Delaware
I am Delaware’s new video guy, and you’ll probably see me everywhere
See where the Wreaths Across America convoy drove by in Delaware
Community members in Claymont line the streets to watch Wreaths Across America drive by on their way to Arlington National Cemetery, Dec. 11, 2025.
I’ve always had a passion for creating videos.
It started when I wrote crime dramas in sixth grade, filmed on an iPod touch and edited in iMovie.
I’ve been telling stories most of my life.
I was excited to turn this passion into a career, and that passion brought me to York College of Pennsylvania, where I had little-to-no idea what to study. However, volunteering to cover the club ice hockey team in my free time sparked an interest in storytelling that I haven’t been able to shake.
At first, I loved the idea of creating fast-paced hype videos mixed with rap music and showing every big hockey hit I could find. But it became deeper than that.
When I was pulled aside by a parent in the middle of filming a game, she told me that she showed her family my most recent video. I figured there were some complaints coming my way, but instead she said that her family couldn’t travel to the games, and being able to see my creation made them feel like they were there. That’s when it clicked.
Having the opportunity to reach such a broad audience and bring them to games or events through what I created was powerful, and the most rewarding part of what I do.
I never pictured a career in journalism. I always envisioned myself behind a camera and behind the scenes. After landing my first videographer job at a Central Pennsylvania news station, it quickly became clear that every position in this industry contributes to telling the story.
Over those three years, I covered anything from parades and farm shows to elections and rallies. Through my camera lens, I was able to visually tell every story I was present for and bring people to these events even if they weren’t physically there.
Along with that, I learned how much I love interacting with the community, and how important my platform is.
My first week after joining Delaware Online/The News Journal as the newest videographer brought me to Philadelphia. I was at the U.S. Mint covering the last penny ever being produced. As I entered the doors to the press conference, I was overwhelmed by the number of news outlets in attendance. We were all circling around this tiny little penny sitting in a giant machine, and I’m holding my camera as far as my arms could reach above my head, just hoping to get something usable. I’ve been in media scrums before, but nothing like that, and as I reflect on that first story, all I can think about is how fulfilling it is to be the person in the middle of that pile representing Delaware.
As I begin my next chapter at Delaware Online/The News Journal, I’m truly excited to start telling the best stories of the First State.
So far, I’ve covered lots of community events and I’ve done some business spotlights. Oh, and I’ve also been talking with tailgaters before Eagles games outside of The Linc, which has been nothing short of entertaining.
You might be thinking that’s a very broad range of stories, but there are hardly any limits to what I will cover. I’m eager to help people tell their stories and capture the best moments that Delaware has to offer.
I’m sure you’ll be seeing me around the state from now on, so never be afraid to say hi, and always feel free to reach out to me with any story or spotlight ideas.
You can reach me at jjohnson@delawareonline.com or 302-324-2276.
Inside the Newsroom
Inside the Newsroom is an opportunity for our news team to share a look behind the scenes of how we do our jobs and live our lives.
Delaware
Federal judge says Delaware labor officials must give data to ICE
What to know about jury duty in Delaware
Here are some tips and information about what to do when you receive a jury summons in the mail in Delaware.
A federal judge in Wilmington has ordered the Delaware Department of Labor to hand over confidential state employer data to Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigators.
On April 13, U.S. District Judge Colm Connolly ordered Delaware labor officials to comply with a federal immigration subpoena they had “ignored,” writing that the state lacked legal grounds to resist it and that its political arguments were “wholly inappropriate.”
The subpoena seeks wage reports and employee rosters containing confidential employee information for 15 businesses and sought by ICE investigators as part of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda.
Attorneys representing the state’s Department of Labor justified their noncompliance by arguing that local and federal regulators give state officials the authority to refuse federal investigators’ requests. They warned that allowing ICE to access employer data would discourage reporting and weaken the unemployment insurance program.
Local federal attorneys representing ICE argued the department is legally required to hand over the data targeting businesses that tip-line reports put under suspicion of employing undocumented individuals. In court filings, they said the state’s refusal to comply amounts to a legally unsound disagreement with federal immigration policy.
The arguments: Federal judge questions Delaware’s attempt to sidestep ICE subpoena
The contested subpoena was the last in a series that went unanswered by state labor officials during the first quarter of 2025. The subpoenas themselves are not legally confidential. However, Connolly, the presiding judge, sealed the final subpoena – the one at issue in the case – after federal officials sued the state to force compliance.
The state has produced redacted copies of some of the initial subpoenas to Delaware Online/The News Journal via a Freedom of Information Act request. Those early subpoenas targeted a Perdue facility in Seaford as well as a fencing company and a Mexican restaurant in northern New Castle County.
The final subpoena seeks data on the employees of 15 state businesses for the final two quarters of 2024 and is the subject of the current court wrangling. Connolly also denied the state’s argument that the document be unsealed so the businesses could exercise a right to fight the subpoena in court.
Breaking down the ruling
In assessing whether to enforce the subpoena, Connolly said the threshold question was whether it served a legitimate purpose, sought relevant information, and was not “unduly broad or burdensome.”
Connolly wrote that the investigation pertained to businesses suspected of employing undocumented people, which is in the scope of the agency that issued the subpoena, that the information sought is relevant to that inquiry and that it would not be “unduly burdensome” for the state to copy the 30 records sought by the subpoenas.
Connolly, who is the court’s chief judge and was appointed by President Donald Trump in 2018, also shot holes in what he described as the state’s “novel theory” that production of such records would endanger the state’s unemployment insurance program.
“I am neither willing nor able to adopt DDOL’s cynical view of the State’s employers,” Connolly wrote.
Editor’s note: The judge’s ruling can be read at the end of this article.
Having decided that, he turned to the question of whether the Department of Labor had proved the enforcement of the subpoenas would “undermine the integrity of the judicial process.”
The state argued that enforcement of the subpoena would step on confidentiality regulations in the state’s statue and that the subpoena flows from an “improper purpose” described as an “intense agenda of immigration enforcement.”
Prior coverage: Delaware to fight ICE, Trump administration demands for local businesses’ employee lists
Connolly ruled that the regulations do not override the subpoena power. He wrote that the state’s argument painting the subpoena as improper because of the current intensity around immigration enforcement is a “political argument, not a legal one.”
“This Court is not the proper ‘forum in which to air [DDOL’s] generalized grievances about the conduct of government,’ Connolly wrote. “It would be wholly inappropriate for me to consider this line of argument, and I decline to do so.”
Trump’s deportation agenda and Delaware
The legal fight is part of the front in Trump’s ever-expanding deportation agenda, which has seen the federal government seek new ways to leverage states’ and other datasets in its immigration roundups.
Trump, with the help of Congress, ballooned Immigration and Customs Enforcement funding nearly six-fold from $12 billion in the previous fiscal year to $75 billion in his budget legislation last year.
Recent: ICE detained a toddler in Delaware as arrests topped 500
The agenda has included workplace and neighborhood raids by masked ICE agents, arrests at jobs and courthouses, incidents resulting in deaths, fast‑tracked deportations and allegations of racial profiling and inhumane detention practices lacking due process.
In Delaware, ICE has more quietly doubled its number of detainments through October of last year compared with the year prior, rounding up more people in street arrests along with four children.
This is a breaking story and updates will follow.
Contact Xerxes Wilson at (302) 324-2787 or xwilson@delawareonline.com.
Delaware
ATVs and dirt bikes roar down Delaware Ave., lawmakers search for solutions
BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) — It’s just like clockwork. As the temperatures rise, ATVs and dirt bikes shift into gear in Buffalo.
New video shows a horde of ATVs and dirt bikes on Delaware Avenue Sunday afternoon. Some are seen driving on the incoming traffic lane, and one even pops a wheelie.
Fillmore District Councilman Mitch Nowakowski represents this area.
“This only leads to more chaos and disruption, and ultimately leads to potential fatalities for both those that are operating and those that are in the vehicles,” Nowakowski said. “And it’s wrong.”
These all-terrain vehicles have proven to be a persistent problem for drivers over the years in Buffalo. Nowakowski says once the snow melts, he starts hearing complaints about these vehicles from residents.
“It’s making our city’s streets unsafer and the velocity and the volume in which they congregate and the manner in which they drive not only jeopardizes their life, it jeopardizes the life of everyone around them,” Nowakowski said.
The councilman wrote a letter on Monday to Family Court Judge Brenda Freedman, requesting a meeting to discuss strengthening a collective response to reckless driving involving young people.
“Councilwoman Everhart and I want to sit down with the judge, explain what’s happening in our districts, where we see car thefts, we see the Kia boys, which I’ve even been a victim of,” Nowakowski said. “We see the violence on the 33 of drag racing where somebody has lost their life. And we want to know what programs are in place. But then, where’s the accountability once somebody is in your courtroom for a second, third or fourth time?”
Nowakowski said police using better equipment and technology has helped curtail all-terrain vehicles on city streets.
“If it comes from them being able to see it through a drone or people calling in. We’ve seen a curb in that,” Nowakowski said.
Those who see illegal activity or a public nuisance can contact Buffalo Police or the city’s 311 Call & Resolution Center.
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Delaware
Over 14,000 bags of fentanyl found in woods in Claymont, Delaware
Monday, April 13, 2026 4:54PM
CLAYMONT, Del. (WPVI) — Police say over 14,000 bags of fentanyl were found in the woods in New Castle County on Sunday.
The drugs were found off Miles Road in the Radnor Green neighborhood of Claymont, Delaware.
Authorities say a young adult and a juvenile were walking through the woods around 5:30 p.m. when they came upon two grocery bags filled with the illegal narcotics.
After returning home, they reported what they found to a family member, who then called the police.
Police say the grocery bags contained two large packages, often referred to as “bricks.”
Tests confirmed the substance to be 14,0888 individual bags of fentanyl.
Anyone with information is asked to call the New Castle County Division of Police at 302-573-2800.
Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.
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