According to investigators, both speed and alcohol are suspected to have been factors in this crash.
Credit: Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department Author: Bianca Garcia (FOX43) Updated: 11:25 AM EDT April 17, 2021
LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa. A 21-year-old man is dead after he lost control of his vehicle and crashed early Saturday morning in Warwick Township, police said.
On April 17, shortly after 1 a.m., officers were dispatched to Highlands Drive for a vehicle crash. The driver, Renny Kline of Lititz, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Investigators said Kline was driving on Highlands Drive when he lost control of the vehicle and it rolled several times before coming to a stop on its roof.
Car rams into John Deere tractor on Route 322 in Lancaster County
Updated Apr 09, 9:51 AM;
Posted Apr 09, 9:51 AM
A John Deere tractor was involved in a Friday morning crash along Route 322 in Clay Township, Lancaster County, police said. (Photo courtesy of the Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department)
Facebook Share
The driver of a John Deere tractor was taken to the hospital Friday morning after a car hit them while they were driving alongside Route 322 in Lancaster County, police said.
A sedan hit the John Deere while it was pulling a manure spreader along Route 322 east in Clay Township, according to Northern Lancaster County Regional police.
Suspect ID’d in Lancaster County standoff
Updated Mar 08, 2021;
Posted Mar 08, 2021
Police have identified the man taken into custody after an hours-long standoff in Warwick Township. (Photo courtesy of the Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department)
Facebook Share
Police in Lancaster County have identified the man charged in connection with an hours-long standoff Friday night.
William A. Evans, 53, is facing charges of reckless endangerment, terroristic threats, simple assault and discharging a firearm in an occupied building.
The incident started as a domestic dispute that escalated to the point of an assault and threats on the 500 block of Creekside Lane in Warwick Township, according to the Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department.
Editor s note: This article has been updated with the list of charges Northern Lancaster County Regional police said the man will face. Police initially released the man s age and address
Since last summer, a police department in northern Lancaster County has saved about $15,000 in fuel costs by transitioning all patrol vehicles to hybrids, which run on electric power part of the time.
And over the course of four years, itâs estimated those savings will rise to about $130,000, according to Sgt. David Burdis of Northern Lancaster County Regional Police Department. Other related savings could add up to even more, he said.
âFuel saving on running a hybrid fleet versus a standard fleet is significant and saves the taxpayer a lot of money,â he said.
On top of that, itâs expected that the hybrid fleet will drastically reduce the patrol vehiclesâ carbon emissions, which have been linked to both poor air quality and climate change.