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Massive fire at West Philadelphia apartment building was intentionally set, authorities say

Massive fire at West Philadelphia apartment building was intentionally set, authorities say

CBS Newsa day ago

An arson investigation is underway at an abandoned apartment building in West Philadelphia after a massive four-alarm fire that heavily damaged the building Saturday was found to be intentionally set.
The fire broke out around 5 a.m. at the vacant Admiral Court apartments at 48th and Locust streets. Firefighters attacked the blaze from the outside, pouring water on the building for hours and trying to protect a nearby school.
The Philadelphia Fire Marshal's Office investigated the cause and confirmed the blaze was caused by an incendiary device, according to a spokesperson for the fire department.
More information on the device used was not immediately available. The case has been referred to Philadelphia police for investigation. No arrests have yet been made.
The property was subject to 61 investigations from the Department of Licenses and Inspections, according to public records. The most recent, posted to a city website on Monday, warned the structure was in imminent danger of collapse.

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Alleged child sexual abuse victim Cindy Clemishire, father file suit against Robert Morris, his wife and Gateway Church
Alleged child sexual abuse victim Cindy Clemishire, father file suit against Robert Morris, his wife and Gateway Church

CBS News

time41 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Alleged child sexual abuse victim Cindy Clemishire, father file suit against Robert Morris, his wife and Gateway Church

Cindy Clemishire, the woman at the center of the child sex abuse case involving Gateway Church founder Robert Morris, and her father have filed a lawsuit against the church founder, his wife and several current and former church leaders. The suit alleges the defendants knew about Robert Morris' deceit, hid it and made millions of dollars from his "moral failures and rape of Plaintiff, Cindy Clemishire." The lawsuit names Gateway Church, Robert Morris, Robert Morris' wife Deborah Morris, Thomas H. Miller, Jr., John D. Willbanks III, Kevin Grove, Jeremy Carrasco, Kenneth W. Fambro II, Gayland Lawshe, Dane Minor, Lawrence Swicegood, Steve Dulin and the Robert Morris Evangelistic Association Inc. Miller, Willbanks, Grove, Carrasco, Fambro, Lawshe, Minor and Dulin are identified as Gateway Church elders and Swicegood as the former Executive Director of Media and Communications for Gateway. Deborah Morris, Robert Morris' wife, is listed a former leader of the women's ministry at Gateway. The scandal surrounding Gateway Church's Robert Morris The public controversy for the megachurch began in June, when Cindy Clemishire publicly claimed the church's founder, Robert Morris, sexually assaulted her starting in 1982 when she was 12 years old. Robert Morris was a traveling evangelist in his early 20s and had become close with her family. Those allegations were first published by The Wartburg Watch, a North Carolina-based church watchdog blog, and then picked up by The Christian Post. Cindy Clemishire told CBS News Texas the alleged abuse continued until 1987. Cindy Clemishire CBS News Texas Robert Morris acknowledged in a sermon in 2014 that he was "sexually immoral" when he was a young man and admitted to "inappropriate sexual behavior" In a statement to the Christian Post. "When I was in my early twenties, I was involved in inappropriate sexual behavior with a young lady in a home where I was staying," he said. "It was kissing and petting and not intercourse, but it was wrong. This behavior happened on several occasions over the next few years." Church elders said Robert Morris disclosed to them he'd had an extramarital affair, but not that he had allegedly abused a 12-year-old. On June 18, Robert Morris resigned from his position as senior pastor at Gateway Church. Cindy Clemishire said she has mixed thoughts and feelings regarding his resignation and believes she is not the only victim. "Though I am grateful that he is no longer a pastor at Gateway, I am disappointed that the Board of Elders allowed him to resign," Cindy Clemishire wrote in a statement. "He should have been terminated." She rebuked church elders for knowing and acknowledging her claims of sexual abuse but intentionally embracing "the false narrative Robert Morris wanted them to believe." On June 23, protesters gathered outside the church as a church elder addressed the congregation for the first time after Cindy Clemishire's statements. "As an elder, I did not know the truth and, frankly, like many of you my wife and I are shocked, devastated and grieving," said Tra Willbanks, a Gateway Church elder. "I'd like to express my personal compassion for Cindy Clemishire, I can't imagine carrying a burden like that for so many years and I want to say to you, Cindy, I'm so sorry." Four members of the Gateway Church Board of Elders, including Robert Morris' son, were put on temporary leaves of absence as an outside legal team investigated the accusations against Robert Morris, the church said on June 28. Founded in 2000, the Southlake-based Gateway Church expanded to become one of the largest congregations in the nation, drawing approximately 100,000 attendees each weekend to its nine campuses. Robert Morris broadcast his weekly program live online to over 190 countries, reaching even wider audiences. Robert Morris indicted on 5 counts of lewd or indecent acts with a child in Oklahoma In March, Robert Morris was indicted on five counts of lewd or indecent acts with a child, stemming from Cindy Clemishire's allegations. Morris, 63, was booked into the Osage County Sheriff's Office at 7:57 a.m. on Monday. By 8:11 a.m., just 14 minutes later, he had posted a $50,000 bond and was released, according to jail records. CBS News Texas / OCSO The indictment was announced by the office of Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond. A multi-county grand jury investigation resulted in five felony counts. "After almost 43 years, the law has finally caught up with Robert Morris for the horrific crimes he committed against me as a child," Cindy Clemishire said in a statement. "Now, it is time for the legal system to hold him accountable. My family and I are deeply grateful to the authorities who have worked tirelessly to make this day possible and remain hopeful that justice will ultimately prevail." According to Drummond's office, the statute of limitations does not apply to this case because Morris was not a resident or inhabitant of Oklahoma at any time. A week later, Robert Morris surrendered to officials in Osage County. Online records showed he bonded out shortly after he turned himself in. Court records showed an Osage County judge set a $50,000 bond and ordered Robert Morris to surrender his passport to the local sheriff. Mack Martin, Robert Morris' attorney, declined to comment on the charges, but said he anticipated entering a not guilty plea on Robert Morris' behalf. Court documents reveal what Gateway Church may have known before abuse allegations CBS News Texas obtained court documents, filed in Tarrant County, related to a lawsuit against the church over retirement payments. They include a proposed announcement that he was going to make to the congregation, but it was never made public. According to Robert Morris' attorney, the proposed announcement was written by Morris in 2011. In it, Robert Morris admits to "inappropriate behavior" with an underage girl, but did not name Cindy Clemishire. That 2011 announcement was never made public because, in a letter in 2007 to the board of elders, the president suggested Robert Morris "should not mention the family or Cindy specifically by name as this would violate their privacy." Gateway Church released a statement that read, in part: "We have consistently and publicly said that there were elders and employees at Gateway who knew about this issue before it became public - and either didn't take action or didn't inquire further. That was fundamentally wrong - the church elders took action, and none of those individuals are a part of Gateway Church today." Robert Morris' million-dollar demand In May, 63-year-old Robert Morris demanded millions of dollars in payments and retirement benefits from the church following his resignation in 2024. Church lawyers wrote in the court filing that "amid the chaos of his conduct had unleashed upon Gateway and his community, Morris was laser-focused on securing his financial future." According to a retirement compensation agreement included in the court filing, the retirement benefit is not payable if Robert Morris is fired or resigns for failing to adhere to church policies and causing harm to the church. The church argued that if its founder is convicted of the criminal charges he faces in Oklahoma, it would have grounds to withhold the money. Damages The lawsuit states that Cindy Clemishire and her father have also suffered damages to their reputation and image, which could continue into the future. In a news release, attorneys for the Clemishires said they are seeking civil damages in excess of $1 million, including but not limited to loss of reputation, mental anguish, and economic losses, in an amount to be determined at trial. A jury trial has been requested. CBS News Texas reached out to Gateway Church, which said it had no comment at this time.

Pittsburgh-area woman says ICE agents detained husband at his business
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CBS News

time41 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Pittsburgh-area woman says ICE agents detained husband at his business

A woman said Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained her husband at his business in Carnegie in May. "I watched on the camera, and I saw that ICE had came in and they had zip-tied him and took him out," Brittany Gonzalez said. Gonzalez said she had to explain to her four children why their father, Macario Gonzalez-Perez, vanished on his birthday, May 20. It was also their ninth wedding anniversary. "My dad got kidnapped, and they go by ICE 'cause they aren't very nice," their 6-year-old daughter said. In 2009, Macario Gonzalez-Perez started a new life in the United States after leaving Guatemala. He opened Alteration World on East Main Street in Carnegie, fell in love with Brittany Gonzalez and had four children. "It's overwhelming the first four, five days after it happened. I was just quite, somber," Brittany Gonzalez said. Now, outside the shop in Carnegie, their 6-year-old daughter sells lemonade, with every cup poured in pursuit of his presence. At the same time, her mom works to keep the business Gonzalez-Perez built from scratch alive. "A lot of sleepless nights, staying up worrying about him, worrying about if I am going to be able to afford the rent for the store, the house, where the kids are going to be tomorrow," Brittany Gonzalez said. She said her husband is in ICE detention at the Moshannon Valley Processing Center in Clearfield County. He called during KDKA's interview with his wife on Thursday. He agreed to speak with KDKA. "How are you feeling?" KDKA's Mamie Bah asked. "I'm feeling little stressful," he said. Bah followed up, "Do you have residency, a visa? What is your immigration status?" "I'm in the process, that's what I told them," he said. "I'm in the process for a green card." Brittany Gonzalez said her husband is not a criminal, and he has an active visa. She said they began the immigration process in 2017. She doesn't understand why he was picked up. "What do you want to say to people who may say 'you shouldn't come here illegally?'" KDKA's Mami Bah asked Brittany Gonzalez. "That term, illegally and legally, isn't a term that we use within the immigrant culture. So, to say does he belong here, is he here, is he doing things the right way? Yes," she said.

Minnesota girl with epilepsy wins Supreme Court ruling expected to make disability lawsuits against schools easier
Minnesota girl with epilepsy wins Supreme Court ruling expected to make disability lawsuits against schools easier

CBS News

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Minnesota girl with epilepsy wins Supreme Court ruling expected to make disability lawsuits against schools easier

A teenage girl from Minnesota who has a rare form of epilepsy won a unanimous Supreme Court ruling on Thursday that's expected to make it easier for families of children with disabilities to sue schools over access to education. The girl's family says that her school district didn't do enough to make sure she has the disability accommodations she needs to learn, including failing to provide adequate instruction in the evening when her seizures are less frequent. But lower courts ruled against the family's claim for damages, despite finding the school had fallen short. That's because courts in that part of the country required plaintiffs to show schools used "bad faith or gross misjudgment," a higher legal standard than most disability discrimination claims. The district, Osseo Area Schools, said that lowering the legal standard could expose the country's understaffed public schools to more lawsuits if their efforts fall short, even if officials are working in good faith. The family appealed to the Supreme Court, which found that lawsuits against schools should have the same requirements as other disability discrimination claims. Children with disabilities and their parents "face daunting challenges on a daily basis. We hold today that those challenges do not include having to satisfy a more stringent standard of proof than other plaintiffs," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court. The court rebuffed the district's argument, made late in the appeals process, that all claims over accommodations for people with disabilities should be held to the same higher standard — a potentially major switch that would have been a "five-alarm fire" for the disability rights community, the girl's lawyers said. Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, wrote separately to say he would be willing to consider those arguments at some point in the future, though he didn't say whether they would win. But Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, saw it differently. Sotomayor wrote in another concurrence that adopting those higher standards more broadly would "eviscerate the core" of disability discrimination laws. The girl's attorney Roman Martinez, of Latham & Watkins, called Thursday's ruling a win for the family and "children with disabilities facing discrimination in schools across the country." He added that "it will help protect the reasonable accommodations needed to ensure equal opportunity for all."

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