Here's a look at the Lower Makefield Police blotter for Feb. 14-Feb. 21.
Yardley Borough Police say the 55-year-old has been harassing his victim at home and now work for more than two months.
The now 18-year-old bought the drugs online and used them with another teen, who was later found dead inside his car.
The head-on crash happened on Big Oak Road at about 6:40 a.m. on Thursday.
A man who worked as a medical assistant at a Bucks Co. pediatrician's office had a huge collection of child porn, federal prosecutors said.
The 40-year-old man was arrested and taken to a medical facility, where he was admitted for evaluation.
The man broke into both his victim's vehicle and home, according to police.
Police say he stole $3,000 in electronics and credit cards used to make more than $7,000 worth of unauthorized purchases.
The DA's office says the man who formerly lived in Philadelphia, has used his home for prostitution since at least December 2017.
The man, who is charged in Falls Township, has been charged with six felony offenses in the case, according to police.
Yardley Police say they were alerted in December by borough residents that they had received threats of harm and other harassing messages.
Police say the woman had sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl at least five times.
A juvenile passenger was released to her parents without charges, according to borough police.
Police say an officer was conducting a speed-enforcement detail at 3:17 p.m. on Sunday in the 200 block of South Main Street.
Police say the driver, a 74-year-old woman, believed that the water was part of the roadway.
A former Saint Ignatius priest has been placed on administrative leave following new allegations he sexually abused a minor.
The robber broke into two vehicles at about 4:30 a.m. on Sunday, police say.
Yardley Police officers were generally busier this past year, too — taking more than 200 more calls for service than in 2017.
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The 57-year-old man had open warrants for his arrest in two states, according to police.
The victim's credit cards were then used to make more than $3,600 in purchases at Walmart and Best Buy.
The man, who has warrants for his arrest in three states, likes to target older women shopping at supermarkets, according to police.
One of the leaders of the now-defunct squad, accused of stealing $100,000 from it, appears to have addressed the charges on Facebook.
They say she then went on a spending spree, spending more than $2,000 at several stores in the area over the next several hours.
The suspect in the case, which dates back to October, turned himself in to police on Saturday, Yardley Borough authorities say.
James J. O'Neill, who passed away in September, served on the Yardley police force from 1985-2014, including 14 years as its chief.
A Falls Township police officer was driving the opposite way and said the motorcycle appeared to be speeding moments before the crash.
A Yardley Borough police officer was called to an address on Sandy Run Road at about 10:58 p.m. on Friday.
The Yardley Police Department will be joining other Bucks County law enforcement agencies Wednesday evening in ramping up DUI detection.
The former Morrisville Ambulance Squad leaders used stolen funds for a honeymoon, to pay off credit cards and other uses, prosecutors say.
Investigators say money from the squad's bank accounts was used for a honeymoon, credit card bills and an animal hospital visit.
While applying for jobs, the man claimed combat experience he never had and claimed awards he never earned, the PA attorney general says.
The man stole a credit card from a shopping cart, then tried to buy $2,000 worth of gift cards just minutes later, police say.
The incident happened at about 11:13 p.m. Wednesday on S. Main Street in Yardley, according to police.
Yolanda M. Torres, 43, of Hamilton, N.J., was arraigned Tuesday morning on 10 felony counts of stealing from Shu Dental Laboratory, Inc.
Police in Yardley Borough say "numerous" people have reported getting calls and emails claiming to be from the Internal Revenue Service.
Find out where the registered sex offenders are living in Yardley before the kids go out trick or treating.
The program, by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, is designed to get opioids and other potentially dangerous drugs out of circulation.