Man taken to Pittsburgh hospital after shooting occurs outside of Washington County club

(File Photo of Police Siren Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A man needed to be taken to a Pittsburgh hospital after an overnight shooting occurred in Washington County last night. According to the City of Washington Police Department, they were called to the area of the Washington Community Club on North Main Street last night. The call came in originally for someone who had been shot and sustained injuries that were not life-threatening. Officers arrived at the scene and found a man who had been shot multiple times and EMS was able to transport him to a Pittsburgh area hospital. The condition of that man was not made available. Police believe that the shooting happened outside the club after a person had been removed earlier in the night and they are asking either anybody with information or witnesses of the shooting to either call the City of Washington Police Department’s confidential tip line at 724-223-4108 or call their detective unit at 724-223-4225.

Man taken into custody after a SWAT situation occurs in Pleasant Hills

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pleasant Hills, PA) A man is now in custody after a SWAT situation occurred in Pleasant Hills yesterday. Police were called to the 100 block of Broadway Drive on the early afternoon of yesterday. Forty-two-year-old Dennis Maloy was escorted by SWAT officers out of his home after police state he threatened to kill both his own four young children and officers. According to Pleasant Hills Police Chief Brian Finnerty, a social worker came to do a welfare check at the home on Broadway Drive when Maloy threatened her. Then she made a call to 911 and when officers arrived, Chief Finnerty stated Maloy made more threats. SWAT officers made a decision to set off flash bangs and go inside the home and then bring Maloy outside of the house. Maloy is facing charges of several counts of terroristic threats.

Old Economy Village in Ambridge’s Christmas in the Village 2025 brings 19th-century Christmas to life

(File Photo of an Old Economy Village Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Ambridge, PA) On December 6th from 2-9 p.m. and on December 7th from 2-7 p.m., Old Economy Village in Ambridge will host their Christmas in the Village event for 2025. A 19th-century Christmas will be brought to life in our present world with music, lighted cobblestone streets, demonstrations of crafts, buildings that are historic, a holiday train display and activities for the kids. Holiday vendors will also have items for sale and food items can be bought on-site. There is an admission cost of $10 for adults, reduced prices of $6 for youth age 3-11 and $9 for seniors age 65 and older. Admission is free for children under the age of three years old, active duty military and Friends of the members of Old Economy Village. You can get tickets for this event by going to this website: https://www.ticketleap.events/tickets/friends-of-old-economy-village/christmas-at-the-village

Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center presents “The Nutcracker,” a long-standing Beaver County tradition

(Photo Courtesy of Rick Orienza, Director of Marketing and Relations at Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Midland, PA) A long-standing Beaver County tradition returns to Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center in Midland as they present the holiday classic, “The Nutcracker.” This show for the entire family will take place in the MainStage theater from December 12th-14h and December 19th-21st, 2025. This ballet follows the story of Clara and her magical adventure on Christmas Eve and includes the iconic selections of “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” and “Waltz of the Flowers.” Tickets for this performance are on sale now by either calling the Lincoln Park Box Office at 724-576-4644 or by visiting the website LincolnParkArts.org. If you attend “The Nutcracker,” you can also bring a unwrapped toy that is new to Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center so you can contribute to the yearly Batch A Toys holiday drive and your donations will help make hundreds of deserving families right here in Western Pennsylvania have a brighter season this year. Best of the Batch Foundation, which was founded in 1999 by former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Charlie Batch, provides over a dozen programs serving school-aged children and their families across nine counties that are in southwestern Pennsylvania.

PennDOT Construction Jobs Hiring Event Wednesday in Bridgeville District Office

(File Photo of the PennDOT logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Bridgeville, PA) PennDOT District 11 invites the public to attend a job fair at PennDOT’s District 11 office in Bridgeville from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Wednesday, December 3rd. This event is so they can learn about available positions that PennDOT offers for construction work in Beaver, Allegheny and Lawrence counties. The positions that are available in PennDOT’s District 11 include: Transportation Construction Inspector, Transportation Technician and Technical Assistant. Recruitment staff of Pennsylvania will be at the event to discuss present construction job openings in the district and hiring managers will be at the site to talk with individuals that are interested, and both onsite application and interview opportunities will be available. 

More than 3 dozen sickened in infant botulism outbreak tied to contaminated formula

(File Photo: Source for Photo: A sign for ByHeart, a manufacturer of organic baby formula, is displayed outside a building that houses a plant for the company on Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)

(AP) More than three dozen babies have been sickened in an infant botulism outbreak tied to contaminated formula, federal health officials say.

The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday reported 37 cases of confirmed or suspected illness in babies who consumed ByHeart formula since August. The most recent case was reported on Nov. 19.

No deaths have been reported in the outbreak, which was announced Nov. 8.

ByHeart, a New York-based manufacturer of organic infant formula, recalled all its products sold in the U.S. on Nov. 11. The company, which accounts for about 1% of the U.S. infant formula market, had been selling about 200,000 cans of the product each month.

It can take up to 30 days for symptoms of infantile botulism to develop, medical experts said.

Here’s what to know about the outbreak and infant botulism.

The outbreak begins

The outbreak has sickened babies aged about 2 weeks to about 9 months, the FDA said. All the infants were hospitalized after consuming ByHeart powdered formula.

California officials earlier confirmed that a sample from an open can of ByHeart baby formula fed to an infant who fell ill contained the type of bacteria that can lead to illness. And the company has said lab tests confirmed some samples were contaminated with that bacteria.

FDA inspectors have been to the company’s infant formula production plants in Allerton, Iowa; and Portland, Oregon.

The FDA is investigating a rise in cases of infant botulism reported since August. “ByHeart brand formula is disproportionately represented among sick infants in this outbreak,” the agency said.

Illnesses began between Aug. 9 and Nov. 19, federal officials said. Cases have been reported in Arizona, California, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin.

Families of babies treated for botulism after drinking ByHeart formula have sued the company. Lawsuits filed in federal courts allege that the formula they fed their children was defective and ByHeart was negligent in selling it. They seek financial payment for medical bills, emotional distress and other harm.

Causes of infant botulism

Infant botulism typically affects fewer than 200 babies in the U.S. each year. As of Sept. 20, 133 cases had been reported in the U.S. according to the most recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention records. There were 145 cases reported all of last year.

The infection is caused by a type of bacteria that produces a toxin in the large intestine. The bacterium is spread through hardy spores present in the environment that can cause serious illness, including paralysis.

Infants are particularly vulnerable to infection because their gut microbiomes are not developed enough to prevent the spores from germinating and producing the toxin. They can be sickened after exposure to the spores in dust, dirt or water or by eating contaminated honey.

Symptoms can take weeks to develop and can include poor feeding, loss of head control, drooping eyelids and a flat facial expression. Babies may feel “floppy” and can have problems swallowing or breathing.

Baby formula has previously been linked to sporadic cases of illness, but no known outbreaks of infant botulism tied to powdered formula have previously been confirmed, according to research studies.

Infant botulism treatment

The only treatment is known as BabyBIG, an IV medication made from the pooled blood plasma of adults immunized against botulism. California’s infant botulism program developed the product and is the sole source worldwide.

BabyBIG works to shorten hospital stays and decrease the severity of illness in babies with botulism. Because the infection can affect the ability to breathe, infants often need to be placed on ventilators.

Potential impact on U.S. formula supplies

There is little danger of infant formula shortages because ByHeart represents a small share of the market. That’s far different from the crises in late 2021 and 2022, when four infants were sickened by a different germ after consuming formula made by Abbott Nutrition. Two of the babies died. No direct link was found between the Abbott products and the infections caused by a different germ, cronobacter sakazakii, but FDA officials closed the company’s Michigan plant after contamination and other problems were detected.

Abbott recalled top brands of infant formula, triggering a nationwide shortage that lasted months.

In 2022, ByHeart recalled five batches of infant formula after a sample at the company’s packaging plant tested positive for cronobacter sakazakii. In 2023, the FDA sent a warning letter to the company detailing “areas that still require corrective actions.” A ByHeart plant in Reading, Pennsylvania, was shut down in 2023 just before FDA inspectors found problems with mold, water leaks and insects, inspection documents show.

Reviewing infant formula ingredients

Federal health officials have vowed to overhaul the U.S. food supply and are taking a new look at infant formula.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has directed the FDA to review the nutrients and other ingredients in infant formula, which fills the bottles of millions of American babies.

The effort, dubbed “Operation Stork Speed,” is the first deep look at the ingredients since 1998.

FDA officials are reviewing comments from industry, health experts and public to decide next steps.

Bullet hits office portion of the Squirrel Hill Tunnel

(Photo Courtesy of WPXI/WPXI)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Pennsylvania State Police are holding an ongoing investigation into an incident in which a bullet hit the office portion on the inbound side of the Squirrel Hill Tunnel early yesterday morning. A PSP spokesperson told WPXI they received a call from PennDOT employees just after midnight. A bullet hole was found in the garage door and the floor inside the building had a “deformed bullet fragment” on it. WPXI also received a photo which appears to show a bullet hole that was on the front end of a car. 

Pittsburgh mother facing charges because her four-year-old son was hospitalized after ingesting fentanyl

(File Photo of a Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A mother from Pittsburgh is now facing charges after police said her 4-year-old son ingested fentanyl. According to court paperwork, detectives were called to UPMC Children’s Hospital on Monday after a 4-year-old boy was admitted into the ICU to be treated for fentanyl ingestion. Police confirm that his mom, Taneara Green, had found him unresponsive at their home on Smithton Avenue in the Marshall-Shadeland neighborhood of Pittsburgh around 11:30 a.m. Detectives said Green told them that she took fentanyl pills almost every morning. Detectives confirmed they searched the home, and in the bedroom upstairs, they found a kid’s shoe with a sock inside of it and in the sock, police note they found multiple stamp bags of heroin. Green has charges of endangering the welfare of children and aggravated assault. 

Couple from Aliquippa accused of kidnapping woman and taking her as far as a Pittsburgh neighborhood faces hearing

(File photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) A couple from Aliquippa faced a judge for the first time yesterday at a hearing after they were accused of threatening a woman with a gun, kidnapping her, and taking her as far as the Allentown neighborhood of Pittsburgh. The incident started in Aliquippa on November 17th2025 and the suspects who were taken into custody were Tyrone Turner and his girlfriend, Ariel Harper. The woman who was kidnapped testified at the hearing and she stated she was work-friends with Harper and had asked if she could come over and do laundry instead of going to the laundromat. After that, the couple picked her up, but an argument about money ensued in the car and when they went to the apartment of Harper, the female victim also testified that Turner pointeda gun at her. The woman fought with Harper over her purse and phone, saying Harper took both in the car and Turner dangled the purse out the window and threatened to drop it. The woman also said that Turner threatened that he was going to have her raped and murdered, but she then jumped out of the car at a red light in Beechview after she noticed she saw signs for Pittsburgh and ran to an antique store before calling 911.Harper and Turner had several charges like robbery and conspiracy dropped by a judge to commit robbery charges from the duoafter defense attorneys made an argument that they did not rob or try to rob the victim. The judge kept the kidnapping charges for a trial for Harper and Turner and January of 2026 is when they are due back in court.

Afghan national in custody after shooting of 2 National Guard members near White House

(File Photo: Source for Photo: National Guard patrol on the National Mall near the U.S. Capitol, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)

WASHINGTON (AP) — An Afghan national has been accused of shooting two West Virginia National Guard members just blocks from the White House in a brazen act of violence at a time when the presence of troops in the nation’s capital and other cities around the country has become a political flashpoint.

FBI Director Kash Patel and Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said the guard members were hospitalized in critical condition after Wednesday afternoon’s shooting. West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey had walked back his statement Wednesday announcing the troops had died, saying he received “conflicting reports” about their condition.

The rare shooting of National Guard members on American soil, on the day before Thanksgiving, comes amid court fights and a broader public policy debate about the Trump administration’s use of the military to combat what officials cast as an out-of-control crime problem.

The Trump administration quickly ordered 500 more National Guard members to Washington.

The suspect who was in custody also was shot and had wounds that were not believed to be life-threatening, according to a law enforcement official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

The 29-year-old suspect, an Afghan national, entered the U.S. in 2021 through Operation Allies Welcome, a Biden administration program that evacuated and resettled tens of thousands of Afghans after the U.S. withdrawal from the country, officials said.

The initiative brought roughly 76,000 people to the U.S., many of whom had worked alongside U.S. troops and diplomats as interpreters and translators. It has since faced intense scrutiny from Trump and his allies, congressional Republicans and some government watchdogs over gaps in the vetting process and the speed of admissions, even as advocates say it offered a lifeline to people at risk of Taliban reprisals.

The suspect, who has been living in Washington state, has been identified by law enforcement officials as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, but authorities were still working to fully confirm his background, two law enforcement officials and a person familiar with the matter said. The people could not discuss details of an ongoing investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Lakamal arrived in Bellingham, Washington, about 79 miles (127 kilometers) north of Seattle, with his wife and five children, said his former landlord Kristina Widman.

Wednesday night, in a video message released on social media, President Donald Trump called for the reinvestigation of all Afghan refugees who entered under the Biden administration.

“If they can’t love our country, we don’t want them,” he said, adding that the shooting was “a crime against our entire nation.”

Jeffery Carroll, an executive assistant D.C. police chief, said investigators had no information on a motive. He said the assailant “came around the corner” and immediately started firing at the troops, citing video reviewed by investigators.

“This was a targeted shooting,” Bowser said.

Troops held down the shooter

The shooting happened roughly two blocks northwest of the White House near a metro station. Hearing gunfire, other troops in the area ran over and held down the gunman after he was shot, Carroll said.

“It appears to be a lone gunman that raised a firearm and ambushed these members of the National Guard,” Carroll said, adding that it was not clear whether one of the guard members or a law enforcement officer shot the suspect.

“At this point we have no other suspects,” Carroll said at a news conference.

At least one of the guard members exchanged gunfire with the shooter, said another law enforcement official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Social media video shared in the immediate aftermath showed first responders performing CPR on one of the troops and treating the other on a sidewalk covered in broken glass.

Witnesses saw people fleeing

Michael Ryan was just across the street when he heard loud bangs and started running with others. When he later came back, he told AP he saw a person pinned to the ground as people shouted “stay down,” and, nearby, National Guard troops hugged each other.

“It’s just a terrible situation to see,” Ryan said.

Emma McDonald, who exited a metro station just after the shots were fired, said she and a friend sought safety with others in a cafe. McDonald told AP that minutes later she saw first responders rolling a stretcher carrying a National Guard member whose head was covered in blood.

Police tape cordoned off the scene, and fire and police vehicle lights flashed and helicopter blades thudded overhead. Agents from the Secret Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were there, and National Guard troops stood sentry nearby. At least one helicopter landed on the National Mall.

“I think it’s a somber reminder that soldiers, whether they’re active duty, reserve or National Guard, our soldiers are the sword and the shield of the United States of America,” Vice President JD Vance said in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where he delivered a Thanksgiving message to troops.

Gen. Steven Nordhaus, chief of the National Guard Bureau, scrapped plans to spend the holiday with troops at Guantanamo Bay in order to travel to D.C. and be with guard members there instead.

Army Secretary Dan Driscoll said on social media that he visited the wounded National Guard members in the hospital and that his “heart breaks for them.”

Troops deployed to DC under emergency order

Trump issued an emergency order in August that federalized the local police force and sent in National Guard troops from eight states and the District of Columbia. The order expired a month later, but the troops remained.

Nearly 2,200 troops currently are assigned to the joint task force operating in the city, according to the government’s latest update.

Last week a federal judge ordered an end to the deployment, but she also put her order on hold for 21 days to allow the administration time to either remove the troops or appeal.

The guard members have patrolled neighborhoods, train stations and other locations, participated in highway checkpoints and been assigned to pick up trash and guard sports events.

More than 300 West Virginia National Guard members were deployed in August. About 160 of them volunteered last week to extend their deployment until the end of the year, while the others returned home just over a week ago.