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Cops, Courts & Fire -Bensalem Township

DA Schorn Rules Bensalem Township Police Were Justified in Shooting of Armed Felon

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District Attorney Jennifer Schorn ruled that five Bensalem Township officers were justified in the January fatal shooting of an armed felon who led police on a vehicle pursuit before barricading himself inside his vehicle and pointing a firearm at them.

In a letter to Bensalem Township Police Director of Public Safety William McVey, Schorn wrote that based upon her review of the evidence, she “concluded that [the officers] were reasonable in their individual beliefs that each of their lives were placed in clear and present danger by Zachiry Derrek Kerschner at the time that they fatally shot Kerschner.”

“I therefore conclude that [the officers] were justified in discharging their weapons and fatally shooting Zachiry Derrek Kerschner.”

Kerschner, 30, of Lehighton, was fatally shot on Jan. 24, 2025, after a series of events that began with a traffic stop near the intersection of Route 1 and Old Lincoln Highway, leading to a 35-minute vehicle pursuit through five jurisdictions and a two-hour standoff.

During the standoff, Kerschner refused to comply with officers, vowing that he was never going back to jail.  Kerschner had a passenger in the vehicle. The investigation revealed that at one point during the standoff, Kerschner pointed a gun at him and ordered him to remain in the car. The passenger was unharmed following the standoff and the fatal shooting of Kerschner.

The standoff ended when Kerschner drew down on police with a loaded gun.

Whenever deadly force is used by law enforcement officers in Bucks County, it is standard procedure for the District Attorney to investigate to determine whether the use of deadly force was justified. Schorn assigned the Bucks County Detectives to investigate immediately after the shooting occurred and relied on their findings and other evidence in reaching her conclusions.   The evidence included police reports, crime scene analysis, body worn camera and patrol car recordings. It also included a look back into the offender’s criminal past.

The investigation found that Kerschner had a lengthy criminal history and, for much of his adult life, spent time in and out of both state and county correctional facilities.

Particularly troubling was Kerschner’s most recent arrest in February 2024 for felony gun possession in Philadelphia where he served only three months of a 11 ½ to 23-month sentence.  The sentence meant he should have been incarcerated on the day he pulled a gun on Bensalem police.

Furthermore, the sentence imposed was significantly below what the Pennsylvania Sentencing Guidelines recommend for an individual with a prior criminal history who commits a firearms offense graded as a felony in the first degree. The standard recommended sentence would have called for a sentence of at least 5 years in a state correctional facility.

After spending three months in jail following his arrest in Philadelphia, Kerschner entered a negotiated plea with the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office on Aug. 14, 2024, and was sentenced to 11 ½ to 23-month sentence but was allowed to be paroled on that same date.

To be eligible for parole, he would have needed to serve an additional 8 ½ months in a correctional facility. In Pennsylvania, paroling an individual before they reach their minimum is an illegally executed sentence.

Had Kerschner served just the minimum amount of that sentence, he would have still been incarcerated on Jan. 24, 2025, and unable to possess two firearms, use illegal substances, drive with a suspended license and travel into Bucks County where he placed the lives of law enforcement and the community in jeopardy.

Equally concerning, on the day of the Bensalem incident, Kerschner was on active supervision with the Philadelphia Department of Adult Probation and Parole, however the investigation found that he was no longer being supervised by a parole officer in the field due to manpower constraints. His sentence did not impose any conditions to address his substance abuse issues, and the electronic monitoring device he was ordered to wear had no GPS capabilities, the investigation found.

“Again, this is concerning because it was by agreement that the sentence imposed upon Kerschner was one that allowed him to be in the community and supervised by an agency that is overtaxed with limited resources,” Schorn wrote.

Kerschner was driving a Ford Fusion 3:50 p.m. on Jan. 24, 2025, when he was stopped by Bensalem Police near the intersection of Route 1 and Old Lincoln Highway for a vehicle code violation. Kerschner was non-compliant and told police that he was on house arrest, was armed and was not going back to jail.

Officers attempted to communicate with Kerschner, get him to exit the vehicle, and de-escalate the situation. After approximately 45 minutes, Kerschner fled from police, and officers gave chase.

Pennsylvania State Police joined the pursuit, and police were able to use a pit maneuver to force the vehicle to stop in the 1200 block of Bristol Pike. Officers surrounded the vehicle and ordered Kerschner and his passenger out. Both refused to comply.

For two hours, officers negotiated with Kerschner to try and resolve the situation peacefully, even having his loved ones call him to persuade him to surrender, but he continued to be non-compliant.

During negotiations, Kerschner repeatedly told police there were guns in the car, and he was not going back to jail.

Due to the lack of cooperation, Bensalem SWAT made the decision to deploy tear gas to get the occupants to exit the vehicle. After a second tear gas canister was deployed, Kerschner pulled a handgun and pointed it directly at officers, who discharged their weapons.

Officers pulled Kerschner from the vehicle and began life-saving measures. The passenger of the vehicle was taken into custody and was unharmed.  Kerschner was taken to Jefferson Torresdale Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The evidence collected at the scene included two firearms. The gun that had been in Kerschner’s hand had a live round jammed in the chamber.

The investigation found that Kerschner had used methamphetamines and other illegal substances on the day of the incident.

In coming to her conclusion, District Attorney Schorn said she weighed the totality of the circumstances as reasonably perceived by the officers at the time they fired their weapons.  Schorn wrote that Kerschner placed the five officers in fear of death or serious bodily injury of themselves and their fellow officers. The officers believed that Kerschner intended to kill them, shoot them or seriously harm them when he raised his right hand holding the black semi-automatic handgun and pointed it directly at the SWAT officers and other officers who were on scene near Kerschner.

“Despite the officers repeated directions to comply with police commands, Kerschner created a situation in which (the officers) had no other reasonable choice but to fire their weapons in defense of themselves, and others to neutralize what was a deadly and imminent threat,” Schorn wrote.

All five officers acted within the permissible scope of Bensalem Township Police use-of-force requirements, and the use-of-force best practices guidelines adopted by all Bucks County Police Departments in November 2020, Schorn noted.

“For the foregoing reasons, I therefore conclude that [the officers] were each legally justified in fatally shooting Zachiry Derek Kerschner,” Schorn wrote. “Since [the officers] were justified and therefore unequivocally have no culpability, our investigation is accordingly closed.”

Because none of the officers are being charged, their names are not being released, per District Attorney’s Office protocol.

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Cops, Courts & Fire -Bensalem Township

NJ Man Has Aggravated Assault Charges of Police Held Over for Trial

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A Millville, New Jersey man accused of stealing a vehicle and subsequently striking a Bensalem Police officer last year, when attempting to flee a traffic stop had all of his charges held over for trial at preliminary hearing last week.

Late last month Magisterial District Judge Michael W. Gallagher ruled there was enough evidence presented by the Commonwealth to sustain two felony counts of aggravated assault, felony fleeing, felony theft and related offenses filed against Devit Sanchez of New Jersey.

According to the probable cause, on Friday, August 8, 2025, Bensalem Township Police conducted a stolen vesicle investigation at the Sunoco Gas Station, located at 1432 Street Road,  The stolen vehicle was identified as a 2020 Acura ILX. white in color, bearing NIN97NMP, The vehicle is listed in NCIC as stolen out of Mount Laurel, NJ. Police were alerted to the stolen  vehicle traveling in the area of Bensalem Twp.

Police saw the stolen vehicle at the gas pumps of the Sunoco Station and a male entering the driver’s seat.

Officers pulled behind the stolen vehicle af the gas pumps and another Bensalem officer pulled in front of it, and the driver reversed the allegedly stolen vehicle rammed a patrol car causing the officer’s head to hit the interior roof.

Sanchez then fled the Sunoco Station at a high rate of speed traveling Eastbound on Street Rd. Bensalem officers pursued the vehicle that fled onto Northbound I-95 exceeding speeds of over 100 mph. The pursuit was eventually terminated and the vehicle got away.

Surveillance footage from the Sunoco Gas Station was obtained by the Bensalem Police, court records show.

Investigators circulated the video surveillance to other police agencies and to the public depicting the stolen vehicle and driver. Through investigation, a suspect was developed, identified as Sanchez, according to the probable cause.

On  October 7 , Police conducted an interview with Sanchez in which he allegedly admitted he was the driver of the stolen vehicle in this incident that hit an officer’s police car and fled.

An arrest warrant  was issued on January 27 for Sanchez and he was arrested on Feb. 2.

Sanchez remains in County Jail unable to post bond although a county judge reduced his his bail to half of the original set, to 10 percent of $100,000.00

He is scheduled for a formal arraignment in Doylestown on March 13 and is legally represented by the Bucks County Public Defender’s Office.

No trial date has been set as of publication time

 

 

 

 

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Cops, Courts & Fire -Bensalem Township

Cops: Motorist Driving “Erratically” on Street Rd Arrested for Fleeing, DUI

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A Langhorne woman spent a day in jail after she fled Bensalem Police who observed her driving erratically  on Street Road last month locating the vehicle and its owner, ironically on the same block of funeral home.

According to the probable cause filing, on Saturday, Feb. 28, at approximately 10:23 p.m.  Police were on routine patrol in the area of 3000 Street Road when officers observed a sliver Ford Explorer bearing a Pennsylvania registration MHS-**** driving erratically. Police attempted to initiate a traffic stop by activating lights and sirens.

The  motorist, police said,  fled west on Street Road at a high rate of speed.

Police in court papers said, the driver passed multiple vehicles on the right side and then ran through multiple steady red lights. Police lost track of the  Explorer in the area of Street Road and Public Safety Way.

At approximately 11:35 p.m. police found the vehicle in the rear of 4737 East Street Road in Bensalem Twp.

Police  initiated a second traffic stop by activating lights and sirens with back-up officers surrounding the  Explorer so the motorist could not speed away again.

Police made contact with the driver and sole occupant, who was identified as 50 year-old Paige Holwood.

Holwood had bloodshot, glassy eyes, and the odor of an alcoholic beverage emanating from her person which increased as she spoke. She was unsteady on her feet when she got out of the vehicle, according to coure papers.

Police came to the conclusion that she could not operate a motor vehicle safely, said the probable cause.

Holwood was transported back to Police Headquarters where she was read the implied consent form in its entirety and refused to submit to a blood test, the arresting officer said.

On-Call District Judge John T. Galloway arraigned Holwood in the early morning hours of Sunday on a felony charge of fleeing police, DUI and four related traffic offenses.

Galloway set bail at 10 percent of $25,000 and Holwood, unable to post bail, was remanded to County Jail. She paid the 10 percent on Monday and released.  Holwood’s preliminary hearing is scheduled for  March 26.  Currently, she has no attorney of record, according to online court records.

 

 

 

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Cops, Courts & Fire -Bensalem Township

Bensalem House Fire Kills One Woman, One Man Injured

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A early morning Tuesday fire in Bensalem took the life of one woman and firefighters were able to rescue a man, community sources told Lower Bucks Source.

Bensalem fire companies were dispatched for the reports of a dwelling fire in the 2900 of Bellview Drive at around 2:45 a.m with possible entrapment.

Police officers on scene reported two residents were unaccounted for and believed to be inside. Fire crews initiated an aggressive quick search and attack of the fire, where a male was immediately located by the doorway, Bensalem Volunteer Fire Department, officials said.

The woman killed in the fire was located shortly thereafter, fire officials said.

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Firefighters arrived to find heavy smoke and flames coming from the home, officials said.

An on scene witness said they saw  a man was taken to the hospital by Bensalem EMS. His condition is unknown as of publication time.

The identity of the woman killed in the blaze has not been released

The fire caused the closure of  Bellview Dr, from Morrow Drive  to the entrance of Faust Elementary for several hours.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation of the fire marshal’s office.

“The thoughts and prayers of our entire department go out to the family and friends of those affected by this tragedy. It’s a sad day for our Nottingham Village families” said Bensalem Volunteer Fire Dept officials.

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