Ohio man charged after allegedly stealing a credit card and a debit card from a Cranberry Township gym

(File Photo of Police Siren Lights)

Story Written by Tyler Friel, Courtesy of the Butler Radio Network

(Cranberry Township, PA) An Ohio man is facing charges in Butler County after he allegedly stole a credit card and debit card from a gym. In February, two cards were stolen out of a locker at Planet Fitness in Cranberry Township. The cards were used to buy six gift cards at the Butler Township and an Ohio Sam’s Club’s for a total of $3,000 Following an investigation, police charged 45-year-old Anthony Christian of Canal Winchester. He has been charged with access device fraud, theft by unlawful taking, and receiving stolen property. Christian is awaiting a preliminary hearing. 

PUC Doubles Penalties in FirstEnergy Settlement Over Improper Winter Termination

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) According to a release from The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC), they approved modifications in Harrisburg yesterday to a proposed settlement with FirstEnergy Pennsylvania Electric Company (FirstEnergy PA). The Commission doubled financial penalties after determining that the original agreement was inadequate in light of a December of 2021 incident involving the improper termination of electric service during the PUC’s winter moratorium. The case involves the termination of electric service to a residence in Westmoreland County during a period when additional consumer protections are in place for income-eligible households. Service was shut off on December 14th, 2021. Resident Melissa Gourley died three days later in the home while the electric service remained off. The Commission voted 5-0 to adopt a motion by Chairman Steve DeFrank and Commissioner Ralph V. Yanora to modify an earlier settlement proposed between the PUC’s independent Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement (I&E) and FirstEnergy PA. The Commission concluded that stronger penalties were warranted given the company’s failure to follow procedures designed to protect vulnerable customers. The action of the Commission underscores the critical importance of utility compliance with termination protections, which includes the responsibility of ensuring that customers are informed of available assistance programs and safeguards before service is shut off.

Fire occurs at a home in Beaver

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of Gavin Thunberg)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver, PA) The Beaver Volunteer Fire Department was dispatched just before 6:45 p.m. yesterday for a possible structure fire at a home on Seventh Street. Smoke was reported and crews extinguished the fire very quickly before they returned from service. 

Arts Community Highlights Need for Investment During Annual Advocacy Day in Harrisburg

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of the Senate Republican Communications Office)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) According to a release yesterday from the Senate Republican Communications Office, the bipartisan, bicameral PA Legislative Arts and Culture Caucus joined Creative Pennsylvania in Harrisburg on Tuesday for their annual Arts Advocacy Day at the Capitol. The events on that day highlighted the importance of the arts across the state and emphasized the need for increased investment in the creative sector of Pennsylvania. 

Pennsylvania court upends mandatory use of life-without-parole for second-degree murder

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – The Pennsylvania Judicial Center is seen, June 30, 2025, in Harrisburg, Pa. (AP Photo/Aimee Dilger, file)

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania’s high court on Thursday overturned the use of automatic life sentences without parole for people convicted of second-degree murder, saying it violates the state’s constitutional ban on cruel punishment when imposed without a closer look at the defendant’s specific role and culpability.

The court majority ordered resentencing in the case of Derek Lee, convicted of a 2014 killing in Pittsburgh, but the decision also has implications for others among the roughly 1,000 other inmates currently serving similar second-degree murder sentences.

The court’s order was put on hold for four months to give the state’s politically divided Legislature time to “consider appropriate remedial measures.” In a footnote, the justices said they were ruling on Lee’s sentence and not addressing “questions of retroactivity.”

Prison reform groups hailed it as a landmark decision, while the Allegheny County district attorney’s office said it will follow the court’s order.

Pennsylvania law has made people liable for second-degree murder if they participated in an eligible felony that led to death, and life without parole has been the only possible sentence.

In the lead opinion, Chief Justice Debra Todd said it doesn’t distinguish “between the lookout, and the killer who pulls the trigger.”

“The mandatory penalty scheme of life without parole for all offenders convicted of second degree murder fails to assess individual culpability regarding the intent to kill, and mandates the same punishment regardless of that culpability,” Todd wrote.

The decision comes after years of advocacy to undo mandatory life-without-parole sentences, both in Pennsylvania and nationally. Nazgol Ghandnoosh of the Sentencing Project said she counts 11 states, including Pennsylvania, and the federal system as having such laws for that kind of crime, sometimes called felony murder. Several states — California, Colorado and Minnesota — have moved away from that sentencing framework in recent years, she said.

Alabama’s governor earlier this month saved a 75-year-old inmate from execution who had received a death sentence for a similar crime.

Justice Kevin Dougherty wrote that, unlike those convicted of first-degree murder, defendants serving life without parole for second-degree murder have “never been found by a judge or jury to have harbored the specific intent to kill” and may not have had “any involvement whatsoever with the actual killing. He or she does not even have to expect or foresee that a life may be taken.”

Lee’s lawyers had wanted the court to rule that life without parole sentences are unconstitutional for all second-degree murder convictions in Pennsylvania, said Quinn Cozzens, a staff attorney for the Abolitionist Law Center, which helped represent Lee. Instead, the court ruled that trial judges must examine the individual circumstances of a defendant’s case to decide which sentence is most appropriate, including the potential of life without parole.

Prosecutors argued it should be up to state lawmakers and the executive branch to address the policy issues surrounding second-degree murder sentences. They also raised concerns about the families of murder victims and said it takes a high standard of proof of culpability to convict accomplices.

The 120-day hold on the decision, the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association wrote in a statement, “allows prosecutors to consider the difficult conversations that they will need to have with victims’ families about the unique circumstances of each case and how issues raised in light of this decision will be addressed.”

The state’s public defenders’ association said the ruling will generate new post-conviction litigation and require them to do more investigation as well as develop “strategic litigation” to get the decision to apply retroactively.

A jury convicted Lee of second-degree murder but acquitted him of first-degree murder in 44-year-old Leonard Butler’s shooting death. Butler was shot in a struggle over a gun with Lee’s codefendant, Paul Durham.

Justice Sallie Mundy wrote that Lee “willingly participated in an armed home invasion and robbery, and purposefully engaged in assaultive behavior in the form of tasing and pistol-whipping the victim.” She said Lee and Durham “arguably kidnapped the victims by forcing them into the basement.”

Rep. Tim Briggs, a suburban Philadelphia Democrat who chairs the state House Judiciary Committee, said he planned to engage with Senate Republicans on legislation.

Briggs said he wanted to have the decision apply retroactively, to give people serving life “for being the getaway driver” to “have the opportunity to have their facts looked at again.”

“I think inaction leaves a lot of this up to the courts to decide,” Briggs said.

Todd’s opinion, citing an advocacy group, said 73% of those convicted of felony murder in Pennsylvania were 25 or younger when the killing occurred and almost 70% are Black people.

I-376 Parkway West Overnight Lane Closures Begin Monday Night in Allegheny County

(File Photo of a Road Work Ahead Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Allegheny County, PA) PennDOT District 11 announced that overnight lane closures on I-376 (Parkway West) in Collier, Robinson, North Fayette, Moon, and Findlay townships will begin on Monday night, weather permitting. An overnight single-lane restriction will occur as needed in both directions on I-376 between the Pittsburgh International Airport (Exit 53) and the Erie/Washington/I-79 (Exit 64A) interchanges nightly from 9 P.M. through 5 A.M. through Friday, April 24th starting on Monday. Crews will conduct pavement marking work between the Airport (Exit 53) and Ridge Road (Exit 61) interchanges, and they will conduct drainage, shoulder, and signage improvement work between the Ridge Road (Exit 61) and Erie/Washington/I-79 (Exit 64A) interchanges. 

Aliquippa Police Department invites the public to celebrate the lives of two of its officers who were killed in the line of duty

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of the City of Aliquippa Police Department, Posted on March 26th, 2026)

Noah Haswell, beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) The Aliquippa Police Department invites the public to gather there today at 11 a.m. to honor the lives of two of its officers who passed away in the line of duty. Officer James Naim and Chief Rob Sealock will be remembered by their community. 

Hopewell Area School District still handling “transportation matter” that caused remote classes yesterday and today

(File Photo of the Hopewell Area School District)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Hopewell, PA) Parents in the Hopewell Area School District got a call from the district on Wednesday evening that they say has left them with more questions. That district will have remote learning today because of a “transportation matter.” According to Hopewell Area School District Superintendent Maura Hobson, two school buses had mechanical concerns on Wednesday, and out of an abundance of caution, they were doing an entire check of their 22-bus fleet. Hopewell also buses students in their district to Lincoln Park and the Baden Academy Charter School. Hobson noted that her district is not getting into specifics on the mechanical concerns and stated that she didn’t know whether other buses had the same issues. That district confirmed it will be done checking buses today, and classes will be in-person on Monday. 

Suspicious fire at Beaver Falls home leads to discovery of numerous dead cats, fire chief says

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) Authorities said yesterday that a suspicious fire at a home in Beaver Falls led to the discovery of numerous dead cats in the basement. According to Beaver Falls Fire Department Chief Mark Stowe, up to 10 dead cats were found in the basement and he believes they were dead before the fire occurred. This incident happened yesterday at a home on Fourth Avenue and when firefighters arrived, they saw several cats jumping out of the windows of the home. This appeared to be a feral cat colony and Stowe confirmed that it all left an odor and the humane society will be on hand today so they can rescue the remaining cats. 

Pirates ace Paul Skenes gets chased in the 1st inning by the Mets on opening day

(File Photo: Source for Photo: The crowd cheers and jeers as Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes (30) exits the field after he was relieved in the first inning of an opening-day baseball game against the New York Mets, Thursday, March 26, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis)

NEW YORK (AP) — Paul Skenes thought he could get out of a jam in the first inning on opening day.

He never got the chance.

After giving up five runs and getting only two outs Thursday in an 11-7 loss at the New York Mets, the reigning NL Cy Young Award winner got the hook from manager Don Kelly after throwing just 37 pitches. It was by far the shortest of his 56 major league starts.

“I’m not as upset about this for me, personally, as people would probably think,” Skenes said. “Because they did a really good job. It was an abnormal outing.”

The 23-year-old allowed four hits and issued two walks, including one to leadoff hitter Francisco Lindor. Skenes also hit a batter with a pitch, and Kelly wondered if the right-hander’s fastball command wasn’t up to his usual standards.

The five runs Skenes allowed matched his career high. The two-time All-Star also gave up five in six innings on April 8, 2025, against St. Louis.

Skenes said Kelly told him something along the lines of it’s too early in the season to push it.

“He wants to stay out there and pitch,” Kelly said. “It’s a really tough thing going to get him in the first inning right there. The bottom of it is Paul’s health. You’re getting close to 40 pitches, yeah 37 pitches and Lindor had a seven-pitch at-bat that first at-bat. If he runs another 7-10, you’re into dangerous territory with the starting pitcher in one inning, so we had to make the move.”

It was not all on Skenes, who was hurt by shoddy defense from Oneil Cruz in center field.

Handed a 2-0 lead on Brandon Lowe’s two-run homer, Skenes walked Lindor in the bottom of the first. Juan Soto followed with a soft single, and Bo Bichette lofted a sacrifice fly.

Jorge Polanco nubbed an infield single, and Skenes walked Luis Robert Jr. on 10 pitches. After pitching coach Bill Murphy visited the mound, Cruz misplayed Brett Baty’s line drive into a bases-loaded triple, coming in a couple of steps before letting the ball sail over his head.

“(It) was one of those low line drives that it takes a little bit more time for me to read it, and they’re really tough balls to read because you don’t know if you’re going to have to come in or go back,” Cruz said through an interpreter. “It got in the sun a little bit at the end, but those are the ones that I will get better at, for sure.”

Marcus Semien then popped up to shallow center, but Cruz lost the ball in the sun and it dropped beside him for an RBI double that gave New York a 5-2 lead. Cruz is a converted shortstop who began playing center field in 2024 before becoming a full-time outfielder last year.

“That ball straight at him, he came in, got a bad read,” Kelly said. “He’s been working hard out there. He just needs to continue to get better. Then the one in the sun. He just lost it in the sun.”

Carson Benge struck out on three fastballs clocked 96-98 mph in his first big league plate appearance, but Skenes grazed No. 9 batter Francisco Alvarez with an 0-1 sinker and that was the end of his afternoon.

Mets fans roared as Skenes walked slowly off the mound toward the dugout.

“I felt good, but (we were) being precautionary,” Skenes said. “The pitch count wasn’t going to be super, super high today anyway.”

Skenes was coming off two starts for the U.S. at the World Baseball Classic. Kelly brushed off Skenes participating in that event as anything contributing to this outing.

Yohan Ramírez relieved and prevented further damage by retiring Lindor on a flyball with runners at second and third. Ramírez was the first of six Pirates relievers.

“Obviously not ideal to have a bullpen game on opening day,” Skenes said.

Skenes made his second opening-day start as he begins his third major league season. He became the eighth starting pitcher since at least 1906 to allow five or more runs in less than an inning in a season opener.

“It’s nice to get it out of the way,” Skenes said. “Just flush it.”