Montgomery County man facing more than 600 charges related to an AI-generated pornography investigation

(File Photo of a Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Lower Providence Township, PA) A man from Pennsylvania is facing more than 600 charges related to an AI-generated pornography investigation. 

Forty-one-year-old John Ohler, Jr. of Montgomery County, is facing over 200 counts of videotaping or depicting on a computer a child engaging in sexual acts, and over 200 more counts of possession of child pornography. 

The criminal complaint includes allegations of secretly recording videos of people in public places and allegations of creating AI-generated sexual videos of many people, which included minors.    

His wife said that the alleged actions all started in October of 2025 when she reported to police that Ohler had sent a sexually explicit photo of her to an unknown person. 

According to the criminal complaint, when Lower Providence Township police started investigating, they found more than 100 digital storage devices, hidden cameras and recording devices, along with multiple AI-generated sexual videos. 

Court documents confirm that Ohler was arrested in April and he posted bond. July is when he is due back in court.

Pennsylvania House passes bill to ban “gas station heroin”

(File Photo of the Seal of the House of Representatives of Pennsylvania)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) The Pennsylvania state House passed a bill yesterday in Harrisburg that would make “gas station heroin” illegal in the Commonwealth. Officials say that it is a dangerous and highly addictive substance which is popping up across the country. Tianeptine is a highly addictive opioid-like drug not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. The FDA said that the substance has been linked to hundreds of deaths and overdoses. Representative Charity Grimm Krupa is co-sponsoring House Bill 377, which would prohibit the delivery, manufacture or possession of the drug with intent to manufacture or deliver. This bill would make that crime a felony with up to five years in prison or a fine of up to $15,000 and the legislation now heads to the state Senate. 

Pennsylvania man among twelve victims of a plane crash in Missouri

(File Photo: Source for Photo: The wreckage of a plane crash burns in a field in Butler, Mo, Sunday, June 14, 2026. (Mid America News Review via AP Photo )

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Bates County, MO) Authorities said that a man from Pennsylvania was one of the 12 people that were killed when a skydiving plane crashed on Sunday in Missouri. 

The private plane crashed moments after it took off from Butler Memorial Airport in Butler, approximately 60 miles south of Kansas City. The Bates County Coroner’s Office identified the twelve victims yesterday, and one of them was sixty-nine-year-old Kurt John Roy of Windber. 

The Somerset County man was part of the victims ranging in age from 23 to 69. The others were five people from Missouri, four people from Kansas, one person from Colorado and one person from India. 

Two changes coming to Medicaid in Pennsylvania in 2027

(File Photo of the Pennsylvania Department of Health Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) Two significant changes will be coming to Medicaid in Pennsylvania.  

The first change is that some adults from ages 19-64 will need to have their Medicaid eligibility checked by completing a renewal every six months instead of every year beginning on January 1st, 2027.  

This means that if you apply for Medicaid after or on January 1, 2027, you need to renew your Medicaid in six months.  

You need to complete a Medicaid renewal in July 2027 if your coverage begins in January of 2027. 

The second change is that some adults from ages 19-64 who do not have a dependent child that is under 14 years old must show that they are meeting work and community engagement requirements beginning on January 1st, 2027. 

That will be reviewed during the application or renewal. If the requirement is met, but you do not report to the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services or follow the new rules, you will lose Medicaid coverage.  

Some people may be exempt from this requirement. You can read more about potential exemptions by clicking here.

New report: Southwestern Pennsylvania hospitals outperform state average

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of Jim Harris/ Pittsburgh Business Times)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) According to a new report by the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council nearly one in three Pennsylvania hospitals operated in the red in 2025, although nearly 60% have operating margins of more than 4%. 

The yearly report showed that hospitals in southwestern Pennsylvania are faring better than the statewide average in many key financial areas, including in operating margin. The hospital with the highest figure in operating income across Pennsylvania was UPMC Magee-Women’s Hospital in Pittsburgh, with $437.5 million in operating income on $1.9 billion in revenue. 

The average in the region that surrounds Pittsburgh was 10.6% compared to the 7.15% statewide average. Additionally, the three-year averages in the region and statewide were closer, with an average of 7.65% in the region and an average of 7.04% statewide. 

Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium holding naming contest for newborn female African lion cub

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of the Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium, Posted on Facebook on June 4th, 2026)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) The Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium is asking for the public’s help in suggesting a new name for their new 2-month-old female African lion cub that was born on April 5th to parents Scarlett and Hondo through an online contest.

The cub is the first child of those two parent lions.

Guests need to pay a donation of $5 and can submit a name for the cub on its website by clicking here. The naming contest will remain open for one month, from today to July 17th.

The zoo staff will review and vet the entries before selecting the winning name, and that name will be announced on the zoo’s social media channels.

The donations made will support the zoo’s ongoing initiatives in animal care, conservation, and education.

The cub will make her debut later this summer in the zoo’s African Savanna habitat.

Beaver County DUI Task Force Conducting Enforcement Operations this Weekend

(File Photo)

Story by Beaver County Radio Staff.

(Hopewell Twp., Beaver County, Pa.) The Beaver County DUI Task Force will be conducting enforcement operations this weekend throughout Beaver County.

In a release that was sent out by the Hopewell Township Police Department it was stated that during this upcoming weekend, June 19th through June 21st, officers will be conducting Sobriety Checkpoints and/or roving DUI patrols.
Officers from the Hopewell Township, Center Township, Franklin Township,
Chippewa Township, Brighton Township, Raccoon Township, and other task force
Police Departments will be taking part in these operations.
The release went on to state that the “Beaver County DUI Task Force prioritizes road safety and encourages all drivers to find alternatives to driving after drinking alcohol or using controlled substances. Make the best decision for yourself and those around you by planning your way home ahead of time.”

Flushing underway to restore Beaver Falls water quality

Story by Curtis Walsh – Beaver County Radio. Published June 16, 2026 1:35 P.M.

(Beaver Falls, Pa) The Beaver Falls Municipal Water Authority issued a statement Tuesday regarding complaints about the taste and odors in the local water recently.

The authority states “We are aware of the system-wide taste and odor concerns.  In conjunction with the DEP, we have determined this is likely caused by Geosmin, a naturally occurring unregulated organic compound”.

They went on to say that while the taste and odor is unpleasant, it is not associated with any health risks.

According to the authority, recent sampling has determined the water is within federal standards, and they are currently conducting additional sampling.

The authority has recently initiated system-wide flushing called “burnout”. They state that the flushing will provide complete turnover of the water in the system and will restore quality.

You can visit the Beaver Falls Municipal Water Authority website at www.bfwater.net for locational burnout flushing updates.

Man life-flighted after vehicle hits him in Vanport

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Vanport, PA) The Beaver Police Department confirmed that a man was hit by a vehicle this morning on State Avenue and F Street in Vanport. He was walking on the crosswalk and the vehicle hit him. The accident was not a hit-and-run crash and the victim was life-flighted to a hospital in Pittsburgh as a result of this incident. The victim is alert, but his condition is unknown at this time.  

FBI disrupts a planned attack on the White House UFC cage-fighting show, court papers say

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Security at the White House looks through a pair of binoculars during the UFC Fan Fest on the White House Ellipse ahead of Sunday’s fight on the South Lawn, June 13, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Law enforcement officials disrupted a planned attack targeting the UFC cage-fighting show staged at the White House this past weekend, according to court papers unsealed Tuesday that say plotters disgruntled with the direction of the country spoke of flying explosives-laden drones and shooting panicked crowd members as they fled.

The FBI obtained encrypted text messages between roughly 20 participants who shared detailed maps of the area and discussed the need for a “safe house” and escape routes after the attack, the documents show. It was unclear from the court records how close the would-be attackers could have come to being able to carry out their plan had it not been thwarted last week.

FBI agents learned about the possible threat on June 10, four days before the mixed martial arts extravaganza on the White House’s South Lawn, “and thanks to the rapid action of the FBI, our partners, and the Department of Justice in a multi-state operation, multiple individuals are now in custody and allegedly planned attacks were stopped cold,” Director Kash Patel said in a post on X on Tuesday.

Five people were arrested from states including Ohio, Missouri and California, said a law enforcement official familiar with the matter. The official spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss information that was not yet public.

Among those arrested was Tycen Proper, a 19-year-old Ohio man whose mother contacted local law enforcement last week with concerns about his firearms purchases and online communications, according to an FBI affidavit filed in the case.

An assistant federal public defender assigned to represent Proper, who’s charged with firearms offenses and crimes including attempted murder of an officer or employee of the United States, did not immediately return messages seeking comment. Proper made an initial court appearance Monday in Columbus and faces a detention hearing on Wednesday.

Proper admitted in an interview with law enforcement that he participated in the planning of an attack, according to the affidavit, which says some members of the group began communicating with each other last March through a TikTok group called “Vanguard of the Old.”

“The members of the group stated that they wanted to protect the United States, which they believed was headed in the wrong direction,” the affidavit says. “Members of the group believed that the United States needed to be torn down so that it could be rebuilt. Some expressed a desire that people who were involved with Jeffrey Epstein should not govern the country.”

The logistics of the planned attack were discussed via Signal, an app that uses end-to-end encryption for its messaging and calling services, through a primary chat of “approximately 19 individuals” and smaller side chats, authorities said.

Messages obtained from Proper’s phone show he discussed the plot with others and highlighted several lawmakers he said should be targeted because of their support for Israel, the affidavit said.

Proper told law enforcement officials that he had been planning to drive with weapons and body armor to a meet-up spot in Fredericksburg, Virginia, where the group was set to gather, it said. He said that though he did not intend to shoot people at the White House, others in the group did, the affidavit said.

The plan called for the use of drones that would be detonated over the north side of the White House, prompting a rushed evacuation into the line of fire of waiting snipers in an attack that Proper said was designed to “jumpstart” a revolution in the U.S., authorities said.

President Donald Trump, who celebrated his 80th birthday at the UFC event on Sunday, was friends with Epstein many years ago but has said he ended their relationship before the disgraced financier’s crimes became known. Epstein killed himself in a New York jail cell in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday in Évian-les-Bains, France, where he was attending the Group of Seven summit, Trump, a Republican, said he had not been briefed on the thwarted plot.