platform Man Fighting

Man stabbed during fight on SEPTA platform, police say

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PHILADELPHIA - Authorities are searching for a man who they say stabbed another person when a fight aboard a SEPTA train spilled onto the platform Wednesday night.

A SEPTA spokesperson said the suspect and two younger men, believed to be teenagers, got into a fight on a Broad Street Line train.

The fight continued onto the platform a Fairmount Station where police say the suspect stabbed one of the young men with a knife.

The victim and the other young man fled the station, according to police. Officers later found the stabbing victim of Ridge Avenue and drove him to a local hospital.AdvertisementThe suspect also fled the station and is currently being sought by police. .

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Mariah Carey sued for $20M over ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’
NEW ORLEANS - It seems that one of America’s favorite Christmas songs has now landed singer Mariah Carey in a legal battle with a man claiming to be the writer of the lyrics.Carey is being sued by Andy Stone, who claimed to have co-written Carey’s hit "All I Want for Christmas is You" in 1989  and recorded it at the Masterphonics Studio 6 in Nashville, Tennessee.Stone, whose stage name is "Vince Vance," filed a complaint against Carey, Walter Afanasieff and Sony Music Entertainment in the U.S. District Court of Eastern District of Louisiana Friday.According to court documents obtained by FOX Television Stations, Stone said Carey and her team never sought permission to use the song "in creating, reproducing, recording, distributing, selling, or publicly performing."RELATED: 1-on-1 with Mariah Carey on her holiday classic, new Christmas special and more!Stone is suing for copyright infringement, unjust enrichment and misappropriation and violation of the Lanham Act, which governs trademarks.Stone is seeking at least $20 million in damages.Neither representatives for Carey nor Sony responded to a request for comment by FOX Television Stations.Carey first released the song in 1994 as part of her holiday album, but the record didn’t become a number-one hit in the U.S.
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