Delaware
Friends, family honor 17-year-old killed in Delaware County crash with vigil
RIDLEY TOWNSHIP, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — A Delaware County community came together on Saturday night to honor the life of a local teen who was killed in a car crash earlier this week.
In just 17 years, Damien Hocker left a lifelong impact in Ridley Township and beyond, especially on his friends.
“He was a great person,” said Patience Dorell. “Always brought light to every situation.”
17-year-old Damien Hocker
“Damien was a very sweet, kind, loving person,” added Kyla Banks. “He was always there for everybody at the hardest times.”
Hocker was walking home from the gym Tuesday night when police said he was struck and killed by a vehicle on West MacDade Boulevard and Fairview Road in Ridley Township.
Witnesses said the driver initially left the scene but returned shortly after. Police said the driver was interviewed and later released.
Pedestrian injured after being hit by car in Ridley Township, Delaware County
Friends and family shared endless memories of Hocker through tears and some laughter at a candlelight vigil at Ridley Park Lake Saturday night.
“He was loving, caring,” said Hocker’s brother, Bryant Colp. “Whenever he loved something, he wouldn’t let go of it.”
Colp said his brother had a passion for music and fitness.
Friends recalled how heartbroken they were upon hearing that Hocker was killed.
“I just dropped on the floor and I just bawled,” said Dorell. “I don’t think I’ve ever hurt so much in my life.”
In light of the immense tragedy, Hocker’s family says they have been supported by the tight-knit community.
“Our house hasn’t been quiet once,” said Colp. “We’ve had people in and out, and I think that’s helped.”
As well as finding strength in these moments, loved ones stood together and supported each other as they honored their beloved Hocker.
Vigil held for Damien Hocker in Ridley Township, Delaware County
“Everyone’s staying strong for him, and we’ll always remember him for the kind and courageous person he was,” said Kyle Luner.
“I hope he’s looking down and watching us gather to be here for him,” said Banks.
Hocker also saved several lives as an organ donor when he died, officials say.
As of Saturday night, it is unclear if the driver in this incident has been charged. Anyone with information on the crash should contact the police.
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Delaware
AIG Unit Sued Over Coverage for Delaware Plant Mercury Cases
An
Environmental Resource Holdings LLC, the successor to Occidental through a merger, should be covered under liability policies that AIG’s National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh, PA, issued to a contractor that worked at the facility, according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in the US District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana.
The lawsuit centers on agreements from 1989 and 1991 that required the contractor, …
Delaware
Delaware holds off Louisiana for 68 Ventures Bowl win in first season of FBS play
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — Jo Silver ran for 116 yards, including a 61-yard touchdown, and Delaware wrapped up its first year in the FBS with a 20-13 victory over Louisiana in the 68 Ventures Bowl on Wednesday night.
The Fightin’ Blue Hens, who went 6-6 in their first year of FBS play, were granted a waiver to play in a bowl game after there were not enough six-win teams to fill all 42 of the FBS bowl games. In general, first-year FBS teams are not chosen for bowl games during their transition period. Wednesday’s victory makes Delaware 7-6 overall.
The Blue Hens had to defend two passes into their own end zone in the final seconds to preserve the win. The Ragin’ Cajuns had the ball on their own 7-yard line with 1:41 remaining. Lunch Winfield led a drive that included a 32-yard completion to Charles Robertson and a pass interference penalty on Delaware.
After Louisiana (6-7) reached the 8-yard line, Winfield ran for 1 yard on first down and threw incomplete on second down. On third down with two seconds left, Blake Matthews broke up a pass in the end zone.
Silver’s long touchdown gave Delaware a 7-0 lead late in the first quarter and the Blue Hens went on to lead 10-3 at halftime. Nick Minicucci’s 35-yard touchdown pass to Sean Wilson made it 17-3 early in the third quarter and a field goal made it 20-3 midway through the third quarter.
Louisiana kicked a field goal to make it 20-6 heading to the fourth and Winfield added an 8-yard touchdown pass to Shelton Sampson Jr. to make it 20-13 with eight minutes left.
Minicucci passed for 176 yards and Winfield had 231 yards.
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The Associated Press
Delaware
Delaware replaces Trump’s U.S. attorney without legal drama seen in Jersey, Virginia
Sens. Coons, Blunt Rochester deemed Murray unqualified
Murray also acknowledged that she could not have obtained the post by the process outlined in the U.S. Constitution, in which a president makes a formal nomination and U.S. Senate confirmation is required.
That’s because part of that process is a longstanding tradition that requires the nominee to receive so-called “blue slip” endorsements by their state’s two U.S. senators.
Delaware’s two U.S. senators, Chris Coons and Lisa Blunt Rochester, are Democrats who interviewed Murray for the post. Coons said the duo decided Murray, who has done criminal defense work, didn’t have the prosecutorial experience to qualify as the state’s chief federal law enforcement official.
Although Murray accused the senators of playing politics with her unconventional appointment, Coons and Blunt Rochester disagreed.
“Any suggestion of political partiality throughout this process is misleading and blatantly false, said Taj Magruder, a spokesman for Blunt Rochester.
Coons, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee that considers nominees before they are considered by the full Senate, told WHYY News last month that Murray’s acting status was “probably illegal.”
After Colm Connolly, Delaware’s chief federal judge, issued the order naming Wallace, Coons said he’s pleased the judges exercised their lawful “power to appoint a U.S. attorney in the absence of a presidential nomination.”
Coons said he’s also relieved that the transition occurred without the rancor seen in New Jersey and the Eastern District of Virginia.
In Virginia, former Trump insurance lawyer Lindsay Halligan was ruled ineligible by a federal judge in her district because Bondi named her interim boss after the 120-day period to do so under federal law had expired.
Perhaps more importantly, the indictments Halligan obtained days after taking office against former FBI director James Comey and New York Attorney General Latisha James were dismissed. Bondi has pledged to appeal but has not yet done so.
Though Habba resigned after the adverse ruling in New Jersey, Halligan remains in her post in Virginia.
Other end-around maneuvers by Trump and Bondi have been deemed unlawful in Nevada, New Mexico and California, but those three remain under appeal.
“I’m just glad that we’ve avoided that level of drama here and that in Ben Wallace, we’ve got a court-appointed U.S. attorney who can keep the office moving forward in a constructive way,” Coons said.
Besides handling major crimes, “the district of Delaware handles some of our country’s most important patent litigation, corporate litigation, bankruptcy litigation,” Coons said.
“So it’s important for Delawareans and our constituents that we have a well-managed, disciplined, appropriate respect for the rule of law in how the federal courts here are handled and how the U.S. attorney’s office is led. And I’m relieved that we seem to have a path forward here that is appropriate.”
Law prof says Judge Connolly ‘navigated it as best he could’
Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond who tracks appointments of U.S. attorneys and federal judges, praised Connolly, a Republican and former U.S. attorney for Delaware, for his deft handling of the potentially volatile situation.
“He navigated it as best he could. He didn’t provoke a confrontation,” Tobias said of Connolly, who Trump appointed as a judge during his first presidential term, with the Senate’s approval. “And he deserves a lot of credit for keeping the courts moving.”
Prior to Friday’s order, Connolly had publicly sought applications for the post, writing that “the court would only appoint a person the court deems qualified for the position.”
That clearly wasn’t Murray. In his previous order in November, Connolly wrote that judges had decided not to name anyone to the post after Murray’s interim status expired Nov. 12.
That prompted Bondi to name her “acting” U.S. attorney and led U.S. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, himself a former Trump personal attorney, to publicly rebuke Connolly on social media.
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