Delaware
Delaware City Refinery equipment repaired, in operation, after almost 3 weeks

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A mechanical failure at the Delaware City Refinery that caused releases of sulfur dioxide above permitted levels has been repaired, facility managers announced Thursday.
The refinery, located in New Castle County, had reported emissions of the toxic gas at rates as high as 1,450 per hour for almost three weeks after an emission control device was compromised. The refinery’s boiler is now in full operation, the refinery said.
“A talented team of experts from maintenance, operations, and union contractors worked around the clock to expedite the equipment repair, which was extremely complicated and safely completed,” General Manager Mike Capone said Thursday in a statement.
The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control said air quality monitoring indicated the pollution did not impact air quality, or public health.

Delaware
A party in the making for 250 years: how to celebrate the nation’s semiquincentennial in Delaware

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Delaware
2 women wanted after robbing Del. store, spraying employee with chemical

Police in Delaware are searching for two women who are accused of stealing from a Target store in Wilmington and spray an employee as well as other customers with a chemical spray.
The incident unfolded just after 6 p.m. on Monday, July 7 at the Target store at the Brandywine Town Center on the 1000 block of Brandywine Parkway in Wilmington, officials said.
A Target employee tried to stop two women from leaving the store with items that they allegedly did not pay for, police said.
One of the women is accused of then spraying the employee with a chemical spray that also hit two shoppers, according to police.
Investigators said that the two suspects ran from the store and fled from the area with the stolen items in a grey-colored Honda Odyssey. They were last seen where dark-colored clothing.
The employee and the two customers who were hit with the chemical spray were treated by emergency responders at the scene.
If you have any information, please contact Detective D. Patterson at 302-365-8404.
You can also contact the Delaware State Police through Facebook or the Delaware Crime Stoppers at 1-800-847-3333.
Delaware
Delaware lawmakers vote to remove death penalty from state Constitution

State Sen. Brian Pettyjohn, R-Georgetown, said his constituents were still scarred by the 2009 murder of local police officer Chad Spicer. Defendant Derrick Powell, who had been sentenced to death for the killing, was resentenced to life in prison.
“Our community, by and large, wanted that person put to death because of what they took from our town, what they took from his family, one of which is upstairs right now,” Pettyjohn said. “So when you speak about being on the right side, the right side is for accountability. The right side is to ensure that that individual does not commit another murder again.”
Legislation signed into law last year by then-Gov. John Carney eliminated the death penalty and instructed that any adult convicted of first–degree murder was to be sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. But future General Assemblies could pass legislation reviving the practice. A constitutional amendment would prohibit its use.
Chief Public Defender Kevin O’Connell, who opposes the death penalty, said a firewall is needed because the state has a long history of ending and then reviving the death penalty, dating back to 1958. He also said Delaware’s historical use of capital punishment has been racially discriminatory.
“For a long time in Delaware and in other states, it was Black people who are most deserving of the death penalty, and Black people who kill white people are most deserving of the death penalty,” he said. “It’s not so much about whether or not some people may deserve to die. It’s whether or not we deserve to kill and whether or not we can set up a system that is truly fair in determining who those people are.”
A constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber in two consecutive General Assemblies. It does not require the governor’s signature. The next time it could come up for a vote is after a new General Assembly is elected in November 2026.
This story was supported by a statehouse coverage grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
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