Crime & Safety
Mercer Gang Member Convicted In Killing, Dumping Body In PA
Robert S. Christie of Trenton shot a man five times and left his body on Interstate 295 in January 2020, authorities said.

MERCER CUNTY, NJ —A Trenton, N.J., gang member has been convicted for the January 2020 killing of Joshua Mcrae, whose body was left on Interstate 295 in Bristol Township, PA authorities said.
Robert S. Christie, 37, was found guilty Friday by a Bucks County jury of first-degree murder, flight to avoid apprehension, hindering apprehension, possession of an instrument of crime, and abuse of a corpse, the Bucks County District Attorney's Office said.
President Judge Wallace H. Bateman Jr., deferred sentencing to a later date.
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Christie was charged last August, along with two other Trenton men, following an exhaustive investigation by the Pennsylvania State Police and Bucks County Detectives and a recommendation by the Bucks County Investigating Grand Jury.
Mcrae's body was found early Jan. 19, 2020, after Bucks County 911 Center dispatchers received a call at 1:39 a.m. of a body lying on the side of I-295, near the Pennsylvania Turnpike onramp in Bristol Township.
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State Police Troopers with the Trevose Barracks arrived and found the body of a man, later identified as Joshua Mcrae, 31, of Trenton.
An autopsy determined Mcrae had been shot five times and his death was ruled a homicide.
During the trial, testimony was presented that Mcrae, Christie, and two other men went to Murphy’s Beef and Ale in Bristol Township on the night of Jan. 18, 2020.
On the drive home, Mcrae, sitting behind Christie in an SVU, said something that Christie found irritating, authorities said.
Christie, a self-professed triple-OG Nine Trey Gangster, testified on his own behalf.
He admitted he turned around and shot Mcrae at least five times, then dragged the dying man out of the vehicle and dumped him on the side of the highway in Bristol Township.
Outside the SUV, Christie pointed the gun at Mcrae and squeezed the trigger, but the gun was empty.
Christie claimed unsuccessfully that he did it in self-defense.
“His intent could not be more clear if he showed up wearing a black hooded robe and a sickle,” Rees said in his closing arguments. “His intent was to kill.”
Two cooperating witnesses are awaiting trial on charges of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, abuse of a corpse, and hindering apprehension. One is also facing charges of prohibited possession of a firearm and sales to an ineligible transferee.
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