SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) The parents of a gunman who killed a Pennsylvania state trooper and permanently disabled another eight years ago in an ambush of a police barracks have settled a lawsuit that accused them of partial responsibility for the attack.
PHILADELPHIA – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has ruled that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania cannot maintain possession of a firearms cache it seized from the family of a man who committed a murderous attack against a state police barracks in 2014.
Pennsylvania may not keep a cache of weapons seized from the parents of a gunman who killed one state trooper and permanently disabled another eight years ago, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday. The parents of Eric Frein sued after authorities refused to return 25 rifles, 10 pistols and two
Pennsylvania may not keep a cache of weapons seized from the parents of a g unman who killed one state trooper and permanently disabled another eight years ago, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday.