Tony LaRussa | Tribune-Review
Fox Chapel police have charged Noble Prince Kamoory El, 28, with two counts of criminal trespass after learning that he moved into a vacant house along Riding Meadow Road earlier this year that is up for sale for nearly $700,000.
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Fox Chapel police have charged a man for allegedly squatting in a vacant home along Riding Meadow Road that is on the real estate market for nearly $700,000.
Police arrested Noble Prince Kamoory El, 28, with two counts of criminal trespass.
Borough police Chief David Laux, who is set to retire in a few weeks, said the case involving Kamoory El “is probably the strangest one I’ve seen in my career.”
Sheriff Sale: Beaver County
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Lift of Puerto Rico revenue bond litigation stay rejected
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Putnam County court records
Dec. 4
Kory D. Inglis, 26, 351 Ertel Ave., Lima, was sentenced to 11 months in prison and 14 months in prison for violating community control standards. The violations included failing to report to his supervising officer, failing to comply with counseling and treatment, failing to maintain employment, and using various illegal drugs including fentanyl. The sentence was ordered to be served concurrently and he was given credit for 242 days served and any additional days while awaiting transportation to the corrections department. He was originally convicted of forgery (uttering) and receiving stolen property.
Dec. 7
Patrick W. Doyle, Pandora, and Tammy S. Doyle, Pandora, were granted a dissolution of marriage. They were married Oct. 14, 2019 in Ottawa and have no children.
Portland family’s path to ‘red house’ foreclosure was long, filled with bizarre twists
Updated Dec 15, 2020;
With protesters’ occupation of the North Portland neighborhood around the so-called “Red House on Mississippi” rounding its fourth day, it remains unclear if there is a peaceful path to resolving a conflict that started two years ago, when a mixed-race family’s long-time home was foreclosed on by their lender, leading law enforcement to try to remove them on Tuesday.
The Kinney family and their supporters have cast the fight as a continuation of the long saga of gentrification, discrimination and predatory subprime lending that has gutted Portland’s historically Black neighborhoods and replaced them with yuppified apartments and condos.