Wednesday, October 10, 2007

JZ: Rap and Fling Latest in Long String

"A woman was dragged from a bench and rapped at the Nursery Road Rail Station Tuesday afternoon ... After a few minutes she advised, all of a sudden he just grabbed her and forced her into a wooded area ... [she] managed to break free telling officers she swam to the Patpasco River back to the train station ... Officers say [the suspect] also flung to the Patpasco River where officers finally found him. Police say this is just the latest of a long string of similar arrest."
UPDATE: WJZ fixed all of the entertaining typos! :(
(For more grody details, read the Sun story!)

More on the NE district domestic-violence pilot project from the Wretched's Brendan Kearney and Luke Broadwater at the Examiner. Who wrote it better?
Christian Marcel Liverman
A Baltimore County judge Tuesday sentenced high school teacher Christian Liverman, right, to one year of probation after he pleaded guilty to assaulting a 16-year-old girl in his classroom.

Two gun felons and a thieving NIH employee met their fates in US District Court.

"Police called it one of the county's worst animal cruelty cases of all time.
But veteran District Court Judge Robert C. Wilcox said the investigation of the alleged Severna Park dogfighting ring is one of the worst examples of police work he's seen."
Meow!

7 comments:

John Galt said...

The Travel & Leisure survey of favorite U.S. cities is in. Guess which one's not a winner ?

Anonymous said...

Don't want to nitpick, but what's up with the 5th grade spelling errors in that story about the rape at the train station?

Maurice Bradbury said...

I love pick nit! That story make me feel like in China restaurant!

Who'da thunk Chicago would be the top food city?

Sean said...

Ya know what kept us off the favorite US cities? All the sex childs and rapping flingers.

Malnurtured Snay said...

Rapped? Like, over the head, with a ruler?

Ben said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
John Galt said...

Lotsa open warrants and an interview with a state parole commissioner.