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Dunmore man accused of dragging woman with his vehicle after crash

Dunmore man accused of dragging woman with his vehicle after crash

Yahoo18-06-2025
SCRANTON — A Dunmore man drove away with a woman's arm inside his vehicle after the woman got out of her car to speak to him about a minor crash at an intersection.
Raymond Lukasik twice bumped a vehicle in front of him at a traffic light at Mulberry Street and Adams Avenue on June 5, police said. The 64-year-old man is charged with leaving the scene of an accident, recklessly endangering another person and criminal mischief.
Lukasik, of 203 Sunset Drive, told police he drove away with Nicole Simmons' arm inside his vehicle because he was trying to get out of the way of approaching fire engines.
Simmons told police, who arrived at about 9:30 a.m., that she was waiting at a red light when Lukasik hit her vehicle from behind. When the light turned green, she remained stopped, intending to speak with Lukasik, who was driving a Ram ProMaster cargo van. He then bumped her vehicle a second time, police said.
When Simmons confronted Lukasik at his driver's side window, he spit in her face, she told police. Simmons started recording the incident on her phone.
Lukasik then drove away with Simmons' arm still in the vehicle, police said. He threw her phone out the window and the screen cracked.
Simmons told officers Lukasik also drove over her foot.
Officers reviewed city cameras, which showed Simmons approaching the van and the van pulling away with her arm inside of it. The footage did not directly show Lukasik driving over Simmons' foot, police said.
Lukasik admitted he bumped Simmons' vehicle and then, when she refused to move, bumped it a second time, police said.
A preliminary hearing is scheduled for 9:45 a.m. on July 21 before District Judge Alyce Farrell.
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Crime cools, politics heats up
Crime cools, politics heats up

Politico

time08-07-2025

  • Politico

Crime cools, politics heats up

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‘Not just an urban story.' New docuseries explores how ‘Miami Kingpins' rose to national acclaim
‘Not just an urban story.' New docuseries explores how ‘Miami Kingpins' rose to national acclaim

Miami Herald

time07-07-2025

  • Miami Herald

‘Not just an urban story.' New docuseries explores how ‘Miami Kingpins' rose to national acclaim

In the early 80s, Burt Simmons had a choice. On one hand, the American Senior High graduate could continue a successful wrestling career that had already earned him district honors, a state title and even a scholarship to the University of Ohio. Or, the Liberty City native could dive headfirst into the streets, a pathway that had begun to prove lucrative – at his peak, he claimed to have '$100,000 days' – but always ended in one of two places: a penitentiary or coffin. 'I turned down the wrong road,' Simmons, known world over as 'Convertible Burt,' told the Miami Herald, calling himself and others 'products of our environment.' 'That was the trend back then. Miami was built off of that drug money. We were just part of the process.' The consequences of Simmons' decision undergirds the recently released docuseries 'Miami Kingpins.' 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'This series is a moment of reckoning that puts weight of morality on America,' said Bailey who not only directed by narrated the project. 'How do we have American citizens living in the wealthiest country in the world forced to sell poison to own community to survive?' Added Bailey: 'Both addict and dealer are bold in desperation. In a state of survival, morality gets thrown out the door. So from an educational standpoint, America and the judicial system, we want to educate them and see how this can inspire some kind of reform.' Therein lies one of the main through lines of the series: how much one's environment can shape their upbringing. In the case of Simmons, James and Sawyer, it clear had disastrous consequences. But for Lucas, who grew up passing by Sawyer's luxurious estate, it showed him a life outside of what his parents wanted. 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Dunmore man accused of dragging woman with his vehicle after crash
Dunmore man accused of dragging woman with his vehicle after crash

Yahoo

time18-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Dunmore man accused of dragging woman with his vehicle after crash

SCRANTON — A Dunmore man drove away with a woman's arm inside his vehicle after the woman got out of her car to speak to him about a minor crash at an intersection. Raymond Lukasik twice bumped a vehicle in front of him at a traffic light at Mulberry Street and Adams Avenue on June 5, police said. The 64-year-old man is charged with leaving the scene of an accident, recklessly endangering another person and criminal mischief. Lukasik, of 203 Sunset Drive, told police he drove away with Nicole Simmons' arm inside his vehicle because he was trying to get out of the way of approaching fire engines. Simmons told police, who arrived at about 9:30 a.m., that she was waiting at a red light when Lukasik hit her vehicle from behind. When the light turned green, she remained stopped, intending to speak with Lukasik, who was driving a Ram ProMaster cargo van. He then bumped her vehicle a second time, police said. When Simmons confronted Lukasik at his driver's side window, he spit in her face, she told police. Simmons started recording the incident on her phone. Lukasik then drove away with Simmons' arm still in the vehicle, police said. He threw her phone out the window and the screen cracked. Simmons told officers Lukasik also drove over her foot. Officers reviewed city cameras, which showed Simmons approaching the van and the van pulling away with her arm inside of it. The footage did not directly show Lukasik driving over Simmons' foot, police said. Lukasik admitted he bumped Simmons' vehicle and then, when she refused to move, bumped it a second time, police said. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for 9:45 a.m. on July 21 before District Judge Alyce Farrell.

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