Because even justice needs a sense of humor
📅 Filed April 8–9, 2026
🚗 Parking Enforcement: The Real Crime Wave
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Christian N. Delgado
Charge: Unlawful Parking in a Meter Zone
Offense Date: March 17, 2026
Columbia Borough Police bravely took on one of society’s boldest offenders: someone who dared challenge a parking meter.
Authorities allege the vehicle remained where the sign clearly suggested it should not be. The meter, reportedly, did nothing to deserve this.
📌 Status: Awaiting plea
🕰️ Moral of the story: The meter always wins.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Anna Nichole Hynes
Charge: Parking Too Close to a Fireplug / Crosswalk / Traffic Signal
Offense Date: March 17, 2026
In what can only be described as multi-zone enthusiasm, prosecutors allege this vehicle managed to be too close to several important things at once.
Fire safety. Pedestrians. Traffic signals. Nobody felt fully respected here.
📌 Status: Awaiting plea
🔥 Pro tip: Fireplugs need personal space too.
🏠 Things Escalated Category
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Brian C. Schwert
Charges Include:
- Theft by Unlawful Taking (F2)
- Criminal Mischief (F3)
- Burglary – Overnight Accommodation (F1)
- Damage to Property by Motor Vehicle
- Possession of Instrument of Crime
This case checked a lot of boxes. According to the filing, investigators allege a sequence of events involving property, tools, movement, and decision‑making that may not age well.
No judgments here—just the observation that when a single docket needs five separate charges, someone had a very busy day.
📌 Status: Awaiting preliminary hearing
🧰 Reminder: Instruments of crime are not covered under homeowner’s insurance.
📄 Courtroom Fine Print (Yes, We Read It So You Don’t)
All cases are allegations, everyone is presumed innocent, and these filings are public records provided by the Magisterial District Court.
Also, parking enforcement remains undefeated.
