Pimp Gives His Prostitutes V8 and Orange Juice

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A pimp on the streets describes in stunningly-candid detail to Ashley Judd and a sex trafficking survivor how he deals with the women he pimps. A Path Appeared on PBS -- MORE: ...


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Sex Trafficking Survivor Tries to Rescue Woman from Streets

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WATCH: A sex trafficking survivor patrols the streets of #Nashville looking for and trying to help women working the streets (click video for audio) -- A Path Appears: Tonight on Nightline...


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McCord stepping down as Pennsylvania treasurer after 6 years

Pennsylvania state Treasurer Rob McCord is stepping down from the job after six years.


McCord's office said Thursday his last day will be Feb. 12.


The 55-year-old Democrat was elected to two four-year terms in the office and ran unsuccessfully for governor last year, losing in the primary to Gov. Tom Wolf.


The Montgomery County resident leaves with two years left in his final term.


It'll be up to Wolf to nominate a successor to fill the job through the 2016 election.


McCord's office didn't say what the former venture capitalist has planned for his future.






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New date set for Garrison Keillor's postponed show in Reading

Garrison Keillor is hoping better weather this spring will allow him to visit Reading.


The author, storyteller and humorist was scheduled to appear on stage at the Santander Performing Arts Center on Tuesday, however, the forecast for wintry weather forced the show's postponement.


"An Evening with Garrison Keillor" has been rescheduled for Thurs., April 9 at 7:30 p.m.


Tickets already sold for the original show will be honored. Remaining tickets can be bought at the Santander Arena box office or through Ticketmaster online or by phone at 800-745-3000.


Keillor's one-man show will include anecdotes about growing up in the American Midwest, the people of Lake Wobegon and late-life fatherhood.






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Hershey dips into meat market with Krave Jerky

Hershey has a sudden hankering for protein, with plans to add jerky to its lineup.


The maker of sugar-high inducing treats like Reese's, Kit Kat and Twizzlers says it's buying Krave Jerky for an undisclosed sum.


Krave, based in Sonoma, California, positions itself as a premium jerky with no artificial ingredients and comes in flavors like black cherry barbecue, basil citrus and lemon garlic.


Michele Buck, president of Hershey North America, said in a phone interview with The Associated Press that the company plans to continue expanding its offerings across the "snacking continuum" through acquisitions and in-house development.


While The Hershey Co. is already strong player in sweet treats, the Krave deal is intended to give it a foothold in snacks people see as healthy fuel.


The push to expand beyond impulsive sweets comes as Americans' addiction to snacking grows. Rather than sticking to three meals a day, people are increasingly grazing on smaller bites around the clock.


The trend has prompted Dunkin' Donuts to position its fried-chicken sandwiches as snacks, and Taco Bell to introduce a "Happier Hour" for people looking for a late afternoon pick-me-up.


In the packaged food universe, the nation's snacking habit is blurring the lines between what qualifies as an indulgence versus nourishing fuel, prompting food makers to market snacks with nutritional benefits like fiber. Protein in particular has become a desirable ingredient, which in turn has helped boost jerky sales.


"We know consumers have an interest in portable and protein-based nutrition," Buck said.


Last year, jerky sales in the U.S. totaled $1.41 billion, according IRI, a Chicago-based market researcher. That's up 13 percent from 2013 and 22 percent from 2012.


Meanwhile, Hershey on Thursday reported fourth-quarter sales and profit that missed Wall Street expectations and lowered its earnings and revenue outlook for the year.


In a note to investors, J.P. Morgan analyst Ken Goldman wrote that the Krave deal "perhaps indicates that Hershey is less enamored of candy's growth potential than it previously was."


He noted that indulgent snacks like chocolates and cookies generally underperformed categories like trail mixes, nuts and meat snacks.


Jon Sebastiani, who founded Krave in 2009, sees even more growth potential for the jerky market by improving the category's image.


As such, Krave notes that its products do not contain nitrates or artificial flavors, and that they're lower in salt and cholesterol than competing jerkies.


"It's very inviting to a female consumer," Sebastiani said.


Sebastiani, who will continue to lead the unit and report to Buck, said sales for Krave Jerky have been growing at triple digit rates. Last year, he said sales totaled $36 million. The company's offerings are expanding, too.


Capitalizing on the desire for protein, Sebastiani said Krave plans to launch a "meat bar" later this year to compete with granola bars found near supermarket checkout aisles.


As for any potential pairings between Krave and Hershey products, Buck said there are no plans but didn't rule out the possibility.


"Who knows what will come down the pike?" she said.






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The spring fashion forecast for 2015

If all this cold weather has you thinking spring, we're giving you the "fashion forecast" for 2015 today.



Jaci Costanza, owner of Jaclyn Anthony Personal and Photoshoot Styling, sat down with WFMZ's Eve Tannery on 69 News at Sunrise to show us what must-haves we should add to our wardrobes to help us "work it and own it" this spring!



Click the video link attached to this story to hear Jaci's style tips!






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Obamacare: How it could impact your tax return

Tax experts say one of the biggest things affecting tax returns this year is Obamacare, so, how will it impact you, and what do you need to know before you file your taxes?



Jaime Susko Bollinger, a CPA from Susko Wealth Management in Allentown, sat down with WFMZ's Eve Tannery on 69 News at Sunrise to share some tips.






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Super Bowl 2015 Security: Law Enforcement Deploying Latest Tech

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Homeland Security warns of new stage in fight against terrorism as preparations to keep the big game safe are underway. Watch more at http://ift.tt/14SvZna.


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Dorney Park parent fights OSHA fines

The company that owns Dorney Park is challenging allegations that it put workers at risk.



In December, the Occupational Safety & Health Administration levied a fine against Dorney's parent company Cedar Fair.


OSHA said seasonal workers were exposed to heat hazards during their employment as outdoor and food stand staff, including a teenager who was burned after collapsing near a deep fryer.



Cedar Fair has since filed a motion to contest the citation in its entirety.


The company says Dorney follows all recommended guidelines and all seasonal associates go through extensive training, which includes the Heat Illness Prevention Program.






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County commissioners blast Executive Tom Muller for being uncooperative

Lehigh County Executive Thomas Muller is being blasted for refusing to meet with the leaders of the nine county commissioners.


On Wednesday night, Commissioner Michael Schware said Muller has informed commissioners by email that he is unwilling to meet with their leadership on any matter affecting the county.


Muller, a Democrat, refuses to have so-called leadership meetings with commissioners chairman Brad Osborne and vice-chairman Vic Mazziotti, both Republicans unanimously elected to those positions by their fellow commissioners in early January.


Muller specifically does not want to meet in any leadership session with Mazziotti.


Schware and Mazziotti said Muller also refused to have leadership meetings last year, when Republican Lisa Scheller was chair and Democrat David Jones was vice chair.


“I thought it might be my aftershave,” joked Mazziotti. “I considered changing that. But then I realized Commissioner Scheller probably doesn’t use aftershave.”


Commissioners speaking out against Muller got support from Jones, one of only two Democratic commissioners, who said he understands “the concerns of my peers in relationship to the whole communication process.”


Commissioners taking over union negotiations


The commissioners’ unhappiness with Muller is spurring them to repeal a 31-year-old ordinance that designates the county executive to act as their agent in labor negotiations.


The commissioners want to take back that job.


It’s a safe bet the repeal of the 1984 ordinance will pass when brought up for a vote next month, because seven of the nine commissioners are co-sponsors.


All are Republicans.


Geoff Brace and Jones, the only two Democrats on the board, are not co-sponsors.


“There’s enough votes that this bill is going through,” said Jones, who does not intend to vote for it. “Arguing against it is moot.”


But Jones said the commissioners are on the verge of changing “years of learned institutional knowledge because we can’t get along.”


Schware said the 1984 ordinance has served the county well over the years, so people deserve to know why the commissioners want to change it.


The reason? “It’s not prudent to have the county executive act as our agent in labor negotiations,” said Schware.


He said commissioners were asked to approve a contract with some Cedarbrook employees last year, but had not been involved in those negotiations or kept informed about them.


But Muller, who was not at Wednesday’s commissioners meeting, later said his administration had more executive sessions with the commissioners on union negotiations last year than in the prior eight years combined.


Muller also said commissioners were asked to sit in on those union negotiations but only two of them did so, each attending only one session.


“It’s hard to dignify some of the nonsense that these guys want to spin,” said the executive.


Schware said having the executive serve as the commissioners’ agent in labor negotiations works, “as long as the county executive is willing to follow the direction of the board and communicates the progress of those negotiations along the way.”


He contended Muller has not been doing that, in direct violation of the existing ordinance.


But Muller said in union negotiations last year, “the administration only pursued the targets they gave us.”


During those negotiations, he said, the commissioners gave his administration direction “as to what our target should be. That was what was delivered and more.”


“We act as their agent,” said Muller. “No agreement is final until approved by the commissioners.”


Said Schware: “The executive has been unwilling to meet with the board leadership on many issues and has certainly failed to keep the board informed of the progress of county labor negotiations.”


Schware said Osborne recently “made a specific request to the administration to be informed of any meetings with bargaining units. That request was ignored.”


“It doesn’t pain me to agree with you,” Jones told Schware. “It pains me to admit publicly to the context of what you said.


“We’re throwing the baby out with the bath water because of a dynamic that exists with this board and this administration.”


Muller said commissioners are unhappy because they don’t have a puppet in the county executive's office.


“They asked if they could sit in on negotiations and we said ‘you’re welcome to come to any one of them’,” said Muller. “It was an open door to them,” he said, adding most commissioners chose not to attend.


Muller said former Commissioner Scott Ott showed up at one session, Scheller showed up at another “and no other commissioner showed up to any other session.”


Schware acknowledged there were instances when commissioners sat in on negotiating sessions.


But he added: “I know there’s also been other times when we’ve asked to either sit in or to just be informed that there is going to be a negotiating session and we haven’t been. It hasn’t happened in all instances.”


When one resident asked how many times commissioners were denied those opportunities, Mazziotti demanded: “Are you here speaking for the administration? Why is that of interest to you?”


“I’m just trying to get honesty,” said the resident.


No love for Mazziotti


After Wednesday’s meeting, Muller said he did meet four times with Scheller and Jones last year, but stopped having those leadership meetings because Scheller did not come to them with any information to share.


And he refuses to meet with Mazziotti in a leadership session.


“I told Mazziotti to his face that I will not meet with him in a leadership meeting,” said Muller.


“That fact that he got the majority to vote him in as vice chairman doesn’t make him a leader.


“At no time in the past year has he shown any inclination to be collaborative with the administration.


“And he’s proven that he can’t be trusted to deliver on his end on any agreement. I said that to him with [county director of administration] Dan McCarthy present yesterday. And he didn’t deny it.”


“On the other hand, I have at no time turned down a meeting with any commissioner or a phone call from any commissioner in the past year.”


The executive said that included the meeting he had with Mazziotti on Tuesday, at the commissioner’s request, about why Muller won’t include him in leadership meetings.


Mazziotti confirmed he met with Muller Tuesday and asked him to reconsider his position, but Muller would not do so.


“He has a right not to,” said the commissioner. “I don’t deny him his right do that. But it’s not an ideal way to work.


“It is in the best interests of the residents that we meet and communicate.


“Every time we hear from the administration that we haven’t communicated, we’re going to have to remind them that the leadership is willing to meet with them.”


Why no leadership meetings


Muller said when Osborne was elected the new chairman of the nine commissioners at the beginning of January, he would have been willing to resume having leadership meetings if Jones had been re-elected vice chair


Mazziotti said Muller told him that he wanted a Democrat to be vice chair of the commissioners, even though Muller would not have leadership meetings when Jones was vice chair.


Muller said Mazziotti told him “the county executive doesn’t get to pick our officers.”


Mazziotti said the commissioners elect their own leaders.


Muller said historically the commissioners’ chair and vice chair usually were from both parties, despite the fact that Republicans usually held the majority. “Without both parties, you don’t really get an open discussion.”


Muller said county executives stopped having leadership meetings near the end of former Executive Don Cunningham’s six years in that position.


Muller said Jones pleaded with him to resume leadership meetings when he became county executive.


He said he had four of those meetings, but stopped having them because they were not productive. “There was no give-and-take. Nothing was coming from her [Scheller].”


He said although Scheller would have nothing to tell him at those meetings, later that same day the commissioners would meet “and jump all over me about something. I should have gotten a heads-up from her during the leadership meeting.


“I think her vision of a leadership meeting was let’s pretend I work for her and I would come to her with my to-do list.”


He also said Scheller could only meet at 3 p.m. on the same day as commissioners’ meetings, adding it would be more productive to have them a day or two earlier to review what issues would come up.


Commissioners will be negotiating


When Muller’s administration no longer is handling union negotiations, the commissioners intend to create a labor relations committee, on which three of them will serve.


Schware acknowledged that might not be ideal, but added Muller’s “unwillingness to communicate with the board on labor negotiations and other matters makes it necessary.”


Jones expressed concern about the ability of the commissioners to actually carry out union negotiations.


While Jones intends to vote against the repeal next month, he wants to be involved to ensure commissioners successfully taking over labor negotiations.


“It is a complicated, time-consuming process,” said Mazziotti.


Said Osborne: “You take the action, you take on the consequences.”


“I don’t think they have a clue what they’re getting into,” said Muller. “Union negotiations are extremely time-consuming.”


The executive also said having the commissioners involved in union negotiations “flies against the common practice of not having the ultimate decision-maker at the negotiation table.”


Scare tactics?


Muller predicted that, in an election year, the Republicans will try to fight for no collection of union dues through payroll.


He said the commissioners wanted the administration to fight for that last year.


“If they’re not going to be tougher, or try to be tougher, why would they want to take over?” asked the executive.


Muller said last year he asked the county’s legal department if the administration could resign as the agent for labor negotiations because the commissioners “were trying to put us in a position of battling for things we would never win.”


He was told the administration could not resign as agent.


Schware said Muller’s assertions that the commissioners plan to take a harder line toward unionized employees is not true.


“It’s the latest in an on-going, deliberate and false narrative by the county executive that attempts to pit the county employees against this board,” said Schware.


“It might be a cheap political strategy for the executive but it’s a poor way to govern.”


Schware said county employees don’t deserve to be the recipients of “wild speculation or scare tactics.”


Schware hopes that by removing Muller from negotiations, the commissioners will be better able to negotiate fair contracts with county employees, in a manner that reduces frustration for all parties.


Muller said his relationship with the unions “helps us settle contracts” because he sits down with union leaders and clearly tells them how far the county can go. The commissioners, he added, “won’t have that relationship.”


How they got to where they are


Commissioner Amanda Holt said the county’s home rule charter stipulates that setting wages and salaries is the responsibility of the county commissioners.


Jones agreed the county charter clearly intended for the commissioners “to have that broad scope of ownership.”


But in 1984, only six years after that county charter was adopted, commissioners passed the ordinance designating the county executive to act as its agent in negotiating with unions representing county employees.


Brace said he suggested repealing that ordinance five years ago, before he became a commissioner, because the commissioners had abdicated some of the authority they had been given in the county charter.


Brace said in most counties in Pennsylvania, county commissioners do the labor negotiations, because those counties don’t have executives.


Osborne said salaries, wages and benefits of all Lehigh County employees cost about $140 million a year — about 40 percent of the overall county budget.


“Working directly with a union in these negotiations will allow our board to listen face-to-face and understand the needs and concerns of the employees,” said Osborne.


“It’s the best way to communicate. And I think the employees will see it as a refreshing change in the relationship with the commissioners.”


Osborne said it is not ideal for the administration to represent the commissioners’ interests in labor negotiations.


He questioned whether the administration can reasonably represent commissioners on those interests, adding: “That’s probably not a realistic expectation.”


But Jones said the commissioners never have given up the responsibility to have the final vote on labor negotiations.


Calls for communication


Despite commissioners’ complaints about a lack of communication and cooperation from Muller, McCarthy asked them to give the administration an idea of financial progress on 2015 negotiations by June.


McCarthy said that will help the administration prepare a more accurate 2016 county budget.


Osborne said if the repeal bill passes next month, he expects the commissioners will remain in communication with the administration — not just in relation to preparing a new county budget, but also to be fair to the administration and county employees.


At the end of Wednesday’s meeting, Osborne appealed to the administration to meet with commissioners “to talk about the people’s business, so we can continue to do our job as elected officials.”


Osborne said he does not intend to give up.






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Crepes craze spreading in the Lehigh Valley

All across the Lehigh Valley, customers are flipping over the newest food craze: freshly made crepes.



Crepes are nothing new. The thin pancakes, filled with anything and everything, have been a beloved delicacy of France and all around the world.



Now the popularity is spilling into the Lehigh Valley.



Full of Crepe, located at 333 S. New St. in Bethlehem, was the first shop to open in 2012.



Now there's Crepe Soleil, which opened in the Promenade Shopping Center in Center Valley in December.


At least three more shops are popping up locally in just the next few months.



" I think it's wonderful because the more people exposed to crepes, the more people will want to eat crepes," said Ashley Caldwell, owner of Full of Crepe in Bethlehem.







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Bethlehem approves full-day kindergarten

The Bethlehem Area School Board voted tonight to move to a full-day kindergarten program. Currently the majority of classes are half-day.>>WENDY davis: WFMZ's Meghan Packer is live in Bethlehem with the story. Meghan? This district could have as many as 900 kindergartners next year and they'll all attend full-day kindergarten. District leaders say it's one more way to make students are prepared as possible.>>DR roy " i think its the biggest education initiative for the district has put forth in a long time.">>SHANNON "i wan to go right up to the roof and scream we have full day kindergarten.">>REPORTER The Bethlehem Area School board voted to make all kindergarten classes full-day in the district's 16 elementary schools...starting next school year. Currently only a portion of classes are full-day.>>DR roy "we'll see the tremendous growth that kids will make getting them ready for first grade, second grade with the goal of all students being on grade level by the end of third grade." >>reporter The original cost estimate was 900-thousand dollars..but the superintendent says they may be able to come down to 500-thousand. Some staff will be reassigned from other areas. >>dr roy "We' have savings cause we won't be bussing kindergarteners in the middle of the day as we do with half day.">>BONILLA "i am puttin my faith in dr roy...administration...that we will make all day kindergarten work with a minimal to little impact on taxpayers." Most school districts in our state have moved to full day kindergarten...and Bethlehem will now be one of the few in the Lehigh Valley to offer it. Other news coming out of the district... the school district and teachers have reached a new three-year contract. Live in Bethlehem, Meghan Packer 69 News.






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Spartans confident heading into playoffs

the heels of the first ever "Fire and Ice Festival" earlier this month...>>> rob vaughn: Now Berks Sports.>> wendy davis: Here's Dan Moscaritolo. With less than a week left in the regular season, county seeding is starting to take shape. The Wyomissing boys took a key step in locking up a top-seed out of Berks iii last night following a thrilling win over Antietam.>>> Ben Croft's shot in the final seconds gave the Spartans a victory over the former division leaders.Coach Toph Miller attributes the performance to the character of his team.Wyo has been challenged plenty this season, both within the league and beyond...The Spartans...now showing the affects of those






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City controller asks for police protection at Easton Council meetings

In the wake of a shooting at a council meeting in Minnesota, Easton Controller Tony Bassil said Wednesday night he wants police protection at city council meetings, a move Mayor Sal Panto Jr. said he is thinking about, even though he doesn't believe that would stop someone from bringing a gun to a meeting and opening fire.


"It's something we've been looking at," Panto told Bassil.


"We don't have any security at all," Bassil said. "No officer, no x-ray machine."


Bassil said city officials have promised security will be greatly increased at the new city hall building under construction.


But the mayor then pointed out that the two people who were shot at Monday night's council meeting in Minnesota were two new police officers who were waiting to be sworn in.


"It's not going to stop it, having a police officer here," Panto said. He said the first person a gunman will target is a police officer.


Unlike state and federal buildings, which have metal detectors at the front door, municipal buildings like the Alpha Building which houses Easton's City Hall, are not permitted to post signs warning no weapons are permitted.


Panto said the problem lies in the state legislature, which has not moved on requests over at least the last several years to have the law changed.


In Monroe County in 2013, a man who had feuded for years with township officials over a land dispute that he lost walked into a municipal meeting, opened fire and killed three people.


The alleged shooter, Rockne Newell, is awaiting trial on first-degree murder charges. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.






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Deflate-Gate: Super Bowl Controversy Over Deflated Footballs Casts a Shadow Over the Big Game

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New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and coach Bill Belichick say their main focus is the Super Bowl game against the Seattle Seahawks. Watch more ABC News coverage: www.abcnews.com ...


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