Philly Girls

Another Fatality At One Of Philly's Most Dangerous Intersections.  

Sunday, June 29, 2008


                           Tire laying across the street 
    One side of the car on the opposite side of the street                                                
                                                  An overturned vehicle
          Poor guy laying under his vehicle 

                                  The tree that was struck
                        After 2hrs. they finally get him out
The worst intersection -- Flamingo Road and Pines Boulevard -- is in Pembroke Pines, Florida. The number of accidents at that intersection over the two-year period of the study was 357.

The second most dangerous is in the northeast section of Philadelphia at Red Lion Road and Roosevelt Boulevard. There were 331 accidents at that intersection. The third is a nearby intersection, Grant Avenue and Roosevelt Boulevard, where 261 accidents occurred.

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Former 76er arrested on gun violations  

Monday, June 23, 2008


For years, Aaron F. McKie was a charismatic success at every level of Philadelphia basketball, winning awards as a player for Simon Gratz High School, Temple University and the 2001 NBA Finals 76ers.
But yesterday morning, McKie ducked into a State Police barracks in Belmont and turned himself in for a felony arrest. Authorities charge that he lied when trying to buy two pistols in an Abington gun shop by concealing a restraining order that forbade the purchase.

Just days after attending the Sixers' predraft workouts for a possible return as a coach, McKie, 35, now faces imprisonment for denying the existence of the Delaware County court order he compliantly signed last September.

"There's no argument of lack of knowledge," said Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman, "because it's right there in black and white."

The reason for the restraining order is confidential under Pennsylvania law, and Ferman would not say who sought it against McKie.

In the criminal charge, he is accused of lying by answering "no" to the gun-purchase application's question about a restraining order to protect his "child or an intimate partner or child of such partner."

Signed Sept. 27, the order bars McKie from buying or possessing a gun for a year. Yet April 8, he allegedly walked into Abington Gun Sports in Upper Moreland Township to buy two pistols, a .38 caliber Smith and Wesson and a 9 mm Ruger. Ferman said McKie had not volunteered why he wanted the handguns.

After an arraignment in an Oreland courtroom, McKie was allowed to go free on a $50,000 bond and ordered to hand over his passport.

It remains unclear how the charges will affect his relationship with the 76ers, the hometown team McKie played for from 1997-2005.

McKie spent part of last season with Sixers as a volunteer assistant coach, but left the team midseason when the Los Angeles Lakers - which retained contract rights to McKie as a player - signed him for a bit part to help a trade meet byzantine NBA salary regulations.

The arrangement sent star Pau Gasol from the Memphis Grizzlies to the Lakers in exchange for McKie and other players, and McKie was paid $750,000 under a player's contract, though he did not play.

McKie's last NBA playing time was in 2007 with the Lakers. He had been attending recent 76ers predraft workouts, which provoked speculation he would rejoin the team as a coach this summer.

Sixers officials yesterday had no comment about the situation.

McKie, who lives in Narberth, is due back in court for a scheduled preliminary hearing July 3 on one felony count and one misdemeanor, both for how he filled out the gun-purchase application. Ferman said she did not yet know if her office would seek jail time if McKie is convicted.

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4 hit by gunfire outside social club, including a girl, 6  

Monday, June 9, 2008


The West Oak Lane businessman said he's worked 11 years in the neighborhood, only daring to walk west of 21st Street and Chelten Avenue twice during that time.
"I'll drive, I don't walk," said the man, who did not want his name or that of his business to appear in print for fear of retaliation.

The block of Chelten between 21st and 22nd has been well-known for drug activity for about 25 years, the man said yesterday. "That area is the root of the problem. Cut that out and it'll be a good neighborhood."

It was there, at 21st and Chelten, that shots rang out Saturday night, injuring three adults and a 6-year-old girl in front of Klubb Acacia social club, police said.

People were ordering food in front of the club shortly before 9:30 p.m. when two men began firing into the crowd from across the street, police spokeswoman Officer Tanya Little said.

The businessman said he was waxing his car on a hot, balmy evening, "a regular night," when it began to "sound like the wild, wild West."

Some people started running, others began ducking. Still others believed that the bullets piercing the air were firecrackers, he said.

The four victims - whose names were withheld - were taken to Albert Einstein Medical Center by private vehicle, Little said.

The men were listed in critical condition. The girl was stabilized and then transported to St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Little said. The girl, shot in her right thigh, was in critical but stable condition.

The motive for the shooting was unknown, and no arrests had been made, Little said.

The club is a tax-exempt nonprofit association, according to www.taxexempt world.com.

The sounds of gunfire are too common in the neighborhood, the businessman said.

"There are shootings here every other night, believe me," said the man.

The cops do their jobs and raid the drug houses, he said, but soon afterward the operations are back in business.

"The city has to keep them shut down," he said.

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