Pennsylvania
Pride on Passyunk | Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Man pleads guilty to stabbing wife to death inside Pennsylvania home
Warning: The details of this story are graphic and could be disturbing for some readers.
A Pennsylvania man pleaded guilty to stabbing his wife to death, officials announced on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, March 11, 2025, around 8:30 a.m., Bethlehem Township Police responded to a home on the 2100 block of 3rd Street in Easton, Pennsylvania, for a welfare check. A family member had told police they were concerned about the wellbeing of the people inside the house.
If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline by calling 1-800-799-SAFE (7233), visiting www.thehotline.org or texting LOVEIS to 22522.
The responding officers banged on the doors and windows, announcing their presence but no one answered. They then used a ladder to enter a second-floor window and were met by 58-year-old James Christopher Frank.
After opening the door for the officers, Frank led them into a bedroom and told them, “My wife is dead in the bathtub.” The officers entered the bathroom and found the body of Frank’s wife, 55-year-old Deborah Denise Glaser, in the tub. Glaser was facedown in the tub with multiple puncture wounds while her shirt was soaked in blood.
The officers also found knives, razor blades, box cutters and a mallet inside the bathroom.
Frank admitted to police that he cut his wife’s throat with a steak knife. He then told police he punctured his wife’s chest and heart with a knife and hammer around 10 times to make sure she was dead. He was then arrested and charged.
On Wednesday, June 10, 2026, Frank entered a guilty plea to the charge of first-degree murder. The mandatory sentence is life in prison. He is scheduled for sentencing on June 17, 2026.
Pennsylvania
Smart Glasses in Pennsylvania May Soon Legally Require a Visible Recording Light
Lawmakers in Pennsylvania are pushing for legislation that would require devices like smart glasses to visually indicate when they’re recording.
Joe Ciresi, a Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and majority chair of the House Communications and Technology Committee, introduced a bill (known as House Bill 2603) that would require smart glasses manufactured, sold, and used in Pennsylvania to have a visual indicator when the device is recording audio or video.
According to a report by local news outlet abc27 News, Ciresi describes the bill’s provisions as “common-sense privacy safeguards for smart glasses to help protect Pennsylvanians from potential misuse of this emerging technology.”
There is currently no nationwide law in the U.S. requiring smart glasses to display a light or other indicator while recording. The proposed measure would affect only recording devices used in Pennsylvania.
House Bill 2603 would also require retailers to clearly inform users of Pennsylvania’s existing recording laws and to prevent users from disabling any visual indicator that shows the device is recording.
“Smart glasses are an innovative technological advancement, but their design also allows them to easily record or stream without anyone noticing,” Ciresi says. “Considering the implications this has for individual privacy and surveillance, we must take thoughtful, proactive steps to address those risks.”
Smart glasses have one obvious privacy concern: people can record others clandestinely. Most smart glasses currently on the market — including Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses — have indicator lights designed to show people nearby when a user is recording video or taking photos. However, there is currently no U.S.-wide requirement for manufacturers to include such features in devices. This newly introduced bill in Pennsylvania could change that by requiring smart glasses sold or used in the state to clearly show when audio or video recording is taking place.
Nonetheless, although Ray-Ban smart glasses show a blinking red light when recording, many people who are filmed for social media attention or otherwise say they do not realize they are being recorded.
Meta has also faced controversy over the company’s reported plans to introduce facial recognition technology into its Ray-Ban smart glasses, with a feature internally known as “Name Tag.” The news outlet WIRED discovered dormant code for the facial recognition system in Meta’s companion app for its line of Ray-Ban smart glasses, leading the company to quietly delete the software a day later.
Image credits: Header photo licensed via Depositphotos.
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Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania volunteer firefighter allegedly set fires, then helped extinguish them
FILE – Mug shot of Justin Sholly. (Montgomery County Office of the District Attorney)
A former volunteer firefighter in Pennsylvania has been arrested after he allegedly set multiple fires and then responded to the scene with the fire department to help extinguish them.
Justin Sholly, 29, was a member of the Perseverance Volunteer Fire Company in Souderton. He has since been terminated, according to a statement shared on the fire agency’s Facebook account.
What they’re saying:
“We want to assure the community that this incident does not represent the character or integrity of our dedicated volunteers. Our emergency response services remain fully operational, and our commitment to serving the public remains steadfast,” a statement on the agency’s Facebook page read.
Dig deeper:
Sholly is accused of setting a series of fires between May 29, 2026, and May 30, 2026.
Using license plate reader records and surveillance footage, investigators were able to spot Sholly’s vehicle near each fire incident before the blazes began.
Timeline:
Firefighters were first dispatched to a pile of wood logs that were set on fire on the side of a roadway on the afternoon of Friday, May 29, according to a criminal complaint filed on May 31, 2026.
Sholly allegedly admitted that he knew that a former employer who fired him in 2025 lived nearby before lighting the blaze.
A few hours later and into Saturday morning, crews responded to a massive barn fire which began after Sholly allegedly stuffed a fire starter log in a bag of trash before placing it against the barn.
The fire eventually spread to three vehicles, a shed, an outhouse and a gazebo, causing major damage.
A home nearby the blaze had eight people inside. Sholly admitted he was aware of the occupants but proceeded to light the fire anyway, the complaint read.
Investigators later searched Sholly’s car and garage and found multiple fire logs, lighter fluid, a lighter and a box containing fire-starting materials.
Sholly has been charged with multiple offenses, including arson, endangering property, reckless burning, possession of incendiary material and recklessly endangering another person.
The Source: Information for this article was taken from a criminal complaint filed on May 31, 2026, in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, and Facebook posts published by the Perseverance Volunteer Fire Company. This story was reported from San Jose.
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