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Sugar Cookie

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Last December 17th, the body of Caleb Michael Harley was found in a Cumberland County creek bed, partially clothed and without identification. The temperature the night before was below freezing. Now, some 10 months after Harley was found, two men are charged in connection with his death.

Malachi Scripko, 20, and Jacob White, 23, both of Dillsburg, are charged with involuntary manslaughter. Investigators say they found out Harley was with the men prior to his death. When police interviewed them, they admitted to driving to Harrisburg to buy drugs. On the way back to Dillsburg, Harley snorted three or four bags of the drugs, thinking it was heroin, when in fact it was furanyl fentanyl. Harley suffered a medical emergency, and, rather than seek medical help, police say Scripko and White decided to dispose of his body. They drove him to Creek Road in Monroe Twp. about half mile west of Route 74 and allegedly dumped Harley out and fled the area, but not before taking his wallet, with about $170 in cash, and the rest of the drugs.

According to court documents, White and Scripko changed their story about the night of Harley’s death several times over the ensuing months. In a July interview, police say Scripko and White came clean. They said when Harley began showing signs of overdose, they ‘freaked out.’ They described his breathing as a ‘death rattle.’ They stopped along Creek Road and pulled Harley out of the back seat of the car. They said he tried to stand up but could only get to one knee. Harley tried to talk but could only mumble. White said he Googled “what happens when you overdose on heroin?” He and Scripko said they knew Harley was dead after that, according to court documents.

Harley died from a combination of drowning, hypothermia and multiple drug toxicity.

http://fox43.com/2017/10/13/dillsburg-men-charged-for-leaving-man-in-yellow-breeches-to-die/

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Malchi Scripko and Jacob White
 
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Both of their haircuts are crimes against humanity.

Guys, if you're already THAT bald like Malchi, just give up hope and shave it off. Mullety haircuts are never a valid solution.
 
They kinda look Amish-y,
is a shitty teen facial hair out of synch with 21st century.

I wonder if that look scored then a lot of sex that didn't include livestock.
 
Sep 18, 2018

If he stays clear of alcohol and drugs, Jacob White won't serve any more jail time for abandoning a friend in the throes of a heroin overdose to die along a wintry Cumberland County back road.

County Judge Albert H. Masland made such abstinence a condition for a prisonless future when he sentenced the 24-year-old Dillsburg man to time served to 2 years behind bars on Tuesday.

White already has spent nearly a year in county prison after his arrest for the December 2016 death of Caleb Harley. White struck the deal for a time served sentence last month when he pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to involuntary manslaughter and an unrelated drunken driving count, District Attorney Skip Ebert noted. Masland also ordered White to spend 3 years on probation.

White and Malachi Scripko, 21, of Monaghan Township, were arrested over what happened when Hardy began overdosing on fentanyl-laced heroin while riding in their car. State police said the two dumped Harley out of the car and left him along Creek Road in Monroe Township in 26-degree weather. Harley, a 25-year-old father of two, had no coat, hat or gloves.

The next day the Dillsburg man was found dead in the nearby Yellow Breeches Creek. The coroner ruled Harley's death was due to drug toxicity, hypothermia and drowning.

Although White's plea agreement was not universally backed by Harley's family, Ebert said the sentence is at the top of the guidelines for the charge.

White was apologetic when the judge gave him a chance to speak. He said he became a "follower of Jesus Christ "while in prison.

"I'm sorry for the way things went. If I could do anything to take it back, I would," White said. "If I can do anything for (Harley's) family, I will."

Masland made it clear he wasn't accepting White's expressions of remorse at face value. He told White he won't be released from prison without completing a drug and alcohol evaluation, and that the consequences will be dire if he uses either substance while on probation.

"The behavior that you demonstrated may have been the result of shock or fear or panic, but that makes it no less criminal," the judge said. "And the fact that your victim was an addict makes it no less criminal."


Scripko has pleaded guilty to the same charge as White. He is to be sentenced by Judge Christylee Peck next month.
https://www.pennlive.com/news/2018/09/stay_clean_or_go_back_to_priso.html
 
Oct 02, 2018
The second of two men who admitted dumping a friend along a Cumberland County back road to die of a drug overdose won't be serving more prison time for the crime.

Honoring a plea agreement, Judge Christylee Peck sentenced Malachi Scripko, 21, to time served to 23 months in prison on his guilty plea to conspiracy to commit involuntary manslaughter.
Scripko, already has spent more than 9 months in county prison following his arrest for the December 2016 death of 25-year-old Caleb Harley. Peck ordered Scripko to spend another 3 years on probation.

Police said Scripko and Jacob White, 24, dragged Harley out of their car while he was in the throes of a heroin overdose. They then drove away, leaving Harley, who had no coat, hat, or gloves, beside Creek Road on a 26-degree day, investigators said.
Scripko's sentencing came two weeks after Judge Albert H. Masland sentenced White to time served to 2 years in prison. White also must spend 3 years on probation.
 

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