Tag Archives: NBC10

‘Smallpox’ Vials Found at Merck Lab in Suburban Philadelphia Facility – NBC10 Philadelphia

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Vials labeled with “smallpox” were found at a Merck facility in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, where vaccine research is conducted, but it is unclear why the vials were there, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

Smallpox is caused by a virus that was eradicated from human transmission in the late 1970s after centuries of epidemics across the globe. It is so deadly that only two laboratories in the world are allowed to have doses of the virus: the CDC main lab in Atlanta and a facility in Russia.

The CDC said the frozen vials were “incidentally discovered” by a lab worker. The discovery occurred at the Merck Upper Gwenydd facility in North Wales, about 30 miles northwest of Philadelphia, according to a source with knowledge of the ongoing situation. It is not clear exactly when the vials were discovered.

“Merck is in the process of figuring out why it was there,” the source told NBC10 on Wednesday.

The CDC said an investigation is underway. Yahoo! News first reported the discovery. Merck did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday morning.

“The frozen vials labeled “Smallpox” were incidentally discovered by a laboratory worker while cleaning out a freezer in a facility that conducts vaccine research in Pennsylvania. CDC, its Administration partners, and law enforcement are investigating the matter and the vials’ contents appear intact,” a CDC spokeswoman said in a statement to NBC10. “The laboratory worker who discovered the vials was wearing gloves and a face mask. There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials. We will provide further details as they are available.”

Smallpox dates back as early as the 6th century, and for centuries spread uncontrolled throughout the world. About 3 in 10 people who contracted the disease died, according to the CDC. It was spread as a virus called variola. A vaccine was invented in 1796, but it wasn’t for nearly another 200 years before the last known cases in the late 1970s.

“Following the eradication of smallpox, scientists and public health officials determined there was still a need to perform research using the variola virus. They agreed to reduce the number of laboratories holding stocks of variola virus to only four locations,” the CDC says on its website. “By 1984, England and South Africa had either destroyed their stocks or transferred them to other approved labs. There are now only two locations that officially store and handle variola virus under WHO supervision: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, and the State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology (VECTOR Institute) in Koltsovo, Russia.”

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Philadelphia Councilwoman Maria Quiñones Sánchez Reveals Breast Cancer Diagnosis – NBC10 Philadelphia

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Maria Quiñones Sánchez, the lone Latina voice in the Philadelphia City Council, has revealed she is battling breast cancer.

Quiñones Sánchez, a Democrat representing the 7th District, revealed Saturday in a Philadelphia Inquirer op-ed that she was diagnosed with the disease this summer.

“I am waging my own fight against breast cancer, one that began this summer after I had my first mammogram in seven years,” Quiñones Sánchez wrote.

Despite knowing she had a lump in her left breast, the councilwoman said she had put off cancer screenings first because of “work and life,” and then because “COVID-19 gave me another excuse not to go to the doctor.”

Quiñones Sánchez said she had a mastectomy in August of this year in hopes of avoiding chemotherapy and radiation, but despite the removal of her left breast, doctors told her she needed the treatments to prevent future illness.

“Three days after I had my breast removed, I joined a Zoom meeting with my staff, never missing a beat in my duties as a City Councilmember,” she wrote.

Quiñones Sánchez said that although she is currently cancer-free, she is receiving chemotherapy at Penn Medicine and expects to begin preventative radiation in a few weeks.

Originally, the councilwoman said, she planned to stay silent about her diagnosis until completing her treatment in December, but she was inspired to speak out after thinking about women close to her who lost their battle to breast cancer, as well as seeing women share their own breast cancer stories during Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Quiñones Sánchez said she is especially concerned about Black women and Latinas. Black women are almost 40% more likely than white women to die from the disease, while breast cancer is the most common form of cancer diagnosed among U.S. Latinas.

“Get a mammogram regularly. Because of my own experience, I’ve learned that regular screening is absolutely vital to detecting and treating this disease,” Quiñones Sánchez wrote.

The councilwoman added that doctors have told her “this entire experience may be in the rearview mirror” by February of next year.

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Sixers’ Ben Simmons Attempting to Sell Gaudy South Jersey Home for $5 Million – NBC10 Philadelphia

Simmons lists gaudy South Jersey home for $5 million originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Ben Simmons is extremely ready to leave Philadelphia, as evidenced by his agent requesting a trade over the summer, him not showing up for Sixers training camp, him not participating in practice, and him listing his Center City apartment for sale.

And now Simmons is also attempting to sell his primary residence, his expansive Moorestown home.

The home hit real estate website Zillow in the late hours of Tuesday night, just hours after Simmons was kicked out of Sixers practice by head coach Doc Rivers for refusing to engage in a drill.

The New Jersey home comes with quite a lot: a gated entrance, five bedrooms, six bathrooms, an appointed chef’s kitchen, a basement-level gaming room and entertainment space, and plenty more.

You can also take a guided tour of Simmons’ gaming room in this SLAM video from a year ago, in which Simmons shows off his gaming setup and his personalized candy room – yes, candy room – with friend a pro gamer FaZe Temperrr:

It’s basically a mansion designed by an 18-year-old who subscribes to the Architectural Digest YouTube channel and spends all his time playing Call of Duty.

Here are some scenes from inside the house:





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Major Schuylkill River Flooding Closes I-76, I-676 in Philadelphia – NBC10 Philadelphia

After up to 6 to 8 inches of rain from the remnants of Ida fell across parts of the Philadelphia region Wednesday, major flooding closed some of the city’s major roadways as the water rushed from the Schuylkill River.

In Philadelphia, the Vine Street Expressway (I-676), Schuylkill Expressway (I-76), MLK Drive and Kelly Drive were closed Thursday morning as water took over the roadways. Boathouse Row was inundated with water.

Water from the Schuylkill River flowed onto the Vine Street Expressway, turning it into a river of water that cut Center City in half from 22nd Street to Broad Street.

The Schuylkill River overflowed Thursday morning, flooding water onto Philadelphia’s Vine Street Expressway. The roadway looked more like a river as water reached almost as high as the overpasses. NBC10’s Mitch Blacher reports from SkyForce10.

Cars and trucks were going through the flooded Schuylkill Expressway near 30th Street during the Thursday morning commute before PennDOT shut down the roadway at 30th Street and ramps back to City Avenue around 6:40 a.m. Floodwater swamped the roadway under 30th Street through much of the morning.

By 6 a.m. the water level along the Schuylkill near 30th Street Station was already at near 16 feet, well above the major flood level of 14 feet.

A failing pump station near 22nd Street and I-676 was failing, leading to more flooding, PennDOT spokesman Brad Rudolph said.

There was no timetable for when the roads will reopen.

Philadelphia urged people to stay home and avoid the roadways.

People along low-lying areas up the river in Manayunk were urged to stay put on higher ground as the water rises. Debris could be seen flowing along flooded Main Street.

Roads off Kelly Drive in East Falls were also closed.

NBc10’s Randy Gyllenhaal shows you the flooding in Manayunk as Mitch Blacher in SkyForce10 shows you East Falls as the Schuylkill River floods roadways Thursday morning.

The Schuylkill River Trail was entirely underwater, SkyForce10 captured a person who was holding onto a pylon being rescued.

The Fairmount Water Works near the Philadelphia Museum of Art was underwater at daybreak, no sign of the normal dam you see at that point.

The Philadelphia School District delayed opening for two hours for schools that open at 8:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. They also closed the James Dobson Elementary School and Albert M. Greenfield School due to power outage issues.

Philadelphia libraries and government buildings were closed Thursday. The Streets Department was attempting to still collect trash and recycling in areas where flooding isn’t occurring.

Public transit was also impacted: “Service is operating with delays and cancellations due to residual effects from Tropical Storm Ida,” SEPTA said.

SEPTA has all the Regional Rail and bus lines affected listed on its website.

The worst of the flooding was expected as the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia crested around 9 a.m. By 10:35 the water was still above 16 feet, falling short of the 17-foot record, but still very significant, according to the National Weather Service.

The best bet is to avoid driving anywhere if you don’t need to as other roads near the river are also flooded.

The American Red Cross has set up emergency shelters at West Philadelphia High School and Roxborough High School in the city.



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Worker Killed, Operator Hurt After Drill Rig Collapses in Philadelphia – NBC10 Philadelphia

One man was killed while another man was injured after a drill rig collapsed in Philadelphia’s University City Tuesday night.

The drill rig was offloading equipment from a tractor-trailer and placing it in a work site on the 3100 block of Convention Avenue shortly before 8:30 p.m. when it tipped over and collapsed.

Both the rig operator and a 55-year-old worker were trapped underneath the apparatus, which was originally described as a crane. Rescue crews were able to get both men out. They were both taken to Presbyterian Hospital where the worker was pronounced dead at 9:45 p.m.

Officials have not yet revealed the condition of the rig operator.

“Cook Drilling” was seen on the side of the crane. NBC10 reached out to a spokesperson for the Bucks County-based company who said the owner was headed to the scene.

Firefighters also said there was a fuel leak from the crane and L&I responded to the scene.

The investigation into the incident continued Tuesday morning. Expect some potential traffic troubles in the area.

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Man Rapes Woman Inside Center City Macy’s Store, Police Say – NBC10 Philadelphia

Philadelphia police are searching for a man accused of raping a woman inside the Center City Macy’s store.

Police say the unidentified man sexually assaulted a woman inside the bathroom of the Macy’s on 1300 Walnut Street on Sunday around 11:30 a.m.

The suspect then left the store on foot and boarded a SEPTA Market Frankford Line train at 13th and Market streets around 11:45 a.m. He was last seen exiting the SEPTA station at 52nd and Market streets at 11:54 a.m. Sunday.

The suspect is described as a thin man in his 20’s. He was last seen wearing a surgical mask, black hoody, black pants with white stripes on the left leg, black sneakers with white around the sole, three quarter length jacket with a hood and white writing on the left shoulder with possibly four buttons on each sleeve.

If you have any information on the man’s whereabouts or identity, please call the Philadelphia Police Special Victim’s Unit at 215-685-3252.



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Philly Fighting COVID CEO Andrei Doroshin Admits to Giving Vaccines to Friends – NBC10 Philadelphia

The 22-year-old CEO of a company once working with the City of Philadelphia to distribute coronavirus vaccines but now embroiled in controversy admitted that he took some vaccines home with him and injected his friends.

Andrei Doroshin made the confession Thursday on the TODAY Show in what was his first TV interview since the fallout of the scandal involving Philly Fighting COVID, a group that once injected city-issued vaccines. The city has since cut ties after the group failed to disclose that it recently became a for-profit company, after collecting the personal information of thousands of residents.

Doroshin defended his decision to inject his friends, despite not being a registered nurse. He told TODAY’s Stephanie Gosk that he administered four doses which had been left over and were about to expire. Doroshin maintained he and his group made calls looking people at high risk who qualified for a shot but could not find anyone.

“I stand by that decision. I understand that I made that mistake. That is my mistake to carry for the rest of my life, but it is not the mistake of the organization,” Doroshin said.

City health officials had said Wednesday that an audit of vaccine doses given to Philly Fighting COVID found “no evidence that vaccine was wasted, stolen, or otherwise misused.”

The Philadelphia Department of Public Health’s decision to partner with PFC, a 9-month-old startup, despite having a litany of other options in the hospital-heavy city, was surprising from the get-go.

“Why we have to rely on an organization that is less than nine months old, started by students primarily to produce PPE, and not by organizations that have a vetted track record around helping people address COVID-19, is beyond me,” Councilwoman Katherine Gilmore Richardson said. “I’m flabbergasted, I’m dismayed and I’ll never understand how this happened.”

The group never signed a contract with the city before receiving vaccine doses, because, health department spokesman James Garrow said, the city did not receive federal funds to distribute the doses. Instead, the city requires only that organizations fill out an interest form before receiving and distributing the vaccine, he said.

The city has declined to make public the registration form that Philly Fighting COVID filled out to begin getting doses.

Initially, the group was testing for the coronavirus and set up shop at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, where they ran vaccination clinics and injected nearly 7,000 people. But in recent weeks, the department of health said PFC abruptly stopped testing for the virus, as well, a key component of the partnership.

As recently as Jan. 8, the city actively directed people toward the group’s website to “pre-commit” to being notified when they qualified for a vaccine. However, the group only recently posted a privacy policy, following concerns about people’s personal information being sold off, which Doroshin said has not happened and would violate HIPAA rules.

The city has since set up its own website and is encouraging people to sign up there instead.

PFC also started billing instance companies for the vaccines, despite receiving them for free. Doroshin defended that decision, as well, claiming that the donations the group was receiving were not enough to cover the costs of running the vaccination clinics.

However, reporting from WHYY and Billy Penn has since indicated Doroshin embellished his resumé and always planned to make a profit. A former volunteer at PFC told the news outlets that Doroshin openly bragged about using the opportunity to become a millionaire.

The group has also come under scrutiny for other allegedly shoddy practices.

Katrina Lipinsky, a registered nurse and former PFC volunteer, told NBC10 she found it “unusual” that the group didn’t ask to see her credentials before allowing her to administer vaccines.

It’s now unclear if Doroshin, who says he has recently received death threats, will face any criminal charges. Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Kraner and Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro are looking into the matter.

Several Philadelphia City Council members are also calling for hearings into the partnership between the city and the group.



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