Philadelphia Public Record

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Vol. XIV No. 46

Issue 981

November 15, 2018

“The good things we do must be made a part of the public record”

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PUBLIC SERVANT OF THE YEAR 2018 STATE SEN.

CHRISTINE TARTAGLIONE Coverage P. 4-23


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Salute to ‘Our Senator’

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F YOU SPEND even the most cursory amount of time asking Philadelphians about state Sen. Christine Tartaglione, you’re immediately struck by just how many people amend her honorific by personalizing it. It’s never just “Sen. Tartaglione” – it’s “my senator,” “our senator” – the one of the clearest indicators that a politician isn’t just representing constituents, but is serving and connecting with them. When it came time to select the 17th recipient of the James Tayoun Public Servant of the Year – the award named after the founder and longtime editor/publisher of the Philadelphia Public Record (and someone who set the bar high for public service himself) – one name soon presented itself over and over again. Not through any public-relations push nor whisper campaign, but from those helped, from constant and consistent public service events, from funding secured, from an all-too-rare focus on making the lives of

the elderly and the disabled more fulfilling. Sen. Tartaglione became “our Senator” through decades of commitment to Philadelphia and Philadelphians, beginning as a child helping her mother, Marge Tartaglione – a political legend in her own right – do lit drops on Election Day. She has made a difference by working with United Food & Commercial Workers Union Local 1776, as a member of the Democratic State Committee, and as the driving force behind such essential legislation as the Commonwealth’s most recent increase in minimum wage – a cause that she continues to try to improve upon each session – health care protections, and the creation and increasing prominence of the state’s Office for People With Disabilities. As she prepares to begin her sixth term in Harrisburg – and her umpteenth year of working tirelessly for us and our city – we can think of no better way to say “thank you” to our senator than by bestowing this award upon her.

McClinton Makes House History

PUBLIC SERVANTS at WORK

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TATE REP. JOANNA McClinton (D-W. Phila.) was selected by her peers to serve as the chair of the House Democratic Caucus for the 2019-20 legislative session. McClinton has served in the House since 2015. McClinton is the first African American and woman to hold the caucus chairman leadership position. The chair is responsible for conducting caucus meetings on each day of voting session and helps Democratic members understand the legislation called up for votes in the House chamber. “Last week’s midterm elections showed politicians

City of Philadelphia Public Hearing Notice The Committee on Labor and Civil Service of the Council of the City of Philadelphia will hold a Public Hearing on Tuesday, November 20, 2018, at 12:00 PM, in Room 400, City Hall, to hear testimony on the following item:

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An Ordinance amending Section 17-1305 of The Philadelphia Code, entitled “Compensation Required to be Paid to Employees,” to revise the compensation required to be provided in connection with application of the Philadelphia 21st Century Minimum Wage Standard; and amending Section 19-2604 of the Code, entitled “Tax Rates, Credits, and Alternative Tax Computation,” to make the wage rates related to the tax credit for new job creation consistent with Section 17-1305; all under certain terms and conditions.

Immediately following the public hearing, a meeting of the Committee on Labor and Civil Service, open to the public, will be held to consider the action to be taken on the above listed item. Copies of the foregoing items are available in the Office of the Chief Clerk of the Council, Room 402, City Hall. Michael Decker Chief Clerk

across the state and nation that people are looking for strong leadership and a desire for lawmakers to collectively make a difference. While the priorities of urban and rural legislators may vary, we in the House Democratic Caucus have a sincere desire and plan to put people first and work together to build a strong economy that works for all of us,” McClinton said.

Bass Advocates For Veterans Following the observance of Veterans Day by the City of Philadelphia, Councilwoman Cindy Bass (8th District) plans to introduce a series of resolutions during this week’s Council session on critical issues facing veterans and military families, including: transitioning to civilian life, mental and physical trauma, housing, and unemployment. The resolutions will call for hearings on the variety of challenges and disparities suffered by veterans in Philadelphia. There will also be a focus on the unique needs of female veterans such as healthcare disparities, and sexual trauma. “As Chair of the Committee on Public Health & Human Services, I recognize that our military men and women need greater access to the various resources available to them,” the councilwoman said. “Among these, access physical and mental health education and treatment is crucial to the integrity that this country and the City of Philadelphia provides for our veterans.” Councilwoman Bass will deploy a multifaceted legislative approach to tackling challenges faced by veterans. She will be partnering with the Phila-

delphia Veterans Advisory Commission, the City’s American Legions, government agencies, health care professionals and social services providers for the hearings. The hearings will examine issues like the federal Veterans Affairs backlogs affecting veteran benefits, and high unemployment and homelessness among veterans, often linked to mental health challenges.

Oh Seeks Pardon For Eric Riddick Councilman David Oh (at Large) has filed a petition for the governor to pardon Eric Riddick because evidence obtained after his conviction proves he is not guilty of first-degree murder. Filing a petition in this case is necessary because under Pennsylvania’s Post-Conviction Relief Act, the evidence proving Riddick’s innocence is prevented from being considered by a judge on appeal. This makes a petition for a pardon a viable way to get an innocent man out of jail. However, it can take up to two or three years for the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons to render a decision for a pardon petition. As Eric Riddick’s case is unique in that he is not asking for pardon for a crime he committed, but freedom from punishment for a crime he did not commit, Oh’s petition requested an expedited process from the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons. Eric Riddick is currently serving a life sentence for first-degree murder for an incident which occurred on Nov. 6, 1991. Riddick pleaded not guilty and has continued to maintain his innocence over the course of the ensuing decades.

The Philadelphia Public Record (PR-01) (ISSN 1938-856X) (USPS 1450) Published Weekly Requested Publication ($20 per year Optional Subscription) The South Philadelphia Public Record 21 S. 11th Street, Suite 205 Philadelphia, PA 19107 Periodical Postage Paid at Philadelphia, PA and additional mailing office POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to: The Public Record 21 S. 11th Street, Suite 205 Philadelphia, PA 19107 (215) 755-2000 Fax: (215) 525-2818 editor@phillyrecord.com EDITORIAL STAFF In Memoriam:James Tayoun, Sr. Editor/Publisher: Greg Salisbury Managing Editor: Anthony West Editorial Staff: Joe Sbaraglia Everyday People Editor: Denise Clay Contributing Editor: Bonnie Squires Editor: Eldon Graham Photographers: Leona Dixon Wendell Douglas Harry Leech Director of Operations:Allison Murphy Production Manager: Sana Muaddi-Dows Sales Director: Melissa Barrett Circulation: Yousef Maaddi The Public Record welcomes news and photographs about your accomplishments and achievements which should be shared with the rest of the community. Contact us by phone, fax, e-mail or by dropping us a note in the mail. If you mail a news item, please include your name, address and daytime telephone number so we can verify the information you provided us, if necessary. The Public Record reserves the right to edit all news items and letters for grammar, clarity and brevity. No reproduction or use of the material herein may be made without the permission of the publisher. City & State will assume no obligation (other than the cancellation of charges for the actual space occupied) for accidental errors in advertisements, but we will be glad to furnish a signed letter to the buying public. The Philadelphia Public Record is a publication owned by:

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Public Servant of the Year

2018

BY TONY WEST O UNDERSTAND State Sen. Christine (“Tina”) Tartaglione, you have to understand the Tartagliones. Father Eugene and mother Marge started out on Frankford Avenue, in a rowhouse community where nobody had a fancy title or a lot of money. But loyalty mattered, as did family. In 1965 they moved to Oxford Circle. Eugene Tartaglione was “a strong, silent type,” as his daughter describes him. He owned a gas station and a bar. His crab recipe was famous. A lot of pols hung around the bar. Marge? Well, she knew how to count. In those days, a housewife who didn’t know how to count often couldn’t put food on the table. Eugene’s aunt recruited Marge to become a committeeperson. She took to politics like a fish to water. She could count noses. She could count votes. She could count dollars. She could sure work. And she could navigate the prickly, multiethnic, blue-collar rivalries of her part of town with stolid, hard-edged fairness. By the early 1970s, she had made something of a name for herself among grassroots politicos in North and Northeast Philadelphia. Still, in 1975, as Sen. Tartaglione tells the story, “Mom was a nobody with three little kids.” (She ended up with five, of which Tina is the middle.) Then, in part because of a fallout with then-City Commissioner Eugene Maier, Mayor Frank Rizzo recruited Marge Tartaglione to run

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for City Commissioner. And she won, the first woman ever to be elected citywide. Marge stayed on City Commission for a 40-year run, eventually becoming its chair. “I couldn’t be more proud of what my mother accomplished,” the senator says. Commissioner Tartaglione started “sunshine meetings” in which the three City commissioners discuss and set all policies in open meetings – a practice continued to this day under Commissioners Lisa Deeley, Al Schmidt and Anthony Clark. “She was devoted to transparency,” her daughter says. Marge also carried a rep-

Working-Class Champion: Sen. Christine Tartaglione from Peirce Junior College maxima cum laude in 1980. She worked in Judge Joe McCabe’s office alongside another rising star – future Ward Leader Bob Dellavella. In 1986, she got a constituent-service job with Councilwoman Joan Krajewski, who set a high standard for that mission. “You could just walk into her office, you never had to make an appointment,” Tartaglione notes. It was a skill set Tartaglione absorbed early. There she developed a wealth of citywide governmental contacts that she was able to take with her later to Harrisburg. Harrisburg beckoned in 1989, when Tartaglione landed a job with Treasur-

She also learned more about the rest of Pennsylvania. Real estate, after all, is everywhere. “I traveled the state,” Tartaglione says. “I learned how to get along with people. I took my camera with me everywhere and took pictures with people.” And she learned how different rural issues can be from the urban challenges she had grown up with. It was

“With my mother, it was all about your name and your honor. If she shook your hand, you could take it to the bank.”

“Selection of these contracts was outsourced to legal firms, which charged hefty fees for their services. I looked at what they were doing and said, ‘I can do that myself.’” utation as a plain-spoken, tough-minded competitor who gave as good as she got. She didn’t come from a part of town where people who back down easily come out ahead. Tina Tartaglione grew up in a political world. As a kid, she did lit drops door to door; on Election Day, she worked as a runner between ward headquarters (her home) and polling stations. “I was indoctrinated early,” the senator says. “With my mother, it was all about your name and your honor. If she shook your hand, you could take it to the bank.”

Tina Goes to Work Tartaglione

graduated

er Catherine Baker Knoll as senior executive assistant. Her main assignment was to work on the State Commission on Buildings & Grounds. The Commonwealth is, among other things, a huge landlord, with a bucket of lucrative contracts at any given time. When she arrived in Harrisburg, selection of these contracts was outsourced to legal firms, which charged hefty fees for their services. “I looked at what they were doing and said, ‘I can do that myself,’” Tartaglione said. She introduced the first competitive-bidding process for this vital state function.

union in which she remains a dues-paying member. “I’d be fielding grievances while I was going down the checkout aisle in food stores,” she says. Local 1776 was no ordinary school for labor activism then. “He ran for president of his union at age 21 and won,” Tartaglione recounts, still amazed. “Mr. Young made sure I had to know the history of the

a wisdom that would serve her well when she later returned to Harrisburg in a different role. But politics was in her blood. In 1992, Tartaglione ran against State Rep. John Perzel (D-Northeast), then a titan of influence far beyond city limits. “I knocked that district twice, in high heels,” she notes cheerfully. But she lost by 1,500 votes. After that election, Tartaglione went to work from 1992 to 1994 as a business representative for United Food & Commercial Workers Union Local 1776, under the redoubtable leadership of Wendell Young III – a

union.” Young led Local 1776 workers, who staffed the PLCB liquor stores, to boycott California wines in support of grape-picker organizer César Chávez. That broke the wine industry’s resistance – Pennsylvania is the largest single purchaser of wine in the nation – and won recognition for the United Farm Workers Union. “He was the real thing,” acknowledges the senator. “I will always be grateful to him.”

Taking off Statewide Tartaglione went with her mother to Democratic State Committee and Democratic National Committee meetings. Her work at the Treasurer’s Office had made her known around the state. When Lt. Gov. Mark Singel became acting governor in 1993 during Gov. Bob Casey’s protracted battle with amyloidosis, Tartaglione become acting chair of State Committee. She inherited a body that was $325,000 in debt and generally in disar-

ray. “I bought a voter file,” she says of her work there. “I made money transparent. I was able to bring people together.” But Tartaglione stepped down from State Committee in 2002, after Mayor Ed Rendell beat Bob Casey, Jr. for the Democratic nomination for governor, since she had backed Casey in that race. In 1994, another elective opening loomed. State Sen. Frank Lynch was ill when he won renomination in the 1992 primary; eager upand-comers were already circling his seat. “I was the only one who said, ‘Don’t run against him,” Tartaglione puts it. Lynch died in 1993. In a special election, Democrat Bill Stinson was elected to fill his shoes. But a federal judge ordered him unseated for election fraud and declared Republican Bruce Marks the winner. Tartaglione had no qualms in 1994. She beat Harvey Rice in the primary and defeated Marks in the 1994 general, in a race that cost $750,000 – big money for a senatorial contest in those days. In doing so, she became only the fifth woman in state history to win election to the State Senate. 1994 was the year of Newt Gingrich’s “Contract with America” that unleashed what we would now call a “red wave” across the land. Tartaglione was one of only two Democratic challengers to unseat a Republican state senator that year. In the Senate, Tartaglione started out on the Aging & Youth Committee. Two years later, she became (Cont. Next Page)


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(Cont. From Prev. Page) Democratic chair of the Labor & Industry Committee, a position she has held to this day. Now in her sixth term, she also serves on the Law & Justice Committee, Appropriations Committee, Veterans Affairs & Emergency Preparedness Committee, Banking & Insurance Committee, Intergovernmental Opera-

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tions Committee and Democratic Policy Committee. In 2010, she became the

first woman elected to Senate Democratic Leadership (Cont. Page 14)

Congratulations, Senator Christine Tartaglione on being named the 2018 Public Servant of the Year!

Congratulations State Senator

Christine M. Tartaglione

Call: 215-302-3600

Visit us at: www.esperanzahealth.com

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Three Convenient North Philadelphia Locations to Serve You: Fifth Street • Hunting Park • Kensington

Public Servant of the Year 2018

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Providing high-quality, bilingual primary medical, dental behavioral health and wellness services to our North Philadelphia community.


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7th Senatorial District Democratic Appropriations Chair

Senator Vincent Hughes


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The Officers and Members of The Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO Congratulate State Senator Christine Tartaglione

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The 2018 Public Servant of the Year

Patrick J. Eiding President


CONGRATULATIONS SENATOR CHRISTINE TARTAGLIONE 2018 PUBLIC SERVANT OF THE YEAR

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1310 Wallace Street Philadelphia, PA 19123 (215) 765-6272

Cory Robinson President

Andrew Robinson Secretary-Treasurer

Samuel Staten, Jr. Business Manager Perry DiVirgilio Recording Secretary

Ryan N. Boyer Executive Board Member

Ernest Blake Sergeant-At-Arms

Malik Staten Field Representative

Eric Oree (Hanif) Field Representative

Joe Rowland Auditor

Fred Cosenza Auditor

Leonard Peterkin LDC Organizer

Anthony Jacobs LIUNA Organizer Staff & General Membership

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John McCarty Vice -President

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Tina Gears up for School

WHEN SCHOOL started on Aug. 27, these youngsters were ready to carry their textbooks in style, thanks to State Sen. Christine Tartaglione, who arranged a bookbag giveaway at Fairhill Park. Across the city, many other Philadelphia legislators are following suit, equipping their young constituents with the tools for academic success. Photo by Wendell Douglas

Congratulations to my colleague N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

State Sen. Christine Tartaglione on being named State Senator

Sharif

Street

1621 W. Jefferson Street Philadelphia, PA 19121

215-227-6161

Public Servant of The Year

2018

Representative

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Congratulations

Senator Tartaglione on being named the 2018

Public Servant of the year! 2901 South 19th Street, Philadelphia Pa 19145

215-468-1515


Congratulations

Senator Tartaglione Public Servant 2018

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from your colleagues in the

Senate Democratic Caucus

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You are an inspiration to all of us


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Public Servant of the Year

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(Cont. From Page 5) when she was chosen Caucus Secretary. Tartaglione

has broad experience with the workings of the Senate.

Labor’s Guardian In Harrisburg Tartaglione is known as a bulldog for the causes of organized labor. Tartaglione authored Pennsylvania’s landmark 2006 minimum wage increase, from $5.15 to $7.15. “It was extremely hard,” she recalls. “It was the first bill I ever negotiated by myself.”

This year, she is pleased that Gov. Tom Wolf has called for a $15/hour minimum wage. Widely known as the Senate’s leading advocate for workers and their families, she has written and ushered through the legislature laws protecting health-care employees from the dangerous (Cont. Page 18)

On the Move

PRACTICING on ReWalk, a bionic exoskeleton, State Sen. Tina Tartaglione steps out at Moss Rehab Center.


EVERYDAY PEOPLE BY DENISE CLAY ecause it’s my favorite museum in the entire City of Philadelphia, I pay close attention to anything that comes out of the National Constitution Center. Recently, the museum played host to former President George W. Bush and his wife, former First Lady Laura Bush, as they picked up the Liberty Medal for their post-presidency work with veterans and their families. Former Vice President Joe Biden

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deeper caught my interest. At the ceremony, it was announced that the NCC was going to start offering a two-week course on the 1st Amendment to highschool students. In light of current events, the organization thought it might be necessary. They shouldn’t stop there, however. A link to that course also needs to go to the person whose job it is to support, obey and defend the entire Constitution, not just the parts that have to do with gun rights, voter suppression and getting rid of birthright citizenship. Yes, the president of the United States has once again decided that the 1st Amendment doesn’t apply to him and because of this, he can abuse – and, in the case of CNN’s Jim Acosta, kick out – reporters that ask him tough questions. To say that Trump has (Cont. Page 30)

BY JOE SHAY STIVALA HE VETERANS Day Award of the Liberty Medal to President and Mrs. Bush for helping veterans seems to cast a pall over Veterans Day. To me, Bush began an UNNECESSARY WAR in Iraq, based on UNTRUE allegations of Weapons of Mass Destruction and yellowcake (uranium). As a result, 3,000 soldiers died. They NEVER got to be veterans. At the Iraq War outset, the USA was WINNING in Afghanistan; we had the momentum to conclude it. Military resources had to be diverted

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CITY HALL SAM

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HE congressional districts that were redrawn as a result of the redistricting litigation gave Democrats sweeping victories in Pennsylvania. LT. GOV. MIKE STACK was the leading Democrat fighting for these changes. As a result, CHRISSY HOULAHAN, MADELEINE DEAN, MARY GAY SCANLON and SUSAN WILD are heading to congress to represent Philly and the burbs. Pennsylvania will now have a congressional delegation that truly reflects the will of

The Bob MENENDEZ 15 win in New Jersey was needed to reinforce awareness that he was NOT GUILTY. I looked for his opponent Bob Hugin at the Marine Corps birthday party. Most all who were there had a beer. I did not see Hugin; but he might have been out of place holding a martini (?). And Sen. Ted CRUZ winning by JUST THREE POINTS – in Texas? Nothing to brag about. The New Jersey public showed themselves smart by bypassing SLEAZE ads and selecting Andy KIM. At this writing, the jury is still out in Florida (what else is new there?) and Georgia. You know who I am praying for. Congrats to State Rep. Marty FLYNN in Scranton on his re-election! A future star! A millennial woman greeted voters outside my polling place; directing them to one of several divisions inside. She greeted millennials with great glee. She did not speak (Cont. Page 30)

the people. The anti-Trump backlash was real and PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP was a major drag on the Republicans. Additionally, the Republicans at the top of the ticket, firebrands and Trump replicas SCOTT WAGNER and CONGRESSMAN LOU BARLETTA, never generated any excitement among Pennsylvania voters. It helped JOE HOHENSTEIN capture a state House seat that was held by Republicans for 34 years in rapidly changing sections of Kensington and Port Richmond. MARTINA WHITE held onto her State House seat by an impressive margin. But the Democrats flipped a bunch of state Senate and state House seats in Montco, Delco, Bucks and Chesco. This led to a net pickup of 12 seats by House Democrats. The moderates came to the poles at above-average rates with above-average focus. Their focus was to re-

ject Trump, Trump acolytes and Republicans. And that is just what they did. What was really amazing was the healthy edge this gave down-ballot races for Democratic congressional, state Senate and state House candidates. It led to the defeat of a number of incumbent Republican State senators. The high turnout of Democratic votes for the congressional races killed TOM McGARRIGLE in Delaware County, JOHN RAFFERTY in Montgomery County, and led a formerly strong R seat in Bucks County to be won by STEVE SANTARSIERO over GOP incumbent STATE REP. MARGUERITE QUINN. Veteran Republican STATE SEN. TOMMY TOMLINSON was holding a 100-vote lead as of this writing against STATE REP. TINA DAVIS. So it looks like the Democratic Senate caucus has won between (Cont. Page 31)

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presented the award, and hopefully had some snacks on hand since former First Lady Michelle Obama wasn’t around to provide them to the former President. (And can we talk about the fact that despite creating a lot of veterans through the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Dubya didn’t actually do a lot for them while he was in office, which is why protesters congregated in front of the Constitution Center while the Liberty Medal ceremony was going on? A lot of people had to fight harder than they should have to get the Veterans Administration benefits their injuries should have garnered them.) But while giving the Bushes a medal for their contributions to veterans families might have been the lede in this week’s column, a part of the story that was buried a little

WALKING the BEAT

to Iraq. So now Afghanistan is a QUAGMIRE. The question of WHY the Iraq War lingers with the story of agents of Saddam Hussein attempting to assassinate Bush’s father (?). And WHY did President Trump celebrate Veterans Day in France? Why was he not here in the USA? Thanks to Drexel University for 600 U.S. flags along Market St. for Vets Day, though!! The GENERAL ELECTION outcome for Congress in Pennsylvania was balanced between GOP and DEM winners. This is proof that the redesign of congressional districts by the State Supreme Court was FAIR and not political, as the GOP cried. Thank you, Justices FORD and DOUGHERTY et al. I am not too happy over the outcome in Bucks County. In two years, BOTH PARTIES must pledge to run only decent TV commercials! BOB BRADY delivered for Gov. Tom WOLF in Philly.

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ast Tuesday was supposed to be a “blue wave.” While the Democrats did better than Republicans in Philadelphia and the commonwealth, I would not call it a wave. In Philadelphia, we only had two seats that were competitive for Republicans. As expected, STATE REP. MARTINA WHITE (R-Northeast) won solidly. We had hoped to keep the seat of retiring STATE REP. JOHN TAYLOR (R-Northeast) with PATTY-PAT KOZLOWSKI.

She did not prevail and the Republican candidate for her State House seat lost. In Delaware County, the Republicans lost the State Senate seat held by TOM McGARRIGLE to JOE KEARNY, the mayor of Swarthmore. Yes, the mayor of the most-liberal section of Delaware County won a State Senate seat. Former CONGRESSMAN PAT MEEHAN’S congressional district included a large part of this state senate seat, and Meehan won this district solidly in 2016. Speaking of congressional seats: After the redistricting written by Supreme Court Democrats, Republicans feared a slaughter. The pundits estimated that the Republicans would loss five to seven of the 12 Republican Pennsylvania U.S .House of Representative seats. The bad news is the Republicans lost seats, (Cont. Page 30)

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ELEPHANT CORNER

Patty-Pat knocked on every door in her district at least once. She had the active support of Taylor, but she did not prevail. Patty-Pat is probably more representative of the traditional residents of the district than her opponent JOE HOHENSTEIN, but the changing demographics of the gentrifying area probably did her in. Statewide, the Republicans lost 11 seats in the State House and five in the State Senate, but Republicans keep the majorities, albeit with slimmer margins. A significant number of the Republican seats were lost in the Southeast. Longtime STATE REPS. KATE HARPER (R-Montgomery) and BECKY CORBIN (R-Chester), among others. In Bucks County, STATE REP. MARGUERITE QUINN was persuaded to run for retiring CHARLIE McILHINNEY’S State Senate seat.


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Congratulations, State Senator,

Christine Tartaglione

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7th WARD

Janice

53rd WARD

Carlos

19th WARD

Alan

54th WARD

Tim

23rd WARD

Bob

55th WARD

Peg

31st WARD

RZEPSKI

Marge

62nd WARD

Donna

33rd WARD

TARTAGLIONE

Brian

63rd WARD

Bill

35th WARD

Pete

64th WARD

CRUZ MATOS SAVAGE

SULMAN

BUTKOVITZ

DELLAVELLA

AUMENT

EDDIS

DOLBOW

McDERMOTT

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Angel

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from Your District Democratic Ward Leaders


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Public Servant of the Year

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(Cont. From Page 14) practice of mandatory overtime, preventing attacks on public transit workers and establishing the “Pennsylvania Center for Health Careers.” “I have held the line against right to work, against attacks on prevailing-wage policies and on paycheck protection.” After Republican Tom Corbett succeeded Rendell as governor at the height of the Tea Party movement, she boasts, “He didn’t get anything through my committee.” Tartaglione can get away with being feisty because she can also be warm-hearted. “I’m good at relationships with the other side,” she states. She cites an occasion when she invited her colleague Chuck McIlHinney, a Bucks County Republican, to dinner with 10 other Republicans. “There was no ulterior motive,” she says. “I just told them, ‘Loosen your ties and open your buttons.’” As a result, she avers, “A lot of my legislative work doesn’t have my name on it.” But for a senator in the minority – most of all when facing the current Republican supermajority – she must know how to bury her ego in order to win an accomplishment.

The Total-Body Experience

In 2003 came the accident that changed her life. Tooling around down the shore, her boat was hit by a big wake that knocked her over, flying up in the air and bouncing on the deck in a way that took a chunk out of her spine. She would not walk unaided again.

“At first I was angry,” she relates. “Then I was full of self-pity. Eventually, though, I said to myself, ‘Let’s get real.’ God wanted me to become an advocate for the disabled.” First, the senator threw herself first into her own rehabilitation efforts – efforts that will last a lifetime. “I haven’t given up,” she asserts. “I will never surrender to this wheelchair.” In recent years, working with the Moss Rehab Center, she has pioneered the use of ReWalk, a bionic walking

She Didn’t Become Disabled; She Became an Expert

disabled Pennsylvanians. She recently passed a bill allocating $1 million for spinal-cord injury research. She worked closely with State Sen. Daylin Leach (D-Montgomery) to develop the controversial legalization of medical marijuana. Tartaglione was touched by the plight of mothers whose children suffered from conditions like severe epilepsy, which can be relieved by cannabis. “I talked with a mother who lost her baby because of it,” the senator relates. “It tore me up.” There isn’t a medical institution serving her community that she has not worked the resources of the

unit that will bring medical staff and counseling to the community to help those who are addicted before they end up in an emergency room due to an overdose. But much more than spot intervention is needed, Tartaglione insists. As a model, she points to the Self Help Movement, a residen-

“At first I was angry. Then I was full of self-pity. Eventually, though, I said to myself, ‘Let’s get real.’ God wanted me to become an advocate for the disabled.’”

of priests charged with longago sexual abuse.

“Wendell Young ran for president of his union at age 21 and won. He was the real thing. I will always be grateful to him.” assistance system that uses powered leg attachments to enable paraplegics to stand upright, walk and climb stairs. She demonstrated its use on Capitol Hill to applause from the Senate chamber. In everyday life she maneuvers well, boasting that she drives her own van. She religiously maintains a program of physical therapy two days a week to stay in shape. “I am a self-reliant individual,” she says. “I am unstoppable.” She didn’t stop with her own needs. In the 15 years since her accident, Tartaglione has taken a host of medical issues under her wing. “Gov. Rendell created the State Office for People with Disabilities for me,” Tartaglione states with pride. She pressed for programs to fund guide dogs and expand vocational training for

Commonwealth to help. She got a $1 million grant for St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children and for its associated Ronald McDonald House. She recently landed $500,000 for the Fox Chase Cancer Center. Maria de los Santos Health Center got $1 million over a three-year period. Einstein Hospital and Moss Rehab Center have also benefited from her lobbying. A Cancer Treatment Centers of America expansion into her district has already added 153 jobs, she says; ultimately this number may go up to 2,000. Opioid addiction is a statewide problem that has hit her low-income inner-city communities of Kensington and the Lower Northeast especially hard. Tartaglione worked to fund a 20-year research project on opioids and to help Temple University Hospital launch a mobile suboxone

to read the names of people who were killed,” she recalls. “It was devastating.” Abuse in any form riles her up. Although she comes from a faithful Catholic family, she pressed in the Senate for the “two-year window” in the statute of limitations that would have permitted the prosecution

Politics Can Make A Lively Party

tial program for men with addiction disorders that her old friend Dellavella plays a role in. It is a short- and long-term, medication-free program that focuses on a holistic understanding of each person’s life that can redirect a wounded life toward new horizons. In her impoverished district, Tartaglione reports that domestic violence is a widespread tragedy. “I do a lot of work on this in my district office,” she reports. The immediate need is to scramble for alternative placement for women who fear for their lives but have few resources. Recently she participated in a vigil for domestic violence in Harrisburg. “I had

Vibrant participation in party politics is second nature to Tartaglione. It’s her calling – but also her hobby. She recounts with a thrill how, when she wound up flying in the same plane with President Bill Clinton in 1994, she wanted to take a memento home with her but she didn’t have anything conventional for the president to write on. “So he signed my shirt!” she exclaims. “I still have it somewhere.” At the 2000 Democratic National Convention, she got to know Vice President Al Gore. One of the proudest moments of her life was when her mother was president of the Pennsylvania Electoral College that year, casting the state’s votes for Gore (in vain, it turned out). In Harrisburg, Tartaglione is far more than a tourist. Come January, beginning her sixth term in office, she will lead the Philadelphia Caucus – and perhaps a new Southeastern Caucus – in handsomely expanded seating on the

Senate floor, as Democrats have added five new members, ending the chamber’s Republican supermajority. Sen. Tartaglione was elected vice-chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party, where she continued to advance the Democratic agenda in the state, in June 1995 and served as chair from June 1998 to June 2002. In that capacity, she led the Pennsylvania Delegation at the 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles and served as President of the 54th Pennsylvania Electoral College in December 2000. Then there’s grassroots politics, the stuff Tartaglione grew up in. Ward politics in Kensington and the Lower Northeast can be folksy, even boisterous at times. Her mother Marge is also the Democratic leader of the 62nd Ward and holds ward meetings in her basement. “If a candidate came to be interviewed by the committee, he would have to either sing or play an instrument,” Tina recalls fondly. The senator remembers the time her mother met Carlos Matos, now Democratic leader of the 19th Ward, along with other local leaders. A dispute erupted. “My mom grabbed Carlos in a headlock and threw him out of her basement,” Tartaglione tells the story with a laugh. Matos wound up marrying Marge’s daughter and Tina’s sister, Renee. “My mom just loves him today!” she notes. Today, Tartaglione stays in close touch with all her ward leaders. With each new session, she develops an idea of how many Commonwealth dollars she can tap for hometown causes. (Cont. Page 21)


Congratulations,

T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

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Tina!

INDEPENDENCE BLUE CROSS

SALUTES

State Senator Christine Tartaglione

Independence Blue Cross congratulates Christine Tartaglione, Philadelphia Public Record’s 2018 Public Servant of the Year and recognizes her public service and commitment to building stronger communities. Independence Blue Cross shares this commitment. We embrace a bold, innovative vision to help improve the lives and health of people in our region and across the nation.

From

State Sen.

Jay Costa IBC ad 4.87x4.9_ChristineTartaglione.indd 1

11/12/18 10:54 AM

P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

Thank you for your outstanding contributions to our Commonwealth

N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

Public Servant of the Year 2018


Tina’s Tiny Ones

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TALKING with a young constituent in Norris Square, State Sen. Tina Tartaglione is a legislative leader in causes that matter to working-class women and children in her district.

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Court of Common Pleas Phila. County Civil Action – Law

LABORERS’ DISTRICT COUNCIL HEALTH & SAFETY FUND 665 N. Broad St. Philadelphia, PA 19123

(215) 236-6700

www.ldc-phila-vic.org

P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

Alan Parham, Adminstrator

Local 57 - Esteban Vera, Jr., Business Manager Local 135 - Daniel L. Woodall, Jr.,, Business Manager Local 332 - Samuel Staten, Jr., Business Manager Local 413 - James Harper, Jr., Business Manager Laborers’ District Council - Ryan Boyer Business Manager Building better and safer communities in Philadlephia, Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery Counties

Do it Right, Do It Safe, Do It Union.

No. 181000200 Notice of Action in Mortgage Foreclosure Reverse Mortgage Solutions, Inc., Plaintiff vs. The Unknown Heirs of Minnie Di Labbio a/k/a Minnie Di Labio, Deceased, Mortgagor and Real Owner, Defendant(s) To: The Unknown Heirs of Minnie Di Labbio a/k/a Minnie Di Labio, Deceased, Mortgagor and Real Owner, Defendant(s), whose last known address is 2423 South Iseminger Street, Philadelphia, PA 19148. This firm is a debt collector and we are attempting to collect a debt owed to our client. Any information obtained from you will be used for the purpose of collecting the debt. You are hereby notified that Plaintiff, Reverse Mortgage Solutions, Inc., has filed a Mortgage Foreclosure Complaint endorsed with a notice to defend against you in the Court of Common Pleas of Phila. County, PA, docketed to No. 181000200, wherein Plaintiff seeks to foreclose on the mortgage secured on your property located, 2423 South Iseminger Street, Philadelphia, PA 19148, whereupon your property will be sold by the Sheriff of Phila. County. Notice: You have been sued in court. If you wish to defend against the claims set forth in the following pages, you must take action within twenty (20) days after the Complaint and notice are served, by entering a written appearance personally or by attorney and filing in writing with the court your defenses or objections to the claims set forth against you. You are warned that if you fail to do so the case may proceed without you and a judgment may be entered against you by the Court without further notice for any money claimed in the Complaint for any other claim or relief requested by the Plaintiff. You may lose money or property or other rights important to you. You should take this paper to your lawyer at once. If you do not have a lawyer or cannot afford one, go to or telephone the office set forth below. This office can provide you with information about hiring a lawyer. If you cannot afford to hire a Lawyer, this office may be able to provide you with information about agencies that may offer legal services to eligible persons at a reduced fee or no fee. Community Legal Services, Inc., Law Center North Central, 1410 W. Erie Ave., Phila., PA 19140, 215.227.2400/215.981.3700. Phila. Bar Assn., Lawyer Referral & Info. Service, One Reading Center, Phila., PA 19107, 215.238.1701. Michael T. McKeever, Atty. for Plaintiff, KML Law Group, P.C., Ste. 5000, Mellon Independence Center, 701 Market St., Phila., PA 19106, 215.627.1322.


(Cont. From Page 18) “I go to every single one of them and ask them where they want it to go,” she explains. On this year’s menu: Juniata Boys & Girls Club, the Frankford Chargers, Fox Rock Baseball, the Oxford Circle Raiders, Lawncrest Civic Association, Mayfair CDC and Port Richmond CDC.

Honors Piled Upon Honors

Tartaglione has been awarded the prestigious John F. Kennedy Memorial Award by the Kennedy Foundation for her tireless support of mental health/mental disability programs. In 2012, she was named Legislator of the Year by Pennsylvania Industries for the Blind/Handicapped. Both the Retired Police, Firemen &Prison Guard Association of Philadelphia and Philadelphia Area Project on Occupational Safety & Health named her “Woman of the Year,” and she was awarded the Firefighters Friend Award by the Philadelphia Firefighters Union Local 22. Tartaglione has received the Jo Cooper Foundation for Family Unity award from Congregation Beth Solomon Synagogue and Community Center; the Profile Ihn Courage award from the Women Making a Difference, Inc.; the Rosa Parks award presented by Hon. Louise Bishop; the Tuttleman Award for

Excellence in Healthcare; the Magee Leadership award; the United Food & Commercial Workers Minority Coalition’s “Legislator of the Year Award”; the Philadelphia Veterans MultiService & Education Center and Organized Labor Supports America’s Veteran’s “2005 Public Service Award”; the Service Employees International Union’s “Thomas F. Zuber Award for Patient Safety”; the “John O’Donnell Friend of Frankford Boys Club Award”; the “Columbus Civic Association Achievement Award”; the “Working Woman of the Year Award” by the Coalition of Labor Union Women; and the “Achievement Award” from the Concerned Black Leaders of Lower Tioga-Hunting Park. She has also been recognized for her outstanding and continuing support by the 2nd Police District Advisory Council and the Juniata Boys & Girls Club. She is cited in the “Italian Americans of the Twentieth Century” and is a member of the Ecumenical Hospitaller Order of St. John Knights of Malta for her work as a political and community leader. The senator still lives in her family home with her mother. In one sense, she’s come a long way for a rowhouse girl from Oxford Circle; but in many important ways, she never left it at all. And her community is better off for that.

– Ducky Birts

T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

Bring It Home

to a classy lady

N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

2018

Congratulations

P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

Public Servant of the Year

21


P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

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T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

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Congratulations To State Senator

Christine Tartaglione From Your Friends At

T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

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The Salvation Army

Eastern Pennsylvania & Delaware

701 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19123

215-787-2800 | www.SalvationArmyPA.org

P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

The Salvation Army Eastern Pennsylvania & Delaware

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Lt. Colonels Stephen & Janet Banfield Rev. Bonnie Camarda


High Turnout in Pa. Dazzles Observers

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24

POLS on the STREET BY JOE SHAHEELI N NOV. 6, it was back to the glory days of citizen participation, when more citizen voted in a midterm election than did not. More than 4.9 million Pennsylvanians voted in the gubernatorial election, up from 3.5 million four years ago. In Philadelphia, City Commissioner Al Schmidt predicted that after all absentee and provisional ballots had been counted, turn-

N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

O

State Rep.

William Keller 184th District 1531 S. 2nd Street

215-271-9190

out would come out at more than 52%, higher even than the 1986 election, with a 550,000 turnout, and up from 380,000 four years ago. Turnout was up for both Democrats and Republicans. Republican voter participation on Tuesday was around 56% – a reason the GOP punches above its weight in politics. But it was the Democratic Party that benefited most, as both Gov. Tom Wolf and U.S. Sen. Bob Casey coasted to easy victories. Detailed analyses of voter demographics have not been completed. But exit polls suggested that youth turnout was over 30%. That’s a nice improvement, but still not enough to train politicians to bow to the rising generation’s wishes. Women were a more dynamic factor in the race. Early polling found that while Casey and Wolf just bested 50% with men, they won female voters by almost 2-1. The swing toward the

Always Hard At Work for You! P H IL LY R E CO R D.C O M - 215 -755 -20 0 0

State Senator

Anthony Hardy Williams 8th Senatorial District

2901 ISLAND AVE. STE 100 PHILADELPHIA, PA 19153 (215) 492-2980 FAX: (215) 492-2990 ---419 CHURCH LANE YEADON, PA 19050 (610) 284-7335 FAX: (610) 284-5955 6630 LINDBERGH BLVD.

2103 SNYDER AVENUE PHILADELPHIA, PA 19145 (215) 755-9185 FAX: (215) 952-3375 ---SENATE BOX 203008 HARRISBURG, PA 17120 ROOM: 11 EAST WING (717) 787-5970 FAX: (717) 772-0574

“Paid for with Pennsylvanian taxpayer dollars”

Dems showed up all across the state and all the way down the ballot. The General Assembly will welcome a total of five new D senators and 11 new representatives. Much has been made of the switch of suburban districts to Democratic control. But the Republican margins in rural and small-city Western Pennsylvania, where Trump virtually ran the table two years ago, saw Republican federal candidates’ totals drop off dramatically from Trump’s two years ago, by 8% on the whole. Exit polls showed that many voters came to cast their ballots for offices with Trump on their mind. And most Pennsylvanians think negatively of him.

Philly Pols Get House Leadership Roles

Both parties, having seen a good deal of turnover in their legislative lineup, have revised their leadership teams as they plan ahead for January. An important opening on the Democratic side was that of minority whip, now

26th Ward Holds Meet Up

MIDTERM elections are over and now much attention turns to next year’s City Council elections, which are expected to draw a crowded field. Expect to see many of those Council candidates to be stopping by the popular 26th Ward Monday Night Meet Ups just as Councilman Mark Squilla recently did at Mifflin Tavern in South Philly. The weekly event always draws a slew of committee people and activists. L-R were 39A’s Greg Offner, 26th’s John Zimmerman, Squilla, the 26th’s Luigi Borda and the 1st’s Anthony Silvanio.

that State Rep. Mike Hanna (D-Clinton) is retiring. The whip does a lot of the scutwork of lapel-grabbing and vote-counting on Capitol Hill. But whips who do well have an advantage in the quest for loftier caucus roles down the road. The job involves meeting a lot of colleagues and getting along with most of them. After a decade in the shadows, it is Philadelphia’s turn to place leaders in the caucus. Again. We State Rep.

Councilwoman

Kevin J.

Jannie L. Blackwell

Boyle

District 3 City Hall, Room 408 Philadelphia, PA 19107 (215) 686-3418, (215) 686-3419 FAX: (215) 686-1933

172nd Dist. 7420 Frankford Ave. Phila., PA 19136

215-331-2600 State Senator

State Rep. Jason

Dawkins District Office:

Sharif

Street

4667 Paul St. Philadelphia, PA 19124 (215) 744-7901 M.–Th.:8:30a.m.–5:00p.m. F.: 8:30 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

1621 W. Jefferson Street Philadelphia, PA 19121

215-227-6161 Paid for with PA Tax Dollars

State Rep.

Phila PA 19148

P: 215-849-6426

5921 Lancaster Ave. Philadelphia, PA 19151 (215) 879 6625 www.facebook.com/RepCephas www.pahouse.com/Cephas

Rep.Maria P.

Donatucci D-185th District 2901 S. 19th St. Phila PA 19145 P: 215-468-1515 F: 215-952-1164

Greenlee Room 506 City Hall P. 215-686-3446/7 F. 215-686-1927

Representative

Angel Cruz

District Office 3503 ‘B’ St. 215-291-5643 Ready to Serve you

1st District City Hall Room 332

T: (215) 748-6712 F: (215) 748-1687

310 W. Chelten Ave.

192nd Legislative District

Service from Bello Vista

Councilman Wm.

Squilla

191st Leg. Dist. 6027 Ludlow St. Unit A Phila., PA 19139

198th District

Mike Morgan O’Brien Cephas

Mark

McClinton

Youngblood

State Representative State Representative

Clinton (D-W. Phila.) was picked to chair the Democratic Caucus as her colleague Rosita Youngblood (D-Northwest) was re-elected its secretary. The new foothold of Democratic representatives in the suburban Southeast – particularly women – had been expected to press for State Rep. Leanne KruegerBraneky (D-Delaware) in the position of whip. But the fact Philadelphia delivered (Cont. Next Page)

Councilman

Joanna E.

Rep. Rosita

are far from the day when hometown guys like State Sen. Vincent Fumo, along with State Reps. Dwight Evans, John Perzel and Denny O’Brien carried big sticks on behalf of their city. State Rep. Jordan Harris (D-S. Phila.) will be the House Democrats’ whip when he enters his fourth term. Harris has been chairing the Pennsylvania Legislative Black Caucus and is well regarded in that role. State Rep. Joanna Mc-

215-686-3458/59 State Rep.

Donna

Bullock 195th Leg. Dist. 2835 W. Girard Ave Phila, PA 19130

T: (215) 684-3738 F: (215) 235-4629

City Councilwoman Cherelle L. Parker 9th District

District Office 1538 E. Wadsworth Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19150 Phone: 215-686-3454 Fax: 215-685-9271. www.phlcouncil.com/CherelleParker

Facebook: CouncilwomanCherelleLParker Twitter: @CherelleParker9


(Cont. From Prev. Page) a 400,000-vote majority to the statewide ticket argued powerfully that city lawmakers share in administering the caucus.

Williams, Butkovitz At the Gate for ’19?

Now that the election is over … let the race begin! All hardcore Philadelphia political observers are immersed in the 2019 munici-

pal primary races now. The top of the ticket ignites the most speculation. Will Mayor Jim Kenney be challenged in the Democratic primary? If so, who would have the gravitas and the clout to mount a serious insurgent campaign against an incumbent? That’s more often seen after two-termers step down. Major donors like at least a good chance of victory before they’ll pay to put you on TV. The two names mentioned most are the two

most-obvious choices: State Sen. Anthony Williams (DW. Phila.), who came in second to Kenney in the 2015 primary in a crowded field; and Alan Butkovitz, a former City Controller who, even though he was swept out of office in 2017 by insurgent Rebecca Rhynhart, surely knows more about how the various parts of

a mayoral administration work than anyone who hasn’t been the mayor. Both are testing the waters. But both are experienced enough to test wisely and learn from the test. Both have strong regional bases – Butkovitz in the Northeast, where he is a ward leader, and Williams in West Philadelphia, half

of which is in his district. But each would have to find a strategy to break through Kenney’s effective and eclectic alliance of three factions of local politics. These are a South Philly-rooted alliance with organized labor; Chuck Finney’s Northwest Coalition of Civics; and a mishmash of young progressive activ-

ists with uncoordinated, 25 esoteric internet followings. Any pro who can figure out how to breach this coalition may be able to beat Kenney. Every mayor ticks certain people off after three years, some of them with money. But they had better know what they’re doing before they open a campaign office. T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

POLS on the STREET

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VETERANS DAY weekend saw the unveiling of a major mural on the VA Hospital in University City, attended by Congressman Dwight Evans and Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell among other dignitaries. Photo by Wendell Douglas

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Veterans Mural


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MARK your CALENDAR Nov. 15- Councilwoman Cherelle Parker hosts Criminal Record Expungement Clinic & Resource Fair at Lawncrest Rec Ctr., 6000 Rising Sun Ave, 5-8 p.m. Must register by Nov. 2. To register: (215) 6 86-3454. Nov. 15- PennFuture & Conservation Voters Of America host “Post-Election Forum: The State Of Pa.’s Environment” at UArts, Caplan Studio Theater, 211 S. Broad St., 17th fl., 5:15-8 p.m. Including State Reps.-Elect Elizabeth Fiedler and Malcolm Ken-

yatta. Must pre-register. For info: Stephanie Rex (412) 463-2942 or rex@ pennfuture.org. Nov. 15- Phila. Public Record hosts “Public Servant of the Year” Award Banquet at Galdo’s Entertainment Complex, 20th St. & Moyamensing Ave., 5:308:30 p.m. Honoring State Sen. Christine Tartaglione Tickets $50, $60 at door. For info: Melissa Barrett (215) 755-2000 #5 or mbarrett@phillyrecord. com. Nov. 15- Alan Butkovitz hosts Fundraiser at McCormick’s & Schmick’s, 1 S. Broad St., 5:308:30 p.m. Support levels $3,000, $1,000, $250. For info: Dominique Miller (609) 784-4513. Nov. 15- State Rep. Pam DeLissio hosts Town hall Mtg. at Roxborough Me. Hosp., Wolcott Aud., 5800 Ridge Ave., 7 p.m. Analysis of midterms and legislative strategy for 2019. For info: (1215)

482-8726. Nov. 17- State Rep. Jared Solomon hosts Senior Fair at St. Thomas Orthodox Church, 1009 Unruh Ave., 9 a.m.-12 m. Light refreshments. Free flu shots, with most insurance and Medicare cards. Blood-pressure screenings, medicine dropoff, giveaways, government resources, senior housing. For info: (215) 342-6340. Nov. 18- Councilman Mark Squilla hosts Re-Election Kickoff Event at Mifflin Tavern, 1843 S. 2nd St., 1-4 p.m. Eagles game. Hail Mary $2,500, Touchdown $1,000, Field Goal $500, General Admission $30, Payable to “Squilla for Council,” P.O. Box 37332, Phila., PA 19147. For info: 267) 275-2120. Nov. 20- Irish National Caucus honors AFL-CIO President Pat Eiding with “Roving Ambassador for Peace Prize” at 22 S. 22nd St., 2nd fl., 2:30 p.m.


to

be

sold

by

WILLIAMS

Sheriff on Tuesday, December 4, 2018 at First District Plaza, 3801 Market Street, at 9:00 AM. (EST) Conditions of Sheriff ’s Sale for JUDICIAL/FORECLOSURE SALE Ten percent of the highest bid for each property auctioned off shall be deposited in certified check, attorney’s check or money order with the Sheriff by each bidder when his bid is registered, provided that in no case shall less than Six Hundred Dollars ($600.00) be deposited, otherwise upon failure or refusal to make such deposit, the bidder shall lose all benefit of his bid and the property may be offered again and sold unless a second bid has been registered, then, the second highest bidder will take the property at the highest bid price. Additionally, where there is active bidding, the highest bidder, and the second highest bidder, if any must post the entire amount of the cost of the distribution policy for the property at the time of sale by certified check, attorney’s check or money order with the Sheriff. The Sheriff reserves the right to reject any certified check, attorney’s check or money order that on its face has an expired use date and is presented for payment of the deposit. The balance of the purchase money must be deposited in certified check, attorney’s check or money order together with a Deed poll for execution by the highest bidder to the Sheriff at his office within 30 days from the time of the sale. An extension of time for an additional 30 days may be granted at the discretion of the Sheriff upon receipt of written request from the buyer requesting the same, except when a second bidder has been duly registered. Also, if the first bidder does not complete settlement with the Sheriff within the thirty (30) day time limit and a second bid was registered at the sale, the second bidder shall be granted the same thirty (30) day time limit to make settlement with the Sheriff on his second bid. Thereafter, the Sheriff shall be at liberty to return the writ to court. A second bid must be registered on any property immediately after it is sold. The second bidder must present the same amount of deposit that the highest bidder delivers to the Sheriff at the sale. An extension of time under no circumstances will be granted or honored by the Sheriff whenever a second bid is registered on a property at the sale. The first bid or opening bid on each property shall be set by the City of Philadelphia. In no event will the successful bidder be allowed to settle on the property unless all the Sheriff’s costs are paid notwithstanding the final bid. The deposit by any bidder who fails to comply with the above conditions of sale shall be forfeited and the funds will be applied to the Sheriff’s cost, then to any municipal claims that the City of Philadelphia has on the property. Finally, if a balance still remains, a Sheriff’s Distribution Policy will be ordered and the money will be distributed accordingly. No personal checks, drafts or promises to pay will be accepted in lieu of certified checks, attorney’s checks or money orders made payable to the Sheriff of Philadelphia County. The Sheriff reserves the right to grant further extensions of time to settle and further reserves the right to refuse bids from bidders who have failed to enter deposits on their bids, failed to make settlement, or make fraudu-

lent bids, or any other behavior which causes disruption of the Sheriff Sale. Said bidders shall be so refused for the sale in which said behavior occurred and for said further period of time as the Sheriff in his discretion shall determine. The Sheriff will not acknowledge a deed poll to any individual or entity using an unregistered fictitious name and may, at his discretion, require proof of identity of the purchaser or the registration of fictitious names. The bid of an unregistered fictitious name shall be forfeited as if the bidder failed to meet the terms of sale. All bidders are advised to remain at the sale until after the last property is sold. The Sheriff reserves the right to re-sell any property at any time before the end of the sale, upon the successful bidders’ failure to tender the required deposit. The Sheriff reserves the right to postpone or stay the sale of any property in which the attorney on the writ has not appeared and is not present at the sale. Prospective purchasers are directed to the Web site of the Philadelphia Bureau of Revision of Taxes, (BRT) brtweb.phila.gov for a fuller description of the properties listed. Properties can be looked up by the BRT number – which should be cross checked with the address. Prospective purchasers are also directed to the Room 154 City Hall, 215686-1483 and to its website philadox.phila.gov and to its website at http://philadox.phila.gov where they can view the deed to each individual property and find the boundaries of the property. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR DETERMINING THE NATURE, LOCATION, CONDITION AND BOUNDARIES OF THE PROPERTIES THEY SEEK TO PURCHASE. The BRT # refers to a unique number assigned by the City Bureau of Revision of Taxes to each property in the City for the purpose of assessing it for taxes. This number can be used to obtain descriptive information about the property from the BRT website. Effective Date: July 7, 2006 NOTICE OF SCHEDULE OF DISTRIBUTION The Sheriff will file in his office, The Land Title Building, 100 South Broad Street, 5th Floor, a Schedule of Distribution Thirty (30) Days from the date of the sale of Real Estate. Distribution will be made in accordance with the Schedule unless exceptions are filed thereto within ten (10) days thereafter. The name first appearing in each notice is that of the defendant in the writ whose property is being sold. All Writs are Writs of Executions. The letters C.P., Court of Common Pleas; O.C., Orphans’ Court; Q.S., Court of Quarter Sessions; C.C., County Court - indicate the Court out of which the writ of execution issues under which the sale is made: S. 1941. 223. means September Term, 1941. 223, the term and number of the docket entry; the figures following show the amount of debt; and the name following is that of the attorney issuing the writ. Attention is called to the provisions of Act No.104, approved July 27, 1955, which requires owners of properties which are used, designed or intended to be used by three or more families, or of commercial establishments which contain one or more dwelling units, to deliver to the buyers of such properties a use registration permit at the time of settlement, under certain terms and conditions. Sheriff Sales are not subject to provisions of the said Act and the Sheriff will, therefore, not deliver use registration permits in connection with any sales

conducted by him. Very truly yours, JEWELL WILLIAMS Sheriff City and County of Philadelphia

www.Officeof Philadelphia Sheriff.com

SPECIAL NOTE: All Sheriff’s Sales are conducted pursuant to the orders of the Courts and Judges of the First Judicial District. Only properties that are subject to judgments issued by the First Judicial District are listed for sale. By law, the Sheriff’s Office cannot decide if a property can be listed for sale; only the District Courts can order a property to be sold at auction.

SHERIFF’S SALE OF Tuesday, December 4, 2018 1812-301 527 E Clarkson Ave 19120 42nd wd. 1,088 sq. ft. OPA#421239600 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: ROW B/GAR 2 STY MASONRY Brenda McClendon C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 00406 $107,454.96 James DiMaggio, Esquire 1812-302 5649 Frontenac St 19124 35th wd. 1,937 sq. ft. OPA#351391100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Christopher John C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 03781 $105,945.56 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-303 130 N Second St, Unit 4A1 f/k/a Unit 4F1 5th wd. 0 sq. ft. BRT#888058186 IMPROVEMENTS: RES CONDO 5+ STY MASONRY Marjorie Krauss and Matthew A. Balin a/k/a Matthew Balin C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 04120 $643,537.24 Milstead & Associates, LLC 1812-304 1213 N 53rd St 19131 44th wd. 1,155 sq. ft. BRT#442319000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE All Known and Unknown Heirs, Personal Representatives, and Devisees of Tonsa Davis, Deceased and Alphonso Tillman a/k/a Alphonso A. Tillman C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 00511 $40,562.77 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-305 6320 Cherokee St 19144 59th wd. 1,400 sq. ft. OPA#593137800 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: ROW 2 STY MASONRY Vivian Woodbury C.P. August Term, 2016 No. 00647 $85,730.41 James DiMaggio 1812-306 2841 S Randolph St 19148 39th wd. 816 sq. ft. OPA#395150100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Rosemarie Ferro and Frank G. Ferro, Jr. C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 03159 $162,870.31 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-307 4226 Ormond St 19124 33rd wd. 810 sq. ft. OPA#332535100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Lapina Jamison a/k/a Lapena Jamison C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 03612 $79,695.94 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-308 4728 C St 19120 42nd wd. 1,147 sq. ft. OPA#421355000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Mary L. Shields C.P.

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September Term, 2017 No. 01771 $49,197.46 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-309 6013 Tulip St 19135 41st wd. 2,980 sq. ft. OPA#411443300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Derrick Lasswell Solely in His Capacity as Heir of Mae Hart, Deceased, Kimberly Lasswell Solely in Her Capacity as Heir of Mae Hart Deceased, Michelle Lasswell Solely in Her Capacity as Heir of Mae Hart, Deceased and The Unknown Heirs of Mae Hart Deceased C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 03546 $81,737.65 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-310 1803 Fernon St 19145 36th wd. 768 sq. ft. OPA#363075200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Carol Myers as Administratrix of the Estate of Muriel Myers Deceased C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 01267 $113,416.14 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-311 6120 E Wister St 19138 12th wd. 2,100 sq. ft. BRT#122316400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Marie Vanhook C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00835 $56,471.22 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-312 6045 N Philip St 19120 61st wd. 1,081 sq. ft. OPA#612416700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Vanessa F. Gould C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 03902 $48,667.48 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-313 8041 Mars Pl 19153 40th wd. 2,493 sq. ft. BRT#405882647 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Greivin Escalante C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00041 $271,316.19 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-314 414 N 64th St 19151 34th wd. 3,125 sq. ft. BRT#871546590 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Jason Pugh, Jr. C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 00635 $105,067.73 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-315 7856 Nixon St 19128 21st wd. 3,020 sq. ft. OPA#212412940 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Steven F. Massa C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00296 $192,779.48 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-316 3850 Woodhaven Rd, Unit 203 19154 66th wd. 1,133 sq. ft. OPA#888660265 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Gregory B. Nalencz, Esquire, Administrator of the Estate of Kent Granger, deceased C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 03031 $70,102.34 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-317 6457 Sprague St 19119 22nd wd. 2,389 sq. ft. OPA#22-1-282400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY James Simmons C.P. August Term, 2017 No. 03069 $241,864.57 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-318 507 S 4th St 19147 5th wd. 795 sq. ft. OPA#051072400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESI-

DENTIAL PROPERTY Thomas J. Cardwell C.P. August Term, 2014 No. 03078 $394,398.51 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-319 1131 Anchor St 19124 62nd wd. 1,501 sq. ft. OPA#621068300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ronald Baylis, Jr. C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 00309 $128,666.17 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-320 1528 S Wilton St 19143 51st wd. 825 sq. ft. OPA#512057300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY David Gaffin C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 05201 $41,843.90 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-321 2430 W Norris St 19121 32nd wd. 1,040 sq. ft. OPA#322245600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Cheri C. Gramby and Anthony W. Gramby C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 00699 $38,599.66 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-322 7500 Woodbine Ave 19151 34th wd. 2,950 sq. ft. OPA#343197900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kimberly Coates C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00875 $0.00 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-323 6626 Lansdowne Ave 19151 34th wd. 1,164 sq. ft. OPA#344022900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Charita N. Henry C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 03622 $77,761.59 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-324 6712 Eastwood St 19149 54th wd. 1,138 sq. ft. OPA#542401300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Waseem Khokhar C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03253 $83,042.23 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-325 606 Anchor St 19120 35th wd. 1,269 sq. ft. OPA#351264100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Qian Li C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 04627 $63,783.74 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-326 2006 W Cheltenham Ave 19138 10th wd. 1,800 sq. ft. OPA#10-1-4085-00 IMPROVEMENTS: 2 STORY ROW MASONRY - RESIDENTIAL Anthony Morse C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 04204 $63,791.17 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-327 4528 Smedley St a/k/a 4528 N. Smedley St 19140 42nd wd. 1,315 sq. ft. OPA#132133400 IMPROVEMENTS: 2 STORY ROW MASONRY RESIDENTIAL Unknown Surviving Heirs of Lenora Hawthorne, Deceased C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 01099 $20,664.50 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-328 7923 Anita Dr 19111 56th wd. 3,633 sq. ft. OPA#561101500 IMPROVEMENTS: 1 STORY MASONRY David Delgado C.P. February Term, 2017 No. 08175 $194,214.35 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-329 5226 N American St 19120 42nd wd. 1,425 sq. ft. OPA#422424100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Roseline Balthazard C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 03303 $29,229.24 Meredith H. Wooters, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-330 6139 Chancellor St

19139 3rd wd. 1,110 sq. ft. OPA#031076500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Evelyn Baynes; Rykeem Alexander C.P. November Term, 2016 No. 02447 $30,119.25 Meredith H. Wooters, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-331 2339 S. Bucknell St 19145 48th wd. 687 sq. ft. OPA#482299300 IMPROVEMENTS: 2 STORY ROW MASONRY - RESIDENTIAL Anthony D. McBride C.P. August Term, 2017 No. 00152 $55,631.71 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-332 5202 Gainor Rd 19131 52nd wd. 2,400 sq. ft. BRT#521161600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Eugene Brown C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 00538 $140,557.79 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-333 5930 Frontenac St 19149 53rd wd. 1,408 sq. ft. OPA#531262200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY David M. Pedrick C.P. February Term, 2017 No. 05323 $95,015.43 Cristina L. Connor, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-334 4245 Elbridge St 19135 55th wd. 1,997 sq. ft. BRT#552092600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Dawn E. Dare C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 02961 $142,286.63 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-335 6537 Berdan St 19119 22nd wd. 1,616 sq. ft. OPA#223216900 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Hermione B. Stinson C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 02543 $133,197.23 Meredith H. Wooters, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-336 147 W Laurel St Unit A 19123 5th wd. 0 sq. ft. (being and designated as Unit A, together with a proportionate undivided interest in the Common Elements); Condominium BRT#888039496 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Raheem Brock C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 00420 $383,699.44 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-337 5831 Pemberton St 19143 46th wd. 938 sq. ft. OPA#032153800 IMPROVEMENTS: 2 STORY ROW MASONRY - RESIDENTIAL Ronald Erwin C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 04205 $43,063.88 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-338 5008 N Franklin St 49th wd. 1,021 sq. ft. BRT#491243000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Charles A.J. Halpin, III, Esquire, Personal Representative of the Estate of Carmen Luz-Castro, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02081 $65,090.83 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-339 2011 E Cheltenham Ave 41st wd. 1,256 sq. ft. BRT#411076900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Daisy Ho C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 00667 $52,771.04 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-340 3635 Drumore Dr 66th wd. 1,520 sq. ft.

BRT#662266400 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Michael Pellicciotti and Rosanna M. Pellicciotti C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 02209 $10,160.76 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-341 3650 Academy Rd 66th wd. 1,800 sq. ft. BRT#663353600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING David Ries a/k/a David P. Reis a/k/a David Reis C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 01759 $139,186.76 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-342 610 Van Kirk St 35th wd. 1,280 sq. ft. BRT#352101700 IMPROVEMENTS: ROW B/GAR 2 STY MASONRY Stephanie M. Osbourne a/k/a Stephanie M. Braxton C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 00765 $74,680.40 Milstead & Associates, LLC 1812-343 1818 Griffith St a/k/a 1816 Griffith St 19111 56th wd. 8,081 sq. ft. BRT#561530300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Gerald Tozzi as Administrator of the Estate of John Przybyszewski C.P. June Term, 2018 No. 03789 $128,453.81 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-344 5411 Torresdale Ave 19124 41st wd. 1,185 sq. ft. OPA#411302700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Stuart D. Quinn, deceased C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 00464 $92,471.15 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-345 6652 N Opal St a/k/a 6652 N. Opal St a/k/a 6652 N. Opal St, Apt 1 10th wd. 1,249 sq. ft. BRT#102048200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Drew S. Brown C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 02104 $132,162.73 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-346 3336 A St 19134 7th wd. 1,197 sq. ft. OPA#073055100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Brenaliz K. Rivera C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 01107 $53,684.23 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-347 4605 Shelbourne St 42nd wd. unknown sq. ft. BRT#421627700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Almira Llanos C.P. September Term, 2014 No. 04415 $96,510.45 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-348 6862 Erdrick St 19135 55th wd. 3,344 sq. ft. BRT#552266115 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Charles Goodroe C.P. September Term, 2016 No. 02175 $123,782.83 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-349 8030 Ditman St, Unit #131, assessed as Unit #131W 19136 65th wd. 708 sq. ft. OPA#888651031 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Igor Smirnov C.P. June Term, 2018 No. 03012 $119,177.32 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-350 1912 Pratt St 19124

SHERIFF’S SALE 62nd wd. 1,399 sq. ft. BRT#622053000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Ndubuisi Okoro C.P. June Term, 2018 No. 01786 $140,776.10 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-351 3461 Chalfont Dr 19154 66th wd. 3,693 sq. ft. BRT#662407100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Kevin C. Lawrence C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 01965 $161,893.20 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-352 12 E Palmer St a/k/a 12 W Palmer St 19125 18th wd. 1,113 sq. ft. BRT#183022400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Steven Polit and Linda M. Hepworth C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 00381 $104,239.27 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-353 6753 Cottage St 55th wd. 1,447 sq. ft. BRT#552418800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Edward C. Smith C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 02509 $108,793.25 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-354 7425 Rhoads St 19151 34th wd. 1,348 sq. ft. BRT#343158300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Terrance Waller and Aneesah Hassan C.P. August Term, 2017 No. 02346 $118,115.79 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-355 1015 Disston St 53rd wd. 2,570 sq. ft. BRT#532207300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Sharon Lee Lundin and Leona Elizabeth Selby C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 03432 $152,340.18 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-356 8662 Rugby St 19150 50th wd. 1,546 sq. ft. OPA#502091800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Paul Washington C.P. December Term, 2015 No. 00810 $147,465.92 Meredith H. Wooters, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-357 6017 W Columbia Ave 19151 34th wd. ROW B/GAR 2 STY MASONRY; 1,568 sq. ft. BRT#342113200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Joseph Robinson a/k/a Joseph W. Robinson C.P. October Term, 2015 No. 00818 $93,103.45 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-358 4427 Loring St 41st wd. 980 sq. ft. BRT#412183700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Gregory Ingram C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 05601 $89,958.19 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-359 3221 Chatham St 45th wd. 1,015 sq. ft. BRT#451379000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Edward F. Marcinkiewicz C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 01677 $93,514.45 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-360 116 W Ritner St a/k/a 116 Ritner St 191484021 39th wd. 984 sq. ft. OPA#391129100

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SHERIFF’S SALE IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Matthew Boyd, Marie Elena Grandelli, Gregory Grandelli C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01547 $166,315.72 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-361 238 E. Haines St 19144 59th wd. 2,148 sq. ft. OPA#591154900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Donna Thomas, in Her Capacity as Executrix and Devisee of The Estate of Cora Young Taylor a/k/a Cora L. Young Taylor a/k/a Cora L. Young C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 02810 $87,604.60 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-362 2028 W 66th Ave a/k/a 2028 66th Ave 191383139 10th wd. 1,158 sq. ft. OPA#102364100 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kimberly Cooper C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01342 $37,644.07 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-363 4819 N 13th St 191413426 49th wd. 1,590 sq. ft. OPA#491503800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Bakary Kante C.P. November Term, 2016 No. 02277 $85,082.41 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-364 3420 Shelmire Ave 191363525 64th wd. 1,432 sq. ft. OPA#642170200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Angelica M. Marquez C.P. December Term, 2013 No. 02406 $134,785.85 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-365 6245 Langdon St 191115806 53rd wd. 1,296 sq. ft. OPA#531226200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Shelly Laibhen C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 00013 $188,660.24 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-366 4624 Pennhurst St 191243828 42nd wd. 1,242 sq. ft. OPA#421614300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Roseline Henry a/k/a Roseline O. Henry C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 01514 $80,169.75 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-367 6717 Cinnamon Dr 19128 21st wd. 1,920 sq. ft. OPA#212473731 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Andrew C. Stopani a/k/a Andrew Stopani C.P. December Term, 2016 No. 01918 $249,359.64 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-368 9220 Horatio Rd 191143809 57th wd. 1,127 sq. ft. OPA#572240600 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Cathleen A. Darcy C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 03021 $99,401.67 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-369 6186 Newtown Ave 19111-5928 35th wd. 1,120 sq. ft. OPA#352211800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Colleen I. Robins C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 00828 $93,783.51 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-370 5308 Rising Sun Ave 19120 87th wd. 1,460 sq. ft. BRT#871197000 IMPROVEMENTS:

SHERIFF’S SALE RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Edwin Santiago C.P. October Term, 2015 No. 02412 $224,505.85 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-371 847 Sanger St 35th wd. 1,208 sq. ft. BRT#351219700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Robert Minkiewicz, Kelly Minkiewicz and Richard Schmidt C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 03330 $87,971.43 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-372 5933-35 N. Camac St a/k/a 5933-5935 N. Camac St a/k/a 5933 N. Camac St 48th wd. 1,680 sq. ft. BRT#493166400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Michael P. Dunston a/k/a Michael Dunston and Brenda J. Dunston a/k/a Brenda Dunston C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 00574 $36,574.09 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-373 4218 Frost St 19136 65th wd. 1,200 sq. ft. OPA#651219500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Marcos A. Gonzalez a/k/a Marcos Gonzalez C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 00124 $106,940.79 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-374 1505 E Walnut Ln 19138 10th wd. 1,575 sq. ft. OPA#102155700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Oliver T. Jessup, Sr. C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 04803 $135,472.45 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-375 2232 Washington Ln East 50th wd. 1,081 sq. ft. BRT#501392600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Francis M. Graham a/k/a Frances M. Graham, Deceased C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 02491 $34,875.67 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-376 1411 E Johnson St 5th wd. 3,365 sq. ft. BRT#102299000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Dorothy Edwards a/k/a Dorothy M. Edwards a/k/a Dorothy H. Edwards, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 02588 $131,549.39 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-377 1221 Dufor St 191483513 39th wd. 784 sq. ft. OPA#394302800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Charles M. Capra C.P. May Term, 2015 No. 01529 $116,862.26 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-378 1706 Tulip St, Unit 3 19125-2427 18th wd. 1,920 sq. ft. OPA#181468406 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Stacy L. Powers C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 00080 $380,460.92 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-379 704 E Thayer St 191341814 33rd wd. 1,320 sq. ft. OPA#331138700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Jose L. Diaz a/k/a Jose Luis Diaz C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 04517 $59,343.26 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-380 10912 Kirby Dr 19154 66th wd. Land Area: 2,902 sq. ft. BRT#662189300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Jamie M. Miles C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 03048 $285,052.40 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire,

SHERIFF’S SALE Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-381 749 Magee Ave 19111 35th wd. 2,340 sq. ft. BRT#353109401 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Tatyna Petrosov and Dmitriy Koslov C.P. July Term, 2013 No. 04445 $214,085.16 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-382 726 W Nedro Ave 19120 61st wd. 1,350 sq. ft. BRT#612082600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Edward Bradley C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00877 $99,701.78 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-383 5733 Catharine St 46th wd. 1,122 sq. ft. BRT#463099100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Marshall Moyer, Deceased C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 01444 $80,866.68 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-384 934 Tree St 191483122 39th wd. 854 sq. ft. OPA#393333100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Margaret E. Taylor, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02410 $97,967.21 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-385 1737 N 24th St 19121 47th wd. 1,728 sq. ft. OPA#472193900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Lavette Florence Watts a/k/a Lavette F. Whaley; Whaley Realty Management, Inc C.P. June Term, 2018 No. 01220 $17,725.52 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-386 219 N Robinson St 19139 34th wd. 1,585 sq. ft. OPA#341170900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kristie M. Trice C.P. March Term, 2014 No. 04306 $31,826.94 Meredith H. Wooters, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-387 3908 Palmetto St 191245418 33rd wd. 1,206 sq. ft. OPA#332181900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Edwin Cruz C.P. April Term, 2014 No. 00984 $116,059.69 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-388 2040 S 69th St 191421204 40th wd. 1,188 sq. ft. OPA#403202700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Pamela Palmer C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 00659 $59,894.13 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-389 3905 Glendale St 19124 33rd wd. 1,200 sq. ft. OPA#332440300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Charise Brown, a/k/a Charise C. Brown C.P. January Term, 2017 No. 03001 $50,568.14 Cristina L. Connor, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-390 1228-1232 Arch St Unit 4D a/k/a 1228-32 Arch St #4D 19107-2816 5th wd. 856 sq. ft. OPA#888038082 Subject

SHERIFF’S SALE to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Magda Teresa Vergara C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 03045 $203,142.10 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-391 1806 W 72nd Ave a/k/a 1806 72nd Ave 19126 10th wd. (formerly 50th wd.) 1,344 sq. ft. OPA#101292600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Boubacar Ouattara C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00061 $79,075.42 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-392 1710 Kendrick St 19152 56th wd. 2,156 sq. ft. BRT#562192400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Jeffrey Sabalski and Phyllis A Sabalski a/k/a Phyllis Sabalski C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 00005 $118,090.69 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-393 2731 C St 19134 7th wd. 700 sq. ft. BRT#071441300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Kepler Louis-Charles C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 01982 $60,062.24 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-394 3720 N 15th St 191403602 13th wd. 1,544 sq. ft. OPA#131147200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Desmond Labor a/k/a Desmond J. Labor C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 02960 $75,169.71 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-395 4908 W Thompson St 19131 44th wd. 1,401 sq. ft. OPA#442114000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Bianca Barnes C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 03294 $116,673.63 Justin F. Kobeski, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski LLC 1812-396 1708 Shelmire Ave 19111 56th wd. 1,312 sq. ft. OPA#561340200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY La’Deva Kelly, in Her Capacity as Heir of Wayne C. Kelly, Deceased; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Wayne C. Kelly, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02991 $157,861.51 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-397 212 Stearly St 191115915 35th wd. 1,138 sq. ft. OPA#352168700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Aleisha C. Riles C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 01634 $65,059.41 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-398 5311 Saul St 19124 62nd wd. Land: 1,388 sq. ft.; Improvement: 1,180 sq. ft.; Total: 1,388 sq. ft. OPA#621464200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ryan G. Dolby C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02716 $97,482.84 Richard M. Squire & Associates, LLC 1812-399 3836 Baring St 19104 24th wd. Land: 1,530 sq. ft.; Improvement: 2,078; Total: 2,078 sq. ft. OPA#241167300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Carolyn Johnson, solely as Administratrix of the Estate of Edward D. Hayes and Kathleen McEachin, solely as Administratrix of the Estate of Edward D. Hayes and Melissa Hayes, solely

SHERIFF’S SALE as Administratrix of the Estate of Edward D. Hayes and Vanessa Hayes, solely as Administratrix of the Estate of Edward D. Hayes C.P. August Term, 2017 No. 01622 $215,556.73 Richard M. Squire & Associates, LLC 1812-400 3848 N Gratz Ave a/k/a 3848 N Gratz St 191403526 13th wd. 1,332 sq. ft. OPA#131268300 Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Shi Coney, Deceased C.P. January Term, 2016 No. 02772 $53,095.54 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-401 1236 McKinley St 191115834 53rd wd. 1,360 sq. ft. OPA#531019700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Clifton Hunter, Aja S. Hunter C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 00074 $147,155.65 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-402 11845 Academy Rd, Unit C8 19154 66th wd. 1,326 sq. ft. OPA#888660423 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL Josephine H. Taylor and Agnes Reeves-Taylor C.P. April Term, 2016 No. 02014 $15,108.80 Hal A. Barrow, Esquire 1812-403 1011 Lorraine St 19116 58th wd. 1,652 sq. ft. OPA#582213000 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kristen Sanchez; Michael J. Sanchez C.P. August Term, 2012 No. 02337 $267,570.44 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-404 12126 Rambler Rd 191541723 66th wd. 1,296 sq. ft. OPA#663207200 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Stephen Mensick C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02774 $142,088.90 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-405 2301 Green St, Apartment 1 19130-3143 88th wd. 1,210 sq. ft. OPA#888153600/ OPA#888153616 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Eugene Bukh C.P. April Term, 2015 No. 00301 $304,179.36 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-406 9232 Edmund St 191144004 65th wd. 2,348 sq. ft. OPA#652388600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Neisha Lugo; Joemike Lugo C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 00593 $328,397.59 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-407 5832 Windsor Ave 19143 3rd wd. 1,088 sq. ft. OPA#034095900 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kevin Jones C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 01361 $51,899.65 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-408 625 S. Yewdall St 19143 46th wd. Land Area: 1,005 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 1,170 Sq. ft. OPA#463168600 IMPROVEMENTS: RM-1 Brian Keith Bullard Sr. and Janet L. Bullard C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 2178 $20,222.97 plus interest to date of sale Robert J. Wilson, Esq., Wilson Law Firm 1812-409 5020 Boudinot St 19120 42nd wd. 1,464 sq. ft. OPA#421422000

SHERIFF’S SALE IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Louise Charles; Guerino Pierre-Louis C.P. January Term, 2011 No. 00994 $66,162.34 Justin F. Kobeski, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski LLC 1812-410 4605 Conshohocken Ave 19131 52nd wd. 1,840 sq. ft. OPA#521191500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Stephani Edmunds; Dwayne Hollis C.P. October Term, 2011 No. 02169 $299,157.79 Cristina L. Connor, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-411 2948 N Twenty-Sixth St a/k/a 2948 N 26th St 38th wd. 1,280 sq. ft. BRT#381155900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Bruce E. Carter a/k/a Bruce Carter C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 00114 $39,798.33 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-412 1456 N Felton St 34th wd. 1,080 sq. ft. BRT#342345000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Crystal Smith C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 00264 $98,554.15 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-413 1335 S 54th St 19143 51st wd. 1,356 sq. ft. OPA#511253800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ivra Davis C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 03629 $49,446.07 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-414 6138 Grays Ave 191423208 40th wd. 1,740 sq. ft. OPA#402157700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Debra Mcduffie a/k/a Deborah Mcduffie; Jasper Golatt C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 00225 $63,274.91 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-415 7027 Saybrook Ave a/k/a 7027 Saybrook 191421123 40th wd. 1,140 sq. ft. OPA#403299500 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kenneth M. Manning; Olga E. Manning C.P. February Term, 2017 No. 04332 $21,677.75 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-416 424 Longshore Ave a/k/a 424 Longshore St 10th wd. 5,546 sq. ft. BRT#353154700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Thuan Le C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 00723 $154,033.38 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-417 7015 Ridge Ave, Apt 2 a/k/a 7015 Ridge Ave, Unit 2 21st wd. 1,320 sq. ft. BRT#214135402 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Michael K. Harrison C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 02022 $140,514.40 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-418 3322 N Hope St 19140 7th wd. 918 sq. ft. OPA#072023800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Caren Paez C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03351 $30,030.26 Justin F. Kobeski, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski LLC 1812-419 5533 W Girard Ave 191314248 4th wd. 1,792 sq. ft. OPA#041090200 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Gregory S. Hughes C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01335 $51,353.35 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP

SHERIFF’S SALE 1812-420 1327 W Ruscomb St 19141-2708 49th wd. 2,640 sq. ft. OPA#491140500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Sonya F. Wood C.P. March Term, 2013 No. 02991 $127,646.71 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-421 4625 Tacony St 19137 45th wd. 1,214 sq. ft. OPA#453432800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Jesse B. Andrus Jr.; Kedra Johnson C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 00058 $106,727.28 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-422 2751 Willits Rd 191143410 57th wd. 1,279 sq. ft. OPA#571158205 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Keith Stukes; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Robert T. Willis, Deceased; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Mary E. Willis, Deceased; Unknown Administrator of The Estate of Robert T. Willis C.P. November Term, 1998 No. 03093 $261,794.41 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-423 1324 Locust St a/k/a 1324 Locust St Apartment 711 19107-5658 5th wd. 319 sq. ft. OPA#888115506 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Richard J. Zambino a/k/a Richard Zambino C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 03133 $96,519.58 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-424 2522 S Rosewood St 19145-4631 26th wd. 1,080 sq. ft. OPA#261108600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Catherine M. Buonfiglio C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 03144 $118,086.24 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-425 7204 Montague St 191351111 41st wd. 1,224 sq. ft. OPA#412259000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kenneth N. Weber; Lisa M. Mc Devitt C.P. August Term, 2017 No. 02999 $75,338.34 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-426 7122 Guyer Ave 191532406 40th wd. 960 sq. ft. OPA#404352900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ephene Emmanuel; Yvrose A. Emmanuel C.P. May Term, 2016 No. 01684 $63,524.07 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-427 4229 Marple St 19136 65th wd. 1,046 sq. ft. OPA#651104800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Tina Marie Derocini C.P. June Term, 2015 No. 03508 $72,641.32 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-428 15156 Ina Dr 191161450 58th wd. 1,176 sq. ft. OPA#583165252 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Christopher P. Oneill a/k/a Christopher P. O’Neill; Nacole F. Oneill a/k/a Nacole F. O’Neill C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 02680 $228,173.49 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP

SHERIFF’S SALE 1812-429 4031 Neilson St 191245302 33rd wd. 1,200 sq. ft. OPA#332527100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Sarah Cardona C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03266 $50,397.30 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-430 1613 Fox Chase Rd 19152 56th wd. 2,841 sq. ft. OPA#562178300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Lois D. Hurowitz a/k/a Lois Hurowitz C.P. May Term, 2016 No. 03839 $149,175.87 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-431 225 W Nedro Ave 19120 61st wd. 992 sq. ft. OPA#612101200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Rochelle Alverest and Gregory T. Alverest C.P. October Term, 2011 No. 02642 $43,282.93 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-432 10725 E Pelle Cir a/k/a 10725 Pelle Cir E 19154 66th wd. 960 sq. ft. OPA#662092270 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Danielle Marchiano; Robert J. Hearn C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03272 $174,489.78 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-433 2008 N Marston St a/k/a 2008 N Marston St 19122 a/k/a 19121 32nd wd. 746 sq. ft. BRT#323197000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING John Vanderhost as mortgagor and real owner and in his capacity as heir of Jessie Vanderhost a/k/a Jessie McDonald, Deceased and Robert P. Venderhost a/k/a Robert P. Vanderhost as mortgagor and in his capacity as heir of Jessie Vanerhost a/k/a Jessie McDonald, Deceased, and Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Jessie Vanderhost a/k/a Jessie V. Mcdonald, Deceased C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 01944 $42,248.61 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-434 5947 Reach St 19120 35th wd. 1,575 sq. ft. OPA#352242300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Philip S. Appenzeller and Tammy M. Lowe C.P. July Term, 2013 No. 01527 $126,999.14 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-435 300 W Winona St a/k/a 300 Winona St 19144 12th wd. 2,571 sq. ft. OPA#124058000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY William Rufus and Nekesha C. Rufus a/k/a Nekesha Chantel Rufus C.P. January Term, 2016 No. 00017 $246,293.40 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-436 2531 S 21st St 191454207 26th wd. 1,768 sq. ft. OPA#262197900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Andrew D. Peshek C.P. October Term, 2015 No. 01804 $350,053.93 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-437 921 S 8th St 19147 2nd wd. 800 sq. ft. OPA#021498300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Joseph Cotropia M.D. C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02321 $317,480.16 KML Law Group, P.C.


Term, 2018 No. 02411 $149,841.32 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-458 5135 Jackson St 19124 62nd wd. 1,436 sq. ft. OPA#622406700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Elizabeth M. Oldfield a/k/a Elizabeth Oldfield C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02257 $17,344.37 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-459 2555 S Massey St a/k/a 2555 Massey St 191422122 40th wd. 1,018 sq. ft. OPA#406115300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Bernice L. Townsend C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 03704 $52,329.77 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-460 246 Christian St a/k/a 901 S Third St 19147 2nd wd. 1,131 sq. ft. OPA#871502110 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Durwood Hankinson C.P. February Term, 2016 No. 03629 $485,032.26 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-461 1420 W. Grange St a/k/a 1420 W. Grange Ave 15th wd. 1,560 sq. ft. BRT#171116000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Albert Cordery, Jr. C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 00100 $65,008.23 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-462 6330 Cherokee St 22nd wd. 2,000 sq. ft. BRT#593138300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Christopher J. Reed C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 01459 $393,569.11 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-463 1512 N Robinson St 19151-4244 34th wd. 1,380 sq. ft. OPA#342284900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Theresa M. Evans, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03277 $6,660.32 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-464 1927 Haworth St 19124 62nd wd. 1,312 sq. ft. OPA#622031500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Olga Marrero and Maria Rodriguez C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 02249 $86,688.78 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-465 2539 S Robinson St 19142 40th wd. 1,119 sq. ft. OPA#402086900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Mansa J. Paye, II a/k/a Junior M. Verdier a/k/a Mansa J. Paye a/k/a Junior M. Veridier C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02030 $82,735.57 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-466 252 E Hortter St 19119 22nd wd. 2,050 sq. ft. OPA#221167800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Denise Norfleet as Administratrix of the Estate of Maude Ransom, Deceased C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 03576 $8,179.99 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-467 5438 Hawthorne St 19124 62nd wd. 1,893 sq. ft. OPA#622253321 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Christopher Jones solely in His Capacity as Heir of Melinda Muniz Deceased, The Unknown Heirs of Melinda Muniz Deceased

SHERIFF’S SALE and Miguel Santiago Solely in His Capacity as Heir of Melinda Muniz Deceased C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 02902 $117,156.53 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-468 1972 W Spencer St 49th wd. 1,320 sq. ft. BRT#171254700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Robin Montgomery C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 01900 $141,403.34 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-469 7164 Georgian Rd 191382119 10th wd. 1,314 sq. ft. OPA#101133100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Laurine Spivey C.P. January Term, 2016 No. 01834 $62,245.37 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-470 6214 Gillespie St 55th wd. Beginning Point: on the Northwesterly side of Gillespie Street (40 feet wide) at the distance of 457 feet 7-1/2 inches measured Southwestwardly along the said side of Gillespie Street from its intersection with the Southwesterly side of Robbins Street (60 feet wide) OPA#552425400 IMPROVEMENTS: ROW B/GR 2 STY MASONRY Rubin Bonny and Brenda J. Moon C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 00800 $107,487.90 Patrick J. Wesner, Esquire 1812-471 5021 Rosehill St 19120 42nd wd. 1,104 sq. ft. OPA#421348800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Pablo Celedonio C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 03531 $69,963.36 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-472 6044 Baltimore Ave 19143 3rd wd. 1,876 sq. ft. OPA#034004800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Elwood H Walton C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01397 $106,089.75 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-473 2756 Alresford St 19137 45th wd. 1,120 sq. ft. OPA#453015000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Erin Shain C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 01922 $72,788.05 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-474 1371 Westbury Dr 191512817 34th wd. 1,120 sq. ft. OPA#343285700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY John Phillips, Jr; John Phillips, Sr C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 03258 $114,332.08 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-475 8409 Suffolk Pl 19153 40th wd. 3,269 sq. ft. OPA#405186004 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY The Unknown Heirs of Alice Jane Scott Deceased and Duane Scott Solely in Her Capacity as Heir of Alice Jane Scott Deceased C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 01719 $43,774.75 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-476 3706 Vader Rd a/k/a 3706 Vader Dr 19154 66th wd. 1,800 sq. ft. OPA#663424200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Carole Jane Tyre a/k/a Carol Jane C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02724 $38,993.97 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-477 4247 Tackawanna St 23rd wd. 815 sq. ft. BRT#232344500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELL-

SHERIFF’S SALE ING Myriam Rivera C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 04110 $38,567.52 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-478 6725 Marsden St 19135 41st wd. 2,075 sq. ft. BRT#412383800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Ingrid Rodriguez C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03552 $113,470.48 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-479 1619 Solly Ave 56th wd. 4,185 sq. ft. BRT#562072700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Elena Sklyar C.P. October Term, 2015 No. 03491 $123,021.97 Law Office of Gregory Javardian, LLC 1812-480 78 W Godfrey Ave 19120 BRT#611284300 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Dionne N. Jackson a/k/a Dionne N. Singleton $122,987.62 Thomas A Capehart, Esquire 1812-481 4952 Wellington St 19135 65th wd. Land: 1,128 sq. ft.; Improvement: 1,064 sq. ft. BRT#651014300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Anthony Black C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 01191 $57,514.60 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-482 3221 Stanwood St 19136 64th wd. 2,797 sq. ft. BRT#642317400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Joseph R. Lee, Jr.; Lucyanne Lee C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 02548 $314,017.25 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-483 6341 Chester Ave 19142 40th wd. 1,004 sq. ft. OPA#401222800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Leonard A. Murphy C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 03033 $68,423.41 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-484 5229 W Jefferson St 19131 52nd wd. 1,232 sq. ft. OPA#521031800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ella Butts a/k/a Ella L. Butts C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01062 $64,104.79 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-485 7675 Woodcrest Ave 19151 BRT#343197500 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Ayesha Ferguson C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 00118 $115,040.10 Thomas A Capehart, Esquire 1812-486 2643 Bonaffon St 19142 40th wd. 1,112 sq. ft. BRT#406072700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Arlene Glover C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 01765 $47,418.39 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-487 2917 S 67th St 19142 40th wd. 3,180 sq. ft. BRT#406615800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Thomas G. McGill Tappeh and Gweh Nementobor a/k/a Nementorbor Gweh a/k/a Gweh Tappeh C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03507 $198,342.63 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-488 2721 Reed St 19146 36th wd. 1,292 sq. ft. OPA#362-114700 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: HOUSE; RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Eugene Bulch, 2301 Green St

SHERIFF’S SALE C.P. June Term, 2018 No. 01280 $176,000.00 1812-489 2441 S Alder St 19148 39th wd. 714 sq. ft. OPA#394122500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Jamie Devito and John M. Devito C.P. March Term, 2008 No. 01030 $55,972.93 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-490 855 Locust Ave 191382333 12th wd. 1981.00 sq. ft. OPA#122077600 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL Silver Eagle Investment Group, LLC, 1632 Frankstown Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15235 C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 01905 $34,090.07 Brandon R. Wind, Esq. 1812-491 4419 Richmond St 19137 45th wd. 1,156 sq. ft. OPA#453318400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Jamie M. Haas a/k/a Jamie M Haas C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 00597 $102,379.80 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-492 6165 Upland St 191422428 40th wd. 1,064 sq. ft. OPA#401294000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Justine Cassandra Staten a/k/a Justine Staten, in Her Capacity as Devisee of Last Will and Testament of Lorraine D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten; Arlen Corprew, in Her Capacity as Heir of Lorraine D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten, Deceased; Lorraine Staten, in Her Capacity as Heir of Lorraine D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten, Deceased; Justina Sheryl Staten, in Her Capacity as Heir of Lorraine D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten, Deceased; Marquita Antoinette Staten, in Her Capacity as Heir of Lorraine D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten, Deceased; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Lorriane D. Staten a/k/a Lorraine Diana Staten, Deceased C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01344 $37,349.08 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-493 9717 Chapel Rd 19115 58th wd. 6,490 sq. ft. BRT#581292100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Hamdi Ibrahim C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03543 $221,178.73 Martha E. Von Rosenstie, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire, Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-494 5703 N 13th St 19141 49th wd. 1,360 sq. ft. OPA#493199100 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Juanita Jones, Executrix of The Estate of Brenda Goode a/k/a Brenda Elaine Goode C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03975 $60,167.80 Kevin J. Cummings, Esquire 1812-495 3100 Brighton St 191492027 55th wd. 2,827 sq. ft. OPA#551351600 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Joseph West; Roberta West C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 02207 $47,663.92 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-496 13085R Bustleton Ave Unit 606B Hazel Lane Condo’s 19116 58th wd. 867 sq. ft. OPA#888581709 IMPROVEMENTS: RESI-

SHERIFF’S SALE DENTIAL PROPERTY James Alexander C.P. January Term, 2015 No. 02527 $167,032.12 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-497 111 Durfor St 19148 39th wd. ROW 2 STY MASONRY; 876 sq. ft. BRT#391111800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Brian T. Brennan and Kerrie L. Giffear C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01055 $141,804.79 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-498 711 E Phil Ellena St 19119-1532 22nd wd. 2,840 sq. ft. OPA#222011100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Anthony Jackson; Margo Jackson C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 00784 $370,190.82 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-499 7960 Bayard St 19150 50th wd. 1,425 sq. ft. OPA#501202900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Camara J. Thorpe C.P. October Term, 2015 No. 02059 $144,644.59 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-500 9921 Bustleton Ave, Apt J4 19115-1556 58th wd. 654 sq. ft. OPA#888580777 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Theresa Jamison; Charles E. Lee C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 03324 $104,925.00 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-501 4061 Balwynne Park Rd 19131 52nd wd. 2,440 sq. ft. OPA#521405100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Beverly Driver C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 01578 $61,012.12 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-502 2911 Knorr St 19149 55th wd. 2,002 sq. ft. OPA#551205600 IMPROVEMENTS: ROW B/ GAR 2 STY MASONRY Lisa M. Ward C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 001032 $142,450.37, plus interest through the date of the sheriff ’s sale, plus costs Jessica A. Kubisiak, Esquire 1812-503 1612 Benner St 19149 62nd wd. 1,778 sq. ft. OPA#621145900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY James F. Hatcher C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 00539 $95,372.93 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-504 1919 N 25th St 191212002 32nd wd. 1,924 sq. ft. OPA#322176500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Lorrel Mccook a/k/a Lorrel Mccook, Sr C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 01851 $110,197.65 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-505 1129 Bingham St 19115 63rd wd. 5,065 sq. ft. OPA#632126800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Joan B. Ryan and Jeffrey M. Ryan C.P. October Term, 2013 No. 01791 $265,574.61 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-506 15005 Sunflower Dr 19116 58th wd. 2,190 sq. ft. OPA#583261005 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Robert A. Severio and Christina M. Severio C.P. July Term, 2017 No. 01545 $415,127.14 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-507 8011 Fairview St 19136 64th wd. 2,000 sq. ft. OPA#642016100

SHERIFF’S SALE IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Joseph Bittner C.P. February Term, 2016 No. 04178 $181,459.38 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-508 1351 E Airdrie St 19124 33rd wd. 878 sq. ft. OPA#331241600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Janine Ann Taylor a/k/a Janine A. Taylor C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 01938 $33,013.68 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-509 5411 Irving St 191394055 60th wd. 1,530 sq. ft. OPA#603054800 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Janice Jones C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 05049 $77,242.59 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-510 1945 Waterloo St 19122 18th wd. 514 sq. ft. OPA#183243400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Esau A. Hernandez a/k/a Esau Hernandez C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01057 $56,944.54 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-511 7134 Erdrick St 191351013 41st wd. 1,290 sq. ft. OPA#412245400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Lou Ann Feuerstein C.P. February Term, 2016 No. 00874 $198,159.25 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-512 2914 Brighton St 19149 55th wd. 1,926 sq. ft. BRT#551346800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Francis X Sees Jr and Christina T Sees C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 01005 $136,276.63 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-513 1946 S Iseminger St 19148-2207 39th wd. 1,232 sq. ft. OPA#394408000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kimmarie S. Santosusso C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 03125 $48,489.31 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-514 3157 Custer St 19134 33rd wd. 1,064 sq. ft. OPA#331309900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Olga Flores a/k/a Olga M. Flores, deceased, Daniel Rodriguez-Flores, Known Heir of Olga Flores a/k/a Olga M. Flores, deceased and Benigno RiveraFlores, Known Heir of Olga Flores a/k/a Olga M. Flores, deceased C.P. June Term, 2017 No. 02916 $25,330.01 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-515 1165 Atwood Rd 19151 34th wd. 1,240 sq. ft. OPA#344328400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Nakia M. Feribee C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 02191 $105,016.70 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-516 6824 Vandike St 191352316 41st wd. 960 sq. ft. OPA#412420600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Brooke Greenberg C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02402 $62,492.93 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-517 1916 Evarts St 35th wd. 4,125 sq. ft. BRT#562241500; PRCL #157 N 10-50 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Joseph

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IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Selina Y. Jallah; David Coletta; Eileen Strobel C.P. April Term, 2016 No. 01035 $59,331.44 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-449 9255 Exeter Rd 19114 57th wd. 5,000 sq. ft. OPA#572251400 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Patrick Waldron (deceased); Christina Waldron, as Believed Heir to the Estate of Patrick Waldron; Patrick J. Waldron, as Believed Heir to the Estate of Patrick Waldron; Matthew Waldron, as Believed Heir to the Estate of Patrick Waldron; Unknown Heirs, and/or Administrators to the Estate of Patrick Waldron C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 00751 $181,416.24 Cristina L. Connor, Esquire; Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC 1812-450 7232 N 21st St 19138 10th wd. ROW B/GAR 2 STY MASONRY; 1,030 sq. ft. BRT#101186800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Rashad Saleem Durrant a/k/a Rashad Durrant C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 03550 $152,336.51 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-451 1619 E Mayland St 19138 10th wd. 1,386 sq. ft. OPA#102263100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ronnie Collins, Administrator of the Estate of Patrick Collins a/k/a Patrick K. Collins, deceased C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 02089 $107,711.98 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-452 7638 Thouron Ave 191502208 10th wd. 1,296 sq. ft. OPA#102498200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ronald C. Walker, Jr C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 02183 $150,950.97 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-453 2730 N 46th St 191311503 52nd wd. 1,354 sq. ft. OPA#521230900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Tamara L. Watkins C.P. March Term, 2017 No. 02632 $126,813.15 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-454 3640 E Allen St 19134 45th wd. 2 STY MASONRY; 1,200 sq. ft. BRT#451128200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Carlos Varona, Jr C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 03162 $30,157.37 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-455 5042 Gainor Rd 191313306 52nd wd. 1,536 sq. ft. OPA#521158600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Pierrette Nix-Pearson a/k/a Pierrette V. Nix Pearson C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 04596 $110,088.88 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-456 10230 Selmer Pl 58th wd. 3,154 sq. ft. BRT#582464100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Zaza Gabuniya and Eka Barbakadze a/k/a Eka Derenovsky C.P. September Term, 2016 No. 03013 $191,379.25 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-457 6518 N 18th St 191263401 17th wd. 1,551 sq. ft. OPA#172283600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Claudel Dorante C.P. May

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1812-438 5145 Germantown Ave 19144-2336 88th wd. 3,588 sq. ft. OPA#881451030 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Childrens Service Inc C.P. April Term, 2018 No. 04464 $174,998.73 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-439 4011 Oakmont St 19136 65th wd. 2,364 sq. ft. OPA#651072200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Anthony Cancelliere C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03499 $85,943.30 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-440 4328 Malta St 191244345 33rd wd. 1,120 sq. ft. OPA#332134100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Cesar A. Nunez, Sr a/k/a Cesar A. Nunez, Jr C.P. October Term, 2017 No. 03212 $45,229.02 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-441 3057 Knorr St 19149 55th wd. 1,737 sq. ft. OPA#551210500 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Keith O. Jackson Jr. a/k/a Keith Jackson C.P. February Term, 2016 No. 04181 $159,923.96 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-442 8641 Temple Rd 19150 50th wd. ROW B/GAR 2 STY MASONRY; 1,088 sq. ft. BRT#501114600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Adrienne Murphy C.P. January Term, 2013 No. 01817 $191,808.71 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-443 10824 Harrow Rd 19154 66th wd. 1,756 sq. ft. OPA#662063700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Ivelisse Montes and John Renzi C.P. May Term, 2017 No. 01906 $134,820.44 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-444 7217 Lindbergh Blvd 19153-2705 40th wd. 1,660 sq. ft. OPA#406559409 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Tenesia Lumsden C.P. September Term, 2017 No. 02873 $208,194.58 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-445 1826 Strahle St 191522323 56th wd. 1,222 sq. ft. OPA#562154900 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Patricia Hetzel Longenecker C.P. February Term, 2018 No. 00176 $129,808.42 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-446 58 E Walnut Ln 19144 59th wd. 1,112 sq. ft. OPA#592056000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Kristopher Way; Joycelyn Way C.P. February Term, 2016 No. 01837 $78,963.01 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-447 1142 S Ruby St 19143 51st wd. ROW 2 STY MASONRY; 1,920 sq. ft. BRT#511063700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Michael Johnson, Known Surviving Heir of Pauline E. Adderley and Unknown Surviving Heirs of Pauline E. Adderley C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 02774 $56,794.66 McCabe, Weisberg, & Conway, LLC 1812-448 2634 S Felton St 191423011 40th wd. 1,056 sq. ft. OPA#402119700

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T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

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EVERYDAY PEOPLE

(Cont. From Page 15) had a dicey relationship with the 1st Amendment since before he won the Oval Office in 2016 is an understatement. This is a man who, among other things, wanted to loosen the nation’s libel laws so that he could sue reporters who didn’t write nice things about him and who also believes he has the right to bar journalists from The People’s House because they won’t defer to him. CNN, to its credit, has sued the White House and the president over Acosta’s hard pass. Granted, they kind of made Trump what he is today through their near-constant coverage of every racist, misogynistic, and downright ridiculous thing that came out of his mouth on the campaign

ELEPHANT CORNER

(Cont. From Page 15) but only three. Now the Pennsylvania delegation is nine Republicans and nine Democrats. On the national level ,Republicans lost control of the House of Representatives, but held the Senate with a net pick up of at

trail and every rally he’s held since becoming president, but it’s not when you see the light that’s important, it’s that you see it at all. Trump’s desire to see the 1st Amendment abolished isn’t new. What is new is my having to explain to fellow reporters that what happened with Acosta was bad, the way Trump treats reporters of color is bad, and that all of it is unconstitutional. Until, that is, I decided early Tuesday morning that I wasn’t going to participate in the discussion anymore because wasting my time explaining journalistic principles to folks who have been in the business long enough to know better and their sycophants wasn’t something I should have to do. I had been debating a former colleague of mine about Acosta when I came

to this realization. When he posted something on Facebook claiming that Acosta was only “playing” journalist because (a) he wouldn’t let go of the microphone and (b) he didn’t have a notepad in his hand – was he supposed to put the pen in his teeth since holding a notepad and a microphone would make both hands full? – I told this colleague that it might be time for him to retire. After a response that featured the whole notepad thing (!), I told him that the reason it might be time for him to seek other work is because I shouldn’t have to explain to a seasoned journalist why this is a violation of the 1st Amendment. And the fact that I’m having to means that it might be a good idea to either (a) get some additional training or (b) leave the business.

least one (the results of all the race are not finalized) and probably two. Some Democrats are acting as if the conversion of the House of Representatives was a major coup. It appears that the Republicans lost 30-35 seats. In 1994, the first interim election after PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON won the first time in 1992,

the president’s party lost 54 seats in the House. In 2010, the first election after PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA won the presidency in 2008, the Democrats lost 63 seats in the House. Was this a referendum on PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP? If so how did his party lose fewer seats than the Democrats did in 2010 with a more-popular president?

WALKING the BEAT

(Cont. From Page 15) to me or other older voters. This act gives millennials a BAD NAME. It is more caste system than engagement. With moderate Republicans beaten at the polls, conservatives remaining are less prone to needed compromise. With few moderates, they will STAND OUT to be seen clearly by Americans as obstacles. I read where journalists are appearing in a talk on making sense of midterms. We do not need any help! And what is your HANDSON political experience? I AM ELATED at the number of common sense WOMEN elected. We miscalculated the Year of the Woman. And maybe Trump did not think they had long memories. Women: The nation needs help from paralysis – LEAD US!! HAPPY BIRTHDAYS: To David KRAIN – who had a chic party! He is a future star!... State Sen. Vincent HUGHES – I do not have enough space to praise you on your BORN DAY. I heard that former Dem Councilman Franny RAFFERTY is now a 26th Ward Committeeman under popular leader Jimmy DINTINO.

John STEVENSON was elected as leader of the St. PATRICK’S Observance Association. Justice Kevin DOUGHERTY became a Board Member. The Association has some great members, including Mary FOGG, Cathy Magee BURNS and Bob GESSLER! The LAWSUIT by Charles PERUTO, Esq. over his leaked OFF-THE-RECORD conversation should remain in Common Pleas Court. There is a great recording of closing defense arguments at the TRAFFIC COURT hearings on DROP BOX. It notes that the Feds asserted that a person never showed up for a hearing and ignored four exhibits to the contrary. The Philly BARRISTERS Association fares well under new leader Tianna KALOGNAKIS, Esq. Former Prison Commissioner Lou GIORLA is lecturing on how mass incarceration is a SOCIETY problem, not an individual one. Nineteen Black women won judicial posts in one state. Lucy McBATH became a councilwoman. Her son was shot dead for having his radio on LOUD. The TAVERN OWNERS recently honored Councilwoman Jannie BLACKWELL and State Sen. Sharif

SHERIFF’S SALE

SHERIFF’S SALE

SHERIFF’S SALE

SHERIFF’S SALE

SHERIFF’S SALE

SHERIFF’S SALE

Waldman and Hannah Waldman C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 02282 $120,698.65 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-518 6444 Saybrook Ave 19142 40th wd. 1,360 sq. ft. OPA#401350200 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Evelyn Bembry a/k/a Evelyn L. Bembry C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 01563 $21,315.60 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-519 437 W Roosevelt Blvd 19120 42nd wd. 2,259 sq. ft. OPA#422111800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Clyde Martin Jr. C.P. March Term, 2018 No. 01830 $92,778.61 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-520 6618 Marsden St 41st wd. 2,250 sq. ft. BRT#411259700 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Willie Washington C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 04952 $94,899.94 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-521 3218-20 W. Cheltenham Ave 19150 50th wd. Land: 1,890 sq. ft.;

Improvement: 1,413 sq. ft. BRT#775107505 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Reginald Covington C.P. November Term, 2017 No. 001730 $176,926.43 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-522 6026 N 2nd St 19120 61st wd. 1,514 sq. ft. OPA#612421800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Teresa G. Brooks C.P. January Term, 2018 No. 03974 $41,641.76 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-523 6112 Sansom St 19139 3rd wd. 1,618 sq. ft. OPA#031050300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Melinda A. Hall C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 01056 $84,560.98 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-524 2822 Wilmot St 19137 45th wd. 1,050 sq. ft. OPA#453089100 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Raymond Pike C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 02317 $144,229.96 KML Law Group, P.C. 1812-525 8031 Mansfield Ave

19150 50th wd. 2,816 sq. ft. OPA#502020500 IMPROVEMENTS: SINGLE FAMILY 2 STORY MASONRY Loren Hackney C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03131 $30,219.79 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-526 1419 N 18th St 19121 47th wd. 1,880 sq. ft. OPA#471289910 IMPROVEMENTS: SINGLE FAMILY ROW 3 STORY MASONRY Rhea A. Gaines C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 01434 $103,218.40 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-527 5510 N American St 19120 42nd wd. 1,950 sq. ft. OPA#422425600 IMPROVEMENTS: SINGLE FAMILY ROW HOME 2 STORY MASONRY Sherrie Lowry C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 02748 $92,914.37 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-528 1110 Elbridge St 19111 53rd wd. 1,037 sq. ft. OPA#531086100 IMPROVEMENTS: SINGLE FAMILY ROWHOME 2 STORY MASONRY Jonathan Valentin and The United States of America

C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 03382 $114,819.49 Hladik, Onorato & Federman, LLP 1812-529 3850 Wyalusing Ave 19104-1124 24th wd. 979 sq. ft. OPA#243179600 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Toni Howard C.P. April Term, 2017 No. 01924 $33,263.67 Phelan Hallinan Diamond & Jones, LLP 1812-530 9225 Milnor St 19114 65th wd. 7,500 sq. ft. OPA#652427805 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Joy Ruiz a/k/a Joy Gallen-Ruiz C.P. May Term, 2018 No. 03361 $351,565.53 Shapiro & DeNardo, LLC 1812-531 611 E Mt. Airy Ave 19114 9th wd. 4,500 sq. ft. BRT#091006300 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Barbara Rizzo a/k/a Barbara-Anne Rizzo C.P. July Term, 2016 No. 00421 $525,889.88 Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, P.C., Martha E. Von Rosenstiel, Esquire, Heather Riloff, Esquire,

Tyler J. Wilk, Esquire 1812-532 2624 Cedar St 19125 31st wd. Land: 1,540 sq. ft.; 2,140 sq. ft. BRT#871142800 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE Helen M. Shiffler C.P. May Term, 2014 No. 02536 $161,166.98 Stern & Eisenberg PC 1812-533 2515 S 67th St 40th wd. 1,600 sq. ft. BRT#406-0353-00 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Towanna N. Pressley C.P. May Term, 2015 No. 02434 $46,014.27 Powers, Kirn & Associates, LLC 1812-534 3401 Kensington Ave 45th wd. Land Area: 1,213 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 2,970 sq. ft. BRT#871571210 IMPROVEMENTS: ROW 3 STY MASONRY Green Tree Asset Management LLC C.P. December Term, 2016 No. 00896 $105,343.35 plus $16.67 per day after 12/7/2016 Laurence A. Mester, Mester & Schwartz, P.C. 1812-535 6231 Clearview St 19138 22nd wd. Land Area:

884 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 1,388 sq. ft. OPA#592309000 Yvonne Barnes-Brown $66,284.35 Robert Crawley, Esq. 1812-536 4534 Fernhill Rd 19144 13th wd. Land Area: 1,717 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 1,010 sq. ft. OPA#133130300 Estate of Raymond A. Johnson; Marquita Bradley, Personal Representative for The Estate of Raymond A. Johnson; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associations claiming right, title, or interest from or under Raymond A. Johnson $62,434.77 Robert Crawley 1812-537 2014 N Gratz St 19121 32nd wd. Land Area: 780 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 1,052 sq. ft. OPA#321249800 Christopher L. Thomas, Co-Personal Representative of The Estate of Sanford King; Jacqueline Y. Davis, Co-Personal Representative of The Estate of Sanford King; Estate of Sanford King; Unknown heirs, successors, assigns, and all persons, firms, or associa-

STREET; also Judges Sheila Skipper-Woods, Rayford MEANS and James DE LEON. All good choices. Council Members Bill GREENLEE and Cindy BASS’S recent bill on pharmaceutical sales activity with opioids is more of their creative thinking. The pair have introduced many good bills for the COMMON GOOD. My BLEAH awards go to Lindsey GRAHAM – Boca Grande. Also Chris CHRISTIE for AG – oh, no! And Jeff SESSIONS – don’t let the door hit you on the way out. PARKING SPACES in Center City are not enough, with parking fees too high. CITY COUNCIL and parking-lot owners have to do MORE to solve the problem. Lot owners complain that profits are down; but they STILL make profit! And they still have CLOUT! A recent column on the RIZZO home auction referred to the police tactics of that era, as well as that RIZZO was content to see himself as a symbol of such feeling. How did the writer know of Rizzo’s intent? Did he study under KARNAK? How old was he in the Rizzo era? Was he even BORN? How did an article on an auction turn to this cooldude insertion?

SHERIFF’S SALE tions claiming right, title, or interest from or under Sanford King $72,855.95 Jenine Davey 1812-538 2543 W Willard St 19129 38th wd. Land Area: 811 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 1,008 sq. ft. OPA#381368100 Edna V. Lee $69,918.21 Robert Crawley, Esq. 1812-539A 519 Fanshawe St 35th wd. 1,344 sq. ft. BRT#353117410 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Jeffrey C. Marshall a/k/a Jeffrey Marshall C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 3446 $165,909.66 Weber Gallagher Simpson Stapleton Fires & Newby, LLP, Sarah A. Elia, Esq. 1812-539B 1826 Frankford Ave 18th wd. 3,174 sq. ft. BRT#183050000 IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL DWELLING Jeffrey C. Marshall a/k/a Jeffrey Marshall C.P. July Term, 2018 No. 3446 $165,909.66 Weber Gallagher Simpson Stapleton Fires & Newby, LLP, Sarah A. Elia, Esq. 1812-540A 404 E Upsal St 19119

SHERIFF’S SALE 22nd wd. 1,345.35 sq. ft. OPA#221084400 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL Silver Eagle Investment Group, LLC; 1632 Frankstown Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15235 C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 01889 $80,883.79 Brandon Wind, Esquire 1812-540B 3615 N 16th St 19140 13th wd. 2,500 sq. ft. OPA#131169100 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: RESIDENTIAL Silver Eagle Investment Group, LLC; 1632 Frankstown Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15235 C.P. December Term, 2017 No. 01889 $80,883.79 Brandon R. Wind, Esquire 1812-541 2613-15 W. Hunting Park Ave 38th wd. Land Area: 43,582 sq. ft.; Improvement Area: 26,784 sq. ft. OPA#775605150 Subject to Mortgage IMPROVEMENTS: 2-STORY STRUCTURE Gethsemane Outreach Ministries C.P. October Term, 2016 No. 00682 $463,848.40 entered on February 8, 2017 John R.K. Solt, Esquire


Q

Y

O! HERE WE go again with this story of two people who made a mistake. On the outskirts of a small town, there was a big old pe-

LETTER to the EDITOR Write-in Write-up

Y

OUR FEATURE on Anthony Johnson, a write-in candidate in the 180th Legislative District, in the Nov. 1, 2018 edition, was thorough, non-partisan, very informative and fertile. You let all readers be aware of his roots, his extensive ed-

The old man whispered, 31 “Boy, you’ve been tellin’ me the truth. Let’s see if we can see the Lord...?” Shaking with fear, they peered through the fence, yet were still unable to see anything. The old man and the boy gripped the wrought iron bars of the fence tighter and tighter as they tried to get a glimpse of the Lord. At last they heard, “One for you, one for me. That’s all. Now let’s go get those nuts by the fence and we’ll be done.” They say the old man had the lead for a good half-mile before the kid on the bike passed him.

ucation, and the current venues where he seeks to raise the quality of life and reduce the rancid rate of poverty. I was delighted that Johnson carefully assembled multi-disciplinary and comprehensive plans to revitalize deeply distressed neighborhoods, that had a 60% highschool dropout rate and a 20% unemployment rate. The 180th District has for 18 consecutive years selected Angel Cruz as ward leader and state representative. It is a sheer steep uphill climb to be a write-in candidate versus an entrenched party leader incumbent ... with a 100-to-1 campaign dollar advantage ... but Anthony Johnson continues to analyze human needs in the

180th District and propose comprehensive solutions. The Public Record provided a valuable public service via a thorough presentation of a well-prepared write-in candidate in a very distressed district. If I had been aware of Johnson’s candidacy in the 180th, I would have invited him to freshman-prep classes.

This year, our highly informative freshman-prep faculty has assembled 86 classes and 14 visits/tours of salient capital assets between the May primary and Sept. 20 for six avid prospective state representatives: Danilo Burgos, Joe Hohenstein, Mary Isaacson, Malcolm Kenyatta, Patty-Pat Kozlowski and Michael Doyle. –Thomas Massaro

CITY HALL SAM

STATE REP. ED NEILSON is allegedly making a try for the position of House Democratic whip. Also running for whip was progressive champion suburban STATE REP. LEANNE KRUEGERBRANEKY. The position of whip is similar to the vice presidency. It’s a good title, but not a ton of duties.

(Cont. From Page 15) five and six new seats. The victories now give the Democrats between 21 and 22 new seats, which is still a minority. Northeast Philadelphia

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refrigerantfinders.com GUN SHOW: PA Gun Collector’s Assoc. -November 10-11: Sat.9-5 & Sun.9-4 –Pgh Mills, 1015 Village Center Dr, Tarentum.15084-Admission: Adults $8–Kids under 12 $4. www. paguncollectors.org or 412486-1129

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T HE P UB L I C R E CO R D

his bike and rode off. Just around the bend he met an old man with a cane, hobbling along. “Come here quick,” said the boy, “you won’t believe what I heard! Satan and the Lord are down at the cemetery dividing up the souls! Hurry.” The man said, “Beat it, kid. Can’t you see that it’s hard for me to walk?” When the boy insisted, though, the man hobbled slowly to the cemetery. Standing by the fence they heard, “One for you, one for me. One for you, one for me.”

N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

BY MICHAEL A. CIBIK AMERICAN BANKRUPTCY BOARD CERTIFIED uestion: Business bankruptcy: Unemployed? Is now the time to file bankruptcy? Before the bankruptcy laws were “reformed,” my rule of thumb was not to file bankruptcy when you were out of work. For most folks, they had nothing that even a creditor who sued and got a judgment could take from them. Wait, I counseled, until things get better, until you know the worst is behind you and you have wages to protect from creditors. My advice has changed 180 degrees under the “new” bankruptcy law. Now, when you have no income and no job prospects appears to be the “right” time to file. That perversity is the result of the means test, which gag-

the WAFFLE MAN

can tree just inside the cemetery fence. One day, two boys filled up a bucketful of nuts and sat down by the tree, out of sight, and began dividing the nuts. “One for you, one for me, one for you, one for me,” said one boy. Several dropped and rolled down toward the fence. Another boy came riding along the road on his bicycle. As he passed, he thought he heard voices from inside the cemetery. He slowed down to investigate. Sure enough, he heard, “One for you, one for me, one for you, one for me.” He just knew what it was. He jumped back on

PUBLIC NOTICE T-Mobile proposes to collocate antennas on the buildings at 4950 Parkside Ave (tip heights (TH) 105’) (20181884), 7th St & Tabor Rd (TH 71’ & 73’) (20181808), and 6250 Walnut St (TH 142’) (20181978), Philadelphia, PA. Interested parties may contact Scott Horn (856-809-1202) (1012 Industrial Dr., West Berlin, NJ 08091) with comments regarding potential effects on historic properties.

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understanding BANKRUPTCY

es your ability to repay your debts in the future by looking at your income for the past six months. Under BAPCPA, there’s further peril, even if your income looking backwards is next to nothing. One of the subsections of 707 allows the UST to object to your discharge based on your future income, even if you pass the means test. Ugh! What better time to take the means test (often in my office known as the MEAN test) when there is neither money in your past nor money in your future to pay to creditors. It hurts me to say to someone living on unemployment or the support from family that they need to pay for a bankruptcy now. It seems like a poor use of money. Yet, if you wait till you have a job, some of that income may appear in the means test look back period, and a steady income is shown in the bankruptcy schedules that look at your income and living expenses going forward. So the legislators who were so clever at figuring out how to stick it to those poor folks who “didn’t want to pay their bills” just created an incentive to file sooner to discharge debt when we know it will be dischargeable. Next Week’s Question: Can you save your IRA or 401(k) before bankruptcy?


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N OV E M B E R 15, 2018

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