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Second escaped inmate captured after breaking out of Philadelphia prison

This combo from photos provided by Philadelphia Dept. of Prisons shows from left, Nasir Grant, left, and Ameen Hurst. Authorities searched Tuesday, May 9, 2023, for two inmates, one accused of killing four people, who were gone from a Philadelphia prison for nearly 19 hours before officials knew they were missing. Hurst, 18, and Grant, 24, escaped from the Philadelphia Industrial Correctional Center around 8:30 p.m. Sunday by cutting a hole in a fence surrounding a recreation yard, the Philadelphia Department of Prisons said. (Photo: AP/Philadelphia Dept/of Prisons)

PHILADELPHIA. — An escaped inmate has been recaptured Wednesday morning in Pennsylvania after breaking out of a prison where he had been held on charges of killing four people.

It was the second of two inmates apprehended after escaping from a Philadelphia prison earlier this month, authorities said.

City police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said Ameen Hurst, 18, was arrested by U.S. Marshals in the city’s West Philadelphia section, but further details on the capture were not immediately disclosed.

Hurst and Nasir Grant, 24, escaped from the Philadelphia Industrial Correction Center on May 7 by cutting a hole in a fence surrounding a recreation yard, the Philadelphia Department of Prisons has said. The two men were gone for nearly 19 hours before officials knew they were missing.

While Hurst had been charged with four counts of murder, Grant was being held on conspiracy drug charges and conspiracy weapons charges. Officials have said the inmates were housed in the same unit, but different cells.

Grant was arrested Thursday night after members of a fugitive task force who were conducting surveillance in an area of North Philadelphia saw him leave a residence dressed as a woman. He was stopped in a car nearby and arrested without incident.

Three people have been charged with aiding the men in their escape.

La demócrata Cherelle Parker gana las primarias para alcalde de Filadelfia

Cherelle Parker, una demócrata con una larga historia política en Pensilvania, ganó las primarias para la alcaldía de Filadelfia el martes, lo que probablemente la convertirá en la alcaldesa número 100 de la ciudad y la primera mujer en desempeñar el cargo.

Parker, de 50 años, quien se desempeñó durante 10 años como representante estatal del noroeste de Filadelfia antes de su elección para el concejo municipal en 2015, se afirmó a sí misma como una líder cuya experiencia en el gobierno le permitiría abordar los grandes problemas de seguridad pública y calidad de vida en la sexta ciudad más grande de la nación.

Se enfrentará al republicano David Oh en las elecciones generales del 7 de noviembre.

Parker venció a otros ex concejales de la ciudad que renunciaron a sus asientos para lanzar sus campañas.
Parker se comprometió durante sus eventos proselitistas, a “detener la sensación de anarquía que azota a nuestra ciudad” poniendo a cientos de oficiales más en las calles para participar en la vigilancia comunitaria. Parker presionó para que los oficiales usaran todas las herramientas legales, incluida la detención de alguien cuando tienen “una causa justa y una sospecha razonable”.

Recibió el apoyo de miembros de la delegación de Filadelfia en la Cámara, así como de miembros del Congreso. También estaba respaldada por sindicatos y varios distritos de la ciudad, y el actual alcalde, Jim Kenney, dijo que había emitido su voto por ella.

Parker recibío el respaldo de varios grupos latinos,Cherelle Parker la candidata que varios grupos latinos decidieron apoyar | Impacto (impactomedia.com) así como de Maria Quiñones Sanchez. María Quiñones Sánchez respalda a Cherelle Parker para alcaldesa de Filadelfia | Impacto (impactomedia.com)

La nominada era esperada en su casa de campaña para dirigirse a sus seguidores, pero con el lugar lleno de gente y prensa, avisaron que Parker habia tenido una emergencia, sin especificar de que tipo, y que no se presentaría a festejar. Sin embargo minutos despues salió este agradeciemiento en su cuenta de Twitter.

Democrats keep Pennsylvania House majority, positioning party to prevent limits on abortion rights

Heather Boyd, Democratic candidate for Pennsylvania House of Representatives, votes at her polling place, Christ's Community Church, Tuesday, May 16, 2023, in Drexel Hill, Pa. (Photo: AP/Matt Slocum)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Democrats maintained their narrow Pennsylvania House majority Tuesday by winning a special election and along with it continued control over how the chamber will handle abortion, gun rights and election law legislation.

Heather Boyd won a seat in the Philadelphia suburbs, beating Republican Katie Ford for a vacancy created by the resignation of Democratic Rep. Mike Zabel. Zabel quit the Legislature in March, shortly after a lobbyist accused him of sexually harassing her.

Boyd is a former congressional and state legislative aide. Her district was once Republican but has given solid margins to Democratic candidates in recent elections. Her win gives Democrats 102 seats, the minimum needed to control the agenda in the 203-member House. The state Senate has a Republican majority.

The Democrats’ victory in the Delaware County district means first-term Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro will have at least one chamber to aid his agenda going into the final month of budget negotiations. The result could also affect a proposed constitutional amendment limiting abortion rights that legislative Republicans are one House floor vote away from putting before voters as a referendum.

Reflecting the stakes, President Joe Biden endorsed fellow Democrat Boyd on Monday, calling her “an experienced public servant who will protect a woman’s right to make her own health care decisions, stand up for common sense gun safety laws and expand access to voting rights.”

Shapiro cut an ad focusing on the abortion issue for Boyd, who reported raising more than $1.3 million, including more than $1 million in in-kind advertising from the House Democrats’ campaign arm and the Democratic Party. Ford reported raising about $146,000, more than half of which came from the House Republicans’ campaign arm.

Boyd emphasized protection of abortion rights, drawing a contrast with Ford, who is personally against abortion but says she did not want to change existing state law. Republicans had hoped to regain the majority, in part, to advance the proposed constitutional amendment that says the Pennsylvania Constitution does not guarantee any rights relating to abortion or public funding of abortions.

Ford criticized Boyd, who has been a leading Democratic Party official in Delaware County, for not doing more in response when she learned about the allegations against Zabel. Boyd said she respected the lobbyist’s request for confidentiality about her claim that Zabel caressed her leg while they discussed legislation outside the Capitol in 2018 and did not stop when she moved away from him.

“Common sense says that if someone comes to you and says that they’re being sexually harassed, you do something about it,” Ford said during a televised debate. “You don’t just let it go.” Boyd responded that she did not endorse or support Zabel after hearing of the lobbyist’s account, and says she tried unsuccessfully to find someone to run against Zabel.

Republicans entered the 2022 election with a 113-90 advantage in the state House, but Democrats flipped a net of 12 seats in November, barely enough to claim majority status after 12 years and elect one of their own as speaker.

In a second House special election on Tuesday, Republican Michael Stender kept the central Pennsylvania seat in his party’s hands.

Stender, a Shikellamy school board member, firefighter and former EMT, was endorsed by former Rep. Lynda Schlegel Culver, the Republican who represented the district before winning a state Senate special election earlier this year. Stender beat Democrat Trevor Finn, a Montour County commissioner. The district also includes part of Northumberland County.

Cherelle Parker holds early lead in Democratic primary for Philadelphia mayor

Philadelphia voters were choosing between front-runner Democratic candidates including former council members Parker, Gym, Rebecca Rhynhart.

Cherelle Parker, a former Philadelphia city council member, had an early lead in a crowded field of Democratic candidates vying to lead the nation’s sixth-largest city in a contest that centered on how to combat gun violence and quality-of-life issues that make people feel unsafe.

The results could still change as the city counts in-person ballots that were cast on Tuesday. Election Day ballots counted so far have largely come from Parker strongholds. If her lead holds, it could prove a disappointment to progressives who rallied around Helen Gym, who was backed by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Only one Republican, former city council member David Oh, is running. He and the Democratic nominee will face each other in the Nov. 7 general election. Because Philadelphia is heavily Democratic, it is likely that whoever wins the primary will become the next mayor.

The Philadelphia race serves as the latest barometer of how residents of some of the nation’s largest cities hope to emerge from the pandemic, which heightened concerns about crime, poverty, and inequality. The results have sometimes been tumultuous in other parts of the country, leading to the defeat of the incumbent mayor of Chicago in February and the ouster of San Francisco’s district attorney last year.

Philadelphia voters were choosing between front-runner Democratic candidates including former council members Parker, Gym, Rebecca Rhynhart, Allan Domb, and Jeff Brown. They are vying to replace Democratic Mayor Jim Kenney, who is term-limited.

The Democrats have pledged to tackle the city’s violence and crime and address the rampant quality-of-life issues, but how they plan to get there varies. The candidate who is able to muster their base and appeal to the widest cross-section of voters will ultimately tip the scales in a tight contest.

Jamie DeAngelis cast her ballot for Gym after taking an online quiz and matching with her platform the most. She said it was difficult with so many in the race, and she predicts anyone who takes the helm of the city will face tough headwinds.

“Especially with the way the Democratic Party is a little bit fractured this time around, I just think that there’s going to be a lot of pushback on whomever gets voted in,” she said.

James Perelman had narrowed down his mayoral candidates to Gym, Parker, and Rhynhart, ultimately casting his ballot for Rhynhart. He described her as having the plans that best match his concerns, particularly what he sees as a need to address gun violence and improve the city’s public schools. He also felt her background suited her for handling any potential economic downturns.

“But it was still difficult,” he said. “I think myself and I think a lot of Philadelphians feel like … maybe it’s time to consider ranked choice voting or something where we’re not having such a small percentage of the city deciding who’s mayor.”

Voters on Tuesday will also elect seven out of more than 30 total Democratic and Republican candidates for city council-at-large seats and three contested district seats.

Voters in Allegheny County, which encompasses the state’s second-largest city of Pittsburgh, picked sitting state lawmaker Sara Innamorato as their Democratic nominee to face the lone Republican contender, Joseph Rockey, in the November general election. Unlike in the Philadelphia mayor’s race, the primary winner will not necessarily be the person most likely to fill the county executive’s seat.

Cherelle Parker lleva la delantera sobre Rebecca Rhynhart

Llega a su fin la carrera a las primarias democratas en Filadelfia, con una reñida carrera para liderar la sexta ciudad más grande del país, mientras los votantes navegaban entre un campo repleto de candidatos demócratas en una contienda que se centró en cómo combatir la violencia armada y los problemas de calidad de vida que hacen que las personas se sientan inseguras.

La exmiembro del Concejo Municipal Cherelle Parker y la excontroladora municipal Rebecca Rhynhart son las dos punteras de una reñida contienda mientras se cuentan los votos anticipados.

En lo que son las elecciones más caras de la historia de la ciudad, finalmente las millonarias campañas de los dos empresarios, Allan Domb y Jeff Brown, no fueron tan contundentes pues a las 10 pm según reporta FOX29, Cherelle Parker, tenía un 33% de las preferencias, Rebecca Rhynhart el 22%, Helen Gym 18% y Allan Domb el 13%.

Por su parte The Inquier reporta que aún es demasiado temprano para dar a nadie como ganador, pero con la mitad de los votos que se esperan por contar, también ponen a la cabeza a Parker con el 19%, seguida por Rhynhart con el 13% y detras sigue Gym con el 10 %

La carrera de Filadelfia sirve como el último barómetro de cómo los residentes de algunas de las ciudades más grandes del país esperan salir de la pandemia, que aumentó las preocupaciones sobre el crimen, la pobreza y la desigualdad.

Republican wins state House special election in central Pennsylvania; GOP 1 seat away from control

Campaign signs for Heather Boyd and Katie Ford are seen, Thursday, May 4, 2023, in Aldan, Pa. The two are running in a special election in the Philadelphia suburbs that will determine whether Democrats in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives will maintain control of the chamber or if Republicans will reclaim the majority control they held for 12 years until this January. (Photo: AP/Matt Slocum)


Republican Michael Stender on Tuesday won a special election for a vacant central Pennsylvania seat in the state House of Representatives, a GOP hold that means majority control of the chamber will be decided by a second special election, in the Philadelphia suburbs.

Stender, a Shikellamy school board member, firefighter and former EMT, was endorsed by former Rep. Lynda Schlegel Culver, the Republican who represented the district before winning a state Senate special election earlier this year. Stender beat Democrat Trevor Finn, a Montour County commissioner. The district also includes part of Northumberland County.

Stender’s win gives Republicans 101 seats, one less than the minimum needed to control the agenda in the 203-member House chamber. The Associated Press has not called the second special election, in Delaware County.

If Republicans retake the House, freshman Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro will have no chamber to aid his agenda going into the final month of budget negotiations. The state Senate is firmly in Republican control.

A Republican House could also vote to put a proposed constitutional amendment limiting abortion rights before voters as a referendum.

Republicans entered the 2022 election with a 113-90 advantage in the state House, but Democrats flipped a net of 12 seats in November, barely enough to claim majority status and elect one of their own as speaker. They held that majority by sweeping three special elections held in February.

Dan McCaffery wins Democratic primary for Pennsylvania Supreme Court seat

Shown is the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania chamber at the Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2023. Primary elections are scheduled for May 16, 2023 for Democratic and Republican voters to determine their parties nominees in the general election for offices including the state Supreme Court. (Photo: AP/Matt Rourke/File)

Dan McCaffery has won the Democratic primary in Pennsylvania for a vacant seat on the state Supreme Court, which is playing a prominent role in settling disputes over voting rights, abortion rights and gun rights in the presidential battleground.

McCaffery defeated Deborah Kunselman in the two-way race. Both currently sit on the state Superior Court, a statewide appellate body that handles appeals from county courts in criminal and civil cases.

McCaffery will face the winner of the Republican primary for the seat in the November general election.

Democrats currently hold a 4-2 majority on the court, which has an open seat following the death last fall of Chief Justice Max Baer, a Democrat.

The court has handled a number of hot-button issues over the past few years.

It is currently examining a challenge to a state law that restricts the use of public funds to help women get an abortion as well as Philadelphia’s challenge to a state law that bars it and other municipalities from restricting the sale and possession of guns.

In recent years, the justices rejected a request to invalidate the state’s death penalty law and upheld the constitutionality of the state’s expansive mail-in voting law. The court also turned away challenges to the 2020 election result from Republicans who wanted to keep former President Donald Trump in power and ruled on a variety of lawsuits over gray areas in the mail-in voting law.

In one 2020 election case, justices ordered counties to count mail-in ballots that arrived up to three days after polls closed, citing delays in mail service caused by disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic. The ruling spurred an outcry among Republicans, who challenged the decision in the U.S. Supreme Court.

The nation’s highest court ultimately declined to take the case. The ballots — nearly 10,000 of them — were never counted in any federal race, including for president, because the election was certified while their fate remained in legal limbo. State elections officials said the votes weren’t enough to change the results of a federal election.

Cierran las casillas en Filadelfia, y habrá que esperar a conocer las victorias

Los votantes de Filadelfia determinaron quién probablemente liderará la sexta ciudad más grande del país entre un campo repleto de candidatos demócratas. La ciudad enfrenta aumentos en la violencia armada y problemas de calidad de vida que hacen que las personas se sientan inseguras.

Aunque hubo afluencia en las urnas, no se vieron grandes filas, y todo parece indicar que votaron mucho menos de los que podrían haberlo hecho.

Quedaron 4 candidatos favoritos, incluidos 3 exconcejales y una exfuncionaria de la ciudad.

La carrera de Filadelfia sirve como el último barómetro de cómo los residentes de algunas de las ciudades más grandes del país esperan salir de la pandemia, que aumentó las preocupaciones sobre el crimen, la pobreza y la desigualdad. Los resultados a veces han sido tumultuosos en otras partes del país, lo que llevó a la derrota del actual alcalde de Chicago en febrero y la destitución del fiscal de distrito de San Francisco el año pasado.

Los votantes de Filadelfia elegieron entre 9 candidatos, pero los que según varias encuestas, lideraban al cierre de sus campanñas, fueron Allan Domb, Helen Gym y Cherelle Parker; la ex controladora de la ciudad Rebecca Rhynhart, que compitieron por reemplazar al alcalde demócrata Jim Kenney, cuyo mandato es limitado.

En nuevo alcalde que se definirá en noviembre de este año, sera el alcalde número 100 de la ciudad, cuna de la independencia.

Solo se postula un republicano, el exconcejal David Oh. Él y el candidato demócrata se enfrentarán en las elecciones generales del 7 de noviembre. Debido a que Filadelfia es fuertemente demócrata, es probable que quien gane las primarias se convierta en el próximo alcalde.

Los candidatos se han comprometido a abordar la violencia y el crimen de la ciudad, y abordar los problemas rampantes de la calidad de vida, pero la forma en que planean lograrlo varía. El candidato que sea capaz de reunir su base y apelar a la muestra representativa más amplia de votantes finalmente inclinará la balanza en una contienda reñida.

Los votantes también elegieron a siete de más de 30 candidatos demócratas y republicanos en total para los escaños generales del Concejo Municipal y tres escaños distritales en disputa.

Al oeste, los votantes del condado de Allegheny, que abarca la segunda ciudad más grande del estado, Pittsburgh, elegieron entre seis candidatos demócratas que compiten para reemplazar al principal funcionario del condado, cuyo mandato es limitado. El ganador se enfrentará a un único contendiente republicano en las elecciones generales de noviembre. A diferencia de la carrera por la alcaldía de Filadelfia, el ganador de las primarias no será necesariamente la persona con más probabilidades de ocupar el puesto del ejecutivo del condado.

Con información de agencias.

Enfriamiento

Fotografía de archivo (Foto: EFE/LENIN NOLLY)

Al final de la última reunión del Comité de Mercado Abierto, el presidente del banco central Jerome Powell indicó que, en vez de “mayor firmeza,” la ulterior apretura de la política monetaria “será conducida por la información recibida de reunión en reunión.” https://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/files/FOMCpresconf20230503.pdf

Hasta ahora, varios indicadores están señalando un enfriamiento moderado en la economía estadounidense, lo cual ha llevado a algunos analistas a la conclusión que en junio el banco central pausará el alza de la tasa de interés.

Por ejemplo, en 1.1 por ciento, fue modesta la tasa de crecimiento económico del primer trimestre de este año, mientras que sectores como la vivienda se debilitaron ante el alza de las tasas hipotecarias. Hasta el mercado laboral todavía fuerte, como lo evidenció la creación de 253,000 nuevos empleos en abril, está mostrando indicios de desaceleración.

Las cifras revisadas del promedio mensual de creación de empleo durante el primer trimestre de este año, en 222,000, están lejos del promedio mensual de 400,000 alcanzado durante 2022. Cierto, la tasa de desempleo de 3.4 por ciento en abril fue la más baja en más de 50 años. Sin embargo, los despidos en las grandes empresas tecnológicas y financieras aumentaron las peticiones de seguro de desempleo a 264,000, durante la primera semana de mayo. Además, en abril la inflación medida por el índice de precios al consumidor bajó levemente, pero en 4.9 por ciento desde el año pasado todavía estaba lejos de la meta de 2 por ciento.

Las nuevas cifras de inflación y empleo serán divulgadas antes de la próxima reunión del banco central, programada para el 13 y 14 de junio.

Cooldown

Fotografía de archivo (Foto: EFE/LENIN NOLLY)

At the end of the last Open Market Committee meeting, central bank Chairman Jerome Powell indicated that, instead of “additional firming,” further monetary policy tightening “will be driven by incoming data meting by meeting.” https://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/files/FOMCpresconf20230503.pdf

Thus far, several indicators are pointing to a moderate cooldown in the US economy, which has led some analysts to the conclusion that in June the central bank may pause interest rate increases.

For instance, at 1.1 percent, this year’s first quarter economic growth was modest, while sectors such as housing weakened due to higher mortgage rates. Even the still strong labor market, as evidenced by the creation of 253,000 new jobs in April, is showing moderate indications of a slowdown.

Revised figures of average monthly job creation in this year’s first quarter, at 222,000, are far from the monthly average of 400,000 reached throughout 2022. True, the 3.4 percent April unemployment rate was the lowest in more than 50 years. However, layoffs among big technology and finance companies pushed upward unemployment insurance claims to 264,000, in the first week of May. Also, in April inflation as measured by the consumer price index was slightly lower, but at 4.9 percent from a year earlier was still far from the 2 percent target.

New figures for inflation and employment will be released before the next central bank meeting, scheduled for June 13-14.