Mother faces multiple charges in death of infant left in hot car

[Photo: Lancaster County District Attorney]

A woman from West Hempfield Township has been charged with third-degree murder, child endangerment, and involuntary manslaughter after her 3-month-old daughter died from being exposed to the environment while left in a car for several hours. The woman, Emily Rose Weaver, 32, was allegedly passed out on meth at the time. She is currently being held without bail at Lancaster County Prison.

According to court documents, Weaver’s stepfather and another individual became concerned for her wellbeing when she failed to pick up her two sons from school. Knowing about her drug addiction, they went to check on her at her residence on Fairview Road. Upon finding her unresponsive on a bed, they woke her, and she realized she didn’t know where her daughter was. Her stepfather then discovered the infant in an unresponsive state in a car seat outside around 4:30 p.m. The car, a Nissan Altima, was parked in direct sunlight with closed doors and windows, and the temperature outside was over 80 degrees.

Weaver admitted to using meth at least twice in the days leading up to the incident and had planned to use it again on Wednesday after taking her sons to school, but she couldn’t recall if she actually did. The father of Weaver’s other two children informed the police that he spoke to her on the phone around 10 a.m. that day and she was incoherent.

Investigations by Lancaster County Children and Youth from 2019 to 2023 revealed multiple instances of Weaver’s drug-related activity, which ultimately led to her relinquishing parental rights of her other two children in 2021. Police stated that during this period, she failed to maintain sobriety and ignored safety plans implemented by the agency.

Visit the past on a Haunted Lantern Tour | TownLively

There’s a war raging in Columbia, and you’re invited to join in – if you dare. Rivertown Theatre Productions will present Columbia’s Haunted Lantern Tour, “Civil War,” beginning on Friday, Oct. 13.

The annual, nonprofit tour will kick off at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, 616 Locust St., before guests will venture through Mount Bethel Cemetery, guided by lantern light on the one-hour tour.

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Columbia approves ‘understandable and implementable’ comprehensive plan

What happened: Council members approved the borough’s 2040 comprehensive plan after Lancaster County Planning Commission suggested no changes or found any errors.

Why it matters: Columbia 2040, which replaces the last comprehensive document approved in 1995, focuses on how the borough will handle growth and improve residential services for the next 15-20 years. The document, divided into two sections and spanning 130 pages, also uses easily understandable language to outline achievable goals, council members said.

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About Town – October 1, 2023

Swinging into Halloween

Jack o’lantern trees on the 800 block of Chestnut

A couple of ghosts yuckin’ it up downtown

Jacks under glass

Chained

3 (or 4?) on a bench

A sunflower of sorts

Patriotic knick-knacks

God bless us.

Many showed up for the Amvets food giveaway on Saturday. 

Vehicles were lined up for several blocks along Manor Street, Florence, Mill, and Barber for the giveaway. 

“Flow” the community rock snake has gotten a big head lately.

Rockers for sittin’ out at Columbia Crossing

The former home of General Shannon under a cloud-padded sky

The water main on the 500 block of Chestnut Street has been replaced. Workers are now connecting service to residents there.

Onward, Christian Patriots!

Training

A look under the “hood”

Truck 80

All manner of vehicles were present at a recent accident at 2nd & Chestnut.

Coming October 23 at the Market House

Wired cats at play

NO

Yes, the bridge inspectors were back at it again this week.

On a call

Looks like “Lyin’ Ted” Cruz.

Door ornament

Fence ornament

Candidates for Borough Council 

Seen on Linden Street

[Submitted photo]

Tree transport

On this Day in History: Veterans Memorial Bridge opens to the public – Uncharted Lancaster

The Columbia–Wrightsville Bridge, officially called the Veterans Memorial Bridge, spans the Susquehanna River between Columbia and Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, and carries Route 462. Built originally as the Lancaster-York Intercounty Bridge, construction began in 1929, and the bridge opened on September 30, 1930. On November 11, 1980, it was officially dedicated as Veterans Memorial Bridge, though it is still referenced locally as the Columbia–Wrightsville Bridge.

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On this Day in History: Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge destroyed by Cedar Keys Hurricane in 1896 – Uncharted Lancaster

On September 29, 1896, the Cedar Keys Hurricane ripped through Central Pennsylvania with gale-force winds and torrential rain. It left a wake of destruction, leveling barns, trees, and the 1869 Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge. It was so powerful that it swept the massive bridge from its piers, with some of the pieces landing near the iron furnaces south of Marietta.

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