenses arising from the federal employee credit union of the city of Wilkes-Barre.
“The soldier has opened a separate file,” Anderson said. “Collins’ investigation has spread to other offenses through agents.”
Despite Lupas’ resolution on the investigation file, Anderson said everything related to Collins had been entrusted to Hughes.
The criminal record of the 8 affected cases is another legal factor discussed through Anderson and Hughes.
Lupas said lawyers would be allowed to offer criminal background if they occurred within 10 years.
The sentencing also allowed the testimony of three other women who allege that Collins, while on duty, made outlandish sexual comments to force them into sexual acts.
Anderson described Collins’ technique to the other three women as a “signature,” making sexually particular comments and promising that he could make the criminals’ fees or fines disappear if they committed an obscene sex act.
PLYMOUTH – Borough police arrested 51-year-old Pedro Juan Santos for strangling a woman and pulling $20 from her bag for domestic disturbances in an apartment on West Shawnee Avenue on Monday.
According to the complaint:
A woman told police that she had dated a neighbor for several hours and when she returned home, her boyfriend, Santos, yelled at her.
He went to a room to get away from Santos.
Santos followed the woman and said, “You’ll probably get nothing from me anymore,” and she went into her purse and took $20, according to the complaint.
When the woman tried to get the cash back, she claimed Santos grabbed it by the throat and squeezed it until she could barely breathe, according to the complaint.
Santos grabbed him and left the room.
She was followed by Santos, who threw her to the ground, causing an injury to her right leg and right elbow, according to the complaint.
Police arrested Santos when he discovered him in the garden drinking a beer.
Santos claimed he had driven it.
Police said the neighbor, who lived in the same building, listened to Santos and the argument.
Santos prosecuted Tuesday night through Wright Township District Judge Ferris Webthrough for robbery, strangulation, undeniable assault, harassment and two counts of theft. He spent at Luzerne County Correctional Center on $10,000 bail.
HANOVER TWP. – State police recovered two nine-mm shell casings and an inside Array380 envelope from a Toyota Camry where Fernando Vasquez-Vittini discovered blood-covered outdoor mendacity after Sunday’s shooting, according to an affidavit of search warrant received through the Times Leader on Wednesday. .
The court order allowed criminal investigators from state police to search for 226 Boland Avenue, where they said Scranton’s 25-year-old Vasquez-Vittini and José Carlos Matos, of unknown age and address, were shot in the Toyota.
Hanover Township police discovered the Toyota parked on Saint Marys Road on South Main Street, where Vasquez-Vittini lay on the bloody pavement.
A witness told police that Toyota was blocking traffic with a guy bleeding in his face, his blouse up and acting “like a madman,” according to the search warrant affidavit.
Vasquez-Vittini transported to Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, where he died.
An autopsy of the medical examiner, Dr. Gary Ross, that Vasquez-Vittini had died from several gunshot wounds.
Matos discovered this through police when he ran into the Lee Park Motors community at 309 Lee Park Ave. where he asked for help. He shot in the shoulder.
No rates have been set.
Witnesses described the gunguy as a black guy dressed in gray jeans and a red hat.
According to the affidavit:
Matos told investigators that he accompanied Vasquez-Vittini to 226 Boland Avenue after receiving a phone call. They parked in front of the apartment and soon after, a red, brown or burgundy vehicle parked them.
Matos claimed to have noticed a black guy leaving the vehicle and entering the residence, the garments he had placed in the red, brown or burgundy vehicle.
After hitting the garments in the vehicle, the black man and a Hispanic sat in the back seat of the Toyota occupied by Matos and Vasquez-Vittini.
Matos told investigators that he saw Vasquez-Vittini with a small bag from his pocket and passed it to the back, and then heard gunshots.
Matos fled the Toyota and ran down Boland Avenue while Vasquez-Vittini toured in the Toyota.
A witness told investigators that he heard gunshots and saw a black guy with a gun running down the street picking up cash while stealing before fleeing in the red, brown or burgundy vehicle that recoiled and turned on Vine Street, the search affidavit says.
An Amazon Prime delivery driving force picked up a remaining ticket left at the scene.
The court order’s home page lists Hakim Wilburn and Danielle Moorer as the Boland Avenue residence, which is displayed through Luzerne County asset records.
Wilburn and Moorer were charged by a federal grand jury for drug trafficking offences in August 2018 when the department searched the FBI.
Several Boland Avenue residents said the user living in the apartment is Wilburn’s nephew, who moved from Friday night to Saturday morning.
Investigators confiscated several pieces of the residence, adding parole cards from Luzerne and Lackawanna counties, an ID card with a man’s call, a state woman’s pass, a driver’s license with a man’s call and a Ring ring, as the search returns. Order.
A 9mm cap discovered through investigators on the sidewalk of the apartment on Sunday.
WILKES-BARRE – City police arrested a guy they said was wanted for violating state probation when a vehicle crashed in a chase Friday night.
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PITTSTON – A former police sergeant in Duryea was arrested Sunday on domestic violence charges, claiming he smothered and knocked his ex-wife unconscious.
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WILKES-BARRE – The Pennsylvania Department of Health showed 8 new CASES of COVID-19 in Luzerne County on Monday and there were no new deaths.
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With the presidential election just over two months away, national and foreign media have put Luzerne County back under the microscope.
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PITTSTON – At the end of the first term of Pittston Mayor Michael Lombardo in 2005, he came up with the concept of creating a service department, but that never happened. After a break, he was re-elected in 2018 when he put his plan in place and may not be more satisfied with his decision.
[…]
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump sunday announced emergency approval to treat COVID-19 patients with convalescent plasma, a resolution he called a breakthrough, one of his most sensible fitness officers called it “promising” and other fitness experts said more studies were needed earlier.
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Plans to rebuild and widen Luzerne-Dallas Highway were announced at a dinner meeting at the Rotary Club of Wilkes-Barre held at the Sterling Hotel in Wilkes-Barre on June 21, 1960.
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JENKINS TWP. – The Pittston Santa Squad in collaboration with Jenkins Twp. La Pequeño Liga will host the annual softball tournament from Friday, August 28 to August 30 in the Jenkins municipality field. All proceeds will be donated to the Pittston Santa Squad 2020 Christmas Toy Collection for youth in the Greater Pittston area.
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HAZLETON – State police arrested two other people after a traffic impediment became a chase that crossed two counties and lasted more than 20 minutes, according to a police report.
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WILKES-BARRE – Sometimes it seems like the only thing left of Great Harveys Lake in those days is water.
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WILKES-BARRE – The Pennsylvania Department of Health showed 12 new COVID-19 cases in Luzerne County on Sunday and there were no new deaths.
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WILKES-BARRE – When Linda Armstrong left Manhattan and returned to northeastern Pennsylvania, she had a clever explanation for why: it could be said to be a mission.
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WILKES-BARRE – Has collaborated with Woody Allen on more than 30 films, adding Radio Days, for which he earned an Oscar nomination for production design, Bullets Over Broadway, An Oscar nomination for production design and Zelig, his third academy nomination for awards. , this one for the design of dresses.
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U.S. Representative Dan Meuser (R-Dallas) announced in a press release that he tested positive for COVID-19.
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HANOVER TWP. – On a beautiful summer Saturday, William Jameson’s call was pronounced with reverence more than two hundred years after his death.
[…]
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro and Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson this week announced two separate multistate coalitions that will bring federal lawsuits and domestic operational adjustments to the U.S. Postal Service.
[…]
HARRISBURG – Just 3 weeks before counties can start sending ballots, prosecutions fill the void of action to unrest or ambiguities with Pennsylvania postal voting legislation after a number one election that saw a record number of votes by mail amid the coronavirus pandemic.
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WILKES-BARRE – The Pennsylvania Department of Health showed Saturday 12 new coVID-19 cases in Luzerne County and 0 new deaths.
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WILKES-BARRE – Teri Ooms, executive director of the Institute for Public Policy and Economic Development at the University of Wilkes, said this week that the significant economic effects of the pandemic will also affect local governments during this fiscal year.
[…]
HARRISBURG – Unemployment in Pennsylvania rose in July to well above the national rate, even as the payroll recovered for a month after pandemic closures, the state reported Friday.
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EXETER TWP. Wyoming State Police alleges that Glenn William Davis, 27, got drunk when he crashed into a motorcycle and sent two other people to the hospital Thursday night.
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WILKES-BAR TWP. – Cantonal police accused a Moosic guy of perjury when he falsely testified before a justice of the peace about the damage of his truck.
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WILKES-BARRE – Luzerne County Director C. David Pedri called for a Philadelphia-based attorney to be hired to adopt an independent review of the occasions surrounding Shaheen Mackey’s death two years ago.
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WILKES-BARRE – A sentence handed down by a Butler Township district was acquitted of an abstract harassment offence following a hearing in Luzerne County Courthouse on Friday.
[…]
Pennsylvania and the other five states of Chesapeake Bay and the District of Columbia agreed 10 years ago to take steps to cover up and protect local waters and ultimately save the bay.
[…]
WILKES-BARRE – Sometimes it seems that the only thing left of Great Harveys Lake in those days is water.
[…]
WILKES-BARRE – Has collaborated with Woody Allen on more than 30 films, adding Radio Days, for which he earned an Oscar nomination for production design, Bullets Over Broadway, An Oscar nomination for production design and Zelig, his third academy nomination for awards. , this one for the design of dresses.
[…]
There is nothing more sacred to our democracy than the right of each and every American citizen to vote for their constituents in government. The trust that our citizens place in our voting systems, which will constitute US ALL, may be just as important. That is why it is imperative that we introduce policies that ensure the right of each and every citizen to vote, while protecting themselves from fraud and those who wish to undermine our electoral system.
[…]
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro and Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson this week announced two separate multistate coalitions that will bring federal lawsuits and domestic operational adjustments to the U.S. Postal Service.
[…]
Last week, the NCAA Big Ten Conference, of which our universities are members, announced that it was canceling the fall sports season. In delivering their decision, convention officials, university rectors and sports administrators expressed fears of the physical condition of students-athletes due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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WILKES-BARRE – President Donald Trump’s scale thursday was impressive, to say the least.
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We all know that other people don’t tell the truth, especially politicians.
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The question is this: do Americans who want to replace now know enough about Joe Biden to vote for him enthusiastically?
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As mayor of Wilkes-Barre, I would like to respond to the Times Leader editorial on Sunday, August 16 entitled “Solutions to the problems of city elevators”, with the following review of the renovation and repair of the paintings that took place in Wilkes- Barre Town Hall since I assumed January 6, 2020:
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WILKES-BARRE – At that time, each and every town had a baseball box that was not maintained through town.
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WILKES-BARRE – That was 51 years ago this week.
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Several states across the country are experiencing a coronavirus “peak” that threaten to shut down their economies. But a moment of prevention would cause serious difficulties for our economic health.
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WILKES-BARRE – On my Friday night walk, I crossed Plymouth Mountain and walked Jesse’s Road to Plymouth Township.
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There’s two of us! There’s two of us!
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Preparing to send young people back to school is a combination of challenges, but this year, as we continue to navigate the adjustments caused by the new coronavirus pandemic, the transition is exceptionally difficult.
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“All Americans wear a mask when they’re outdoors for at least three months,” former Vice President Joe Biden said at a recent press conference.
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Well, there’s one thing the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic would do more by not taking away: the 2020 football season.
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A few weeks ago, one of the board members of the United Way of Wyoming Valley, a former member of the United States Navy, sent me an article that I found interesting. I did.
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WILKES-BARRE – Department of Human Services secretary Teresa Miller reminded Pennsylvania residents that this week they suffer from anxiety and other difficult feelings due to the coVID-19 emergency they didn’t have to deal with alone, is available.
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The largest generation has won this call, it has earned it.
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“People in the same industry rarely get together … however, verbal exchange ends with an opposite conspiracy to the public or to raise prices.”
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WILKES-BARRE: This is all I’ve been looking to do.
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An existing TV ad shows a guy named Shawn complaining that Joe Biden’s preference to phase out fracking will result in job losses.
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