Chief Pat Molloy joined Dawn Stensland to discuss community policing, police recruitment, youth outreach, and his upcoming swearing-in as president of the Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police Association. Dawn praised Molloy as one of the community leaders working on real solutions, and Molloy credited his department, local civic groups, the NAACP, the Police Athletic League, and Abington’s broader community for helping build a strong relationship between police and residents. He explained Abington’s “alphabet soup” of community policing programs, including Cops and Kids Together, PAL, youth aid panels, mental health co-responders, and diversion efforts designed to keep young people from entering the criminal justice system unnecessarily. Molloy also discussed the recruitment crisis in law enforcement, saying applicant numbers have dropped sharply since the George Floyd era and that departments must work harder to show young people that policing is still a noble profession. The interview closed with a positive discussion of Philadelphia, with Molloy praising Commissioner Bethel and Mayor Cherelle Parker for rebuilding morale, improving training, and helping the city’s police department move in a better direction and Assemblywoman Dawn Fantasia joined Dawn Stensland on New Jersey primary day for a wide-ranging conversation about voter turnout, New Jersey politics, Delaney Hall, immigration enforcement, special education, media bias, and the state’s public image. Fantasia began by discussing primary turnout and the impact of New Jersey eliminating the county line system, noting that the change has created a crowded Democratic field while Republicans still face an uphill battle statewide. The conversation then shifted to Delaney Hall, where Fantasia argued that the controversy was never truly about detention conditions but about activists and politicians opposing immigration detention and enforcement altogether. She criticized what she described as selective outrage from New Jersey Democrats, contrasting their focus on ICE with long-running problems inside state-run correctional facilities, women’s prisons, and special education services. Fantasia also raised concerns about thousands of unresolved special education complaints, criticized New Jersey’s fractured media market, and closed by emphasizing the beauty of the Garden State beyond the political chaos, pointing to its shore towns, mountains, lakes, forests, farms, and outdoor life.

Jun 04, 2026




