
Five candidates emerge as sole candidate for November district judge races
Kormanik-Lucas, of Ogle Township, advances to the Nov. 4 general election unopposed: she sailed through the Republican primary as the only candidate on the ballot and defeated local attorney Amy Thomas, of Paint Township, in the Democratic primary Tuesday.
Candidates are permitted to cross-file for the seat, which has a six-year term.
Kormanik-Lucas won 582 votes to Thomas' 279 votes in the Democratic primary. She also won 1,417 votes on the Republican side, where she was uncontested.
'I'm honored that the people of my district trust me to move forward on both sides of the ticket,' said Kormanik- Lucas, a Widener Law School graduate who works as a contract administrator for a local defense firm.
She said her victory Tuesday was the culmination of several months of hard work.
'I made an honest run with integrity,' she said. 'I met people (Tuesday) at the polls. It was great to see people come out.'
After the November election, Kormanik-Lucas will serve in the judge's seat, serving communities in the Windber Area and Shade-Central City school districts, succeeding District Judge William Seger, who is retiring at the end of the year.
The Windber-based district judge seat includes communities in the Windber Area and Shade-Central City school districts.
'I have always felt called to public service,' she said.
Thomas said she was thankful to her supporters, but disappointed in recent TV news coverage of the race.
'First and foremost, l'm incredibly grateful to everyone who supported me in this race,' Thomas said. 'Unfortunately, this race was never just about qualifications – it became clear early on that I was also up against media bias and misinformation. The coverage I received was often one-sided and failed to reflect the truth about my record and my character.
'I've overcome significant personal challenges and was fully cleared of past accusations, yet that didn't seem to matter to those determined to discredit me,' she said. 'Despite the loss, I remain committed to serving this community and will continue looking for ways to make a meaningful, positive impact. This was just one chapter – not the end of the story.'
A New Centerville judge's seat, in Somerset's District 16-3-05, also had two challengers – both cross-filed – with one winner on both tickets.
Patrick Svonavec, of Milford Township, secured that primary victory Tuesday over Daniel Lewis, of Confluence Borough.
Svonavec is a longtime attorney with experience practicing at the Common Pleas and federal court levels.
Lewis is a longtime state constable in the region.
Svonavec won 191 Democratic votes to Lewis' 100. On the Republican ticket, Svonavec won 596 votes to Lewis' 473.
District 16-3-05 includes the townships of Black, Jefferson, Milford, Middlecreek, Upper and Lower Turkeyfoot and Casselman, Confluence, New Centerville, Rockwood, Seven Springs and Ursina boroughs. The office was previously held by Sandra Stevanus, who retired last year.
In Cambria County, two men sought election to District 47-3-01, which has been held by longtime District Judge Mary Ann Zanghi.
William 'Bill' Hines Jr., of Nanty Glo, a longtime law enforcement officer now working as a Cambria County detective, won the primary on both party tickets.
His opponent, Aaron Ling, of East Conemaugh, is a former Cambria County public defender who has worked as a full-time assistant prosecutor with the Somerset County District Attorney's Office since 2020.
Hines won 779 votes on the Democratic ballot to Ling's 401. On the Republican side, Hines won 958 votes to Ling's 422 votes.
District 47-3-01 includes Browns- town, East Conemaugh, Franklin, Nanty Glo and Franklin, in addition to the townships of East Taylor, Jackson, Lower Yoder, Middle Taylor and West Taylor.
For Cambria County judge, District Attorney Greg Neugebauer cruised through unopposed primary on both tickets for the position.
He won 9,851 votes on the Republican ticket and 7,980 votes on the Democratic ticket.
In November, he is seeking a seat that has been vacant since former Judge David Tulowitzki retired in 2023.
In Somerset County, District Attorney Molly Metzgar also ran unopposed in her Republican bid for a county judge seat vacated in late 2023 by former President Judge Gregory Geary.
Metzgar, of Somerset Township, won 7,359 votes Tuesday on the Republican ticket.
Russ O'Reilly is a reporter for The Tribune-Democrat.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
23 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg expected to testify in $8 billion Facebook privacy lawsuit
A $8 billion-dollar class action investors' lawsuit against Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and company leaders — current and former — begins Wednesday, with claims stemming from the privacy scandal involving the Cambridge Analytica political consulting firm. Investors allege in their lawsuit that Meta did not fully disclose the risks that Facebook users' personal information would be misused by Cambridge Analytica, a firm that supported Donald Trump's successful Republican presidential campaign in 2016. Shareholders say Facebook officials repeatedly and continually violated a 2012 consent order with the Federal Trade Commission under which Facebook agreed to stop collecting and sharing personal data on platform users and friends without their consent. The fallout led to Facebook agreeing to pay a $5.1 billion penalty to settle FTC charges. The social media giant also reached a $725 million privacy settlement with users. Now shareholders want Zuckerberg and others to reimburse Meta for the FTC fine and other legal costs, which the plaintiffs estimate total more than $8 billion. The case will feature testimony from Zuckerberg and former Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg. Others expected to appear on the stand include board member Marc Andreessen and former board member Peter Thiel.


New York Post
23 minutes ago
- New York Post
CNN crew allegedly attacked in West Bank by Israeli settlers while reporting on death of US citizen
Israeli settlers attacked a CNN news crew over the weekend as it traveled to the Palestinian town of Sinjil in the West Bank to report on the death of a US citizen, according to the network's Jerusalem-based correspondent Jeremy Diamond. Diamond, a veteran journalist and former CNN White House correspondent, said he and his crew were targeted while on assignment investigating the death of 20-year-old Florida native Saif al-Din Kamil Abdul Karim Musalat. Musalat was visiting family in Sinjil when he was allegedly beaten by Israeli settlers. His relatives say settlers also blocked ambulances from reaching him as he lay dying from his injuries. Advertisement 4 CNN reporter Jeremy Diamond posted an image of a vehicle used by his crew after the alleged attack by Israeli settlers. @JDiamond1/X 'As we were covering this story, my team & I were attacked by Israeli settlers. The back window of our vehicle was smashed, but we managed to escape unharmed,' Diamond wrote Monday night in a post on X. He shared an image of the damaged vehicle, adding: 'This is just a sliver of the reality many Palestinians face in the West Bank amid rising settler violence.' Advertisement A CNN spokesperson declined to comment. The Post has sought comment from the Israeli government. The death of a US national in the West Bank prompted the Trump administration's top envoy in Israel to ask the government to investigate. 'I have asked @Israel to aggressively investigate the murder of Saif Mussallet, an American citizen who was visiting family in Sinjil when he was beaten to death,' US Ambassador Mike Huckabee wrote on X. 4 Diamond, a former White House correspondent for CNN, is based in Jerusalem. He was reporting on the death of a US national allegedly beaten to death by Israeli settlers. CNN Advertisement 'There must be accountability for this criminal and terrorist act. Saif was just 20 yrs old.' The attack on Diamond's team comes amid a documented rise in violence against journalists working in the West Bank. The Jerusalem-based Foreign Press Association (FPA), which represents 400 media professionals covering Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, issued a statement Tuesday condemning the incident. 'This is the second settler attack on foreign journalists in Sinjil this month,' the FPA said. Advertisement 'On July 4, a Deutsche Welle team was chased by settlers while filming. A window of DW's car was smashed with stones, and its bodywork dented. In each of these incidents, settlers struck in broad daylight. Yet so far, we are unaware of any arrests being made.' 4 A group of Israeli settlers is pictured above. According to Diamond, the settlers followed his crew and then ambushed them. CNN The association said the situation reflects a broader pattern of hostility and violence faced by journalists, particularly Palestinians, in the region. 'This is taking place at a time when our Palestinian colleagues routinely face threats, intimidation and violence at the hands of settlers and security forces, while the foreign press is routinely vilified by some Israeli public figures,' the FPA said. Before the CNN crew was attacked, the Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) also issued a statement on July 8 reporting a rise in violence against both Palestinian and international journalists by Israeli settlers and soldiers. One of the cases cited by the IFJ involved Palestinian journalist Issam al-Rimawi, who was attacked in the village of al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah. Al-Rimawi was beaten so severely by settlers that he lost consciousness. In another incident in Jenin on May 28, Israeli soldiers fired warning shots near a car clearly marked 'press' that was carrying French journalist Amira Souilem of France 24 and Radio France Internationale, Palestinian journalist Mohammed Mansour and three other Palestinian journalists. On June 2, a group of international reporters attempting to visit Masafer Yatta — an area in the southern West Bank featured in the Oscar-winning documentary 'No Other Land' — was stopped by masked Israeli soldiers. Advertisement 4 The CNN crew was on assignment investigating the death of 20-year-old Florida native Saif al-Din Kamil Abdul Karim Musalat. AFP via Getty Images The journalists had been invited by the film's co-directors, Yuval Abraham and Basel Adra, who later documented the obstruction by the army. According to the FPA, the Israeli military has also prevented journalists from entering refugee camps in the northern West Bank, which the FPA says have seen tens of thousands of Palestinians expelled. 'These phenomena have led to a worrying and rapid shrinking of the space and freedom to report on Palestinian lives,' the FPA said in its statement. 'We call on Israeli authorities to uphold the country's stated commitment to freedom of the press by ensuring the safety of journalists and prosecuting, not protecting, their assailants.' Advertisement Access to Gaza remains severely restricted. International journalists are currently banned from entering the territory unless as part of a rare embed with the Israeli military. In early June, more than 200 press freedom organizations and global newsrooms issued an open letter demanding that foreign journalists be granted 'immediate, independent and unrestricted' access to the Gaza Strip.

an hour ago
Bipartisan support helps foundations avoid tax increase in new Trump legislation
Two Republican senators and a broad bipartisan coalition of funders and nonprofits prevented a 600% increase in taxes levied on the endowments of the largest private foundations as part of President Donald Trump's the tax and spending legislation. Thanks to their support, when Trump signed the bill into law on July 4, taxes went up on the endowments of the largest universities, but not on the endowments of philanthropic foundations. 'I do have to say that this took some persuasion,' said Sen. Todd Young of Indiana in an interview with The Associated Press. The other champion was Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma, who did not respond to an interview request. Together, they advocated to remove the provision which, at the high end, would levy a tax of 10% on the investment earnings of foundations with more than $5 billion in assets, up from the current rate of 1.39%. The move reveals both the power of philanthropic groups, especially conservative ones, to sway legislators and a split in the administration's coalition between those who want to protect the independence of private philanthropy and those who think the sector supports resistance to the president's agenda. Young said he spoke with leaders or representatives of a dozen foundations in his state to understand what it would mean to increase these taxes on foundation endowments. Though Young didn't name any specific leaders, Indiana is home to numerous major foundations — including one of America's largest foundations, the Lilly Endowment, which holds shares in the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly and reported assets of almost $80 billion at the end of last year. The Associated Press receives funding from the Lilly Endowment for its coverage of philanthropy and religion. Young said many in the Republican caucus appreciate the value of the investments private foundations make in their communities. 'Let's be honest here. The target of this excise tax increase was not the vast majority of private foundations. It was a handful of large foundations that are nationally known that have been accused of embracing and perpetuating certain woke policies and agendas,' Young said. While he didn't specify the specific foundations, Young was tapping into a critique of large progressive foundations brought by politicians like Vice President JD Vance. In a 2021 speech at the conservative think tank The Claremont Institute, Vance attacked foundations who fund movements for social justice and characterized their support for Black Lives Matter groups as 'investing in racial division.' 'We should eliminate all of the special privileges that exist for our nonprofit foundation class,' Vance said at the time. 'If you're spending all your money to teach racism to our children in their schools, why do we give you special tax breaks instead of taxing you more?' The White House has generally expressed support for that policy view. In an early executive order, Trump asked the attorney general to identify large foundations to investigate for civil rights violations, along with large corporations and universities. So far, the administration has not announced any investigations into foundations, even as the deadline included in the executive order has passed. Conservative philanthropic groups added their voice to oppose the proposed increase in taxes on foundations' endowment earnings. The Philanthropy Roundtable, which said it supports conservative and free market ideas, led a coalition to send a letter to Senate majority leader Sen. John Thune of Montana and Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho, who leads the Senate Finance Committee. 'We know policies that siphon private dollars away from charities to line the government's coffers are antithetical to conservative values,' the signatories wrote of the proposed tax on foundation assets. The legislation also contains a mix of provisions that impact funders, nonprofits and communities. It allows the vast majority of tax filers to take a charitable deduction of up to $1,000 for individuals and $2,000 for married couples, which advocates believe will increase the amount everyday donors give. The law also moved forward with a new cap on itemized deductions for the wealthiest tax filers, which advocates think will deter charitable giving. It also creates a new requirement for corporations to donate a minimum of 1% of their taxable income before receiving a tax benefit. Many corporations do not meet that threshold, meaning they may be discouraged from giving at all. United Philanthropy Forum is a membership organization for foundations, which has long advocated around issues important to the sector. Besides the recent spending bill, they've followed executive orders, provisions that would have threatened the tax-exempt status of organizations and cuts to social safety net programs. Matthew L. Evans, the forum's vice president of advocacy and external relations, said the forum shifted their strategy several years ago away from defending the interests of the sector to advocating for the communities which private philanthropy serves. 'It really is an all hands on deck moment because again this is such an unprecedented time for us,' Evans said. The forum was part of a coalition of nonprofit associations that helped organize a letter pushing back on multiple provisions in the spending bill, which almost 3,000 nonprofits signed on to support. But one of the most important messages nonprofit advocates were delivering to lawmakers was around the impacts of cuts to social safety net programs, said Kyle Caldwell, who leads the Council of Michigan Foundations. He said his organization has advocated for foundations and the communities they serve in Michigan for decades. 'If you think about all of the systems that were in place: access to health care, access to education, access to food. All of those really were targeted services to the most vulnerable in our community. That's where philanthropy invests most. That's where nonprofits act most," he said, adding that the cuts will "put higher demands on the nonprofit sector, which was already overburdened.' When asked about concerns over the impact of the cuts, Senator Young from Indiana said he thinks the bill strikes the right balance. 'What we have found is that when the economy grows, people give more because they to have more to give,' Young said. ___