Good Friday Morning, Fellow Seekers.

An assistant city solicitor in Philadelphia who was caught on camera in an anti-Donald Trump vandalism incident made a "dumb mistake" and will keep his job, according to Mayor Jim Kenney.

As our friends at The Philadelphia Inquirer report, the attorney, Duncan Lloyd, was ID'd in surveillance footage that caught him and another man walking along Germantown Avenue in the city's Chestnut Hill section on Nov. 25.

More from The Inquirer:

In the footage, Lloyd is seen wearing a blue blazer and holding a glass of wine, filming or taking photos, while a second man spray paints "F--- Trump," on the wall of a newly opened Fresh Grocer.

As of Thursday morning, police said no arrests have been made in the incident and Kenney said Lloyd remains employed with the city.

"It's still working out. It's certainly hateful and inappropriate and unacceptable...but people are human beings and they make mistakes and it's a dumb mistake," Kenney said. "It's hateful graffiti, hateful graffiti is never acceptable whether it's a city employee or not."

Lloyd has not returned calls for comment.

First Deputy City Solicitor Craig Straw confirmed on Wednesday that Lloyd, who has worked for the Law Department since 2011, is one of two men in the video.

"We do not condone this type of behavior from our employees," Straw said. "To my knowledge, Mr. Lloyd has already contacted the Philadelphia police and is cooperating with them. We will decide on a course of action once we obtain more information about the investigation."

The Inquirer reports that Lloyd has already contacted Philadelphia city police and is "cooperating" with them.

Damage from the spray-painting incident has been estimated at between $3,000 and $10,000, the newspaper reported.

The rest of the day's news starts now.

The blame game between the Wolf administration and lawmakers over looming layoffs for more than 500 state employees is rolling on with no end in sight, our Capitol colleague, Jan Murphy, reports.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania's budget hole is getting 'incrementally' bigger, PennLive's Wallace McKelvey reports.

For those of you playing along at home, Gov. Tom Wolf will skip next weekend's Pa. Society gala in Manhattan. It's the last one at the storied Waldorf-Astoria hotel, which is due to be converted into condos, because, progress, we guess.

Pa.'s physician-general, Rachel Levine, says Americans need to stay vigilant about LGBT issues with the incoming Trump administration, The Post-Gazette reports.

U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey has called on PEOTUS Donald Trump to 'punish' Philly for being a sanctuary city, PhillyMag reports.

Hillary Clinton lost Pa. by just 46,000 votes, BillyPenn reports.

Here's your #Harrisburg Instagram of the Day:

Keystone Crossroads explains why thousands of Pa. coal miners stand to lose their benefits.

A new state law has opened the door to adoptees seeking their birth certificates, NewsWorks/WHYY-FM reports.

The Morning Call looks at the latest in the case against former wrestler Jimmy "Superfly" Snuka.

PoliticsPA wonders whether Jill Stein cost Hillary Clinton the presidency (Magic Eightball Answer: Seems likely.).

The House GOP's plans for Medicare have hit a brick wall in the U.S. Senate, Politico reports.

Roll Call looks at Donald Trump's pick to lead the Pentagon.

Heavy Rotation.

Here's an old fave from Primal Scream that popped up this morning. Live at T in the Park, it's "Country Girl."

Friday's Gratuitous Hockey Link.

Carolina lost a nail-biter to Boston on Thursday, dropping a 2-1 decision in a shootout.

And now you're up to date.