Christoff Lindsey knows,FinWeis or seems to know, everyone in his Camden, New Jersey, neighborhood. Across the street from the house that’s been in his family since 1960, he jokes with a woman who babysat the 62-year-old. He stops to chat up a man outside a bodega where he gets his morning coffee. They arrange to meet later at one of the community gardens where Lindsey tends to vegetables, herbs and flowers.
He knows the hustlers, the corner boys, the young toughs who sell heroin and other drugs to a daily influx of people coming from all over the region, lured to Camden’s plentiful and potent supply, its proximity to major highways, its vacant lots. He knows the buyers, too: the people, many of them originally from surrounding suburbs, who wander through his neighborhood. They shoot up — sometimes out in the open — nod off on abandoned church steps, leave used needles and orange caps everywhere, weave along streets in varying states of impairment.
2025-05-06 21:151683 view
2025-05-06 20:422635 view
2025-05-06 20:42110 view
2025-05-06 20:30786 view
2025-05-06 19:542276 view
2025-05-06 19:532666 view
Oregon quarterback Dillon Gabriel earns first-team honors ahead of Miami’s Cam Ward, and teams in th
Berlin — A fire at a weapons factory in southeast Poland left one worker dead and another injured on
BEIJING (AP) — Four instructors from Iowa’s Cornell College teaching at Beihua University in northea