New Jersey

Pennsylvania Year in Review: Bill Cosby to Jail, Synagogue Massacre, Deadly Plane Engine Failure and Eagles Super Bowl Win

Synagogue massacre, clergy abuse, Cosby sentence and Eagles Super Bowl win top Pennsylvania stories from 2018

Eagles center Jason Kelce brought down the Parkway with a fiery speech about his team and the people of Philadelphia as the city celebrated its first Super Bowl victory. Here’s his speech in full. NOTE: This video contains profanity. Viewer discretion is advised.

An anti-Semite with a cache of weapons brings terror upon a Pittsburgh synagogue. Grand jurors savage the Catholic Church, rekindling a global crisis over clergy abuse. In the first big celebrity trial of the #MeToo era, Bill Cosby is convicted of sexual assault and, a few months later, enters prison.

These were the headlines in a hugely consequential 2018, a year that saw Pennsylvania play host to some of the nation's biggest stories.

On Oct. 27, in the heart of Pittsburgh's Jewish community, a truck driver walked into Tree of Life synagogue and opened fire with an AR-15 rifle and other weapons, killing 11 and wounding six, including four police officers. "I just want to kill Jews," Robert Bowers told police, according to court documents.

It was the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history. Prosecutors have signaled they intend to pursue the death penalty against Bowers, 46.

HewittLexy
On Memorial Day weekend, a violent arrest was caught on camera in Wildwood, N.J., showing a woman being held down by three police officers as one punched her in the back of the head. She was charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and being a minor in possession of alcohol, among other charges. Police released widely watched body camera footage of the ordeal and started an internal investigation.
CSNPhilly.com
You might remember that the Eagles won the Super Bowl this year. Usually, that merits an invitation to the White House. But President Trump broke with tradition when he rescinded his invitation for the Eagles in June. Trump cited player boycotts and anthem protests, but the Associated Press reported he was furious when he learned only a few players were expected to attend the ceremony.
Pepperidge Farm
Some of our best-read stories are consumer stories. One of the top this year was Pepperidge Farms' recall of one of its biggest sellers: Goldfish crackers. The company was notified by one of its ingredient suppliers that whey powder in a seasoning applied to four varieties of crackers had been recalled due to the potential presence of salmonella. That led many families to check their shelves -- and toss their crackers.
SkyForce10/ Bucks County DA
In 2017, authorities made a terrifying discovery: The bodies of four young men buried on a sprawling Bucks County farm. Nearly 10 months later, cousins Sean Kratz and Cosmo DiNardo were charged in their deaths. Each victim reportedly thought they were meeting DiNardo to buy weed — and each drug deal turned into an ambush, according to authorities. In confession tapes obtained exclusively by NBC10, the cousins detailed the murders and their attempts to cover their tracks. DiNardo has pleaded guilty in the case, but Kratz has pleaded not guilty to three counts of criminal homicide.
EFE
A North Philadelphia restaurateur who gained local fame last year for spending $25,000 on her son's prom party -- which featured a camel, three tons of sand and exotic cars -- and a Christmas party that included hundreds of gifts and two real reindeer was charged with defrauding the Social Security Administration. According to prosecutors, Saudia Schuler collected nearly $37,000 in government benefits by claiming she was disabled but continuing to work.
AP
Sometimes our big stories aren't local. In Texas, a white ex-police officer was convicted of murder for fatally shooting a black, unarmed 15-year-old boy while firing into a car packed with teenagers in suburban Dallas, marking a rare guilty verdict in a police shooting case. Dallas County jurors were not swayed by Roy Oliver's claim that he feared for his partner's life when he fired into the vehicle in April 2017. The gunfire killed Jordan Edwards. Pictured: The teen's father of Jordan Edwards, getting a hug from Dallas County district attorney Faith Johnson after hearing a guilty of murder verdict.
Cydney Long/NBC Philadelphia; GoFundMe
Our hearts melted when a homeless man spent his last $20 to help a New Jersey woman whose car had broken down, and she paid the favor forward by raising more than $400,000 with a GoFundMe campaign that lit up social media and landed the woman and her boyfriend on national TV. But it was way too good to be true. In November, NBC10 broke the news that Mark D'Amico, Kate McClure and Johnny Bobbitt Jr. were accused of conspiring with one another to make up the story. Their scheme "hoodwinked an awful lot of people," authorities said.
AP
Ecstasy. Pure joy. Delirium that comes not just from tailgate beer but from the still-can't-believe-this feeling that the ultimate underdogs, the Philadelphia Eagles, were World Champions. Four days after the Super Bowl, Philadelphia threw a citywide party. Universities, schools, government offices, museums, city courts and even the Philadelphia Zoo shut down in preparation for the city's first-ever Super Bowl parade, capped with Jason Kelce in Mummers gear shouting a profane victory speech from the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The rest of the world may not have liked us, but we bleeping loved it.
Keith Holloway/National Transportation Safety Board via Getty Images
Our biggest story of the entire year was a rare tragedy. An in-flight engine explosion in April blew a hole in the side of a Southwest Airlines jet and sucked a woman partly out of the plane, killing her. Fellow passengers frantically worked to yank her back inside the airliner as it depressurized and quickly descended thousands of feet per minute to Philadelphia's airport. Jennifer Riordan was a bank executive and mother of two from New Mexico. The investigation into the incident is continuing, but investigators believe a piece of engine cover struck and shattered the window.

A look at some of the year's other top stories:

Crisis in the Church

A blockbuster grand jury report uncovered decades of abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania — and a systematic cover-up by bishops and other senior church leaders. In all, some 300 priests molested more than 1,000 children in six dioceses, according to the report, the most thorough and expansive accounting of clergy abuse ever undertaken by a state.

Church officials apologized, again, for their failure to protect children, and pledged to compensate victims. In a highly unusual move, the U.S. attorney in Philadelphia sent subpoenas to dioceses throughout Pennsylvania, the first step in a possible federal prosecution. Officials in many other states launched their own probes into clergy abuse and the church's handling of it.

But the grand jury's recommendations failed to produce any legislative results in Harrisburg, where Senate Republicans blocked efforts to allow victims in older child sexual abuse cases to sue.

Cosby Redux

The elderly entertainer once again found himself in a suburban Philadelphia courtroom to face charges that he drugged and molested a woman at his gated estate in 2004. Cosby's retrial took place less than a year after a jury deadlocked in the case.

This time, prosecutors got a conviction.

Cosby was sentenced to three to 10 years behind bars in what was seen by many of his accusers as a reckoning richly deserved and long overdue.

Mapping the Election

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court threw out the state's crazy-quilt congressional map — considered one of the most gerrymandered in the nation — ruling it unfairly benefited Republicans. The court's redrawn map was a boon to Democrats, helping produce the most competitive congressional election in years. Democrats picked up three seats in the U.S. House, while voters elected a state-record four women to the chamber.

In other races, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf handily won re-election over Republican Scott Wagner, while Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Casey dispatched GOP nominee Lou Barletta to win a third term. Casey promptly floated the idea of a presidential run.

Wolf, meanwhile, ordered every Pennsylvania county to replace their voting machines by 2020, an effort to beef up election security.

Keystone Korruption

Another year, another batch of shady Pennsylvania politicians.

A jury convicted Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski of selling his office for political gain. Prosecutors said Pawlowski — who began a fourth term while awaiting trial — rigged municipal contracts in exchange for campaign cash for his failed runs for Senate and governor. A federal judge sentenced him to 15 years in prison.

Former Attorney General Kathleen Kane began serving a 10- to 23-month term for leaking grand jury material and lying about it. Kane was convicted of perjury, obstruction and other counts in 2016 but had remained free during appeals.

Racial Strife

A white Pittsburgh-area police officer was charged with homicide for gunning down an unarmed black teenager, Antwon Rose Jr., who was shot in the back as he fled a traffic stop. The shooting fueled daily protests around Pittsburgh.

Meanwhile, Starbucks apologized and ordered anti-bias training for workers at more than 8,000 stores after the inexplicable arrest of two black men at a Philadelphia Starbucks. The episode was a major embarrassment for the coffee-shop chain.

A Good Bet?

Legalized sports betting made its debut in Pennsylvania. The state's gambling board also auctioned licenses for five "mini-casinos," part of the biggest expansion of gambling in the state since casinos were legalized more than a decade ago.

Elsewhere in state government, a new law required people convicted of domestic violence or subject to protective orders to turn in their guns. And the Legislature, spurred by the February high school massacre in Parkland, Florida, approved $60 million in school safety grants.

Finally a Super Bowl For Philly

The Philadelphia Eagles did what many outside Eagles Nation thought impossible — they won their first Super Bowl without injured star quarterback Carson Wentz. The Birds downed the New England Patriots in a thriller that featured an instantly immortal trick play dubbed "Philly Special" or "Philly Philly." Hundreds of thousands of deliriously happy fans turned out for the long-awaited parade.

Philly celebrated another title as the Villanova Wildcats routed Michigan to win their second NCAA basketball championship in three years.

The 2018 NCAA men’s basketball champion Villanova Wildcats had thousands celebrate their huge win with a parade through Center City on Thursday.

Miscellany

A Southwest Airlines passenger was partially sucked out of a broken jet window and was fatally injured. Pilots landed the crippled plane in Philadelphia. Prosecutors say a homeless veteran from Philadelphia plotted with a New Jersey couple to concoct a feel-good tale that scammed $400,000 from GoFundMe donors.

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