The Ink has last week's seven murders, plus case updates
Dundalk murder victim's finacee told the Patch's Ron Cassie that the accused, her brother, was trying to protect her and her fetus
Glad to see the Dooce's Cold Case files covering the 2008 murder of Remington septuagenarian Nancy Schmidt
Was William Torbit's funeral too over the top?
VA court upholds the use of warrantless GPS tracking devices. Though I guess law enforcement still needs a warrant for someone's cell phone tracking records?
Ed & Van: "A British ex-con was sentenced to 78 months in prison—-quite a bit below the 120-month mandatory minimum—- for scheming to export cocaine from Baltimore to London."
Lee Farkas, the former chairman of the mortgage company that financed many a flipped house in the southeastern is now on trial in Alexandria VA for fraud
Bicyclists are biking from Bmore to A-town this morning in support of a bill that would create the new offense of manslaughter by criminal negligence
Yesterday the in-state tuition bill passed the House Ways and Means Committee
If you're a drunken weenus at an O's game, here's where you're going to go
MD police seminar focuses on "sexting." That doesn't sound good to you? Well, what if I threw in a picture of my cock?
And in national news, the FBI has released hundreds of pages of files re. the murder of the Notorious B.I.G. ... though so redacted you can't really read anything.
2 comments:
Let's say the police decide to put a warrantless GPS device on the front bumper of your car. Let's say you hit a bump and the GPS device falls off and you drive over the device smashing it into a million pieces. Will you be expected to pay for said device? Inquiring minds wish to know.
Short answer, no.
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