Michael D. Curtis, 38, of Philadelphia who was linked to an organized retail theft group that targeted Lowes and Home Depot stores in Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties, and who led police on a high-speed chase in the wrong direction on Route 422 that injured two state troopers, is headed to prison.
Michael D. Curtis, 38, of Philadelphia who was linked to an organized retail theft group that targeted Lowes and Home Depot stores in Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties, and who led police on a high-speed chase in the wrong direction on Route 422 that injured two state troopers, is headed to prison.
Michael D. Curtis, 38, of Philadelphia who was linked to an organized retail theft group that targeted Lowes and Home Depot stores in Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties, and who led police on a high-speed chase in the wrong direction on Route 422 that injured two state troopers, is headed to prison.
Michael D. Curtis, 38, of Philadelphia who was linked to an organized retail theft group that targeted Lowes and Home Depot stores in Montgomery, Bucks and Delaware counties, and who led police on a high-speed chase in the wrong direction on Route 422 that injured two state troopers, is headed to prison.
The trial for Jahme Barnes, who was 17 at the time of the alleged homicide but has since turned 18, will begin on June 24 with jury selection, according to an order signed on Monday by Montgomery County Judge William R. Carpenter. The trial is expected to last about five days.