Boone St. murder victim ID'd as Damon Vaughn, 21. The Patch notes that Vaughn had a sizable criminal record, including a conviction for armed robbery.
The Ink recaps the past week's seven murders
Remember that guy, Christopher Sharp, who took pictures of police beating up his female friend at Preakness? Police seized his camera and deleted the pictures, along with other personal photos and videos of his. So Sharp, with some help from the ACLU, sued the department, considering that taking pictures of the police in public is thoroughly legal, so long as you aren't all up in their business and whatnot. Then the DOJ chimed in as well, with a 10-page letter to the BPD telling them to quit being hosers. Buuut rather than settling the case and quietly moving on, as most flagrantly-in-the-wrong plaintiffs usually do, the department is now using your tax dollars to dig up dirt on Sharp, including talking to his ex-wife, his ex-wife's boyfriend and his former employers,* and subpoenaing his medical records, including the results of a court-ordered hair follicle test in 2007.
....But the city can afford it, because guess how much it made from speed cameras last year? Here's a hint: Xerox's windfall was $18.4 million, it averages out to about $57 per Baltimorean, and it also happens to be about the same amount the city paid out in police lawsuits last year. Note to self, buy Xerox stock.
Criminal-of-all-trades Jose Morales has been charged with soliciting the murder of one Robert Long, an accomplice who'd recently agreed to testify against him in a case involving stolen scaffolding.
The May Flower Chinese buffet at 33rd and Greenmount was robbed at knifepoint
"Parkville Man Allegedly Burglarizes Mother, Blames Society"
In Towson, a guy who wants to start his own railroad has been charged with stealing dirt.
The missing grandson of the octogenarian couple murdered in Pikesville was named as 31-year-old Michael Long*.
A shooting near Catonsville High
"Glen Burnie man shot while tattooing girlfriend"
In Dundalk, a guy stabbed a guy over a woman
The Ink recaps the past week's seven murders
Remember that guy, Christopher Sharp, who took pictures of police beating up his female friend at Preakness? Police seized his camera and deleted the pictures, along with other personal photos and videos of his. So Sharp, with some help from the ACLU, sued the department, considering that taking pictures of the police in public is thoroughly legal, so long as you aren't all up in their business and whatnot. Then the DOJ chimed in as well, with a 10-page letter to the BPD telling them to quit being hosers. Buuut rather than settling the case and quietly moving on, as most flagrantly-in-the-wrong plaintiffs usually do, the department is now using your tax dollars to dig up dirt on Sharp, including talking to his ex-wife, his ex-wife's boyfriend and his former employers,* and subpoenaing his medical records, including the results of a court-ordered hair follicle test in 2007.
....But the city can afford it, because guess how much it made from speed cameras last year? Here's a hint: Xerox's windfall was $18.4 million, it averages out to about $57 per Baltimorean, and it also happens to be about the same amount the city paid out in police lawsuits last year. Note to self, buy Xerox stock.
Criminal-of-all-trades Jose Morales has been charged with soliciting the murder of one Robert Long, an accomplice who'd recently agreed to testify against him in a case involving stolen scaffolding.
The May Flower Chinese buffet at 33rd and Greenmount was robbed at knifepoint
"Parkville Man Allegedly Burglarizes Mother, Blames Society"
In Towson, a guy who wants to start his own railroad has been charged with stealing dirt.
The missing grandson of the octogenarian couple murdered in Pikesville was named as 31-year-old Michael Long*.
A shooting near Catonsville High
"Glen Burnie man shot while tattooing girlfriend"
In Dundalk, a guy stabbed a guy over a woman
No comments:
Post a Comment