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Drug Rehab Pennsylvania
is here to help people with drug and/or alcohol abuse problems in Pennsylvania. find treatment options. Due to our diverse networking system we can find a treatment option tailored to each individuals specific situation and needs. We are able to provide all phases of recovery included but not limited to, alcohol and/or drug intervention, drug and/or alcohol detox, in-patient treatment, out-patient treatment, short term treatment (30 days or less), long term treatment (90 days or longer).

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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Pennsylvania. At Drug Rehab Pennsylvania we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Pennsylvania, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Pennsylvania. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

We realize that each individual in Pennsylvania. is in a different financial situation and we will find treatment options for each individual regardless of their financial situation. No matter what your financial situation everyone will receive the treatment help they are looking for.

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Pennsylvania Police chase leads, but file no charges in five deaths

Pennsylvania Police activity has all but ceased at a northeast Pennsylvania home where investigators unearthed the remains of five people last month, including the bodies of a missing pharmacist and his girlfriend.
Digging at the hillside house in Wilkes-Barre's "Back Mountain" region has ceased and investigators still haven't identified three of the victims or named a suspect in their deaths.


But while no charges have been filed in connection with the apparent slayings, authorities have quietly, in connection with other cases, arrested several people who knew both the home's owner, onetime bank robber Hugo Selenski, and one of the victims, vanished pharmacist Michael Kerkowski Jr.


Prosecutors have lowered a veil of secrecy around the arrests and have refused to answer questions about them, but court filings said one of those jailed was Carey Bartoo, a Trucksville woman who had a child with Selenski and was a cousin of Kimberly Kerkowski, the missing pharmacist's wife.


Police on June 27 charged Bartoo with participating in a burglary at a Dallas Township home in January during which a group of thieves stole a huge cache of guns, cash and valuables.


In a court affidavit, police said Selenski had apparently been aware of the burglary and alleged to police sometime in January or February _ months before the bodies were found _ that Bartoo and several other people were involved, including Paul Weakley, a man who he had previously served time with at the federal prison in Lewisburg, and another friend, Patrick Russin.


Neither Russin or Weakley have been charged in the burglary, but both were arrested in early June on federal firearms charges and remain in jail, their lawyers said.


Investigators said they have been getting information from several people who were apparently aware that there were bodies buried at Selenski's house, but they wouldn't say whether Russin, Weakley or Bartoo were among those who had provided evidence.


Attorneys for the three declined to answer most questions about their cases Monday. Bartoo's lawyer, Jonathan Blum, confirmed that she had been interviewed by police, but wouldn't say what, if anything, she had told them. Russin's attorney, Paul Ackourey, said his client had been arrested under "unusual circumstances," but refused to elaborate, saying the evidence against him had been sealed by a judge.


Kerkowski and his girlfriend, Tammy Fassett, disappeared in May 2002, about two weeks before he was to be sentenced for selling hundreds of thousands of doses of painkillers OxyContin, Vicodin and Lorcet to addicts who visited his pharmacy north of Wilkes-Barre. Police, for a year, assumed that he had fled the state.


Selenski, 29, who served seven years in federal prison for a 1994 bank robbery, has denied any involvement, but has been jailed on charges that he robbed Kerkowski's father after telling him for months that his missing son was still alive and in need of cash.


Sgt. Richard Krawetz, a spokesman for the State Police, said investigators now believe that Kerkowski and Fassett were killed around the time they vanished, and that their bodies were buried first in another location, then moved later to Selenski's home.


Investigators have searched several other sites in a hunt for additional human remains, including a spot behind an area high school, but turned up nothing, Krawetz said. Authorities have also sent the charred bones of several victims to be analyzed for DNA, and are seeking dental records in another state to see if they can confirm the identity of one victim.

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