

Sampson's preliminary hearing is scheduled for 1 p.m. In addition to first-degree murder, Sampson is charged with third-degree murder and endangering the welfare of children, court records show. The Cumberland County coroner's office, children and youth services and district attorney's office were involved in the investigation with PSP. Opioid settlements: Money to help Franklin County expand addiction recovery, prevention efforts Hazy Pennsylvania skies are from wildfire smoke in western. More crime news: Former nurse from Franklin County sentenced for recording, sexually abusing patients 2 hours ago &0183 &32 If you own the lizard, or know who owns it, you are asked to call Carlisle police at 71.

Police identified Sampson as the child's biological father. They determined a 13-month-old child died under suspicious circumstances.Īn autopsy showed the toddler died due to multiple traumatic internal injuries that were intentionally caused, according to a news release from state police.


Troopers from Pennsylvania State Police-Carlisle responded to the 100 block of Big Spring Terrace in West Pennsboro Township, which is south of Newville in Cumberland County, around 7:10 a.m. Magisterial District Judge Vivian Cohick denied bail due to "risk of flight, risk to children in household, multiple addresses," according to online court records. Sampson, 25, of Mount Holly Springs, was arrested May 9 and put in Cumberland County Prison. Part of the recognition of the new status was the founding of Dickinson College in 1783, the first college chartered in the new nation.Watch Video: Colorado school bus driver intentionally hits brakesĪ father in southcentral Pennsylvania is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his baby. Men and women from the town went off to war and returned with fame and rank that lifted Carlisle to new distinction. The town was home to three signers of the Declaration of Independence. The first battalion of what became the United States Army was raised here. The French and Indian War of the 1750s and the 1760s trained a generation of leaders for the American Revolution in the 1770s and the 1780s. World wars swept over the town and county and brought such figures as Benjamin Franklin, Hugh Mercer, Henry Bouquet, and John Forbes to the square of Carlisle. This meant a fiery and violent era of frontier drama for over ten years. Both the town and the county were intended by the colonial General Assembly and the Penn family in Philadelphia to be the opening of the frontier west of the Susquehanna River. Carlisle was founded in 1751 as a county seat of the newly-created Cumberland County.
