
Teen in stolen SUV crashes into home, narrowly misses homeowner in Bristol Township: "People were very lucky"
Dave Matthews is grateful that his 41-year-old son survived after Bristol Township police say a 16-year-old boy stole a SUV and crashed into his son's home.
"He heard a big bang and he didn't know what that was, so he got up to investigate, and he went back down the hallway," said Matthews. "Next thing you know, he sees lights and there's a car in the house."
Matthews said his son was sleeping in the living room due to a back injury. The SUV tore through a bedroom and bathroom.
"It could have been a real disaster," Matthews said.
CBS Philadelphia
"The initial call was for juveniles in the area going through vehicles," said Bristol Township Police Sgt. Jason Mancuso.
Police responded to the 400 block of Stonybrook Drive late Monday night, and say when the 16-year-old saw their lights, the teen took off, crashing into the home.
"People were very lucky," Mancuso said. "If someone was sleeping in the bedroom or in the living room or wherever that vehicle hit that house, someone could have been seriously injured."
CBS Philadelphia
Police say the teen came from Trenton, New Jersey, and has no prior connection to the township. Their message to the public: Make sure your car is locked.
"If they can get in the vehicle without much effort, they will get in the vehicle," Mancuso said. "If the vehicle is locked, 99.9% of the time they move on to the next vehicle."
CBS Philadelphia
Matthews said, despite the damage, his son walked away OK, and that's what matters.
"We're glad he's okay," Matthews said.
Bristol Township police say the 16-year-old is being charged as a juvenile, and they are still investigating if others were involved.
Again, they are urging car owners to lock their cars.

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Forbes
44 minutes ago
- Forbes
As Egg Prices Peaked, 280,000 Vanished Off A Freight Truck—How?
Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images I'm dedicating the newsletter this week to one of the best stories I've read in a long time. Check out the Washington Post investigations team's deep dive on 'The Great Egg Heist'—or what happened when 280,000 brown eggs from America's top producer Cal-Maine were stolen off a freight truck. A ransom note followed. I won't spoil this twisting tale for you, but I'll point out that the story also explains how Cal-Maine became a target while profiting from the sudden spike in the price of eggs that turned the refrigerator staple into one of the hottest luxury items in grocery stores nationwide. In the days leading up to the theft, the U.S. Department of Justice even began investigating Cal-Maine on farmers' allegations of price-gouging. As the company blamed price hikes on the impact of avian flu outbreaks decreasing overall supply, the Washington Post points out that in 2022, Cal-Maine didn't lose a single bird to avian flu and still reported quarterly profits that December that were 169 times higher than the year prior. I'm still waiting for Cal-Maine to return my many requests for an interview with the chairman and son-in-law of the company's founder, or the founder's four daughters. They had controlled the publicly traded company through a majority stake for years, but sold a significant amount of shares in April. Their entire share sale plan is estimated to have a value of about $500 million. I hope you are enjoying all summer has to offer, and, if like millions of Americans, you're in the throes of a heatwave, stay cool and hydrate! — Chloe Sorvino This is Forbes' Fresh Take newsletter , which every Wednesday brings you the latest on the big ideas changing the future of food. Want to get it in your inbox every week? Sign up here . Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images From the Washington Post : 280,000 eggs disappeared from America's top producer. Then came a ransom note. The Feed A gate marks a closed road on land managed by the Bureau of Land Management outside of Moab, Utah. James Roh for The Washington Post via Getty Images Public Land Grab: After widespread bipartisan opposition to the federal government selling some 250 million acres of public land in the West to raise funds as part of the Trump Administration's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, it's looking like the conservationists could win. On Monday, the Senate's Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled out the sales, according to Politico's E&E News. But the fight is not over: Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chair Mike Lee (R-Utah) has vowed to alter his plan. Cofounder Jennifer Garner attends a Once Upon A Farm launch event in October Once Upon A Farm IPO Watch: Once Upon A Farm, the organic baby food brand cofounded by Jennifer Garner and former Annie's CEO John Foraker, has confidentially filed to go public, according to a report in Reuters. The Goldman Sachs- and JPMorgan-backed transaction could value the business at around $1 billion and is a good sign for markets that have faced uncertainty and a tepid supply of new listings. Chickens stand in a henhouse at Sunrise Farms in February 2025 in Petaluma, The Next Pandemic: I also urge you to read a call to action on avian flu and the risks it poses to human health from Danielle Nierenberg, cofounder of Food Tank and a Forbes contributor. 'The time to prevent and contain this virus is right now,' writes Nierenberg. 'There's a very real possibility that avian flu could pose a greater threat in the future, and we can't be caught unprepared. The correct course of action involves vaccination, investments in public health, and global collaboration—all of which appear to be under threat given recent U.S. policy developments.' Ultimately, she declares: 'As Covid-19 made abundantly clear, viruses don't stop at national borders. Keeping the public healthy and preparing for pandemic risks simply must be more important than politicking. And when we're heading in the wrong direction, there is a moral obligation to sound the alarm—and to illuminate a better path forward.' Field Notes Chloe Sorvino I've been spending some time on Cape Cod, which means I had to stop at The Seafood Shanty in Bournedale, Massachusetts right before the bridge. I love this 30-year-plus institution's fried scallops and homemade onion rings, and, I have to say, I personally think the lobster roll might be the best—and the best value—of anywhere around the Cape. Pro tip: This old-school seafood shack piles on the lobster so high that you can get two lobster rolls out of their $32.95 meal (with fries!), just order yourself an extra roll. Thanks for reading the 148th edition of Forbes Fresh Take! Let me know what you think. Subscribe to Forbes Fresh Take here .


Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
They were convicted of killing with their cars. No one told the California DMV
California courts have failed to report hundreds of vehicular manslaughter convictions to the state's Department of Motor Vehicles over the past five years, allowing roadway killers to improperly keep their driver's licenses, a CalMatters investigation has found. Marvin Salazar was convicted in May 2023 for killing his 18-year-old friend Joseph Ramirez, who was in the passenger seat when Salazar gunned his car, lost control and slammed into a tree, court records show. Under California law, the state should have taken away Salazar's driving privileges for at least three years. But the Los Angeles County Superior Court didn't report the conviction to the DMV. Two months later, the agency issued Salazar his most recent license. Since then, he's gotten two speeding tickets and has been in another collision, records show. 'How can he keep driving?' said Gaudy Lemus, Ramirez's mother. 'We wanted consequences for him. Remove his driver's license.' LA court officials belatedly reported the manslaughter conviction to the DMV last month, after CalMatters discovered the failure and asked about the case. It was only then that the state sent Salazar a notice revoking his driving privileges, records show. CalMatters uncovered the error and others like it by cross-checking convictions in vehicular manslaughter cases against motorists' DMV records, as part of an ongoing investigation. Earlier this year, we reported that the agency routinely allows drivers with horrifying histories of dangerous driving — including fatal crashes, DUIs and numerous tickets — to continue to operate on our roadways. But this isn't just a DMV issue. Reporters identified about 400 cases from 2019 to 2024 in which the drivers' convictions weren't listed on their driving records, largely because the courts failed to report that information. The review wasn't comprehensive; records were unavailable or incomplete in a number of counties. In Los Angeles, about one-third of all convictions in manslaughter cases we identified were missing from drivers' records. In Santa Clara County, it was half. We found no missing convictions in Orange County. In response to our questions, 32 county courts so far have reported more than 275 missing convictions to the DMV. As a result, nearly 200 drivers who've killed have had their driving privileges suspended or revoked, updated DMV reports for these drivers show. While some already had a separate license suspension, 70 appear to have had a valid license before the agency took action in response to our reporting. County courts, law enforcement and the DMV have a long history of poor communication that dates to the days of paper records. Today, court administrators blame the breakdowns on a mix of human error and technological bugs. Chris Orrock, a spokesperson for the DMV, said the agency sends out revocation and suspension notices 'as soon as we're notified.' Even without a conviction, the DMV does have the discretion to strip a driver of their license for a fatal crash. We reported earlier this year that the agency often doesn't use that power. But in many cases, there is no discretion. State law, for example, requires the agency to revoke a driver's license for at least three years after a felony vehicular manslaughter conviction. As a result of the delayed reporting by the courts, some drivers could end up losing their licenses for far less than three years. That's because the DMV typically enforces the sanction from the date of the conviction, not the date the court communicates it to the agency. Salazar's current driving record shows him eligible to reapply for a license next spring — three years after his conviction but just a year after records show the state took action to revoke his driving privileges. His attorney declined to comment on his driving record but said Salazar did everything the court required. For Lemus, the months after her son died in Salazar's car were a blur. The loss was haunting, coming just as the teenager had decided to pursue a career building tiny homes for the homeless. She started having such bad panic attacks that she moved to a new city and switched jobs, unable to bear the drive to work through the intersection where the crash occurred. Her 25-year-old daughter still refuses to drive at all. Lemus said she didn't initially want Salazar to go to prison, 'because it was an accident.' Now, she wonders whether that was a mistake. 'I don't want another family to go through whatever we went through,' Lemus said. A series of errors leads to reporting failures State law has long required courts to report vehicle-related convictions to the DMV, including for speeding, DUI and vehicular manslaughter. The agency then puts the violations on a motorist's driving record and, if necessary, suspends their license. Last month, CalMatters reporters sent hundreds of names and case numbers to dozens of courts throughout the state and asked why convictions from vehicular manslaughter cases didn't appear on drivers' records. Most courts responded to questions quickly, thanked us for telling them, acknowledged the mistake and indicated that they would report the convictions to the DMV. 'They were errors on our part. I'm not going to sugarcoat it,' said Tara Leal, the court executive officer in Kern County, where we found 22 missing convictions. In many counties, court staff simply neglected to send the information to the DMV. Court clerks typically enter convictions into a case management system. Many courts use a system that has a tab for them to click on to transmit the information to the DMV. Vehicle code violations like speeding tickets and DUIs clearly need to go to the DMV, court officials said. But most penal code violations, including offenses like robbery and assault, do not. Vehicular manslaughter is a penal code violation. Heather Pugh, the Yuba County Superior Court executive officer, confirmed that her court should have reported conviction information to the DMV for eight cases CalMatters flagged. 'To address that, we will reach out to the DMV to provide training to our staff on reporting requirements,' she said. 'Additionally, we have instituted manual reviews of reportable non-vehicle code convictions to ensure they have been properly reported.' Similarly, Fresno County's director of court operations, Vidal Fernandez, acknowledged 'the element of human error' in his court not reporting a half-dozen convictions in recent years. After realizing the problem, he said, staff checked further back, to 2015, identified an additional 17 cases and sent those convictions to the DMV as well. Other counties have their computers essentially programmed to send conviction information to the DMV when clerks update the disposition information on a case, in theory taking human error out of the equation. But in response to questions from CalMatters, some administrators discovered that the programs were missing certain codes and had failed to function as intended. 'Ultimately it's our responsibility,' said Jake Chatters, the court executive officer in Placer County, where a coding issue kept the court's system from reporting two manslaughter cases. In other courts, convictions were apparently reported, but there was some mistake in the information sent — like an incorrect birth date or a missing digit in a license number — and the DMV kicked the report back with an error message. Administrators said clerks are supposed to fix any errors and resubmit the information to the DMV, but in some cases that didn't happen. The result of the patchwork process is that even convictions from some of the most high-profile traffic deaths in recent years were missing from drivers' records. A deadly street race that grabbed international attention Ricardo Aguilar was racing his Dodge Challenger Hellcat in South Los Angeles one December afternoon in 2021, according to the Los Angeles Times, when he struck and killed a pedestrian — Arian Rahbar, a 21-year-old USC student and aspiring medical researcher. Rahbar's father, Sam, summarized the void left by his only child. 'Without Arian, life as we know it has ceased to exist,' he told a judge. The story made global headlines amid a spike in traffic deaths in Los Angeles and other California cities. Aguilar was convicted of felony vehicular manslaughter in 2023, court records show. But until a few weeks ago, that was never reflected in his state driving record. In the section of his DMV report where collisions and traffic violations are supposed to show up, there was instead this message: 'NONE TO REPORT.' His driver's license was still listed as valid. It was only in May, after CalMatters asked the LA court for an explanation, that officials reported his and more than 100 other convictions to the DMV as required. Aguilar's license is now listed as revoked. Aguilar's attorney did not respond to requests for comment. Rahbar's friend and former high school tennis teammate Ashwin Yedavalli was saddened and frustrated all over again to learn about the court error that allowed Rahbar's killer to keep his license. Yedavalli, now 25, lives in Long Beach and still stops by the crash scene when he's nearby. He helped organize a tennis tournament in his friend's memory, and he said it's unfair that the legal system failed to deliver on fundamental consequences for his death. 'It's basically been brushed off,' Yedavalli said. 'What about Arian's life and legacy?' A decades-long failure to communicate This is not a new problem. In the early 1990s, the California DMV was so concerned about getting timely and accurate reports from courts and law enforcement that it produced an educational video called 'The Traffic Citation Trail.' Frank Zolin, the agency's director at the time, sat behind a desk wearing a crisp suit and chunky glasses, his silver hair swept to the side, to deliver the film's key message: 'We cannot achieve traffic safety without effective teamwork between local law enforcement, the courts and DMV.' The film goes on to tell the fictionalized story of a reckless young driver who is able to avoid a license suspension because a ticket wasn't reported to the DMV. In an early scene, the young man rushes to the mailbox to intercept a letter from the agency before his parents can see it. 'They told me four tickets means bye-bye license. There's only three tickets here,' the driver says in surprise as he reads a warning letter from the state. 'The one I got more than a month ago isn't even here. … It's party time tonight.' In a tragic, real-life twist, the actor who played the motorist was killed by a drunken driver more than a decade later. And communication continued to be an issue. Robert Bullock worked at the DMV for more than three decades. In that time, he said, drivers would sometimes come in wanting to know whether they could renew their license, despite a conviction. 'We'd pull up the record and it wasn't there,' said Bullock, who retired in 2019. He said he would tell them, 'The court has screwed up, and you kind of got a freebie.' Technology has, of course, improved from the era of grainy '90s videos. Back then, police drove boxy sedans and held walkie-talkies the size of bricks. DMV clerks picked through mounds of paper forms, copying information into clunky gray computers with white text on black screens. Today, at courthouses equipped with online records and modern digital tools, some administrators said they're upgrading to a new case management system that should ensure conviction reporting is automated. Others said they're going to do more training and manual checks to make sure the information is sent to the DMV. In Los Angeles — one of the nation's biggest county court systems, where we sent a list of 150 convictions that appeared to be missing from driver records — administrators declined an interview request. Instead, they emailed a statement from Rob Oftring, the court's chief communications and external affairs officer: 'The Court continues to work expeditiously to identify ways to ensure the successful electronic transmittal of all abstract of judgments to the DMV from its case management systems. This includes additional manual checks to identify in advance technical issues that prevent an abstract from being sent to the DMV. This also includes ensuring all criminal courthouse locations timely process their queues for transmittal and additional mandatory training for court staff.' A trail of disappointment For someone like Angie Brey, who's had to confront a system that often treats deadly crashes as accidents rather than crimes, the promises of change sound hollow. She lost her partner and the father of her son, Gregory Turnage, on Mother's Day in 2021. That's when wealth manager Timothy Hamano drove onto a sidewalk and hit the 41-year-old Turnage, according to records prosecutors filed in court. Hamano had been drinking beer on the golf course and a bloody mary at lunch in San Francisco before the crash, his wife later told police. Hamano pleaded no contest to felony vehicular manslaughter and hit-and-run early last year. He received virtually no time behind bars after getting credit for wearing an ankle monitor at home while the case was open. The conviction should have prompted the state to revoke Hamano's license, but the Alameda County court didn't report it. 'They essentially let him get away with murder, in our minds,' Brey said.'The fact that they didn't even take away his license … is just mind-blowing.' A spokesperson, Paul Rosynsky, said the Alameda court reports hundreds of criminal convictions to the DMV every month, but he acknowledged that staff had missed sending two for manslaughter in recent years, including the Hamano case. Hamano's license appears to have been valid as recently as May 7, when DMV records show he got in another collision. (The records don't detail who was at fault or the severity.) The agency sent Hamano a notice on May 28 that his driving privileges were revoked, following CalMatters' inquiries. Hamano's attorney, Colin Cooper, said his client 'is traumatized by what he did' and will never forgive himself. Hamano didn't drive while the case was open and drove afterward only because he had a valid license and insurance, Cooper said. Hamano stopped driving after getting the revocation letter from the DMV, he said. Brey said holding drivers accountable for death is the least the state can do. She said she worries every day, when their son has to cross a busy intersection to get to school, that history will repeat itself. 'If somebody can come up on the sidewalk and kill my partner,' she said, 'it just makes me really scared for my son.' ___ Court research by Robert Lewis, Lauren Hepler, Anat Rubin, Sergio Olmos, Cayla Mihalovich, Ese Olumhense, Ko Bragg, Andrew Donohue and Jenna Peterson. ___ This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
NJ Congresswoman Pleads Not Guilty to Obstructing ICE Agents
US Representative LaMonica McIver pleaded not guilty to federal charges that she interfered with law enforcement outside a 1,000-bed immigration detention facility in Newark, New Jersey. McIver, 39, denied the charges at a hearing in federal court Wednesday. A trial was scheduled for Nov. 10.