Pennsylvania high court takes up challenge to the state’s life-without-parole sentences

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania’s high court is taking a case to decide whether some automatic life sentences for those convicted of murder violate constitutional protections for defendants. The justices said Friday they will hear the appeal by Derek Lee, convicted of a 2014 killing. Lee argues the state’s life-without-parole law violates prohibitions in the Pennsylvania and U.S. constitutions against cruel punishment. Pennsylvania law makes someone liable for murder if they participate in a felony that leads to death, and life with no possibility of parole is currently the state’s only possible sentence for those convicted of second-degree murder.

Jaromir Jagr’s return to Pittsburgh ends with his No. 68 being retired — and catharsis

Former Pittsburgh Penguins player Jaromir Jagr, at podium to right, is joined by former teammates as he speaks during a ceremony retiring his uniform number before an NHL hockey game between the Los Angeles Kings and Pittsburgh Penguins in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Feb. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Gene Puskar)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Penguins have retired Jaromir Jagr’s iconic No. 68. The NHL’s second all-time leading scorer was on hand as his jersey was raised to the rafters at PPG Paints Arena. The 52-year-old Jagr spent 11 seasons in Pittsburgh from 1990 to 2001, helping the franchise win a pair of Stanley Cups. Jagr is the third Penguins player to have his number retired, joining Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux and Michel Briere. While Jagr has played for nine different NHL teams, he says he knows he will be forever linked with Pittsburgh.

YANKEE TRADER 02/17/24

You can email bcr@beavercountyradio.com to add a listing or to let Diane Brosius know if your item has sold. You can also list items on the Website (Beavercountyradio.com) by clicking on the Yankee Trader logo. Snail mail can be sent to WBVP/WMBA 4301 Dutch Ridge Rd. Beaver, PA 15009

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02-17-24 LISTINGS

 

Timothy

New Intex Queen-size durable double-high Air Mattress.  Includes plug-in inflator.  PRICE: $20

PHONE: 330-301-8223

 

Howie (Vanport)  724-774-6397

 

Every episode of every season of CHEERS on DVD’s.  PRICE:  Make an offer

 

100 Cowboy Movies with stars like Hop along Cassidy, John Wayne, Tim Holt, Johnny Mac Brown & Hoot Gibson.    PRICE:  Make an offer

Phone: 724-774-6397

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Smitty

Rechargeable battery operated (Ryobi?) Weed Wacker.  Battery & Charger included.  PRICE:  Make an offer

 

Used Propane Grill.  Tank included.  PRICE:  Make an offer

 

Man’s Winter Coat Size XL.  Dark gray.  PRICE:  Make an offer

 

Wurlitzer Upright Piano.  About 60-70 years old.  PRICE:  Make an offer

PHONE:  724-462-8079

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Ron (Beaver)

2 Women’s Trail Bikes.  Ridden hardly at all.  One is white & one is black.  Paid over $200 each for them.  PRICE: $100 EACH

 

Trunk full of (mostly current) Military Books.  PRICE: Make an offer.

Phone:  724-728-8993

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Val

Lenox Fine bone china.  11 5-piece place settings.  Eclipse pattern.  In perfect condition. PRICE: $79 per setting

 

Noritake Fine China  12 place settings  PRICE:  $600

 

Toshiba Vintage (not flat screen) 19” TV.  PRICE:  $75.00.  TV Stand on wheels available:  $25.00

 

Panasonic Landline Cordless telephones.  5 handsets, 2 dial pads. Includes answering machine, redial, speakerphone & caller ID.     PRICE:  $89.00

PHONE: 724-513-9390

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Ernie  (Center Twp)   724-770-0762

 

Beautiful Amish-made Gun Cabinet.  Has very nice trim and green velvet lining.  2 doors with clear glass and a storage drawer.  Keys included.  Holds 6 guns. In EXCELLENT condition.  PRICE:  $95.00

PHONE: 724-770-0762

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Karen (North Sewickley Twp.)

 

Man’s Polo Brand Winter Black Vest Size L.  PRICE:  $20

 

Brand New still in the box: Size 7 ½ Med. Ladies Timberland Brown Leather Tall Boots with 3-4 inch heels.  PRICE: 100.00

 

Phone:  724-651-5658

Tammy R. Hoffman December 16, 1963 – February 13, 2024

Tammy R. Idzojtic Hoffman, 60, of Rochester Twp., passed away Tuesday, February 13, 2024, in Heritage Valley Beaver.  Born December 16, 1963, in Rochester, Tammy is the daughter of Mary T. Sciaretta and the late Nick Idzojtic. Tammy was a shift manager with D.M.S., Direct Marketing Solutions, Cranberry Twp.  She was Catholic by faith, a member of the Conway Croatian Club Lodge 540. Tammy is survived by her husband, Stephen B. Hoffman, Sr., a daughter, Nichole R. Hoffman, West Aliquippa, Three sons and two daughters in law, Joshua David and Brooke Hoffman, Magnolia, Delaware, Justin Michael Hoffman, Rochester Twp., Stephen B., Jr., and Allison Hoffman, Xenia, Ohio. Four grandchildren, Kinsley, Claire, Kendall and Julian.  Three Aunts, Roseann Granis, New Brighton, Cindy Brawdy, Conway and Mary DeSanzo, Baden.  She was preceded in death by several aunts and uncles.
Friends will be received Saturday, February 17, 2024, from 1 to 5 in The William Murphy Funeral Home, Inc., where services will be held at 5:15 led by Tammy’s cousin, Dan Pindilli.
In lieu of flowers family wishes memorial contributions be made to the Beaver County Cancer and Heart Association or St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital.
The family wishes to thank our cousin Erica and Tammy’s best friend Carol for all their love and support during Tammy’s illness.

 

Ronald Glenn Macek 2/3/1942 — 2/13/2024

Ronald Glenn Macek, age 82, of Moon Twp., Pennsylvania, passed away peacefully on February 13, 2024. Son of the late Florence McCoy Macek and Matthew Macek, devoted husband of Judith L. (Gierl) Macek; loving father of Phoebe Klaer (Michael Hormann) and Daniel (Liz) Macek; proud Papa of Madeline, Alex and Ethan; loving brother of Dennis, Barry, Carol Devilling, and Debra McSweeney. Predeceased by son Michael F. Macek and siblings Loretta, Kenneth, and Roy.

Ron was born in Robinson Twp., Pennsylvania on February 3,1942. He graduated from Montour High School along with wife Judy, but their lifelong love story began a few years later after a chance meeting brought them back together.

Ron valued hard work, following a path blazed by his father and working in the family business installing guard rails. He turned an entry level position at a Mobil oil terminal into a career marked with accomplishments, ending as a regional manager in the petroleum industry. He also consulted on designs for LNG facilities across the United States and even in Puerto Rico. Even after retirement he kept on working, as a driver for Enterprise Rent-A-Car.

Ron’s greatest joy was time spent with his family. He never let work interfere with weekends spent on the sidelines of soccer fields as Dan’s greatest supporter during his childhood. Later, he was in the stands for nearly every one of Alex’s ice hockey games, and in the audience for Maddie and Ethan’s many activities. He was the family transportation director, photographer, master backyard grill chef, lawn manicurist, and fixer of all things. Friends are invited to a memorial gathering on Sunday, February 18 from 1-5pm in the Huntsman Funeral Home & Cremation Services of Moon Twp. (1522 Coraopolis Hts. Rd.). A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at Most Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish (St. Margaret Mary Church), Moon Twp., on Monday, February 19 at 11AM. Private interment will take place at a later date. Memorial contributions may be made to: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, TN, 38105) or www.stjude.org/donate

John P. “Sam” Fabyanic, Jr. July 26, 1941 – February 14, 2024

John P. “Sam” Fabyanic, Jr., 82, of Chippewa Twp., passed away on Wednesday, February 14th, 2023, doing what he loved to do-walking at Big Rock Park.

Born July 26, 1941, in Beaver Falls, he was the son of the late John P. Sr. and Mary (Cencic) Fabyanic. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army where he served as an MP. He retired from Westinghouse (Eaton Electrical) after 40 years of service. He loved to fish, camp and ride his motorcycle with his buddies.

He leaves behind is loving wife of 57 years, Helen L. (Weaver) Fabyanic; daughter and son-in-law, Deena and Jeff Merriman; sister, Barbara “Micy” Adkins; sister-in-law, Nancy Lamey; two nephews who had a special place in his heart, Jim Lamey and Rick Lamey; nephew Michael Barr and his wife Sarah; great-nephews, Jimmy (Samantha Fabyanic) Lamey, Atticus Barr, Bob Lamey and Jeremy Keyes; great-nieces Milena Barr and her husband Will and Brittany Lamey; great-great-niece, Jayden Keyes; great-great nephew, Finley Lamey; special neighbors, Duane and Colleen Pringle, and their children Hannah, Dustin and his wife Maggy; and his beloved cat, Peanut.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his mother-in-law, Ruth Weaver; his father-in-law, Ralph Weaver; his sister, Mary Barr; two brothers-in-law, Richard Lamey and Walter Barr; and a great-niece, Jennifer Lamey.

Friends will be received on Monday, February 19th from 2pm-4pm and 6pm-8pm and Tuesday, February 20th from 10am until the time of services at 11am in the GABAUER-LUTTON FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICES, INC.- 117 Blackhawk Rd., Chippewa Twp-www.gabauerfamilyfuneralhomes.com. Pastor Allan Brooks will officiate.

Full military honors will be performed at the funeral home at 11am on Tuesday by the Beaver County Honor Guard.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Wounded Warriors Project- P.O. Box 758516, Topeka, Kansas 66675 or the Tunnel to Towers Foundation- 2361 Hylan Boulevard, Staten Island, NY 10306.

Josh Shapiro Talks With Mike Romigh About Beaver County Schools, East Palestine, Dissenting Colleagues

(Matt Drzik/Beaver County Radio)

Eight days after the announcement of his budget proposal, Governor Josh Shapiro joined Mike Romigh on “The Live Mike” to talk about how the budget would benefit Beaver County and its surrounding areas.

One of the major focuses of Shapiro’s budget is education, and said that “no school district is worse off than they were last year” in regards to the funding they’ve received. Specifically, he stated that the new budget would create a 15% increase (~$2 million) for the Ambridge and Big Beaver Falls Area school districts.

“I think it’s also important to note the dollars aren’t just going into the bottom lines of school districts,” Shapiro told Romigh. “We’re investing in important things like meals for kids at school, mental health services for kids, [and] a new fund to rebuild schools that are crumbling or falling down.”

However, several Republicans in Congress have come against Governor Shapiro for this new budget plan, including several in Western Pennsylvania. One of the loudest has been State Representative Josh Kail (R-Beaver/Washington), who has labelled Shapiro as a “California Democrat” following the announcement of the budget proposal.

When Romigh brough Kail’s comments to the Governor’s attention, he responded slyly by stating “I don’t know who this person is” in regards to Rep. Kail.

“I get there are certain politicians in Harrisburg who love to just be against everything that I’m for, but that doesn’t actually solve any problems,” Governor Shapiro added. “What we need to do is find common ground on education and a whole host of other issues.”

One of the biggest issues that Shapiro has been dealing with over the course of his first full year as governor is the recovery of East Palestine, Ohio following the derailment of a Norfolk Southern train on February 3, 2024. Shapiro told Romigh that he is still “angry” at Norfolk Southern for their response, and that he wants to continue the fight to hold them accountable.

“We’re going to continue to do what we’ve done, which is testing our water, our air, and our soil,” Shapiro stated, adding that they will publish the results so that the public may know the effects of the train derailment in the current moment. The Governor is also pushing to help reimburse first responders who responded to the disaster, including a $1 million “community fund” for Darlington Township and Lawrence County.

The negotiations for Governor Shapiro’s budget begin on February 20.

Penguins forward Jake Guentzel to miss up to four weeks with an upper-body injury

CHICAGO (AP) — The struggling Pittsburgh Penguins will have to claw their way back into the playoff race without star forward Jake Guentzel.

The team placed Guentzel on injured reserve before Thursday night’s game at Chicago with an upper-body injury. Guentzel, whose 52 points are tied with captain Sidney Crosby for the team lead, will miss up to four weeks.

Guentzel did not play the final 10 minutes of a 5-2 loss to Florida on Wednesday night. Head coach Mike Sullivan said afterward that Guentzel was being evaluated.

The setback is the latest blow for reeling Pittsburgh, which entered Thursday riding a three-game losing streak while falling off the pace in the race for one of the wild-card spots in the Eastern Conference.

The Penguins were already playing without injured forwards Noel Acciari, Jansen Harkins and Matt Nieto, who are all on injured reserve.

Pittsburgh recalled forwards Jonathan Gruden, Vinnie Hinostroza and Valtteri Puustinen from their AHL affiliate in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton to fill in.

Stock market today: Wall Street clings to thin gains as rollercoaster week comes to a close

(New York/AP) Trading on Wall Street was mixed early Friday as markets try to hold on to the thin gains made so far in what’s been an up-and-down week.

Futures for the S&P 500 gained 0.1% before the bell, while futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked down 0.1%.

Although earnings season is winding down, there are still more sales and profit reports coming in, along with an assortment of economic reports that have been moving markets.

A mixed set of data on the economy included a report Thursday showing sales at U.S. retailers weakened by more in January from December than expected. It was a striking drop in spending by U.S. households, whose strength has helped keep the economy out of a recession, even with high interest rates. The upside for financial markets is that it could also remove some upward pressure on inflation.

A separate report said fewer U.S. workers applied for unemployment benefits last week than expected, the latest signal of a solid job market despite high-profile announcements of layoffs.

Altogether, the economic reports helped send Treasury yields lower in the bond market. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.24% from 4.27% late Wednesday.

Treasury yields have been swiveling. Stronger-than-expected reports on inflation, the job market and the overall economy have forced traders on Wall Street to delay their forecasts for when the Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest rates.

The Fed has already hiked its main interest rate to the highest level since 2001. The hope is that high rates will squeeze the economy just enough to get inflation down to a comfortable level without causing a recession.

Coming later Friday are the government’s report on inflation at the wholesale level and the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index.

Technology manufacturer Applied Materials was among the premarket gainers Friday, jumping more than 11% after posting better sales and profit than Wall Street was projecting.

Dropbox tumbled close to 11% in off-hours trading after the cloud storage company issued weak guidance for the first quarter, despite beating analysts’ fourth-quarter sales and profit targets.

Yelp, the the online business review site, fell more than 9% before the bell after it missed profit forecasts late Thursday.

Tokyo’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index traded near a record high, 35 years after it peaked and then plunged with the collapse of Japan’s financial bubble.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 closed 0.9% higher, at 38,487.24. It has been hovering just below the record high of 38,915.87 that it set on Dec. 29, 1989, right before a plunge in share and property prices ushered in an era of slower, faltering growth. At its highest point Friday, it traded at 38,865.06.

Share prices have been pressing higher despite persisting signs of weakness in the Japanese economy, which fell into recession in the last quarter of 2023. Efforts to sustain growth at higher levels have had limited success, undermined by weak private investment and consumer spending.

Changes to rules regarding tax-free investment accounts have accounted for some of the runup in Japanese share prices. A weak yen has attracted bargain hunters, and stocks also have profited from investors shifting out of Chinese markets.

Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index jumped 2.5% to 16,339.96 and the Kospi in Seoul rose 1.3% to 2,648.76.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 climbed 0.7% to 7,658.30. Bangkok’s SET slipped 0.1% and the Sensex in India was up 0.6%.

Taiwan’s Taiex edged 0.2% lower a day after breaching a record high of 18,644.57 as major market mover TSMC, the world’s biggest computer chip maker, surged nearly 8%. That jump followed an upgrade by analysts of share price recommendations for Nvidia, whose main chip supplier is TSMC, due to expected growth in artificial intelligence.

In Europe at midday, Germany’s DAX gained 0.7% and the CAC 40 in Paris was up 0.5%. Britain’s FTSE 100 climbed 1.2%.

In other trading Friday, U.S. benchmark crude oil shed 54 cents to $77.49 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Brent crude, the international standard, gave up 71 cents to $82.15 per barrel.

The U.S. dollar rose to 150.24 Japanese yen from 149.94 yen. The euro slipped modestly, to $1.0771 from $1.0773.

On Thursday, the S&P 500 rose 0.6% to 5,029.73, squeaking past its all-time high set last week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.9% to 38,773.12 and the Nasdaq composite climbed 0.3%, to 15,906.17.