"We are deeply concerned by the video and reports regarding the ... incident involving a member of the Norristown Police Department."
A Norristown Police vehicle struck the man at Stanbridge and West Airy streets Wednesday. Local officials said the officer is on leave now.
Not only was he not disabled, but he was very physically fit, and used the stolen funds for vacations and expensive dinners, officials said.
"Another family separated today," a local advocacy group said. "Another friend, father, brother, son who disappears."
She drove into a police station parking lot and a hospital parking garage during the chase, slamming into police cruisers, officials said.
A weeks-long manhunt that involved U.S. Marshals came to an end in Philadelphia Monday night.
Nearly $15,000 has been raised by the local community to support the family of the 27-year-old man.
Police said the local woman lied on her application to obtain a firearm.
"Though the administration wants us to feel scared and helpless, we are committed to documenting ICE in (Montco)," a watchdog group said.
State and local officials are investigating the cause of Thursday's tragedy in Montgomery County.
SWAT negotiators were called to the scene following a pursuit that began with a reckless driving complaint, police said.
The lights will be employed as a crime deterrence tool, police said.
A $5,000 reward has now been posted for information leading to the capture of the third suspect in a local teen's murder, police said.
An "'(expletive) gold mine' for crack," a Samurai sword-armed resident against a home invader, college student attacks officers, and more.
Do you recognize this man? U.S. Marshals have joined the ongoing search for the man who police say killed a Norristown teenager.
Have you seen this man? Federal authorities are joining the manhunt for the accused killer.
Officials want residents to know for sure they are dealing with a Norristown Police Officer and not someone else.
Just a day before the killing, the man posted a photo on his social media page holding a gun over his head, police said.
Police announced a suspected motive in the shooting that left 19-year-old rising basketball star Hamid Boyd dead.
Police said the man is wanted for three robberies, which netted him around $8,000 all told.
The blaze left heavy damage to a local garage.
PECO crews are on the scene.
U.S. Marshals said that Kadrice Patience fled from a court building before his scheduled appearance.
The chief plead for "unity" as the only way to "stop the cycle of violence which is robbing our communities of so many of our young people."
U.S. Marshals are conducting a manhunt after the suspect failed to appear in court.
Authorities have posted a $5,000 reward for information that leads to the identification or capture of the suspects.
Authorities are asking for the public's help in identifying a vehicle they said sped away from the scene of the fatal shooting.
Hamid Boyd, who was walking to the store Sunday when he was shot, "brought joy and hope to everyone around him," his family said.
The Montgomery County District Attorney's Office is investigating the fatal shooting of a 19-year-old man in Norristown on Sunday.
The man used the funds to pay for school tuition, car payments, and vacations, officials said.
Police said they found the man with stab wounds inside a vehicle that had crashed into an electrical pole.
Police said the victim had called police days before his death in an effort to protect a young woman, who was dating the suspect.
Montgomery County prosecutors also identified the man whose body was found in a trash can just off the Schuylkill River Trail.
Shoemaker Road has been shut down in Upper Merion after an accident Thursday.
Police said the body was discovered by another person experiencing homelessness.
The discovery was made a homeless person, authorities said.
Two of the victims were innocent bystanders, including a man who was filling his tires with air, police said.
Police said the man took advantage of the elderly woman, fabricating an involved story.
Smoke shops and gas stations across the state use misleading labels to sell vape products that sicken children, investigators found.
Police believe the couple, who they said solicited large up-front payments, may have additional victims around the region.