Delaware
2 Wanted On Murder Charges in Delaware County: Authorities
DELAWARE COUNTY, PA — Murder and related charges have been filed against two men who are at large after an October 2023 shooting incident in Delaware County, according to court records and Pennsylvania State Police. Cash rewards of $2,000 are being offered for information leading to their capture, authorities said.
Naere Shamir Alexander-Thorpe, 25, of Upland, and Jamade I. McMillian, 24, of Aston, are wanted in connection with an October 21, 2023, shooting incident on Interstate 95 north in Chester, authorities said. The Delaware County Daily Times reports a 41-year-old Brookhaven man was killed on Oct. 7, 2023 in a shooting on Interstate 95. A 42-year-old Chester man was also hurt in that shooting.
According to court documents, Alexander-Thorpe and McMillian have been charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault, and firearm crimes. Court documents list the incident date as Oct. 21, 2023. There is no mention of the Oct. 7, 2023 incident in court filings for both men.
Find out what’s happening in Mediawith free, real-time updates from Patch.
The Oct. 21, 2023 shooting occurred at about 4:10 p.m. on I-95 north near Exit 3 for Highland Avenue, injuring one person.
Police said Alexander-Thorpe is 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs 165 pounds. He has brown eyes and black hair, and was last seen with ear length dreads.
Find out what’s happening in Mediawith free, real-time updates from Patch.
McMillian is 6 feet, 4 inches tall and weighs 200 pounds, police said. He has brown eyes and black hair and was last seen with a close hair cut, nearly bald.
Authorities said both men have connections to Delaware County, Delaware state, and surrounding states.
A third man, Taveres Cooper, 25, of Chester, is already in custody on the same charges in connection with the shooting, according to court records and Pennsylvania State Police.
Anyone with information on their whereabouts is urged to call Pennsylvania State Police in Media at 610-558-7096 or the U.S. Marshals Service at 866-492-6833.
Tips can also be submitted anonymously through Pennsylvania Crime Stoppers by calling at 1-800-472-8477 or online here. All callers to Pennsylvania Crime Stoppers remain anonymous and could be eligible for a $2,000 cash reward for information that leads to an arrest or the location of a wanted person/fugitive.
Patch has reached out to Pennsylvania State Police for clarification on the charges against both men, and will update the story when additional details are made available.
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To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.
Delaware
Delaware’s proposal to raise tobacco taxes could hurt low-income residents
Excise taxes versus other types of taxes
Adam Hoffer is director of excise tax policy at the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan tax policy nonprofit organization.
He said excise taxes are different from broad funding sources like income taxes, sales taxes and property taxes, because they are specialty charges put on a targeted set of goods.
Tobacco, alcohol and fuel have been historically known as the “big three” excise taxes, but it has widened over recent years to include recreational marijuana products and sports betting.
Hoffer and other tax policy experts say one of the concerns with states relying on excise taxes is that they generate the most amount of money from the people who can least afford it.
“Almost all products that receive an excise tax are more heavily consumed by lower-income Americans,” he said. “So when we tax them, those taxes are regressive.”
Aleks Casper, director of advocacy for the American Lung Association, said they endorse states using tax increases for so-called “sin” products like tobacco, in the hopes it will drive people to change their behavior. She said they are not concerned that the price increase would hit lower-income Delawareans.
“If you look at the history of where tobacco and tobacco companies have historically marketed and targeted, it is many times those low-income communities that already suffered disproportionately from smoking-caused disease, disability and death,” she said.
She said her organization is focused on public health benefits, not on the possible revenue generating aspect of raising tobacco costs. Meyer said on WHYY’s and Delaware Public Media’s “Ask Governor Meyer” call-in show last week that he believes the state would save money if higher prices cause fewer people to smoke.
“The more people that use tobacco, the worse it is for our health care system and it increases the cost of health care,” he said.
But Hoffer said he doesn’t believe using regressive taxation to force behavior change is effective.
“If you’re trying to improve the lives, especially of lower-income households, then regressive taxes, by their definition, make that really hard to accomplish,” he said. “Because you’re going to make a lot of those households worse off because you’re taxing them more heavily.”
Hoffer said tobacco tax revenue can also be unreliable to fund an entire state government because the number of smokers in Delaware and across the U.S. has been dwindling for the past several years.
“Over the past 60 years, we’ve seen fewer people smoke each and every year,” Hoffer said. “This is an overwhelming win for public health and [the] health of American consumers, but as states have become more and more reliant on cigarette tax revenue, then they start facing bigger and bigger challenges, because it’s a shrinking tax base.”
In fiscal year 2025, Delaware collected $87.5 million in cigarette taxes, compared with $92.4 million in fiscal 24.
Last year, Meyer proposed making the state’s income tax brackets more progressive by making people earning more than $600,000 a year pay a higher rate than someone making $60,000. But legislation attempting to do that failed to garner the necessary political support in the General Assembly.
Delaware
Ex-husband of Jill Biden charged with murder in Delaware death of current wife
Delaware
Special education students serve smiles at school cafe in Delaware
WILMINGTON, Delaware (WPVI) — When the lunch bell rings, it’s time for special education students to shine. It all happens in a school cafe where inclusion is the top item on the menu.
Thomas McKean High School, which has a large population of special education students, has various avenues for collaboration with regular education peers. The Unified Sports program and video game club are two examples.
Three years ago, the school launched the ‘Brew and Bake Cafe.’ There, special education students and their peers in student government work together behind the counter.
Fellow students serve as real customers, ordering snacks and drinks in between classes.
It provides job skills, communication skills, and a chance for friendships to form.
Watch the video above to see the students in action.
Wilmington man turns life around with help from St. Patrick’s Center
Marc Palmer knows what it’s like to be on both sides of the table when he helps distribute food at St. Patrick’s Center in Wilmington, Delaware.
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