Body of a dead Pennsylvania woman found in a metal box on former property of her husband, who faces charges

(Source for Photo: Photo of Katlyn Harp Courtesy of the Pennsylvania State Police)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Columbia County, PA) According to officials, the body of a Pennsylvania woman who had been missing for more than a week was found inside a metal box on a piece of land formerly owned by her husband. Pennsylvania State Police confirm thirty-three-year-old Katlyn Harp has died and her husband, Vincent Harp got charges of criminal homicide and tampering with evidence in connection with her death. According to a report from CBS affiliate WHP, the investigation led police to a piece of land in a mountainous area of Columbia County on Sunday and according to a WHP affidavit, the couple had gotten into a fight on the evening of June 19th. Officials confirm that records from a cell phone placed Vincent Harp in the place where the body of his wife was found on June 21st and blood was found on a UTV sold by Vincent Harp on June 24. Officials also note that on Sunday, Vincent Harp was arrested without incident and his bail got denied. Enforcement of the law had been searching for Katlyn Harp since June 19th, the date when she was last spotted in Bloomsburg, part of Columbia County.

Man from Avalon, Pennsylvania charged for driving under the influence of alcohol in Economy Borough

(File Photo of Police Siren Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Economy Borough, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that a man from Avalon, Pennsylvania has been charged for driving under the influence of alcohol in Economy Borough on June 17th, 2025. Sixty-seven-year-old Martin Blankenbicker was stopped during a traffic stop on the 800 block of Ohio River Boulevard. Police then charged Blankenbicker for driving under the influence in that area.

Man from Akron, Ohio arrested and some other suspects cited and identified after causing a criminal trespass incident at Greene Township Municipal in Hookstown

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Hookstown, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that a man was arrested and operators got cited and identified for a criminal trespass incident in Georgetown Borough on June 18th, 2025. According to police, someone was driving a car erratically and trespassing their car at Greene Township Municipal of Hookstown on 400 Market Street. Twenty-four-year-old Lamont Bickley of Akron, Ohio was arrested while the others received citations and identifications for their actions. 

Aliquippa man arrested for driving under the influence of drugs on the 2300 block of Concord Street in Aliquippa

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that a man from Aliquippa was arrested for driving under the influence of drugs in Aliquippa on June 22nd, 2025. Thirty-four-year-old Joseph Hages was stopped by police during a traffic stop on the 2300 block of Concord Street. According to police, Hages was arrested for driving under the influence during the stop and his charges are pending.  

Burglary alarm incident at NVR Building Products, Inc. in Darlington Township turns out to be a false alarm and the third false alarm in twelve months at that facility

(File Photo of a Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Badge)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Darlington Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that Pennsylvania State Police responded to a burglary alarm in Enon Valley on June 22nd, 2025 which turned out to be a false alarm. This happened at NVR Building Products, Inc on 189 Little Beaver Road in Darlington Township. The determination was made that there was a false alarm at NVR Building Products, Inc. and this is the third time in twelve months that this has happened there. 

Alimentation Couche-Tard, Inc. closes deal to receive 270 GetGo gas stations from Giant Eagle in a $1.6 billion sale

(File Photo of the Giant Eagle logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) The official announcement came Monday that Alimentation Couche-Tard, Inc. has received 270 GetGo gas stations from Giant Eagle in a $1.6 billion sale. Alimentation Couche-Tard, Inc. is a Canadian company that owns a bunch of gas station brands already and one of them is Circle K. According to a statement, Giant Eagle said selling GetGo will allow the company to focus on its supermarket and pharmacy businesses.

Victims of crash in Beaver Falls that killed two people and injured both the suspect and a pedestrian identified; Cranberry Township suspect in jail facing charges for the crash

(File Photo of a City of Beaver Falls Police Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) The people affected by a crash in Beaver Falls on Sunday have now been identified. Forty-five-year-old Israel Tun Cooch of Cranberry Township is facing charges after hitting forty-eight-year-old Carrie Koch with his truck. Koch works as a server at Athen’s Family Restaurant in Beaver Falls. The two people that died as a result of the crash were Robert Lance Junior and Sheylee Young Davis. Beaver County District Attorney Nate Bible told WPXI that ICE is being contacted and a process is in the works for lodging a detainer. Cooch is now in the Beaver County Jail and has multiple charges which include homicide by a vehicle.

Erie County and Cranberry Township stores sell winning lottery tickets and winners will split a prize of over $2.3 million

(File Photo of a Dollar Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) A man won a ticket for the Pennsylvania Lottery in Erie County and will split the prize of more than $2.3 million with a ticket winner of a winning ticket that was sold in Cranberry Township. Each winning ticket had the numbers 4,7,17,27,36, and aticket that was sold at the 7-Eleven in Cranberry Township on Glen Eden Road has not been claimed yet. According to sixty-four-year-old Gary Winner, he bought $20 worth of tickets at a Giant Eagle store in Millcreek Township for the June 9th drawing of Cash 5 with Quick Cash. According to lottery officials, each store will get a bonus of $10,000. The winner of the Cranberry Township ticket must claim it within a year to earn their amount of the prize money.

Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital closes permanently with some services moving to Heritage Valley Beaver and Heritage Valley Sewickley

(File Photo of the Heritage Valley Health System Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(McKees Rocks, PA) Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital permanently closed on Monday due to volume of patients and reimbursement for commercial insurance. The services that finished at that hospital are outpatient surgery services, inpatient behavioral health, and emergency room care. These services will go to Heritage Valley Beaver and Heritage Valley Sewickley along with diagnostic imaging and services for lung rehabilitation services. However, next to the facility along Heckel Road, a medical office building will stay open. Appointments in the next week for patients at Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital will still be held.

Bryan Kohberger to plead guilty to murder in Idaho student stabbings to avoid death penalty

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – A flyer seeking information about the killings of four University of Idaho students who were found dead is displayed on a table along with buttons and bracelets on Nov. 30, 2022, during a vigil in memory of the victims in Moscow, Idaho. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Bryan Kohberger has agreed to plead guilty to murdering four University of Idaho students as part of a deal to avoid the death penalty, an attorney for one victim’s family said.

Shanon Gray, an attorney representing the family of Kaylee Goncalves, confirmed Monday that prosecutors informed the families of the deal by email and letter earlier in the day, and that his clients were upset about it.

“We are beyond furious at the State of Idaho,” Goncalves’ family wrote in a Facebook post. “They have failed us. Please give us some time. This was very unexpected.”

They spoke with the prosecution on Friday about the idea of a plea deal and they explained they were firmly against it, the family wrote in another post. By Sunday, they received an email that “sent us scrambling,” and met with the prosecution again on Monday to explain their views about pushing for the death penalty.

“Unfortunately all of our efforts did not matter. We DID OUR BEST! We fought harder then anyone could EVER imagine,” the family wrote.

A change of plea hearing was set for Wednesday, but the family has asked prosecutors to delay it to give them more time to travel to Boise, Gray said. Kohberger’s trial was set for August in Boise, where it was moved following pretrial publicity in rural northern Idaho.

Kohberger, 30, is accused in the stabbing deaths of Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen at a rental home near campus in Moscow, Idaho, early on Nov. 13, 2022. Autopsies showed the four were all likely asleep when they were attacked, some had defensive wounds and each was stabbed multiple times.

At the time, Kohberger was a criminal justice graduate student at Washington State University, about 9 miles (14.5 kilometers) west of the University of Idaho. He was arrested in Pennsylvania, where his parents lived, weeks later. Investigators said they matched his DNA to genetic material recovered from a knife sheath found at the crime scene.

No motive has emerged for the killings, nor is it clear why the attacker spared two roommates who were in the home. Authorities have said cellphone data and surveillance video shows that Kohberger visited the victims’ neighborhood at least a dozen times before the killings.

The murders shocked the small farming community of about 25,000 people, which hadn’t had a homicide in about five years, and prompted a massive hunt for the perpetrator. That included an elaborate effort to track down a white sedan that was seen on surveillance cameras repeatedly driving by the rental home, to identify Kohberger as a possible suspect through the use of genetic genealogy and to pinpoint his movements the night of the killings through cellphone data.

In a court filing, Kohberger’s lawyers said he was on a long drive by himself around the time the four were killed.

In the letter to families, obtained by ABC News, prosecutors said Kohberger’s lawyers approached them seeking to reach a plea deal. The defense team had previously made unsuccessful efforts to have the death penalty stricken as a possible punishment, including arguing that Kohberger’s autism diagnosis made him less culpable.

The prosecutors said they met with available family members last week before deciding to make Kohberger an offer.

“This resolution is our sincere attempt to seek justice for your family,” the letter said. “This agreement ensures that the defendant will be convicted, will spend the rest of his life in prison, and will not be able to put you and the other families through the uncertainty of decades of post-conviction, appeals. Your viewpoints weighed heavily in our decision-making process, and we hope that you may come to appreciate why we believe this resolution is in the best interest of justice.”

In a Facebook post, the Goncalves family wrote that Kaylee’s 18-year-old sister, Aubrie, had been unable to attend the meeting with prosecutors. But she shared her concerns in a written statement.

“Bryan Kohberger facing a life in prison means he would still get to speak, form relationships, and engage with the world,” Aubrie Goncalves wrote. “Meanwhile, our loved ones have been silenced forever. That reality stings more deeply when it feels like the system is protecting his future more than honoring the victims’ pasts.”

In Idaho, judges may reject plea agreements, though such moves are rare. If a judge rejects a plea agreement, the defendant is allowed to withdraw the guilty plea.

Earlier Monday, a Pennsylvania judge had ordered that three people whose testimony was requested by defense attorneys would have to travel to Idaho to appear at Kohberger’s trial.

The defense subpoenas were granted regarding a boxing trainer who knew Kohberger as a teenager, a childhood acquaintance of Kohberger’s and a third man whose significance was not explained.

gag order has largely kept attorneys, investigators and others from speaking publicly about the investigation or trial.