Pennsylvania
Teen, 15, arrested in shooting injuring 3 at western Pennsylvania amusement park
WEST MIFFLIN, Pa. (AP) — A 15-year-old has been arrested in final month’s capturing at a western Pennsylvania amusement park that wounded three folks, together with two youngsters.
Allegheny County and West Mifflin police mentioned final week that {the teenager} is being charged as an grownup with aggravated assault, reckless endangering and firearms crimes within the Sept. 24 gunfire at Kennywood Park on the opening evening of the park’s Phantom Fall Fest.
Park officers mentioned the late Saturday evening capturing adopted an altercation between two teams of youngsters close to the Musik Categorical trip on the park in West Mifflin, southeast of Pittsburgh. A 39-year-old man and two 15-year-old boys had been taken to hospitals with leg wounds, authorities mentioned.
Investigators mentioned final week that proof recovered on the scene indicated that there have been two weapons fired, one among them by {the teenager} arrested. He himself was additionally grazed on the thigh by a bullet, and authorities are looking for a second suspect, which Christopher Kearns, the county police superintendent, mentioned is “almost definitely” a juvenile.
Kennywood closed for the day after the capturing and introduced new safety measures together with extra police, extra safety alongside perimeter fences, limits on bag sizes and masks masking faces and requiring grownup chaperones for all juveniles always through the Fall Fest, scheduled to run till mid-October.
Kearns mentioned it stays unclear how the weapons received into the park, and investigators are nonetheless trying on the chance that the weapons had been tossed over the park fence or carried by somebody leaping the fence. Officers mentioned they’re slicing down timber alongside the perimeter fence to enhance visibility and putting in new floodlights and safety cameras to fully cowl the fence line. Additionally they vowed to “considerably” enhance safety patrols.
Authorities mentioned they consider the gunfire stemmed from a feud between two teams of youngsters that has led to scores of shootings in a number of Mon Valley communities. Victor Joseph, county police assistant superintendent, cited 55 calls for photographs fired in Duquesne and Homestead, the communities of the rival teams.
“Everyone knows that this can be a significant issue,” Joseph mentioned. “The individuals who reside in these communities understand how severe it’s. Individuals who have misplaced family members as a consequence of gun violence and incarceration understand how devastating it’s.”
Pennsylvania
Model Dayle Haddon dies after suspected carbon monoxide leak in Pennsylvania home
Model, actress and humanitarian Dayle Haddon died Friday after what police believe was a carbon monoxide leak at a Bucks County, Pennsylvania, home.
Police from Solebury Township in Bucks County, which is in the Philadelphia metropolitan area, began investigating a property at 6:30 a.m. Friday, after a resident called 911 to report a 76-year-old man was lying down, passed out on the first floor of a detached “in-law” suite.
The man was taken to Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, New Jersey, according to the police report. His condition was not immediately available. A second victim, a 76-year-old woman, was found dead in the detached suite’s second-floor bedroom.
Eliot Gross, the deputy coroner of Bucks County, confirmed to USA TODAY that the female victim was Haddon. Toxicology reports to determine the cause of death are expected on Saturday, according to Gross.
Volunteer firefighters on the scene detected a “high level of carbon monoxide” in the property, according to the police report. Two medics were transferred to the hospital for carbon monoxide exposure, and one was treated on the scene.
CBS News reported that the home is owned by Haddon’s daughter, former journalist Ryan Haddon, and Ryan’s husband, the actor Marc Blucas.
The Canadian-born Haddon was one of the top models in the 1970s, posing on the cover of the 1973 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue. Haddon starred in the 1973 Disney movie “The World’s Greatest Athlete” and in Hollywood films such as 1979’s football satire “North Dallas Forty” along with Nick Nolte.
Haddon worked as L’Oréal spokesperson and was the author of “Ageless Beauty: A Woman’s Guide to Lifelong Beauty and Well-Being.”
Haddon traveled the world as an ambassador for the humanitarian aid organization UNICEF. She is also the founder of WomenOne, a charity focused on creating educational opportunities for girls and women, according to her website.
Pennsylvania
BioNTech settles with U.S. agency, University of Pennsylvania over Covid vaccine royalties
Vials containing the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) are displayed before being used at a mobile vaccine clinic, in Valparaiso, Chile, January 3, 2022.
Rodrigo Garrido | Reuters
BioNTech has entered into two separate settlement agreements with the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the University of Pennsylvania over the payment of royalties related to its COVID-19 vaccine, the company said in filings.
The German company, which partners with U.S. drugmaker Pfizer for its COVID-19 vaccine, said on Friday it would pay $791.5 million to the U.S. agency to resolve a default notice.
Separately, the company will pay $467 million to the University of Pennsylvania (Penn), which has agreed to dismiss a lawsuit brought against the vaccine maker accusing it of underpaying royalties.
BioNTech said partner Pfizer will reimburse it for up to $170 million of the royalties payable to Penn and $364.5 million of the royalties paid to the National Institutes of Health (NIH)for 2020-2023 vaccine sales.
NIH and Penn did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The U.S. government is owed royalty payments under the terms of the license BioNTech has taken for certain patents owned by the NIH, among other entities.
Penn’s lawsuit had said BioNTech owes the school a greater share of its worldwide vaccine sales for using “foundational” messenger RNA (mRNA) inventions developed by Penn professors and Nobel Prize winners Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman.
The company also amended its license agreements with both NIH and Penn, agreeing to pay a low single-digit percentage of its vaccine net sales to both the entities.
Both settlements include a framework for a license to use NIH and Penn’s patents in combination products.
The agreements do not constitute an admission of liability in either case, the company said.
Pennsylvania
5 injured, several families displaced after rowhome fire in Allentown, Pennsylvania
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