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May 31, 2010

City cops probe several shootings; 10 shot, 7 dead over holiday weekend

Update: Police tell me that the two shooting victims from Ramsay Street died. That brings the holiday weekend total to 10 shootings with seven dead. That includes the latest fatal shooting this morning on Loch Raven Boulevard in Northeast Baltimore.

Update 2: Police are reporting that a man was stabbed to death at about 6:15 p.m. Monday in the 4800 block of Truesdale Ave, in the Northeast District's Frankford neighborhood. The three-day death toll is now at eight, the deadliest such stretch of the year. 

Baltimore police are investigating a spate of shooting over this violent holiday weekend, including three that occurred in a brieft span in East Baltimore adnd three others within a few hours and a few blocks in Carrollton Ridge.

Sunday evening, a man was shot and killed on Ramsay Street. A few hours later, two other men were shot (their conditions are not yet known, but homicide detectives were called to the scene). This is the same beleagured neighbhood in which 5-year-old Raven Wyatt was found shot and wounded last year, and the scene of a large community walk with the mayor and police to take back their streets.

The Baltimore Sun's Tricia Bishop just updated that sad tale with news that lawyers for the recently convicted shooter are appealing because they believe prosecutors and a former defense attorney overstated the number of times the suspect had violated his home detention (he was GPS monitoring).

Last year, I walked through the neighborhood twice (once when the mayor came, along with hundreds of angry and concerned residents) and a second time a few weeks later (when hardly anyone showed up).

The Southwestern District's Police Community Relations Council, led by Steve Herlth, is very active with community Citizen on Patrol Walks. And Connie Fowler, the longtime community leader there, has been vocal about violence for years.

May 30, 2010

Architect, 48, dies from Taser jolt after fighting police

Carl D'Andre Johnson was an accomplished architect and religious man, his brother said, not the type of person who would challenge police and wind up dead after receiving a shock from an electronic stun-gun.

But Baltimore County police say Johnson got into a rumble with officers Thursday after crashing his Toyota pickup truck near a busy highway interchange, and continued fighting after being doused with pepper spray and receiving an initial hit from a Taser.

Shortly after he was jolted a second time, county police say Johnson, 48, lost consciousness and was later pronounced dead at a hospital. He became the second person to die after being Tasered by a county officer in the past three years.

Police use the devices to halt or restrain belligerent or potentially dangerous suspects. The weapons shoot a pair of electrodes attached to wires, which deliver an electric current that causes pain and muscle contraction, leading to temporary paralysis.

Responding to concerns about deaths, the U.S. Justice Department has conducted several studies and determined that the darts are trouble-free in the vast majority of cases. The leading manufacturer of the devices, Taser International, has stood by their safety, but last fall issued a recommendation that officers avoid shots to the chest.

Click here to read more.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 7:41 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Baltimore County
        

May 29, 2010

Turn yourself in to the cops!

In mid-June, if you're wanted on a crime, you can turn yourself in to the cops in a church. Baltimore is the latest of several cities, including Washington, to embrace Operation Safe Surrender.

 

It's open to people wanted on nonviolent misdemeanors and felonies who want to clear their name without ending up in handcuffs. In return for your surrender, prosecutors say they will do what they can, within reason, to keep you out of prison.

It's to be held June 16 through June 19 at New Baptist Metropolitan Church on McCulloh Street, the idea being a place of worship is a non-threatening environment. It is not an amnesty program in sense of the word,” stressed Assistant State's Attorney Patricia Deros. “All we can say that we will offer favorable consideration. We will do what we can to not incarcerate people.” (above is a pile of unserved arrest warrants in Baltimore, some dating back two decades).

People want on warrants charging them with shootings, handgun violations and other violent crime don't qualify. But for others on old shoplifting cases, here's a chance to get that old baggage all cleared up.

In Washington, officials hailed the program, which they did in 2007, as such a success they wished it had last longer. It's sponored by the U.S. Marshals Service and they do only one per city. So this is the last change. Officials plan to move everything from office furniture to high-speed copy machines to the church, as well as generators to ensure there's enough power.

They'll be prosecutors, judges, public defenders and clerks on hand. Judges will work out of a community center across the street -- they objected to rendering justice inside a church. Some people not happy with what they're offered will no doubt demand trials and will be put back into the regular system. But the program is designed to get people through the system without handcuffs, without jail, and in the quickest way possible.

Over the past several weeks, Deros (left) has been working hard to examine many the 40,000 open arrest warrants still lingering in the system, and to throw out ones that can't be prosecuted. In some, police officers or even the crime lab chemist have died. A full account of how she's doing this seemingly impossible task is the subject of Sunday's Crime Beat column in the Baltimore Sun.

DC officials have a great web site on the program that explains it in more detail and even offers up testimonials from suspects who went through it. The U.S. Marshal's Office also has a site that offers information.

In DC, 530 people surrendered over the course of three days, and officials there said had it gone a week, they could've gotten more than 1,000. For more information, here's a flier explaining the program:

FSS Poster-Baltimore-8 5x11 Draft
Posted by Peter Hermann at 10:17 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Courts and the justice system, Top brass
        

May 28, 2010

Baltimore police report on governor's daughter

Gov. Martin O'Malley's 18-year-old daughter was briefly hospitalized Thursday night after she was found unconscious at the Inner Harbor. The Baltimore Sun's Julie Bykowicz reports that Tara O'Malley had been at a house party in Towson, then came downtown to board a boat.

The governor and his wife are calling this a private, family matter. The Sun is reporting that a citizen flagged down a city police officer saying the young woman appeared intoxicated. In a statement, the governor's wife, Katie O'Malley, did not mention drinking but called what happened a "teachable moment."

"We … encourage all parents and teenagers to be safe this graduation season," her statement said.

Here is a copy of the police report:

o'malley
Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:51 PM | | Comments (5)
Categories: South Baltimore
        

Car break-ins up in city's downtown

The Baltimore Sun's Justin Fenton is reporting that car break-ins are surging in downtown Baltimore. It's an old problem that seems to surge in the warm summer months, especially during tourist season with unsuspecting motorists.

Baltimore Police have a plan:

Responding to a surge in car break-ins in the downtown area, Baltimore police will be mailing photos of items left in plain view to the vehicle owners in an effort to warn them of the risks. Car break-ins are up more than 100 percent in the past four weeks in the central district, an area that includes downtown, Mount Vernon and the Pennsylvania Avenue corridor. Police said they plan to increase patrols and dedicate a monitor at the downtown closed-circuit television control center to watch for break-ins.

Both Baltimore police and the Downtown Partnership offer crime tips to prevent break-ins. Summed up, don't leave anything in your vehicle. No loose change. Certainly no iPods on the front seat. Plug your cigarette lighter in so thieves don't think you have a portable electronic device that needs charging. City police say: "Next time you leave your car, leave it empty."

Also, the Downtown Partnership sends a letter to judges whenever a person is arrested and charged with breaking into a car in the downtown area. It is to ensure the judge understands that it's not a minor crime.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:42 PM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Confronting crime, Downtown
        

May 27, 2010

Here's looking at you, kid

The last time Qonta Waddell's mother saw him alive, the slightly built 24-year-old was hogtied and screaming for his life as he was carried away by two men with handguns. Humphrey Bougarte Johnson

That's what I reported last May when 32-year-old Sherman Anderson was charged in Waddell's murder. A full year later, Anderson has been cleared, and four other men are now facing charges. 

Among them: a 36-year-old named Humphrey Bougarte Johnson. (Pictured at right)  He deserves consideration for having one of the best names of anyone I've written about, however, The Daily Record's report about bank fraud suspect Brotha Workitout is clearly the winner in this category.

A law enforcement source said charges against Anderson were dropped after investigators tested a piece of evidence and got a DNA hit for Aaron Davis, who was charged in late January. Anderson and Davis apparently share physical features, and he may have been wrongly picked out of a photo lineup. But the DNA match put the focus squarely on Davis, the source said.

It's the second time in a few months we've seen a homicide investigation completely shift gears. Earlier this month, charges were dropped against a woman who police had charged with stabbing her boyfriend to death, and instead charged three men who are alleged gang members. 

Davis' arrest apparently kickstarted the investigation again, because police have since arrested three other men.  The most recent is Derrell Rickey Johnson, who was picked up yesterday, police said.

Also charged are the aforementioned Humphrey Johnson, who was charged on April 21, and William Arthur Rhodes, who was arrested Feb. 27.

Here's the harrowing account of the kidnapping, from charging documents:

Police say that at 4 a.m. April 21, Waddell's grandfather encountered three unknown men in his Pen Lucy home in North Baltimore who said Waddell was outside and had given them permission to enter. They took a handgun and $40,000 in cash, then emptied a safe.   

Within an hour, at about 5:40 a.m., Waddell arrived at his mother's home in the Beechfield neighborhood in Southwest Baltimore. His brow bloodied, Waddell, who stood 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighed about 125 and was nicknamed "Little Guy," was accompanied by two men clutching handguns.   

The gunmen instructed Waddell and his mother to sit on a couch and told Waddell to call his "buddy" and tell him where he was. It was not clear from charging documents whom the men wanted Waddell to call or why. But after Waddell was unable to reach his friend, one of the men said he was going to kill Waddell.   

"The victim made repeated statements to his mother that the suspects were going to kill him while holding onto his mother's legs for dear life," Detective Dawnyell Taylor wrote in charging documents. "The suspects #1 and #2 began to pry the victim from his mother's leg."   

Documents show Waddell was bound by the hands and feet and placed in a vehicle. A short time later officers were called to the 3100 block of Windsor Ave. in Walbrook, where Waddell had been shot multiple times.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 2:40 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: North Baltimore
        

Prosecutors drop murder case

Baltimore prosecutors earlier today dropped a first-degree murder charge against a man who had been arrested in the 2009 death of an 84-year-old immigrant from Peru who was beaten with his own walking cane.

Assistant State's Attorney Charles Blomquist told Circuit Court Judge John N. Prevas that the state had no choice but to dismiss the case because three witnesses, all of whom were in the country illegally, have disappeared. One was deported and two others have not been located.

Also, he said prosecutor could not link DNA evidence found on the victim's cane to the suspect, Hector Jose Posada, 37, who lived a few bdlocks from where Lucio Solorzano was attacked in May 2009 behind a gas station on Reiserstown road in Northwest Baltimore.

One of the witnesses had told police he saw Posada arguing with Solarzano and then attack him, but the defense attorney countered that the witness did not call police and had cuts on his hands when detectives did finally locate him. The attorney, Quncy Coleman, said the witness "is the real killer and that's why he fled."

Solorzano was born in Peru in 1925 and though he spoke little English, he raised a family that ran a successful landscaping business. His company worked for David Nevins, a member of the governor-appointed University of Maryland Board of Regents, who hired them to take care of his private home in Green Spring Valley.

Bomquist told the judge that he dropping the charge only "reluctantly" and he described the case as frustrating. In court, he called efforts to locate the witnesses, which included obtaining arrest warrants and sending outreach workers into the Latino community, "extraordinary." In an interview, the prosecutor said: "We are all trying to get justice and obviously dropping a case is not justice."

Posada is not going free, however. Blomquist said he is to be deported to his home country of Nicaragua.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 1:19 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system
        

FBI: Record cache of child porn found in Parkville home

Federal authorities are describing a bust of a 27-year-old Parkville man as the largest ever haul of child pornography ever seized in Maryland.

They say that starting in the summer of 2006, Jeremy Guzewicz set himself up on an Internet social networking site aimed at teenagers. He introduced himself as an older man with stepchildren, according to the Maryland U.S. Attorney's Office.

In one case, authorities allege he introduced himself to a 12-year-old girl from Massachusetts and told her to send him sexually explicit pictures of herself. He also called her by phone, authorities said, and sent her pictures of a man he said was him.

"Guzewicz allegedly threatened that he would tell the victim's parents that she was communicating with strangers on line and that he would travel to Massachusetts to rape her if she did not send additional pictures of herself or comply with his instructions."

The FBI says they seized three computers from the Parkville home and found what they described as the largest collection of child pornography ever discovered in Maryland. They did not detail what they found.

Guzewicz was charged with sexually exploiting a child and extortion, along with other related child pornography offenses. He faces up to 85 years in federal prison if he's convicted.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:28 AM | | Comments (14)
Categories: Baltimore County, Confronting crime
        

Feds indict four in string of pharmacy, bank robberies

Federal prosecutors say that four men have been indicted on charges that they robbed a string of banks and drug stores from Hagerstown to Timonium in 2008 and last year, and then sold prescription medication such as Oxycodone and morphine and cocaine.

The 17-count indictment outlines a broad scheme of robberies that included stores such as Magnolia Square Pharmacy in Hagerstown to the Lykos Pharmacy on York Road in Timonium. (Read the indictment here). 

Part of a statement from the Maryland U.S. Attorney's Office:

A federal grand jury has indicted Elvin Fulton, age 20, of Waynesboro, Pennsylvania; his brother, Dwight Julius Fulton, a/k/a “DJ,” age 22; Luis Maldonando, a/k/a “Ant,” age 26; and Justin Broadus, age 22, all of Hagerstown, Maryland, on charges related to a string of pharmacy and bank robberies from Western Maryland to Baltimore County.

 “This indictment illustrates the increasing problem of prescription drug abuse in this country. DEA is seeing a rise in prescription drugs sold along with illicit drugs in open air drug markets. Criminal drug trafficking organizations exist to make money. Period. It doesn’t matter to them whether they are selling cocaine, heroin or prescription drugs, as long as it generates a profit.  As an agency, DEA will go after these organizations utilizing all the same tools and methods used to dismantle illicit drug trafficking organizations.”

Man convicted in killing man who tried to stop drug dealers

Faced with sometimes overwhelming violence, we reporters sometimes move too quickly. Back in November 2008, we wrote a short story on the fatal shooing of 49-year-old Angelo Ford, who was killed on Leadenhall Street in South Baltimore.

The initial brief described the shooting -- quoting Baltimore police -- as "drug-related."

The Baltimore Sun's Justin Fenton followed and up and discovered that in this case "drug-related" referred to the victim's attempt to get drug dealers to stop selling near his house. They objected and one shot him on his back porch.

On Wednesday, Baltimore prosecutors announced that a jury convicted Joseph Drummond, 26, of West Henrietta Street, with second-degree murder. A co-defendant, Joy Dulan, 27, had pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder and was sentenced to spend seven years in prison. Drummond is to be sentenced Aug. 2.

Here's the story that Justin wrote on Dec. 12, 2008:

When Angelo Ford was killed in a shooting Nov. 23 in South Baltimore's Sharp-Leadenhall community, just blocks from the heart of Federal Hill, the initial reports were that he had been shot over drugs.

That was only part of the story.Ford, 49, was indeed shot over drugs, but not because he was buying them or fighting with a rival dealer - he was shot for trying to get a group of people to stop selling near his girlfriend's house, according to charging documents. His girlfriend, Saundra Grove, was also shot, and a 27-year-old neighborhood woman who has a history of drug convictions has been arrested and charged with first-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder.

There was no answer at the door of Grove's split-level home yesterday, where newspapers had piled up on the steps; across the street, men stood in the steady rain, yelling on the corner outside a package liquor store. Asked about Grove, a next-door neighbor paused for several seconds with her eyes closed and said Grove was dead.

Informed she was not, the woman said, "Well, even if she's not, she wouldn't come back here."

The double shooting occurred about two hours after the Baltimore Ravens defeated the Philadelphia Eagles at M&T Bank Stadium, a short walk over the Hamburg Street bridge. On game days, many fans cut through the neighborhood, the city's oldest African-American residential enclave with a heritage that traces to 1790. Today, it is a mix of dilapidated public housing, downtrodden apartment buildings and renovated rowhouses blocks from Federal Hill.

According to court records, Grove, 55, asked Joy Dulan and others to stop making noise and selling drugs behind her home in the 1000 block of Leadenhall St. about 6:30 p.m. Dulan and Grove argued, and Dulan refused to leave. Grove told Ford, who went outside to confront the crowd.

Ford got into a fight with the group, and Dulan was knocked to the ground, records show. Grove pleaded for Ford to come inside, and Dulan was seen leaving the scene with two men. But within minutes, a vehicle returned to the scene.

Grove was in her kitchen when there was a knock at the door; a man was standing on the steps asking to see Ford. Words were exchanged, and the man started shooting, according to records.

Ford was struck several times, and Grove was hit in the hip with a stray bullet, according to Officer Troy Harris, a police spokesman.

Dulan was seen running from the scene and jumping into a vehicle with two unknown men, court records show. As Dulan ran, she was overheard by witnesses telling the shooter to get rid of the gun, records show.

Police said witnesses were found who identified Dulan as the woman who got into a fight with Ford and brought the shooter back to Grove's home, according to charging documents.

Dulan, of the 100 block of W. Cross St., was arrested and charged Tuesday in connection with the shooting. Her home is a block away from Grove's, on a corner with bars on the windows and across from the parking lot for the Leadenhall Baptist Church.

Court records indicate Dulan had recently been released from prison after being sentenced to three years in February 2007 for drug possession with intent to distribute. She received prison sentences in 2005 and 2004 on drug charges as well. The two other men, including the shooter, remain unknown, police said.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:02 AM | | Comments (7)
        

DNA helps cops solve 91 cold case

Baltimore police alone have used a statewide database of DNA hits to make arrests in more than 100 crimes over the past three years. This week, they say it helped close a 1991 rape and murder of an 86-year-old woman from Canton.

A DNA sample taken from Eddie Arcaro after he was arrested and charged with stealing $2,025 from a liquor store matched DNA taken from the victim, Anna Keusch, who was killed above her Canton grocery store on June 1, 1991.

For law enforcement, this is yet another victory for a program pushed for by the governor to collect DNA samples from everyone charged with a violent crime or theft-related case. Arcaro knew the victim -- he had lived in one of her rental homes and did odd jobs -- and his mother was devastated by the news.

It's unclear how much scrutiny he initially got by homicide detectives at the time, though people in the neighborhood tell me his name surfaced as a possible suspect amid the rowhouse gossip. A homicide lieutenant described evidence in the case this way: "Everything was cold."

Hero firefighter recovering

In the words of Baltimore's fire chief, Jeff Novack is "a modern-day hero" who "did what we hope all firefighters wil do, and that's put his own life at risk to save others."

To the fire union, Novack (at left, in a phot by The Sun's Kim Hairston), is a poster-child for a policy that endangers lives -- the rotating closure of fire companies to save money.

What Novack did was rush into a burning West Baltimore apartment and resuce an 86-year-old woman, and then he rushed back in to a third floor, up stairs, past flames to save another man trapped in a stairwell. To escape himself, he had to break a window and climb out and hang by his fingertips three stories above the ground.

Finally, he had to let go.

The fire had melted his geard. Doctors at Maryland Shock Trauma Center put him into a medically induced coma. Now, he's recovering, and set to testify in the trial of a woman who prosecutors set the April 7 blaze to get back at her boyfriend for having an affair.

But what makes this story even more troubling is that the fire union says that because of the rotating closures, Novack's backup was delayed to the fire on Liberty Heights Avenue. Novack, who rode a truck and was responsible for search and rescues, arrived well before the engines that have water.

Novack went inside the burning home without backup.

And that has made him not just a hero but a rallying point against further budget cuts. Fire Chief Clack told the Baltimore Sun's Julie Scharper: "I think we're operating at the very edge of what's safe right now."

Posted by Peter Hermann at 6:31 AM | | Comments (1)
        

Cops describe violent backdrop to Dundalk bar family

Enlisting the help of killers has become a family affair in Baltimore County, according to the Baltimore County Police Department.

Authorities have described a twisted family plot that led to the death of popular bar owner Lee Martin and ended with his wife, her brother and two others in jail on murder charges. Court documents describe a violent relationship between Martin and his wife Jaclyn (far left) that included allegations that she was cheating with a drug dealer who supplied her ways to get high. She alleged that he had threatened to kill her. Jaclyn Martin's brother, Robert M. Garner, who police say pulled the trigger, is at right).

The Baltimore Sun's Nick Madigan outlines the plot that took out the owner of Hop's Inn over the weekend and has uncovered a sordid family affair. When Jaclyn Martin sought a protective order against her husband on Dec. 11, she wrote:

"He's telling me he's going to kill me and anyone who tries to help me, and that he's keeping my daughter. He's been coming to property where I'm staying and taking pictures and setting off my car alarm all hours of the nite." He wrote that her husband had a half million dollars in his bank account and property worth $330,000, along with six handguns and at least sive hunting rifles or shotguns.

Martin fought back by seeking an emergeny evaluation of his wife, alleging in court documents that a friend of her (who he was arrested and charged with beating in a courthouse lobby) "is having an affair with his wife and supplying her illegal narcotics."

Posted by Peter Hermann at 6:06 AM | | Comments (5)
Categories: Baltimore County, Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

May 26, 2010

Another murder for hire in Baltimore County

Baltimore County police have charged four people in the murder of a popular Dundalk bar owner, Lee Martin. They allege that his wife, Jaclyn Martin, hired or requested the killing that they say was carried oubt by her brother.

A motive has not been divulged as of yet.

Back in March, a Baltimore County woman was charged with paying $9,000 to five people, including several family members, to kill her husband, a Hess gas station owner on East Joppa Road. Now we have another murder-for-hire plot unfolding in the county.

Here's the police statement:

Police Arrest Four Suspects in Precinct 12/North Point Murder

Bar Owner’s Wife Plots Murder with Family Member and Friends

Baltimore County Police have arrested and charged four suspects with the murder of Robert Lee Martin, 43, who was shot on May 22, 2010. Robert Lee Martin was shot outside of his business, Hops Inn, located in the 7000-block of Railway Avenue, 21222. He was transported to Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center where he was pronounced deceased.

Robert Garner has been identified as the shooter in this incident. It is believed that he murdered Robert Lee Martin at the request of his sister, Jaclyn Martin.

Police have charged the following individuals with his murder:

• Jaclyn J. Martin (Robert Martin’s wife), 29, of the 7000-block of Railway Avenue, 21222
• Robert M. Garner (Jaclyn Martin’s brother), 26, of the 7800-block of E. Collingham Drive, 21222
• Sturm Riley Davis (acquaintance), 19, has no fixed address
• Brandon Michael Roth (acquaintance), 19, of the 200-block of Ashwood Road, 21222

The above suspects have all been charged with first-degree murder. They are being held at the Baltimore County Detention Center with bail denied.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 11:40 AM | | Comments (10)
Categories: Baltimore County, Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

Suspect free after 12 years

Maryland's Innocence Project has freed another defendant.

The Baltimore Sun's court reporter, Tricia Bishop, reports today that prosecutors dropped murder conspiracy charges against Tyrone Jones 12 years after a jury convicted him in the killing of a 15-year-old boy. He's at left in the photo by The Sun's Kim Hairston, with his attorney Michele Nethercott in the background.

At the time, the jury acquitted him of murder but found him guilty of conspiracy, and a judge, though expressing his reluctance, sent him to prison for life. But the Innocence Project took up his cause and as Tricia reported found fatal flaws in the case.

A witness who identified Jones from a photo array had initially told police she didn't see any suspects. There was flawed testimony about the merits of a test for gunshot residue, which has been found to be less than reliable. And prosecutors had failed to disclose a police report with the witnesses original statement about never seeing any suspects.

At the time of his arrest, in June 1998, Jones had his clothes packed to return to a Texas community college. He had played football for Dunbar High School.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:13 AM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system
        

Suspected gang member escapes harsh penalties

The 2007 gang law passed by the General Assembly was supposed to give cops and prosecutors a new tool to end the growing gang problem in Baltimore and beyond. But prosecutors complained that it was so watered down and convoluted it was next to impossible to use.

The numbers over the past three years show this to be true. Only a handful of prosecutors in Maryland have charged anyone and convictions are few -- a guilty plea in Montgomery County, used a leverage to get a plea deal on a lesser charge in Prince Georges County, and only twice used in the city.

One case is pending and the other ended on Tuesday with a familiar tale: a key witness recanted, bringing a jury trial to abrupt halt and prosecutors were forced to offer the 19-year-old associate of Mara Salvatruch, or MS-13, a deal to plead guilty to assault in exchange for a suspended setence and probation.

Had Jose Miguel Hernandez been convicted under the gang statute and of attempted murder in the stabbing of a rival gang member on Pratt Street near the Inner Harbor last year, he could've been put away for life plus 10 years in prison. Instead, he goes home to Rockville to home detention.

Circuit Judge M. Brooke Murdock gave him the familiar warning: "Take advantage of this." Hernandez assured her that he would.

Here's the kicker to this story: Hernandez's lawyer was none other than Luiz R.S. Simmons, a member of the House of Delegates and a member of the House Judiciary Committee, which crafted the very gang law he was defending against in Baltimore Circuit Court. This is the very committee routinely criticized for being over-staffed with defense attorneys accused of molding crime bills to benefit defendants.

Simmons voted for the bill but complained language was overly broad. He feared, as many have, that the law makes mere association in a gang a crime and that anyone can be linked to a gang simply by the way they dress or talk.

It's always humbling for anyone who sits on a lofty perch to get real life expierence. For Simmons, it came before testimony even began, with the polling of potential jurors. The judge asked each if they thought being in a gang was a crime. More than half said yes.

Simmons said that underscored the fear people feel. He said he wants tough gang legislation, just not what is on the books. Even an enhancement passed this year -- one that he supported -- doesn't make the law much better, Simmons told me.

In court, Simmons argued that Hernandez was part of a "political trial" of gangs that went beyond whether he stabbed somone or not. In an interview, he told me he supported revising the gant statute to make it harsher and fairer.

What's on the books now has prosecutors frustrated and impotent.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:56 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system, Downtown, Gangs
        

May 25, 2010

Neighbors, patrons react to shooting of Dundalk bar owner

On Dundalk's Railway Avenue, everyone knew Lee Martin. As the owner of Hop's Inn, he would stand you a drink if you were short of cash. Sometimes, if things were bad, he'd lend you a few bucks. On New Year's Eve every year, his patrons recall, drinks were on the house.

That's why no one in the neighborhood seems to understand why anyone would want to kill him, The Sun's Nick Madigan reports from Baltimore County. Martin, 43, was fatally shot early Saturday by two assailants just after he had closed for the night and was walking the few steps to his house next door.

"Lee was like a father figure to me, especially since my father passed away," Reo Denisuk, a 24-year-old bartender who had worked at Hop's for 3 1/2 years, said Monday through tears. "Any time I needed anything, he'd take care of me. He's been family to me since we were little kids."
Posted by Justin Fenton at 10:32 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Baltimore County
        

May 24, 2010

FBI releases 2009 crime stats; Baltimore No. 5 for murder rate

The FBI this morning released preliminary crime statistics for 2009, and the cities with the highest murder rates are virtually unchanged. Of course, the FBI cautions against comparing cities and there are numerous caveats to making these lists, but the data shows that Baltimore and a handful of other cities continue to remain in their own stratosphere when it comes to murder. Across the country, murders dropped 7.2 percent, including an 11.7 percent decrease in cities between 500,000 and 999,999.

New Orleans continues to record far and away the most killings, with a rate of 51.7 per 100,00 people. Richmond, Calif., a city of only 102,566 that is located north of Oakland, shot up the list to No. 2 after murders there jumped from 27 to 47 in 2009, for a rate of 45.8 per 100,000. St. Louis saw a substantial drop but was still ranked No. 3, followed by Detroit. 

Baltimore ranked No. 5 with a murder rate of 37.26. After dropping from 282 murders in 2007 to 234 in 2008, the city essentially duplicated that number with 238 in 2009, a figure bumped in part by an unusually large number of people who died from injuries suffered in prior years.

Killings are down 17.4 percent so far this year, a pace - not adjusting for seasonal trends - of about 180 for the year, which would be the lowest raw total since 1978.

The sad truth is that even that milestone wouldn't knock Baltimore out of the top 10 murder rates based on last year's list. It'd put Baltimore at No. 9.

I'm scouring the list to make sure I've captured all of the smaller cities whose rates might be deceptively high, but here's the top 10:

City                  Population       Murders        Rate

New Orleans      336,425           174             51.7

Richmond, Calif 102,566           47               45.8

St. Louis             355,208           143             40.3

Detroit                908,441           361             39.7

Baltimore          638,755           238             37.3

Baton Rouge     223,187            75              33.6

Flint, Mich.          111,657            35              31.3

Newark, NJ        279,203            80              28.7

Birmingham      227,373            65              28.6

Hartford, CT      124,049            33              26.6

Oakland, Calif.  404,533            104            25.7

Falling off of the list:  Oakland, Calif. (25.7), Washington, DC (23.8); Jackson, Miss (21.4)

Posted by Justin Fenton at 11:22 AM | | Comments (3)
        

Shootings, gun arrests in city

UPDATE: The shooting on Belnord Avenue described below was a homicide, according to police.

Baltimore police are investigating several shootings over the weekend, the latest reported about 6 a.m. when a man with a gunshot wound to the leg walked into the Johns Hopkins Hospital emergency room. Police said he had been shot in the 1600 block of Ashland Ave.

About 1 a.m., police said an adult male was shot in the 3100 block of Presbury St. in West Baltimore, and a half hour earlier an adult male was shot multiple times in the 900 block of N. Belnord Ave. in East Baltimore. Shortly after 3 p.m. Saturday, a man wa shot in the side and in the leg in the 2900 block of Denham Circle.

Police repoted no arrests or motives in the cases. Conditions of the victims was not immediately made available.

In addition, police arrested several people on gun charges. On Sunday, authorities announced the arrest of Deaven Raeshawn Cherry, 23, who was charged with possession of an illegal handgun after being arrested in the 600 block of Pitcher St. Police said the suspect has an extensive criminal history. Police also said they arrested Clayton Ghomas, 22, in the 5800 block of Glankirk Road after they said he fired a .38 caliber handgun.

And on Sunday, police said they arrested Christopher Jackson, 23, a convicted felon, who they said officers caught with a .32 caliber handgun that had been reported stolen in Pennsylvania.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:31 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime, East Baltimore
        

May 23, 2010

Police quash domestic incident

Police believe they were able to thwart stop more serious violence when they responded to a report of shots fired and were able to track down a man who had opened fire on his girlfriend's Northeast Baltimore home.

Officers found a vehicle matching the description of the one seen fleeing the area, in the 5800 block of Glenkirk Rd. Inside, a man was suffering from a hand injury and a black semi-automatic handgun was in plain view on the floor board, police said.

The officers determined that the suspect, Clayton Thomas, had been involved in an argument earlier in the day with his girlfriend. Police say he returned, but was unsuccessful in making contact with her. As he walked away, he turned and fired numerous shots toward the girlfriend's home, striking two cars but also himself, in the hand, police said.  Thomas was pulled over in the 4300 block of Shamrock Ave, near where court records say he resides.

The seized weapon was a .38 caliber Bersa semi-automatic, with an obliterated serial number. Thomas was charged with various handgun offenses and ordered held without bond.  He has a record of past handgun and domestic charges.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 9:23 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Northeast Baltimore
        

May 22, 2010

Graffiti spree in Oakenshawe

This is no ordinary graffiti case.

On one evening last fall, four college students went on a spray-painting rampage through Oakenshawe, a tiny community of historic rowhouses nestled between Charles Village and Guilford. By the time they were caught, they had marred nearly 40 properties -- cars, garage doors, a canoe and even a pumpkin.

Earlier this month, all pleaded guilty, were put on probation and ordered to perform community service. One of the participants, Lila Albano, 20, told me, "We weren't really thinking." The damage was estimated at more than $9,000. It cost one resident $600 to clean up the mess.

Baltimore authorities turned the case over to a new environmental crimes unit jointly run by the city State's Attorney's Office and the housing department. It's the subject of Sunday's Crime Beat column. And here is the victim's impact statement:

Victim Impact Statement - Oaken Sh Awe
Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:58 AM | | Comments (1)
        

Police shoot man outside Belvedere

[UPDATE: The shooting happened across the street from the Belvedere, in a lot next to Brewer's Art.  Police say the officer was having dinner when he heard a car alarm going off and went to investigate. He encountered a man breaking into his vehicle and saw the man reach for something. He shot the man in the leg. Police say the suspect was reaching for a screwdriver.]

Details are still coming in, but Baltimore police say an officer shot a man outside the Belvedere in Mount Vernon early this morning. This is an historic apartment building with several bars and clubs inside, including the Owl Bar and the 13th Floor.

It also was home to Suite Ultralounge, which if you recall was at the center of last summer's controversy over crime and kids out late in neighborhoods from the Inner Harbor to Mount Vernon. The battle over the bottle club pitted residents against youngsters, bar owners and put the city's night life on trial.

Now, we're barely into the summer season and we get this from city cops, sent out on the police Twitter page about 12:45 a.m.: "POLICE INVOLVED SHOOTING- 1 Chase St- Prelim. A susp shot in leg after pointing suspected weapon during attempted car break-in. Officer ok."

City police are having a news conference at 10 a.m. to provide more details.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:44 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime, Police shootings
        

May 21, 2010

Surveillance footage, Sun article left in mailbox help solve murder

Terry Scott thought he had a handle on all the closed-circuit surveillance cameras in his North Baltimore neighborhood.

Brought in for questioning in the April 7 fatal shooting of Sean Ramseur, the 36-year-old acknowledged to detectives that he went to confront the victim in the 5200 block of York Road, according to charging documents. But he said someone else pulled up in a vehicle and shot Ramseur first.

Detective Martin Young told Scott that police had surveillance footage that showed one person run toward Ramsuer on foot and fire a handgun. Not possible, Scott protested. There was once a “blue light” camera at the intersection, but it was removed, he said.

“[Scott said] he was aware of all the cameras in the area, and that camera was removed,” Young wrote in court records.

But Scott didn’t take into account a nearby company’s surveillance system, which captured the entire incident. Scott, of the 5300 block of Lothian Rd., was charged Thursday with first-degree murder in Ramseur’s death.

Investigators were led to Scott after receiving a tip from his girlfriend. She said Scott had assaulted her and taken her cell phone on April 3, and she had reason to believe that Scott was involved in Ramseur’s death.

On April 9, she said a copy of the Baltimore Sun was placed in her mailbox, and a short article about Ramseur’s death was highlighted. She said he told her, “The same thing could happen to you.” She turned over the article and a letter to police.

Based on that evidence, detectives brought Scott in for questioning.

He said he was there when Ramseur was shot. He said he had gone to retrieve his girlfriend’s cell phone, which he claimed she had sold for drugs.

He described Ramseur as “dangerous because he kept a gun nearby and had pulled a knife out on [Scott] earlier in the day].” He said he was with Ramseur when the vehicle pulled up, but police located a witness who was walking with Ramseur, and no vehicle entered the frame on the camera footage.

Police do not reveal a motive for the crime beyond Scott’s account that he was trying to retrieve a cell phone.

Both the suspect and victim have long criminal records.

In August 2009, Scott was sentenced to 10 years in prison on a burglary charge, but nine years and four months of the sentence were suspended – essentially a sentence of time served followed by three years probation. He had prior convictions for assault and burglary.

Ramseur, meanwhile, was acquitted of first-degree murder and other charges in the stabbing of Gary Shipman, 28, on July 12, 2006, and was awaiting a May trial date on drug charges, according to court records.

 

Posted by Justin Fenton at 1:04 PM | | Comments (6)
Categories: North Baltimore
        

Arundel cops seize drugs

Anne Arundel County police announced this morning a significant drug seizure. Here is their statement:

On May 19, 2010, detectives from the Anne Arundel County Police Department’s Special Enforcement Section along with the Special Operations Section executed a search and seizure warrant at 419 Peach Court in Annapolis. The search warrant was in reference to a month-long investigation into illegal CDS distribution activity occurring at the residence. Through investigation, detectives were able to identify Robert Coates as being involved with drug distribution.

Prior to execution of the search warrant, detectives observed Robert Coates and a female, later identified as Lattress Coates, leave the residence and enter a white Ford F-150. A traffic stop was conducted on the vehicle and both suspects were arrested. A search of the vehicle was conducted and detectives located in the front passenger compartment a clear bag containing suspected marihuana, a cigar package containing suspected marihuana, a small zip lock bag containing suspected powder cocaine and a small zip lock bag containing suspected crack cocaine.

For more:

Detectives conducted a search of the residence and located and seized a clear plastic bag containing a large amount of suspected powder cocaine, two small clear zip lock baggies containing suspected powder cocaine, a small clear zip lock baggie containing suspected crack cocaine, a digital scale with white powder residue and numerous empty small clear zip lock bags.

Detectives also located and seized a gallon size zip lock bag containing suspected marihuana and three smaller zip lock bags, each containing suspected marihuana. Additionally, CDS paraphernalia was recovered from the residence.

Detectives seized a total of 31.8 grams of suspected marihuana, 3.8 grams of suspected powder cocaine and 3.8 grams of suspected crack cocaine from the vehicle. Detectives seized also 399.2 grams of suspected marihuana, 119.9 grams of suspected powder cocaine, and 9.4 grams of suspected crack cocaine from the residence.

The suspected marijuana has a street value of approximately $12,900 and the suspected powder cocaine and suspected crack cocaine have a street value of approximately $13,600. Detectives also seized $2,652.00 of U.S. currency and a Ford truck.

Both suspects were arrested and charged with Possession of marihuana (2 counts),
Possession of cocaine (2 counts), Possession of crack cocaine (2 counts), Possession with intent to distribute marihuana (2 counts), Possession with intent to distribute cocaine (1 count), Possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine (1 count) and Possession of paraphernalia.

Suspect #1: Robert Thomas Coates, 31, of 419 Peach Court, Annapolis, MD
Suspect #2: Latress Chonta Coates, 31, of 419 Peach Court, Annapolis, MD

Posted by Peter Hermann at 9:12 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Anne Arundel County, Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

Recording in public

After I wrote a column and blogged about the motorcyclist who recorded his traffic stop with a Maryland State Police trooper -- and then got charged with violating the state's wiretap laws -- I heard from lots of people that I had missed the mark.

And it appears I had. I learned more information after a Baltiore police officer was caught on camera imploring the photographer at the Preakness to leave the scene of an arrest and turn off his video because he was breaking the law.

I had talked with state police officials, prosecutors and several defense attorneys (including one who was a former federal prosecutor). All told me that it appeared the Harford County State's Attorney was interpreting the law correctly, though most disagreed with his decision. His reading of the law is that it's illegal to record the voice of anyone without their consent, even in a public place.

(Cops get caught on tape all the time. Here is a compilation of some footage of a city officer berating a skateboarder at the Inner Harbor and Prince George's County tactical officers beating a student).

Turns out there does appear to be an exception for intercepting voices in public places, though the law isn't that explicit. The laws you cannot "wilfully intercept oral communicatons" and it defines oral communications as "any conversation or words spoken to or by any person inn private conversation."

That would appear to mean that if you record a person at the Inner Harbor without their consent, you're not breaking the state's wiretap law. That's how former Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran Jr. interpreted it in an opinion that the current holder of his job points to as the blueprint:

"Statements that a person knowingly exposes to the public are not made with a reasonable expectation of privacy and therefore are not protected as 'oral communicatiions' under the state and federal wiretap laws."

Of course, now you can start parsing what is conversation exposed to the public? Seems that virtually anything that happens at the Preakness is public -- I mean how can you reasonably expect privacy at a drunk-fest attending by nearly 100,000 people. But what about the traffic stop? It occurred on a public road but can the officer legitimately claim that he had an expectation of privacy while talking to the driver? The Maryland ACLU says no, that the officer has no expectation of privacy while performing his duties.

Seems there's plenty left for the lawyers to do.

But aside from the law, I hear complaints all the time for from people who say they were told to stop filming police officers or told to stop photographing crime scenes. One explanation that is routinely given is that the person is interfering with the investigation. That certainly can be true, but it doesn't seem that way in the Preakness case.

There was a fairly large crowd that watched officers scuffle with a woman and ultimately arrest her. The officer singled out the man with camera, who appeared to be as far back as everyone else. Here's what the officer said: "Do me a favor and take a walk. Now. Do me a favor and turn that off. It's illegal to record anybody's voice or anything else in the state of Maryland."

Baltimore police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi, who says the law appears muddled, insists that the officer was not giving an order but merely asking a favor. Watch the video and decide, but to most people, the officer's tone, body language and terse voice makes this a command. Gugliemli notes correctly that the cameraman was not arrested, the camera was not seized and it appears that he continues to film for a few moments after the officer spoke with him.

Still, for the ACLU's attorney David Rocah, the intent was clear: the officer intimidated the photographer to stop recording by threatening him with a crime that does not exist. For him, that is part of a pattern of behavior by cops to bar people from filming them.

The ACLU has taken up the case of the motorcyclist. Not only does the group contend he had every right to record the stop, but they say they plan to argue that state police charged him only to retaliate for posting the humiliating video on YouTube. Police told me they charged him after the video appeared only because that's how they discovered the stop had been taped.

That trial is scheduled in Harford County on June 1.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:37 AM | | Comments (7)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system
        

May 20, 2010

Cops help ducks

I'll just let this picture by Daveed Korup speak for itself. Larissa Peters and city police officers help a mother duck and her ducklings cross Pratt Street to the relative safety of the Inner Harbor on Wednesday.

Who says there are no good news stories!

 

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:41 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Crime humor, Downtown
        

Fictional hit-woman avoids testifying in real murder trial

So, the fictional hit-woman on HBO's drama "The Wire" vows to take the 5th and thus helps a companion escape a tough sentence on a real murder charge.

City prosecutors had wanted Steven James Lashly to go to prison for 25 years for stabbing three people outside a chicken restaurant on Baltimore's Block five years ago. But without the key testimony from Felicia "Snoop" Pearson, they had to accept a 30 year sentence with half of it suspended.

Pearson, who already been convicted of second-degree murder as a teen-ager, played a ruthless drug-enforcer on former Baltimore Sun reporter David Simon's television drama. In real-life, she played a reluctant witness to a to an all-too real crime.  

Prosecutors had her arrested in August 2008 on a bench warrant for refusing to cooperate, and officers found marijuana in her home and charged her with that as well (she later was not found guilty). She was released after she told prosecutors she would "honor her obligations as a witness." Reporter Justin Fenton covered the hearing in which she was released; as she left the courtroom, she told him: "Don't slander me. I'm from here." 

Court records show Pearson has fallen on tough times since "The Wire" ended, with her $300,000 Northeast Baltimore home taken through foreclosure proceedings that concluded earlier this year. But Internet Movie Database shows that she's currently filming a movie with Oscar nominees Harvey Keitel and Michael Clarke Duncan, written and directed by a former writer for the show "Entourage."

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:21 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system, Downtown
        

He killed him, then ate his food

One of the property managers at Oldtown Mall summed up the death of Tian Zin Wang: "His is a typical story of an immigrant who came here to start a business and did quite well."

That was last year, and the 51-year-old owner of China Garden and Soul Food Carryout made one last run to Webb Court (to what he discovered was a vacant rowhouse) to fulfill an order -- orange chicken, curry chicken and beef fried rice. There, he was held up at gunpoint and robbed.

Walter Taylor, 29, shot Wang five times and ran off with the food -- which he shared with his girlfriend that very night. Taylor pleaded guilty on Wednesday to robbery and murder and was sentenced to life with all but 40 years suspended.

Wang's shop is gone and his family has lost their home and moved out of state. The Baltimore Sun's Tricia Bishop reports that Wang's sister spoke about the family in court, and about her brother, dying in the street, called his wife.

Said the shooter Taylor: "I'm sorry."

May 19, 2010

MS-13 members to stand trial in alleged gang attack outside downtown club

In a city as violent as Baltimore, there are an untold number of crimes that elude the press as we try to get basic information about shootings and homicides while trying to report on broader topics or delve deeper into individual cases. Here's an example of one that appears to have slipped through the cracks.

Prosecutors say four men from the DC suburbs are due to stand trial Thursday in the stabbing of a woman after a fight inside the Iguana Cantina on April 13, 2009. The Sun has written about violence at the downtown club, which was located in the Power Plant area and has since reopened under a different format. The club was a particular thorn in Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld's side and one of the main reasons he ordered officers to stop moonlighting at city bars.

But this stabbing, which prosecutors say is linked to the MS-13 gang that has terrorized the Washington suburbs, appears to have completely flown under the radar. One of the four men is also being prosecuted under rarely-used gang legislation enacted in 2007. His defense attorney is a state delegate from Montgomery County who sits on the House of Delegates judiciary committee.

According to charging documents, Leonel Herrera, Claudia Ortiz and Vanessa Santos were inside the club when a fight broke out. None of them were involved in the fight, police said, but a large group was ejected from the club by security in trying to deal with the chaos. 

The three began walking toward their car when a group of four males ran past them, who were joined by another six men. They began making hand signs and shouting "MS-13." Herrera, according to charging documents, said he put his hands up and said he was not part of a gang and did not want any problems. The 10 males began punching and kicking him.

Herrera said he observed one man identified as Jose Hernandez, armed with a knife as the group turned their attention to Ortiz and Santos. When the males fled the area, it was discovered that Ortiz had been stabbed 10 times, seven times to the right arm, twice to the right side and once to the left shoulder. Santos was also stabbed once in the back. 

Police said they located four suspects fleeing the scene and arrested Luis Menendez-Mata, Luis Morales, Antonio Ventura, and Vladimir Douglas. Hernandez was later identified through a photo array, as was Mitchel Estrella. 

Court records show that all charges were dropped against Menendez-Mata, while Estrella shows up as a co-defendant but I can't see the status of his individual case. 

Only Hernandez is being prosecuted under the gang legislation, on charges of gang association and participation in addition to assault and attempted first-degree murder. His defense attorney? Del. Luiz R.S. Simmons, a Democrat from Montgomery County who sits on the oft-criticized judiciary committee. 

Officially known as Mara Salvatrucha, MS-13 has long had a prominent and violent foothold in the Washington suburbs. A 2007 indictment made it clear that the gang's activity has spread throughout the Baltimore region, though major cases appear to have been brought in Howard and Baltimore counties, not the city. The defendants charged in this Iguana case all hail from the Hyattsville, Rockville, and Riverdale areas, so this hardly suggests an uptick in local presence.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 6:58 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Downtown, Gangs
        

Caught in the act

Talk about getting caught in the act.

Anne Arundel County police are seeking these young men for breaking into a mall:

On May 9, 2010, the pictured suspects entered the Radio Shack located inside the Annapolis Mall and stole seven Apple I-phones valued at over $4,000. The suspects spent several minutes browsing when the suspect wearing the white t-shirt began to distract an employee. The other two suspects then went to the rear of the store and removed the items. Anyone with information on this crime or these suspects is urged to contact Detective Mark Shawkey of the Southern District Detective Unit at (410) 222-1960(65).

 

Posted by Peter Hermann at 11:48 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Anne Arundel County, Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

Video shows arrest in post-Preakness spat

Warning: contains profanity

Baltimore police called it a quiet Preakness -- with zero arrests and 23 people tossed for fighting or throwing beer. But a video has surfaced on YouTube that shows a young woman bleeding and being arrested.

The poster wonders whether cops used excessive force. Police say absolutely not.

UPDATE: Police are now saying two people were arrested in the incident. Charging documents say that a couple was harassing another person at a ticket window on the club level. One officer exited the ticket booth to try and difuse the situation, while another officer approached from outside. At first, it appeared that the couple was walking away, but police said the woman, identified as Anna Chyzhova, 22, of Savage, walked "at a brisk pace" toward the officer. The documents say the woman hit another person in the face with a close fist. The two officers struggled to subdue the woman who then, according to police, struck one of the officers in the face, also with a closed fist. Police said the officer punched the woman once in the face and continue to struggle, "wildly swinging arms and failing to comply." Officers did not use mace, police said, because there were too many bystanders and other officers nearby. Police said the woman struck the officer a second time, and the officer hit her back a second time. The woman's companion, identified as Mark Dudek, 27, of Elkridge, then stuck one of the officers on the back of the head and he too was arrested. Police said one officer was injured; the female also was injured and treated at Sinai Hospital. Dudek and Chyzhova were each charged with three counts of second-degree assault and one count of resisting arrest. The video picks up after most of what police say happened had already taken place.

Department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi tells me that the woman was drunk, punched a police officer and resisted arrest. He's not quite sure how she became injured but said it was probably during the altercation with officers. The video does not show the initial dispute, but starts with the woman on the floor and officers trying to handcuff her.

At one point, an officer picks a ticket off the floor and notes that it was a winning ticket, but not for the race that the woman was apparently trying to claim. I'm not sure if that's what started the fracas. Guglielmi said the fight occurred at a betting window well after the Preakness race had concluded.

The woman was arrested and charged with assaulting a police officer.

At the very end of the tape, an officer tells the camerman to leave the area and turn off the recorder. "Do me a favor and take a walk, now," the officer says. "Do me a favor and turn that off.
It's illegal to record anybody's vocie or anything else in the state of Maryland."

The officer is partly right. It's illegal to record a voice without consent from the person being recorded, even in a public place. Maryland State Police last month charged a motorcyclist who recorded his traffic stop with violating wiretap laws.

It's not illegal to record images, but in this Preakness case it's a bit more murky. Pimlico is not a public space, but a private one, and the owners can eject anyone they want.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 9:56 AM | | Comments (42)
Categories: Breaking news, Top brass
        

Update on Club 410 -- liquor board chair says alcohol illegal

Baltimore's liquor board chairman, Stephan Fogleman, called me this morning with an update on Club 410, the bar that had been padlocked, linked by federal authorties to a drug gang and then ordered to sell its license.

A man who leased the club from the landlord threw a party Saturday night that got busted by police who said alcohol was being served. The man renting the space told me that while he charged a $5 cover, he gave away alcohol for free. He insisted the cover charge was not for the alcohol.

On Tuesday, Fogleman said authorities would have to prove that the cover charge also covered the alcohol in order for it to be a violation of the liquor laws. The owner is forbidden to sell alcohol until he resells the liquor license.

But Fogleman told me this morning that he researched the issue and it is illegal for any alcohol to be served when a cover is being charged. He told me authorities do not have to prove that the cover was for alcohol -- the mere fact there was a charge to get inside means the club owner violated the liquor board rules.

Fogleman's board must approve the sale or transfer of the liquor license, and he told me that this party could pose problems for the landlord.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 9:43 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Confronting crime, Gangs, Northeast Baltimore, Top brass
        

How hard is it to close a bar?

So just how difficult is it to close a bar?

Last year, after a string of shootings and other drug violence along Belair Road, the cops padlocked Club 410. The manager, a law student, fought back at an administrative hearing, but lost.

Then the feds came and indicted that very same manager as being part of a violent drug gang. She's now in federal lockup awaiting trial. Then the liquor board stripped the owners -- one them a city school employee -- of their license to sell alcohol. They handed the license to the landlord and ordered him to sell it to someone else. Meanwhile, no booze could be sold.

Then, on Saturday, the man leasing the club from the landlord throws a party that the cops bust. Inside, police say alcohol was being sold. Outside, police say, were two security guards impersonating cops and carrying loaded .40 caliber Glocks.

After a story appeared on the arrests of the guards and the police raid, the man leasing the space, Antonio Jackson, called me to complain. The party, he was, was a private affair for Morgan State University students. There weren't 350 inside, as police told me, but 176, the number of tickets he had printed.

Tickets? For a private party?

Yep, he told me he charged $5 a person for a cover charge. But he insisted the money wasn't for alcohol. He limited each patron to one drink. Had the money been for alcohol, his landlord would run afoul of state liquor laws. It's a close call, the liquor board chairman told me, and difficult to prove that the cover went for beer.

But who throws a college party and charges students $5 to get in and gives them only one beer? And what college student would come?

To prove he's on the up-and-up, Jackson stopped by the The Baltimore Sun lobby on Tuesday to show me his lease and other documents. His occupany permit lists the old Club 410 as the new Klub Kidz, listed as a dance studio for children ages 4 to 16.

And so the first event he throws is a beer party for college graduates.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:00 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Confronting crime, Gangs, Northeast Baltimore
        

Fighting drugs in (urban) suburb

John W. Schissler confronts crime.

He keeps a notebook full of names and license plate numbers and hands the information to police. He walks out of his home and runs suspected dealers and users off his streets. Only he doesn't live in a bad neighborhood. He lives in Northeast Baltimore's Hamilton, where there are lawns to mow and towering sycamore trees and foxes running through his garden.

This is an urban suburb.

And that's what makes it all the more scarrier. He lives far enough off Harford Road that you'd think he'd be immune from the rag-tag drunks and addicts that spill from bars and run up and down the busy thoroughfare. But they come in cars, to dark streets when neat-looking bungalow-style houses and manicured lawns.

Schissler has lived in the house for more than 40 years, raised a famiy there and now entertains 13 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren. He doesn't want to move. He doesn't want to be killed either.

Crime is relative, and for the cops Hamilton, particularly the enclave Schissler calls home, is not a dangerous place. In fact, it doesn't even register on the Northeastern District police commander's radar. But if you like to sit on your picnic table in your garden, you don't want to watch people exchange drugs at the corner, nor do you want to pull condoms out of the flower bed you are weeding.

This is the problem for many in the city: they're not faced with daily gunfire and vacant houses, but they are watching the once-proud neighborhoods slowly deteriorate. Schissler grew up in what is now a desolate part of East Baltimore, overrun by crime and violence. His childhood rowhouse is boarded and burned. He fears his neighborhood his next.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:39 AM | | Comments (14)
Categories: Confronting crime, North Baltimore
        

New Orleans opens crime meetings to public

With all the talk about the Baltimore Police Department's internal crime meetings being suspended and then reborn, here's a novel concept out of the once-corrupt New Orleans Police Department: invite the public in.

That's right, open the doors. Talk about transparancy, and then maybe some of of the misgivings Baltimore residents have about cops hiding crime might go away. It would also give the public  valuable insight into just how much the police are really doing to confront crime in their version of Comstat.

Of course, police talk about operational issues that they'd rather keep from criminals and the public, and it remains to be seen whether the police in New Orleans have separate, private meetings to talk about what they can't talk about in front of people and the news media. That could render the public meetings a farce. I also wonder whether police in New Orleans use the meetings to dress-down their top cops the way Baltimore does.

I attended one Comstat meeting in Baltimore -- one of the first they did -- and watched how detectives investigating seemingly unconnected shootings suddenly realized they were looking for the same suspect. I watched as they put dots on a compute map showing 911 calls for drugs and then put more dots on the same map showing where cops were. They weren't in the same place. And that was with old technology.

Comstat uses a dizzying array of computer maps, charts and data to plot crime and guide officers on the street. It's also been criticized for encouraging downgrading crime as commanders struggle to make the numbers, and thus themselves, look good.

I also spent some time in New Orleans, back when Martin O'Malley became mayor, because they  were openly practicing zero-tolerance policing, the kind of strategy O'Malley wanted here but couldn't admit. I was allowed into a Comstat meeting there as well.

Let's see how this New Orleans experiment works. The New Orleans Times-Picayune wrote a story on the first open meeting:

The New Orleans Police Department commander stepped to the podium inside the 1st District station Tuesday afternoon for a first-time-ever public event.

"Welcome to our crime meeting," Maj. Bobby Norton announced. "It's called COMSTAT."

With that, a new era in the NOPD began.

The NOPD's brand new police chief, Ronal Serpas, announced last week that he would open to the public all district and department-level COMSTAT meetings, weekly stat-heavy sessions in which top brass discuss the latest in neighborhood crime.

The open-door policy is a huge departure for the Police Department, which, despite distrust among citizens, has long held data and information on crimes close to its vest.

Norton, backlit by a wall-mounted monitor that displayed a map dotted with icons depicting reported crimes, said he hopes citizens come in for a peek behind the curtain.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:23 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime, Crime elsewhere, Top brass
        

May 18, 2010

Fire truck accident

The old adage defines news as what your editor sees on the way to work. How about what the police reporter sees (and hears) out of his window?

I heard a bang and looked up and saw that a fire truck had hit a car at Guildford and Centre Streets. Word of warning: don't get involved with stuff like this right out a newspaper office if you want to stay out of the newspaper.

Photographer Jeffrey F. Bill was out the door and on the scene before the cops arrived. Not sure who'se at fault or whether anyone was injured yet.

Firefighters in Truck 1 were on their way to a fire call at Ensor and East North avenues. Other trucks were dispatched while the crew from Truck 1 dealt with this crash.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:58 PM | | Comments (2)
        

Prosecutor strikes back in cult case

Few Baltimore coure cases have generated more interest and more disgust than that of the mother starved her 1-year-old son to death at the behest of a religious cult because he refused to say "Amen" before a meal.

Ria Ramkissoon, 23, pleaded guilty to child abuse in the death of Javon Thompson, who died in East Baltimore and whose body was found in a suitcase in Philadelphia. The mother admitted denying food and water to the child over the course of a week.

She was sentenced last month but did not get any more jail time; the judge suspended what had remained of her 20 years sentence and she spent just the time she had been in jail since 2008. The idea was to get the mother to testify against three other cult members, who were sentenced today to a total 150 years in prison.

Assistant State's Attorney Julie Drake, facing criticism among bloggers for the mother's plea deal, penned an unusual letter that she wanted made public:

This is in response to e-mail messages that have been forwarded to me by citizens who have questions or concerns regarding the sentencing of Ria Ramkissoon. Ria Ramkissoon was the mother of 16 month old Javon Thompson, who died of dehydration and starvation while living with a cult in West Baltimore. I am happy to respond to questions and comments regarding Ms. Ramkissoon’s closed case, but first it is important to understand the facts which formed the basis for Ms. Ramkissoon’s guilty plea and the trial of her co-defendants.

Here is the rest of her response:

In April of 2006, Javon Thompson, then 7 months old, lived with his mother (Ria Ramkissoon), his grandmother (Seeta Newton), and other relatives here in Baltimore City. Ms. Ramkissoon was in school, studying to become a pharmacy technician. However, she had two desires.  First, she wanted to be able to stay home and care for Javon full-time. Second, although she had been raised in Hindu faith, Ms. Ramkissoon had converted to Christianity, and wanted to live in a Christian household.  Around that time Ms. Ramkissoon was persuaded by a friend to join a household run by a woman who called herself “Queen Antoinette”. Ms. Ramkissoon was told that this was a Christian household, where she could devote herself to the care of her child. 

Toni Sloan, aka “Queen Antoinette” ran her household under a strict set of rules, which she said were based on Biblical principles. As time passed, the rules multiplied and became more restrictive. Eventually, all members were required to give up their personal possessions (including birth certificates and identification), as well as contact with old friends and family.  Members were forbidden to dress in colors other than white, khaki or blue. The children were not permitted to attend school and the women were expected to stay home and home-school and care for the children.  With the exception of  Queen Antoinette, her daughter Trevia Williams (“Princess Trevia”), and her chief aide, Marcus Cobbs (“Prince Marcus”) no one could leave the house, unless they were accompanied by another member. Queen Antoinette claimed that God had appointed her queen and spoke directly to her; failure to follow her rules would result in damnation.

One morning in early 2007, Javon Thompson, then 16 months old, refused to say “amen” after the blessing before breakfast. Queen Antoinette told the others that Javon possessed a “spirit of rebellion”, and that God told her that the way to purge Javon of this evil spirit was to deprive him of food and water until he said “amen”. At first, Javon became more hungry and irritable.  As he cried, Queen Antoinette warned the household members not to feed him.  Ms. Ramkissoon was so distraught over this that Queen Antoinette ordered Trevia Williams to take control of Javon – she did not want Ria to disobey her order. When it became clear that Javon was on the verge of death, he was returned to his mother and he died in her arms.

After Javon’s death, Queen Antoinette ordered everyone to kneel and pray for his resurrection.  God would bring Javon back to life, she said, but only if they had enough faith.  When Javon did not respond initially to the group’s prayers, they placed his body in one of the bedrooms.  As the days passed, and Javon’s body began to decompose, the only person who remained by his body, praying, reading and singing to Javon, was his mother. When Ms. Ramkissoon wondered why Javon had not risen from the dead, Queen Antoinette told her that it was her fault – she wasn’t a good  enough mother and she didn’t have enough faith. Ms. Ramkissoon believed her.

After a visit from the landlord, Queen Antoinette informed the group that God had told her that it was time to move to Philadelphia. At the insistence of Ms. Ramkissoon, who still believed that Javon would be resurrected, his decaying body was placed in a green suitcase which was taken with the group to Philadelphia. The suitcase was secured in a locked shed in Philadelphia when the group moved on to New York. Meanwhile, Seeta Newton had filed a missing persons report for Ria and Javon.  Ultimately the authorities were able to piece the cases together, located Javon’s body, and arrested the cult members. Ria Ramkissoon, Queen Antoinette, Trevia Williams and Marcus Cobbs have been in jail since their arrest. As of the trial date, Ms. Ramkissoon still believed that Javon could be resurrected.

On March 30, 2009, Ms. Ramkissoon pled guilty to child abuse resulting in the death of Javon Thompson.  The basis of her guilty plea was her failure to feed Javon or seek medical treatment, after the point when feeding would have been dangerous. Under Maryland law, her admittedly sincere religious beliefs did not constitute a defense.  Pursuant to the terms of her plea agreement, Ms. Ramkissoon was required to (1) testify truthfully against Queen Antoinette, Trevia Williams, and Marcus Cobbs at their trial, and (2) participate in and successfully complete a long-term, in-patient program in a residential treatment facility selected by the State’s Attorney’s Office. At Ms. Ramkissoon’s insistence, the court agreed that if Javon is resurrected (not reincarnated), she can come back to court and withdraw her guilty plea.  Ms. Ramkissoon  received a sentence of 20 years, with all but the time she has already served suspended, and 5 years probation. She testified at the trial of Queen Antoinette, Trevia Williams and Marcus Cobbs, helping to secure convictions of all three on charges of second degree murder and child abuse resulting in death.  Immediately after her sentencing and release from Baltimore City Detention Center, Ms. Ramkissoon was driven to the residential treatment facility where she will be held indefinitely.

I will attempt to summarize and answer the questions I have received regarding Ms. Ramkissoon’s case.

(1)  Why did Ria Ramkissoon receive probation instead of a lengthy jail sentence? 
  Isn’t this just a “slap on the wrist”?

There are a number of reasons why one co-defendant receives a more lenient sentence than the others.  There were several factors which applied to Ms. Ramkissoon’s case.

First, it was clear to everyone that the central and most culpable defendant in this case was Queen Antoinette.  She was the leader of the cult.  She was the individual who issued the order to withhold food and water from Javon. Queen Antoinette was the defendant who warned the others not to feed Javon, and who removed Javon from Ms. Ramkissoon’s control in order to ensure that she did not feed him. In order to secure justice for Javon, our first priority was to convict Queen Antoinette of child abuse and murder, and secure a substantial prison term in her case. In order to do that, it was necessary to obtain eye-witness testimony regarding what had occurred.  Although Ms. Ramkissoon did not want to testify against anyone, she was willing to tell the truth. Her truthful testimony was essential to obtaining Queen Antoinette’s conviction.

Second, and equally important, I believe that justice was best served by placing Ms. Ramkissoon in a residential treatment facility rather than in prison.  It was clear to everyone who interviewed Ms. Ramkissoon that she had been indoctrinated through classic “brain-washing” techniques into a cult.  She had no malice or ill will toward Javon; quite the contrary, she believed Queen Antoinette was acting in his best interests by attempting to free him from an “evil spirit”.  Nonetheless, she was extremely distraught when Javon began showing signs of distress, and Queen Antoinette actually removed him from her control in order to ensure that she didn’t disobey her order.  After Javon’s death, Ms. Ramkissoon spent weeks by his decomposing body, praying for the resurrection Queen Antoinette told her would occur if only she had sufficient faith.  This was not an individual who was acting out of a classic criminal intent (e.g. malice, anger, desire for revenge or gain), but rather a mother who has and will suffer anguish over the result of her inaction. 

It is important to note that Ms. Ramkissoon’s attorney sought a finding of “not criminally responsible” for his client.  (This is Maryland’s alternative to the old insanity defense.)  The main reason she was not found “not criminally responsible” is because her “delusions” were of a religious nature and were shared by other people; therefore they could not be classified as a “mental disorder”.  This opinion was provided by the State’s psychiatrist.  The defense was prepared to present expert testimony that she was “not criminally responsible”.

It is also important to note that Ms. Ramkissoon  was not simply released to freedom.  A condition of her probation is that she remain in and successfully complete a long-term, in-patient, residential treatment program. This residential treatment facility was selected by DeVera Gilden, L.C.S.W.-C., a clinical forensic social worker, who works for the State’s Attorney’s Office in the Felony Family Violence Division. After reviewing many options, and visiting this facility, it was her judgement that this intensive program would offer the most appropriate supervision and therapeutic services necessary for Ms. Ramkissoon’s slow process of rehabilitation. Should she leave the facility “AMA”, fail to successfully complete the program, or violate any other condition of her probation, she could be incarcerated for 20 years (with credit for the 19 months she has already spent in jail).

(2) Why did the judge agree to let Ms. Ramkissoon withdraw her guilty plea if Javon is      resurrected?

If Ms. Ramkissoon’s religious beliefs are correct, and Javon resurrects, then it would be legally appropriate for her attorney to file either a “Bill of Actual Innocence” or a “Motion to Reconsider Based on Newly Acquired Evidence”. That said, I do not share Ms. Ramkissoon’s religious beliefs, and I believe the likelihood of Javon’s resurrection in my lifetime is too remote to be a concern.  (I carefully specified on the record that this condition involved resurrection of Javon’s body – not reincarnation into another body).  Since Ms. Ramkissoon insisted on this condition, the State had no objection to it. The court simply accepted the plea agreement between the State and Defense.

(3) Did Ms. Ramkisson receive special treatment because she is not “white”?

No.

(4) Did Ms. Ramkissoon receive special treatment because she is a submissive woman?

No.  Marcus Cobbs was offered a plea deal, which his attorney rejected.

(5)  Where was Javon’s father?

Javon’s father has not been involved in his son’s life to any significant degree.  At the time of Javon’s birth, he was in jail.  He has been physically abusive to Ms. Ramkissoon and other members of her family.

(6) Will the co-defendants receive probation?

I
(7) Is the prosecutor too lenient?

As a prosecutor, my ethical obligation is to do justice, not to secure a conviction or the maximum possible sentence.  n the case of Ria Ramkissoon, I believe the guilty plea and sentence were just – to her, to her mother, Seeta Newton, and to Javon. I believe this outcome is what Ms. Newton wanted and what Javon would have wanted.  In other circumstances I would make different sentencing recommendations. In my last case, in which I prosecuted Mark Castillo for drowning his three children, I asked for and received a sentence of three consecutive life terms without parole.  This was the harshest sentence the defendant could have received. It is my belief that justice requires a meticulous review of the facts, the role of each defendant, and the wishes of the surviving, innocent family members. That is what I did in this case. I respect the fact that not everyone will agree with me, but  I would ask those who disagree to take a careful look at the factors I considered, before rushing to judgement.

Julie Drake
Division Chief
Felony Family Violence Division
Office of the State’s Attorney for the Baltimore City

Another dog attack

Another day, another dog attack.

Baltimore police are searching for three boys between the ages of 10 and 12 who beat a baby pit bull with a tree branch and left it for dead. A maintenance worker at the Carroll Park Golf Course in Southwest Baltimore saw the attack and chased the kids away.

What is troubling about this case is that he called authorities but they were slow to arrive. Police referred him to animal control which responded four hours after his initial call Saturday about 12:30 p.m. But for some reason, the animal control officer didn't remove the dead dog.

The pit bull was still there on Sunday when the worker, Rob Whiderman, returned. He called police again and this time an officer responded. Police found the dog, a red and white striped polo shirt, the tree branch and a cell phone possibly dropped by one of the suspects.

This incident came just a few days after another dog was attacked with a machete in Northwest Baltimore.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:02 AM | | Comments (4)
Categories: Confronting crime, South Baltimore
        

May 17, 2010

Police say Club 410 opened illegally; guards had guns

The cops padlocked Club 410 last year, then the feds indicted the manager in a gang sweep, and then the liquor board ordered the owners to sell the liquor license.

But after all that, early Saturday, police said an officer drove by and heard noise. He stopped,  found 350 people inside the club on Belair Road, and then found two security officers dressed as cops and toting loaded Glock 9mms.

What gives?

The man holding the liquor license as trustee until it can be sold wouldn't comment, and the former manager is in prison awaiting trial. I couldn't reach the two men wwho were arrested, and the cops and liquor board chief are hopping mad.

All this could effect how and when the liquor license is sold. It's not easy to close a club, even one like this.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:54 PM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime, Northeast Baltimore
        

Longtime Arundel police press aide dies

Florence Steffen was a sweetheart with a gruf voice -- she loved reporters but she'd never let on. She loved gossip but she did her best to preserve the dignity and privacy of people whose names appeared in piles of reports in the Anne Arundel County Police Department.

Every morning reporters from the Baltimore Sun and the Annapolis Capital plowed through the robberies and the break-ins, the car accidents and the assaults, the domestics and the shootings, looking to fill blotters and briefs, and maybe, if we were lucky, find a story or two.

Florence died Saturday at the age of 79, and for 35 years with Arundel police she was the keeper of the reports, the guardian of what did and did not appear in the paper, the gatekeeper to countless spokespeople. Get on her good side and you had good copy for your editor.

She hated the fact that phone numbers appeared on police reports and the unwritten rule many years ago was that reporters didn't look at them. For us at The Sun, this was easy -- simply copy the number down and call later. Our deadlines didn't loom until evening. But pitty the Capital reporter who was on deadline, and had to go through the motions of pulling out the phone book (pre-Internet, I remind you) and pretending to find the number that was on the report.

Anne Arundel County police put out a tribue to Florence. Here it is:

THE ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY POLICE DEPARTMENT MOURNS THE LOSS OF LONGTIME SECRETARY FLORENCE STEFFEN

Secretary was a fixture in the Public Information Office for 35 Years

It is with deep regret and profound sadness that we inform you of the passing of Ms. Florence Steffen of the Anne Arundel County Police Department’s Public Information Office. Florence died at her home in Glen Burnie on the evening of May 15, 2010. She was 79.

 Florence was raised in West Baltimore and graduated from Western High School in 1948. She never missed a day of school in 12 years and would continue that consistency and dependability throughout her career at the police department. The majority of her life was spent living in Glen Burnie.

She joined the Anne Arundel County Police Department in August of 1975, where she enjoyed a brief stint in Central Records. It soon became apparent that her social skills would be an asset in the Public Information Office and she would go on to spend the rest of her career there as a secretary. During her career, she served as the PIO secretary and kept meticulous files for the office, which proved to be a significant historical reference through the years. Some of her everyday office duties included sorting incident reports for the department and the press, answering press inquiries and cutting out newspaper clippings about the department. Through many years of change, Florence remained the one constant in the office and her invaluable presence was profound.

She was preceded in death by her husband and is survived by her sisters, Lori and Ruth; her brother, Butch; her daughters, Carla and Shirley; her son, Walter; her eight grandchildren, five great grandchildren and numerous other relatives. Funeral arrangements will be announced at a later time.

“I was extremely saddened to hear of the passing of Florence Steffen,” said Chief of Police Colonel James Teare, Sr. “She served the police department with excellence for more than three decades and was well respected by members of the department and the public. We extend our deepest condolences to her family during this difficult time.”

Posted by Peter Hermann at 11:14 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Anne Arundel County, Breaking news, Top brass
        

Stripper Mobile is back!

When my colleague Laura Vozzella last left this, the strip club on wheels was rolling out of town. But I guess the Hustler Club couldn't pass up the Preakness (who can blame them given the "Get Your Preak On" promotion).

But the strip club on wheels still has plenty of detractors, namely parents with children who saw things on a public street that they shouldn't see until much later in life. I mean, what parents want to explain the term "pole dancing" to a 5-year-old?

Last month, Vozzella noted that cops gave the driver two tickets -- for having unsecured passengers and for blocking traffic.

But other than that, apprently no laws were broken. Baltimore police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi told Vozzella that the stripper-mobile might be perfectly legal, but it's certainly not an ideal addition to the family-friendly town. "Things like this are expected in Las Vegas," he said. "In Baltimore, this is a family town. We have the Inner Harbor. We have the Orioles. Businesses need to use a little more common sense."

Anne Manning de Dios of Alexendria, Va., couldn't agree more. She wrote us an e-mail this morning and sent us pictures -- one is published here -- of the stripper-mobile on Lombard Street. She had been returing from a play on Preakness Saturday:

"Perhaps I wouldn't have been so furious had my children not been in the car. I was shaking with anger. There was no way to ignore what was being thrown in our faces. There was no way to ignore the girls' moves or the men's reactions. There is no doubt this event will be forever-ingrained in my daughters' and son's heads. I didn't ask for it."

Her complete e-mail is here: 

Returning from watching a play in Baltimore County, I drove my three children (5, 8 and 11) through Baltimore City to catch 295 South. Our hopes had been to avoid the Preakness traffic along 695. What we encountered was far worse than what I was trying to avoid. It was unimaginable. For 25-minutes we were stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on Lombard Street alongside this horrific sight. There was no ignoring or escaping the spectacle of Deja Vu's pole dancers in what my 5-year-old called "The Lady Truck".
 
Men and boys were running from the curb, jumping on the truck's bumper. The motorcyclist -- shown in one photo -- several times laid back, with his ankles on his handle-bars and arms folded behind his head. Horns were honking. People were shouting. The girls kept dancing.
 
Perhaps I wouldn't have been so furious had my children not been in the car. I was shaking with anger.  There was no way to ignore what was being thrown in our faces. There was no way to ignore the girls' moves or the men's reactions. There is no doubt this event will be forever-ingrained in my daughters' and son's heads. I didn't ask for it. 
 
In our home I'm able to use the V-chip on the television and parental controls on the computer.  This evening, everything I've tried to protect was violated.
 
When ahead of the truck, I asked the driver if this was really necessary.  His reply was that he too had to feed his kids and that he wouldn't come into my place of work to tell me how to do my job.
 
I didn't ask Deja Vu to educate my children on the seedy elements of life.  Surely these girls wouldn't be able to pole dance on the city's sidewalks. Why is it they can do it on the streets?  Regardless of the legality of the issue, it is Baltimore I have to thank for introducing my children to filth. 

Anne Manning de Dios
Alexandria, Virginia

Posted by Peter Hermann at 10:55 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Confronting crime, Crime humor, Downtown
        

Preakness, beer and cops

So you thought this years Preakness -- with the Get Your Preak On promotion and unlimited beer for twenty bucks -- would mean a return to the debauchery of years past?

Think again.

The infield was so tame that Baltimore Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III (at left, in a photo by The Sun's Gene Sweeney) moved cops out of there and sent them to other spots around the race track. So quiet that I spotted more than a few yawning tactical guys doing more watching than arresting. Cops sat on picnic tables and thumbed through race forms.

"A great day for Baltimore," Bealefeld said as he walked through the infield.

The stats from a day 38,000 people drinking?

Zero arrests. Twenty-three tossed for throwing beer or other frat-like issues.

That's nothing. Some Baltimore bars have more activity on a regular weekend.

That may have put frowns on some in the infield who wanted to repeat the "running of the urinals" but it put a happy face on Bealefeld who noted young people can get together, drink, have fun and still stay out of jail.

The complaints: people couldn't drink fast enough because it took so long first get, and then refill, the bottomless cups of beer. It seems Pimlico struck the balance they wanted -- give back the alcohol but with a catch. Without the bring-your-own kegs, people couldn't binge drink, and many tended to sober up between gulps.

Of course, you could get drunk if you really wanted too. But overall, the scene didn't turn into a total anything-goes drunk fest as it had in years past, but wasn't exactly a family affair either. The real test will be next year.

There some more debate in Sunday's Crime Beat column, and The Baltimore's Sun's Kevin Cowherd also weighs in on the sports pages.

 

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:06 AM | | Comments (4)
Categories: Confronting crime, Crime humor, Top brass
        

Body identified as missing Baltimore man

A body found in a shallow grave in Linthicum on Saturday was that of a missing Baltimore man, and state police say his death is being investigated as a homicide. In a news release sent out late Sunday, police confirmed that the body was that of Matthew C. Martin, 31, who was last seen in Locust Point on April 9. Fliers were posted throughout South Baltimore.

State police said an autopsy determined that Martin had been killed, though they did not release the cause of death. That is an investigative technique used to aid detectives, as only the killer or those involved might know the manner in which Martin was killed. 

An emotional letter was posted on Craigslist a few weeks after Martin's disappearance, imploring anyone with information to come forward. Here's an excerpt: 

The disappearance of Matt has caused us all to question this neighborhood and its ethical values, which were never in question before this happened. We now evaluate how we have let this happen. Were we not involved enough, did we not call police and report drug activities enough, did we turn a blind eye when illegal activities were happening? Did we become complacent to such? Did we say to ourselves, well its just part of everyday life, and I certainly do not wish to get involved. I don't want anything happening to myself nor my family. Well the time has come to stop such and do something here to mend our oversights. I now understand there is a rule that has come about in this neighborhood, that is equal to the video "Stop the Snitching". As comical as it originally had seemed to me, its actually apparent it exist. No we are no Cherry Hill, no West Baltimore, we are good and honest folks here. No way, no shape , no form is this happening here. Well it is. I can only say , what a shame.
Posted by Justin Fenton at 1:10 AM | | Comments (35)
Categories: Anne Arundel County, South Baltimore
        

May 16, 2010

Holding businesses accountable

A dispatch from Dublin, Ireland

A few years ago, Baltimore Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III started making greater use of a little-used police power that allowed the department to padlock businesses associated with violence and criminal activity. Police immediately faced criticism from business owners who say they are not responsible for the actions of patrons or are held hostage by criminals who move in and use their property to deal drugs, and that in fact police should be doing more to help them combat such incidents.

In Dublin, Chief Superintendent Pat Leahy isn't hearing that.

Leahy's north-central district includes much of the city's most heavily traversed commercial areas, and as such he keeps a close eye on crimes committed at businesses. But when things get out of hand, its Leahy who comes calling the businesses, not the other way around.

Leahy said he will often call up owners experiencing an increase in thefts and demand that they tighten their security procedures. He said too often, businesses are lax or hire security firms that prefer to let theft occur so that they can make arrests and prove their worth. The police then are called to log and investigate the crime, taking away resources from the community. Leahy says he "won't accept this."

"They're responsible for what happens in their store," Leahy told me. "And if their security is not doing the job, then I will tell them that I am recommending that firm get sacked. And if they refuse to do so, I'll publicize the fact that you're attracting criminals."

Here's the kicker: Leahy isn't content when the numbers drop, aware that some businesses may simply be underreporting crimes to get him off their back. That's when Leahy, who has an MBA from a prestigious business school, requests to audit their inventory books. He says he has the support of the downtown business association in these efforts.
I'm not sure if Irish police have similar padlock powers (Leahy never mentioned and I neglected to ask), though this country doesn't have nearly the same issues of violence and open air drug dealing that have led Baltimore police to shutter businesses. Still, if Baltimore businesses that have been the scenes of multiple shootings push back on police, imagine if Bealefeld was auditing their books after a rash of thefts.
Posted by Justin Fenton at 8:19 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Crime elsewhere
        

May 14, 2010

A view inside the NYPD

The Village Voice in New York has obtained secret tape recordings made by an NYPD cop of his colleagues, giving the public an unusual and unvarnished view of what it's like to be a police officer in New York, and of some of the attitudes that come with it.

The recording are raw and uncensored, and quite revealing. Reminds me a bit when I took an unsanctioned ride with a city cop last year who wanted to demonstrate how poorly staffed the department was. Commander promptly launched an investigation -- not to fix what was wrong, but to uncover the cop's identity.

Here's how the Village Voice describes the find:

Made without the knowledge or approval of the NYPD, the tapes — made between June 1, 2008, and October 31, 2009, in the 81st Precinct in Bedford-Stuyvesant and obtained exclusively by the Voice — provide an unprecedented portrait of what it's like to work as a cop in this city.

They reveal that precinct bosses threaten street cops if they don't make their quotas of arrests and stop-and-frisks, but also tell them not to take certain robbery reports in order to manipulate crime statistics. The tapes also refer to command officers calling crime victims directly to intimidate them about their complaints.

This pressure was accompanied by paranoia — from the precinct commander to the lieutenants to the sergeants to the line officers — of violating any of the seemingly endless bureaucratic rules and regulations that would bring in outside supervision.

The tapes also reveal the locker-room environment at the precinct. On a recording made in September, the subject being discussed at roll call is stationhouse graffiti (done by the cops themselves) and something called "cocking the memo book," a practical joke in which officers draw penises in each other's daily notebooks.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 9:21 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Crime elsewhere, Top brass
        

Baltimore police budget and crime stats

Baltimore police on Thursday went before the City Council's budget committee to fend off suggested budget cuts that the commissioner said would set back historic gains made in crime reduction by 10 years.

I have the power point presentation and it's filled with great stats and budget numbers.

Here is a taste of what you'll see by clicking on the above link:

2009: Homicides down 16% since 2007 20 year low for homicides recorded in 2008 and 2009
2009: Shootings down 31% since 2007 Lowest number of shootings recorded

Reduction in Youth Violence
Juvenile homicides decreased 45% in 2009.

2009: Gun crime down 17%
FY2009: Overtime down 43% $13.7 million reduction in overtime spending in two years

FY2011 Budget

Amount of general funds required to maintain staffing and safety:
$318,628,203

FY11 Board of Estimates Recommendation:
          $302,547,229

Funding Gap: 
$16,080,974

Fiscal 85% of FY11 budget is personnel
Impact of $16 million funding deficit
Between 250 - 300 fewer sworn positions
Equivalent of 2 police districts
Eliminate all 50 contract specialists
Disband Aviation Unit
Disband Mounted Unit
Disband Marine Unit

Board of Estimates Recommendation Personnel Cuts
173 Sworn Officer  Positions
FOP Contract
B. ORDER OF LAYOFF

Recruits and probationary officers shall be laid off before any other member of the bargaining unit….Thereafter, members shall be laid off in seniority order, the least senior member being laid off first.

Impact of Board of Estimates Recommendation
+ 86 senior officer
 positions
+ 87 entry level
    patrol officer positions
Reduction in Patrol
250 - 300 less sworn officers = the equivalent of 2 Patrol Districts

Jeopardizes $10 million in federal stimulus funds and 50 police officer positions
If these reductions occur, it would take at least 10 years for the BPD to “catch up” and rehire these officers in future years

Fewer Officers on the Street
Sworn Personnel Funded 2000-2010 210 less sworn officers than 2003 even with COPS stimulus funds
Aviation Unit

Annual Cost to sustain unit is $4.1 million.
Half is personnel and half in maintenance, fuel and operating costs.
Initial Capital Investment of over $11 million dollars.
27 of 29 cities with a population over 500,000 have police aviation units.

Aviation Unit
Critical resource for Officer Safety
Minimizes risk in pursuits
Provides operation intelligence
Provides aerial coverage in high risk situations including pursuit of armed suspects, hostage situations, etc.
Supports other City agencies by providing real time operational information about events as they happen:
Responds to all critical incidents
Supports emergency operations
Homeland Security checks of critical infrastructure
Fire Department support

Marine Unit
Spent nearly $400,000 in Federal Homeland Security Funds to create the Unit.
The Unit consists of 11 vessels - 3 vessels must be maintained pursuant to federal grant requirements. Responsible for public safety and protection of property on waterways.

Potential Restorations
If approved by the City Council, the Mayor’s Comprehensive Plan will restore $14.7 million in funding to the following:
Fully restores all sworn police positions
Restores the Aviation Unit (Foxtrot)
Restores the Marine Unit
Restores the Mounted Units

Posted by Peter Hermann at 9:08 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime, Top brass
        

Child gonorrhea case and the repeat offender wanted for questioning

It's a horrific case and a mystery all rolled into one.

How did an 18-month-old girl contract the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea over the weekend? Was it from a 21-year-old neighbor who might have been alone with the child in her house? Or from someplace else?

The story has lots of angles to it. The parents who brought the sick baby to Harbor Hospital are angry that police haven't yet arrested and charged the man they named as a chief suspect. Police are working carefully (it took until Tuesday for tests to confirm the infant had the disease, and now they want to question the man to see if his story adds up). He's not yet been named a suspect. And detectives are not even sure yet how the girl got gonorrhea in the first place.

But there's another question here. The man being sought has twice in the past three years been convicted of serious crimes -- manslaughter, for which he got 10 year suspended prison sentence -- and dealing drugs -- for which he got a five year prison sentence.

He violated the terms of his probation three times yet each time two different judges balked at more prison time and continued his probation, leaving him free. And the man -- who we're not naming because he not yet been charged in the sex crime -- was parolled after serving just over two years in the drug case.

Another example of soft judges handing out break after break? The Baltimore Police Department's chief spokesman, Anthony Guglielmi, certainly thinks so. He called the man a "poster child on how to skirt the system. The state's parole and probation office violated this guy three times and three times he's been given a slap on the wrist."

I couldn't reach either judge on Thursday. But a review of his record might shed some new light on this. The manslaughter conviction stems from an arson fire that court records show were set by the man's three teen-aged friends in 2006. Police made note that this man was with them but did not set the fire that killed a 37-year-old man. He was convicted but not sent to prison.

The drug charge involved cops seeing a hand-to-hand deal and finding a bag full of heroin pills in his pants pocket. You can argue that being paroled after serving less than half your sentence is lenient, but non-violent offenders typically get their first parole hearing after serving a quarter of their sentence. For this type of non-violent offense, parole is pretty standard.

And what about the probation violations? Two were technical, for missing court-ordered drug treatment sessions. The third was for getting arrested on the drug charge, and it appears the judge simply folded that violation in the 5-year drug sentence.

So is this man a poster child? Should he have been on the street? The state has a new program called Violence Prevention Initiative, in which violent offenders are singled out for just these types of technical, minor probation violations to send notice that they are being carefully watched and will go to jail for stepping out of line just a little bit. But this man, given the nature of his offenses, wasn't anywhere near this program, reserved for the worst of the worst.

Police budget and (non) budget questions

Update: See below for police answers to questions posed by City Council members.

Thursday's routine budget hearing for the Baltimore Police Department started off anything but routine. First off, chairwoman Belinda Conaway had to take on her critics. The police brass was irked at the questions she sent in advance of the meeting -- most, they felt, had nothing to do with the budget.

Many of the questions dealt with the racial make-up of the force. She wanted to know how many officers had complaints sustained against them. Police were desperate to show off to the City Council glowing crime stats that showed homicides and other crime dropping to historic lows even while they cut back overtime by nearly half.

The numbers are impressive: murder down to a 33-year low; shootings down 31 percent from three years ago; carckings down 20 percent; residential robberies down 17 percent; commericial robberies down 13 percent; assaults down 14 percent. All while making tens of thousands of fewer arrests then past administrations and cutting back on overtime from $31.6 million in 2007 to $14.2 million this year. And now the mayor's proposal is to cut another $16 million from the budget, which could force laying off up to 300 cops and eliminate the helicopter, marine and mounted horse units.

City council members, Bealefeld and the finance chief tussled over the cuts. Finance proposed cutting from detective and other specialized units. The top cop said, "It doesn't work that way. It can't work that way." It's a union shop and that requires last hired, first fired. So the cuts come from the cheaper patrol units, the backbone of the agency, and because those cops make less money then detectives, it would mean not cutting 173 officers as the finance department says but 300 to 350 officers.

Of course, if the mayor's $50 million package of new fees and taxes gets approved by the council, all this back and forth becomes moot. The police department and other agencies would be fully funded again.

Through all this discussion, Conaway managed to at least ask some of her non-budget related questions. But at the onset of the hearing, she blasted police commanders for the leaks of her questions to the media. Why did she want to know how many cops have complaints about race lodged against them? Or want to know the racial makeup of the accident investigation unit? Or how many officers are suspended?

It's a budget issue, Conaway said, listing a series of out-of-court settlements in racial discriminatiion cases, some totaling $500,000, to officers and civilians alike who claimed disparate and unfair treatment. "We cannot afford this," she said. "Year after year after year there is a culture of discrimination in the Police Department, and it is costing the citizens money in out-of-budget revenue."

I posted Conaway's list of questions in an earlier blog. The Police Department has written answers which they promised to give me today. Here they are:

Responses to Budget and Appropriations Committee Questions
Baltimore Police Department Budget Hearing – May 13, 2010

1. How many top ranking officers are minorities?  How many minority (top ranking) officers have been terminated since July, 2008?

Half of the sworn command staff are minorities. No minority sworn command staff  have been terminated since 2008.

2. Are there top ranking officers that have EEO complaints, sustained or pending?  If yes, how many top ranking officers and how many does each have?

Four sworn command staff have prior sustained EEOC complainants and there are pending EEOC allegations under review related to three command staff.

3. Is it true that the two Chief positions previously held by African-Americans have been eliminated?

Due to budgetary constraints, the Baltimore Police Department has eliminated/left unfilled a number of command staff positions.  Since 2008, the Department has either eliminated or left vacant at least seven command positions.  Four of those seven positions were held by minorities. 

4. How is overtime disseminated?  How many officers have been assigned overtime? How many officers have an average of 20+ hours of overtime per week?

Due to budgetary constraints, patrol is using very limited initiative based overtime.  When overtime is offered, it is posted in the Districts and officers voluntarily sign up on a first come, first serve basis.  The Overtime Unit also offers uniformed overtime throughout the Department.  This overtime is publicized on read outs and email.  Officers select this overtime by applying directly to the Overtime Unit.  Investigative Units, such as homicide, utilize overtime to support real time investigative efforts.  The Department will provide the Chair of the Committee with a list of officers averaging more than 20 hours of overtime per week.

5. Is the 4 day work week effective and does it produce cost savings?  If yes, why hasn't it been implemented citywide?

The alternative work schedule that was piloted in the Northeast District is no longer in effect.  The Baltimore Police Department and the Fraternal Order of Police negotiated a new schedule which was agreed upon by contract.  This new schedule was implemented citywide pursuant to the contract on January 14, 2010.

6. Please provide a racial and gender breakdown for the police department. Specifically, how many minorities are in top ranking positions?

The racial and gender breakdown for all sworn members of the Department is as follows:  56.2% minority and 16.7% female.  As stated above, 50% of sworn command members are minority.

7. How are the PAL vehicles being utilized?

There are a total of 13 PAL vans. One is assigned to each police district, 1 to the tactical unit, 1 to Recreation and Parks, 2 to the Police Academy to transport recruits to various details/initiatives and there is 1 spare in the motor pool.

8. How many multi-use vehicles does BCPD rent?

We don’t understand the term multi-use vehicle.  The BPD rents 21 SUVs.

9. Why has the HICKS training been contracted out?  How much do you pay for this training?  Are academy instructors qualified to provide this training?  If yes, why are we paying a private contractor?

The 2010 contract for Hicks Arrest and Control Training is $235,000.  This training is paid for out of asset forfeiture and grant funds.  No general funds have been used to fund Hicks Training.  Although self defense and arrest techniques are integral to an officer’s training, officers must have the ability to communicate with the community while basing decisions on the moral and ethical aspects of the decision.  Since the overwhelming interaction between the police and the public is verbal and requires problem solving skills, the Hicks Arrest and Control program heavily focuses on this type of communication.  This training allows the officers to feel as though they have the appropriate tools to deal with circumstances that might arise.  This program teaches officers how to use the appropriate level of controlled, articulated force necessary to respond to and effectively handle any type of physically dynamic situation. The Hicks system trains police officers to work in any environment or situation and to adapt and meet changing circumstances.  The training teaches officers how to evaluate a situation and apply the correct response, whether that is using force or exercising control and restraint. The training also addresses moral and ethical dilemmas that officers encounter daily while emphasizing the use of sound judgment, critical thinking, and decision making.  These themes are threads throughout the training that inculcate these ideals in every aspect of police training and work.  Each year, more Training Academy staff are trained and certified as trainers and are able to perform this training.  Each year, the Department has reduced the cost the Hicks contract because it has expanded its internal capacity to provide the training.

 

10. Does the Police Department have the technology to provide effective constituent services as well as locate and identify violent offenders?

Yes. 

11. Currently, how many officers are suspended with pay?  How many are suspended with pay?  Please provide the racial demographics for each category.

Currently, there are 99 officers suspended – 90 with pay and 9 without pay.  Half of these officers (48) are on medical suspension from duty.  Of the 90 officers suspended with pay -- there are 30 african american males, 28 white males, 17 african american females, 8 white females, 6 hispanic males and 1 hispanic female.  Of the 9 officers suspended without pay -- there are 4 african american males and 5 white males.

12. How is the federally funded "Click it Ticket" money disseminated?  Please provide a breakdown for ALL precincts. Is the money distributed equally?  If no, why not?

Funding for this program is administered by the Department of Transportation not the Police Department.  Both Department’s collaborate together to provide traffic initiatives with these funds.

13. Please provide a racial breakdown for the Accident Investigation Unit and the Mounted Unit.

There are 11 officers assigned to the Accident Investigation Unit: 6 white males, 1african-american male, 3 white females and 1 hispanic male.  The Mounted Unit has 6 officers assigned, 3 white males and 3 white females.

14. What is the FLEX unit doing?  How many officers are assigned to this unit?  When an arrest is made and multiple officers respond, how many get credit for the arrest?  For example, if two flex unit officers make an arrest, do multiple officers document the same arrest?

Each District has 1 to 2 Flex Units.  A Flex Unit is on average comprised of 1 Sergeant and 5 officers.  The Flex Units are a discretionary team of officers that District Commanders deploy into specific areas to respond to crime patterns and crime problems.   They generally work afternoon and night hours.  When examining arrest statistics from Flex Units, we usually look at the unit as a whole team.  However, it is the usual practice for only 1 officer to document (take credit) for the arrest statistic.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 6:47 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime, Top brass
        

May 13, 2010

Are these really budget questions?

Later this afternoon, Baltimore police commanders are going before the City Council's budget committee to talk about money. The department is facing a $16 million cut that could eliminate its helicopter unit and up to 300 police officers (the number varies depending on who you talk to).

So you would think the budget committee would want to talk about the budget. Think again.

A series of questions sent to the commissioner to help him prepare for the meeting, however, shows that they want to talk about the racial make-up of the command staff, about rental cars and about how many cops are suspended.

In one question, the lawmakers call citizens constituents. In another, they refer to precincts. In still another, they demand answers about extending a program that ended in January with a new police contract. Politicians, not cops, have constituents. And the city has police districts. Precincts are in the county.

But even those gaffs aside, what gives? When Martin O'Malley was mayor, his top cop had unlimited overtime, unlimited resources and the force busted more than 100,000 people a year. Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III runs a cash-strapped agency with pension problems so severe half the force wants to bolt, doesn't have enough money to feed a police horse, has arrested tens of thousands of fewer people than did past chiefs, and yet homicides and shootings are at 33-year lows.

Police commanders are understanably upset and perplexed. As one told me, "Let's talk about money."

Here's how Robert F. Cherry, the police union president, sees it:

I think that the police department has gone to great lengths over many years to diversify the ranks and I think the issue that should be discussed at the budget hearing is, if anything, a commendation to the commissioner and the entire police department, black and white, male and female, who have brought his city to levels of crime that haven’t beens seen in decades.

I would hope that the council members would who wrote that memo would not be using this budget hearing for poltical grandstanding and instead ask the real question that matter to the homeowners and residents of this city -- how can we further give you the resources, the money and the tools to continue the good fight.

These are tough economic times. I have to give credit. The commissioner's plan is working and it's working because the men and women on the sreet are making it work. These questions arren't the kind of questions that should be asked at a budget hearing. The city's own survey showed the public ranked fire and police one and two in terms of their top priorities.

I would hope the budget committee works hard to give Commissioner Bealefeld the resources he needs to continue cutting cirme. If the police department was a Forturne 500 company in the private sector, police officers on the street would be receiving bonuses for the work they’ve accomplished. We have to draw the line in this thing that everybody needs to share the pain. The bottom line is that public safety is paramount.

The chairwoman of the budget committee told me these questions are all "very relevant" to the police budget. Here's the list. You decide:

Per the Chairperson of the Budget and Appropriations Committee

Please respond to the following questions: 

Police Department

How many top ranking officers are minorities?  How many minority (top ranking) officers have been terminated since July, 2008?

Are there top ranking officers that have EEO complaints, sustained or pending?  If yes, how many top ranking officers and how many does each have?

Is it true that the two Chief positions previously held by African-Americans  have been eliminated?

How is overtime disseminated?  How many officers have been assigned overtime? How many officers have an average of 20+ hours of overtime per week?

Is the 4 day work week effective and does it produce cost savings?  If yes, why hasn't it been implemented citywide?

Please provide a racial and gender breakdown for the police department. Specifically, how many minorities are in top ranking positions?

How are the PAL vehicles being utilized?

How many multi-use vehicles does BCPD rent?

Why has the HICKS training been contracted out?  How much do you pay for this training?  Are academy instructors qualified to provide this training?  If yes, why are we paying a private contractor?

Does the Police Department have the technology to provide effective constituent services as well as locate and identify violent offenders?

Currently, how many officers are suspended with pay?  How many are suspended with pay?  Please provide the racial demographics for each category.

How is the federally funded "Click it Ticket" money disseminated?  Please provide a breakdown for ALL precincts. Is the money distributed equally?  If no, why not?

Please provide a racial breakdown for the Accident Investigation Unit and the Mounted Unit.

What is the FLEX unit doing?  How many officers are assigned to this unit?  When an arrest is made and multiple officers respond, how many get credit for the arrest?  For example, if two flex unit officers make an arrest, do multiple officers document the same arrest?

Marguerite  Murray
Marguerite Murray
Office of Council Services
419B City Hall
100 Holliday Street
Baltimore, MD  21202

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:59 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime, Top brass
        

Baltimore's own CSI case?

Prosecutors and cops have long complained of the so-called CSI-Effect -- in other words, people watching cop and court dramas on TV have come to expect the same level of investigations and advanced technlogy (even if some of it doesn't exist) that they get discouraged in real court rooms and let criminals go.

But now, Baltimore State's Attorney Patricia C. Jessamy is touting her own CSI case -- the solving of a murder in a vacant house with no witnesses. DNA evidence from under the victim's fingernails linked to a hammer used to pummel the victim 16 times in the head helped nail the suspect.

That man had a string of criminal convictions in New York -- evidence that Maryland is not alone in a revolving door-justice system.

For more, here's the statement from city prosecutors:

Darnell Jeter, 45, of the 5000 block of Walther Avenue was found guilty of second degree murder and carrying a deadly weapon late Tuesday afternoon after a jury deliberated four hours before reaching a verdict. Jeter will be sentenced before Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge Emanuel Brown on July 8, 2010. 

Prosecutors relied heavily upon an excellent police investigation prepared by veteran detectives in the Baltimore Police Department Homicide Division. The investigation led to a DNA hit from evidence recovered under the victim’s fingernails and Jeter’s fingerprints on the murder weapon, in addition to the victim’s blood on the murder weapon to help secure the conviction. There were no witnesses to the murder that occurred in a vacant dwelling and homicide detectives had one lead from witness interviews -- an individual with a street name of “New York”.  Detectives were able to learn that an individual nicknamed “New York” had been living for a brief period of time in the second floor apartment where the murder occurred.  Darnell Jeter was later identified as “New York” in a photo array and the individual living on occasion in the second floor vacant apartment at 1202 Treeleaf Court where the murder occurred.

On March 25, 2007, the victim, Theresa Parker, 39, was found unresponsive on the second floor of a vacant dwelling at 1202 Treeleaf Court, in the Somerset Projects.  An autopsy revealed that Parker sustained 17 blunt force trauma injuries, 16 of those to the head. Additionally, the victim sustained injuries to the neck, and petechial hemorrhaging to the eyes, which were consistent with asphyxiation.

Although Jeter denied living at the dwelling, crime lab technicians recovered CDs in a closet in the dwelling, and suitable prints which were later found to belong to Darnell Jeter. In July of 2007, after search warrants were secured to obtain swabs of Jeter’s mouth, DNA was removed for comparison to evidence removed from the crime scene and in February 2008, the DNA comparison was completed.  Darnell Jeter’s DNA was found on the handle of a hammer believed to be the murder weapon and underneath the fingernails of the victim. The blood on the head of that hammer was found to belong to the victim, Theresa Parker. 

Darnell Jeter has an extensive criminal record from New York State that includes seventeen prior convictions dating back to 1983. Additionally, Jeter was convicted in Maryland of failure to register as a sex offender in 2007. He was found guilty of violating probation in November 2009 and sentenced to 18 months in prison.
 
Assistant State’s Attorney Rita Wisthoff-Ito of the Homicide Division prosecuted this case.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:50 AM | | Comments (5)
Categories: Courts and the justice system
        

Baltimore gun busts

Baltimore's top cop's crusade against guns continues -- city police department officials announced three more arrests overnight:

Mark Taylor, 24, was arrested in the 2800 block of Waldorf Ave. in Pimlico, in Northwest Baltimore, with what police say an illegal .38 caliber handgun. A traffic stop led police to arrest Keisha Cohen, 21, with what they say as a fully loaded .38 caliber Hi-Point semi-automatic handgun.

And, police say convicted felon Dana Smith was arrested in South Baltimore's Cherry Hill neighborhood with drugs and a .45 caliber gun hidden in the engine of a car. All three suspects were charged with illegal possession of handguns; Smith also faces drug charges.

The photo at left is an old one, a police-sponsored gun-buy back program in 1997. It was taken inside the Baltimore Police Department's gun store vault.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:39 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime, Top brass
        

May 12, 2010

O'Malley and crime problems

The Washington Post Maryland Politics blog had a little fun this week with the governor and a Baltimore murder:

Here at The Washington Post Maryland Politics blog, we don't typically write about crime, especially crime in Baltimore. But when news of the brutal killing of a pregnant woman makes headlines on the same day that Gov. Martin O'Malley is touting the state's lowest crime rate in 35 years, the juxtaposition raises eyebrows.

The Post is talking about the slaying of Betsy Sue Riggin, a 28-year-old food service worker at the city jail who apparently met the love of her life, who happened to be incarcerated at the time. He is now charged with killing her. It has been particularly painful for the Riggin's family, who had been told their daughter met her future husband, and father of her soon-to-be-born baby, at a restaurant salad bar.

They had no idea the circumstances of the relationship until a Baltimore Sun reporter called the day before Mother's Day. Then came revelations that the suspect, who has a long arrest record, had an outstanding warrant that went unserved, despite speeding that process along has been a centerpiece of O'Malley's crime fighting efforts.

The Post blog:

It becomes a statewide political story and gets a mention here if within 24 hours documents show the suspect in the slaying -- and a target of the governor's award-winning crime-prevention effort - should have been locked up at the time his girlfriend and unborn child were killed. Police say the suspect has confessed to the crime.

It also helps if the spokeswoman for Patricia C. Jessamy (D), the Baltimore State's Attorney, tells television reporters that it's unclear why a state parole and probation agent appeared to have failed to file paperwork for a warrant that would have allowed the suspect to be put behind bars before the killing. In other words: why did O'Malley's signature "Violence Prevention Initiative" break down?

Turns out everything worked perfectly in this case. The courts and the state exchange warrant information through the mail, and there's typically a two-week delay. That's all it took for a criminal suspect to stay on the streets and a 28-year-old pregant woman to lose her life.

Shooting in Park Heights; gun, drug arrest

Breaking News Update: Police told me just a few minutes ago that the victim has died. 

A man was shot in the head this morning in Northwest Baltimore Park Heights neighborhood. City police had few details, but said the shooting occurred about 3:25 a.m. at West Cold Spring Lane and Daytona Avenue, between Reisterstown Road and Wabash Avenue.

The victim was rushed to Sinai Hospital. His condition was not immediately available, but police said on Twitter that homicide detectives had been called to the scene.

Also this morning, police said they raided a house in East Baltimore's Townway Court and arrested Anthony Martin, 22. Authorities said they seized $3,810, 88 vials of suspected cocaine and a .40 caliber handgun.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 6:58 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Breaking news, East Baltimore
        

May 11, 2010

Find Your Happy Place -- crime?

Baltimore's new marketing campaign: Find Your Happy Place!

We mocked the old slogan, "The City that Reads," turning it into the "The City that bleeds" -- complete with cops wearing it on T-shirts. I'm not sure that the "Get In On It" campaign produced any riffs on crime.

How about it readers. Give me some ideas on where happy place and crime!

One reader has already posted this to the story comment section:

Yeah, I found my happy place--150 miles away. After eighteen years of crime, parking b.s., high property taxes, and assorted other oddities such as Sheila Dixon, I moved last fall. Don't get me wrong, there were great things, too, like the '96 and '97 Orioles, the restaurants, Center Stage, the BSO, the Book Fair and Flower Mart, but I just couldn't take it any more

Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:22 PM | | Comments (8)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime, Top brass
        

An oveturned boat, a found ring

Feature stories can sometimes be the hardest to report. Unlike a breaking news event, they require a nearly perfect and impossible lineup of agendas. But it's so nice when everything does come together.

Cathy Isphording helped rescue Vivian Holley, 84, and Henry Harris, 73, whose boat capsized in the Patapsco River on Saturday. While pulling Vivian aboard the sailboat, rescuers noticed his ring was about to fall off, and they took it for safe keeping. Holley was rushed to the hospital before Cathy could return it.

She didn't have a name and Maryland Shock Trauma Center wouldn't give her any information. So she brought the ring to the Baltimore Police Department's Central District station, in an envelope with "William" scrawled on the outside (what she thought was Vivian's name). On Sunday, Cathy e-mailed a reporter at the Baltimore Sun wondering if we could track the ring.

I called police on Monday and a spokesman called the Central District and Officer Helen Mateo found it in the desk. We still didn't have a name of the victim though. But Mateo tracked down the police report and found Vivian at Shock Trauma. About the same time, Vivian's daughter in Buffalo called the newsroom looking for a phone number for the fire department so she could thank them.

Thought that, I was able to call Vivian and talk to him at the hospital, and the daughter, Bonnie Hawkins, was able to talk to her father's rescuer, Cathy Isphording. Tears were shed. A fun, bright story was born. A man saved. A ring found. Red tape cut. And a very happy retired longshoreman who lives to fish another day.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:14 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Heroes
        

May 10, 2010

Baltimore absent from O'Malley's crime speech

Gov. Martin O'Malley is touting crime declines during his term as the election season gears up, saying crime in Maryland has dipped to its lowest levels since 1975 in part because of DNA matching initiatives and other programs his administration has enacted, The Sun's Julie Bykowicz reports.

The governor made the announcement in Prince George's County, a heavily Democratic enclave where many observers say he will need to do well to win re-election. A poll released by the Washington Post on Monday indicated that the governor's support in the county is below what it was four years ago, Bykowicz reported.

Because of its size and high amount of crime, the state's crime rate seems dependent on Baltimore's successes or failures, so the choice of PG County immediately stood out. Looking at crime statistics posted on the web site for the governor's Office for Crime Control and Prevention, Baltimore would appear to have made far more significant progress than PG County, at least in recent years. PG County's crime rate was at 6,257 incidents per 100,000 people in 1999, and after an increase in the mid-2000s was at 6,254 in 2008, essentially the exact same rate.  Baltimore in 1999 recorded 11,657 incidents per 100,000 people, which had dropped to 6,463 in 2008. Of course, Baltimore leaders have also been touting a 20-year low in murders and gun crime - none of which were apparently mentioned in O'Malley's speech.

A former mayor of Baltimore, O'Malley fought against charges in 2006 that the stats had been juked and crime in Baltimore had not improved significantly. Bykowicz reported that O'Malley's decision to go elsewhere for his crime-statistics announcement could indicate concern that the city's progress is eclipsed by gains in other parts of the state.

Former governor and Republican challenger Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. responded with this statement: "We have miles to go in reducing the awful toll of violence in our state," former governor Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R) said in a statement. "When we do make headway, it's the police officers and sheriff's deputies and corrections officers who deserve the credit." 

Posted by Justin Fenton at 4:43 PM | | Comments (2)
        

More twists and turns in the killing of Gerrod Finch

The stabbing death of 21-year-old Gerrod Finch last year in West Baltimore may be a perfect example of how a case is far from closed after police make an arrest.

When police got to the scene June 30, 2009, they found a blood trail leading from a vehicle and Finch lying in a supine position. Girlfriend Tanaya Salter, 21, said the pair got into an argument in the 600 block of Wheeler Ave. that caught the attention of some nearby men, who surrounded Finch and stabbed him.

But detectives noticed inconsistencies between Salter's account and that of other witnesses. Salter waived her rights and signed a taped statement, confessing that she stabbed Finch as he struck her during an alcohol-fueled argument inside the vehicle.

Authorities weren't sure at first if the new account — involving allegations of domestic violence and self-defense — merited criminal charges at all. But they would charge Salter with manslaughter, saying she had an opportunity to leave the argument but instead escalated it, "which inevitably caused the death of Mr. Finch," Detective Michael Moran wrote in charging documents.

Now, there's been another twist in the case. Salter has been cleared. And three men, at least one who police say has ties to the Bloods gang, have been indicted in the killing.

The current account is more similar to the original: Police say Derrean "Dizzy" Mills, 17, Montell "Cannibal" Mills, 17, and Mishael Belcher, 20, approached Finch's vehicle while he and Salter were arguing and assaulted him. Belcher is accused of stabbing Finch after he climbed out of the vehicle.

Follow the link for an account of witness intimidation related to the case that police say occurred at a downtown bus stop. 

[This entry has been updated since it was originally posted]

Posted by Justin Fenton at 11:35 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Downtown, Gangs, West Baltimore, Witness intimidation
        

Four dead in weekend violence; man carjacked in AA County and left in city

The weekend saw at least seven shootings in Baltimore, three of them fatal, and news of an arrest in the strangling of a pregnant woman in the Coldstream-Homestead-Montebello neighborhood.

Police said a white man was shot in the neck and died on the scene in the 500 block of N. Collington Ave. in East Baltimore at about 6 p.m. Saturday. Four hours later, two black men were found dead in a vehicle that had its engine running in the 900 block of North Hill Drive., in the Ednor-Gardens-Lakeside community of Northeast Baltimore. None of those victims had been identified as of this morning and police were not able to provide any new information about the crimes.

An insignificant but odd fact: there was not a single white homicide victim in the city until May 5, a span in which 58 people were killed. The next four city victims were all white: a homeless man found beaten to death in West Baltimore, a man beaten to death outside a Brooklyn bar, a 29-year-old pregnant woman strangled by her boyfriend, and Saturday's victim. The city's total now stands at 64 homicides for the year, compared with 80 at this time last year. That's a drop of 20 percent, but the pace is slowly evening out.

In other news, Anne Arundel County police reported this morning that a 28-year-old man was forced into the trunk of his own vehicle on Saturday in the 800 block of Nursery Road in Linthicum, and driven into Baltimore. The suspect took his wallet and cell phone and drove off in the vehicle, a 1998 gold Chevrolet Cavalier. It was not immediately clear where in the city the man was taken in Baltimore, but police believe the victim and suspect had met as part of a planned meeting and that the motive may have been drug-related.

Police also disclosed today that the male who was shot to death on May 3 in the 1500 block of W. Fayette St. was a 16-year-old named Andrew Copeland, who lived in the 2500 block of W. Baltimore. No additional information was immediately available, and it was not clear whether it took several days to locate his next of kin or whether detectives simply had a delay in updating internal databases. We'll try to learn more.

Three-alarm fire damages West Baltimore rowhouse

It's not really crime but I wanted to share some photographs by the Baltimore Sun's Barbara Haddock Taylor of a 3-alarm fire Sunday afternoon on South Fulton Avenue.

It was first reported about 3 p.m. and firefighters who arrived reported flames in the basement of a vacant rowhouse at 21 South Fulton Ave. But it quickly became apparant that the fire was far more severe, and flames were shooting through the roof, which eventually collapsed.

Fire spread to 23 and 25 S. Fulton avenues. All three buildings are vacant. Nobody was injured, though a commercial air conditioning unit atop one of the structures made it difficult for firefighters.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:25 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Breaking news
        

May 9, 2010

Boyfriend charged with strangling girlfriend

[UPDATE, May 10, 11:34 a.m.: According to charging documents, Jackson gave a "detailed taped confession to the killing" after being picked by members of the Advanced Technical Team, which often does work with cell phones. Contrary to initial reports that there was no visible signs of trauma on Riggin's body, charging documents say she had visible bruising on her left abdomen, both upper arms, neck and face.]

Betsy Sue Riggin told her mom that she met Andrew Jackson at a restaurant salad bar. But it appears that the 29-year-old from a tiny town in Illinois actually met her boyfriend at her job -- she worked as a food manager at the city jail, where he was incarcerated.

Last week, police say Jackson strangled Riggin in her Northeast Baltimore home, and now the woman's family is learning about the long criminal history of the man their daughter had called a "wonderful man" and was the father of her soon-to-be born child.

The Baltimore Sun's Justin Fenton describes this relationship and murder in today's newspaper. On one hand, it's another sad tale of a convict with a long record yet still on the street. But it's also a tragic story of a woman who apparenlty fell in love with the wrong person.

Justin talked with the victim's mother, Cathy Staver:

Riggin was remembered for her smile, blue eyes and outgoing personality. Before working at the jail, she was involved with a mentoring project in the Salisbury school system, her mother said. According to court records, Riggin never had any run-ins with the law.

"She very seldom met anyone she didn't like," Staver said.

Upon learning that her daughter was pregnant, Staver sent baby clothes and purchased books such as "What to Expect When You're Expecting." Those books sit on a computer stand in her home, where they will likely stay as the family works out funeral services in Maryland and Illinois.

"If nothing else comes out of this, people need to be aware [of who they trust]," Staver said. "I talked to my daughter [earlier in the week], and now I have nothing."

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:34 AM | | Comments (6)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

State police charge motorcyclist for recording stop

(Here's an extended version of the driver's video.)

Today's Crime Beat column on the motorcyclist who recorded his traffic stop with a helmet-mounted camera raises two questions. One is whether the plainclothes Maryland State Police trooper over-reacted by taking his gun out, and second, whether authorities are being vindictive by charging the man with violating the state's wiretap law.

It's illegal in Maryland to record a conversation without getting that person's permission. The trooper says he didn't know he was being recorded with sound and authorities filed charges after seeing the video on YouTube. It's something I bet a lot of us have done when we aim our camcorders or cell phones at something on a public street. In this state, pick up sound, and you could be violating the law.

Rarely does the wiretap law get used this way. But with this allegedly dangerous driver, authorites went all out. Here's some differing opinions on the issue. Watch the video and decide what you think (keep in mind, police said the video doesn't show the whole story, such as the marked police car and uniformed trooper who also particated in the stop):

Harford County State's Attorney Joseph I. Cassilly: "It seems to me that that the taping was done deliberately to provoke some sort of response from police so he could turn around and use it against the police. I mean, who rides a motorcycle with a helmet cam on and flies up 95 like that unless you're trying to orchestrate contact with the police and instigate some issue."

Baltimore criminal defense attorney Steven D. Silverman told me he's "never, never, never" seen the wiretap law used this way. "I guess it's more of the 'contempt of cop' than the violation of the wiretapping law."

Baltimore police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said his officers have little time to worry about legions of videographers. "We're focused on going after bad guys with guns," he told me. "We're not focused on going after citizens with video cameras."

Here are some more controversial police related videos.
Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:06 AM | | Comments (10)
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system, Top brass
        

May 8, 2010

911 calls from city officer injured in Harford attack

Today we posted audio - an edited and an unedited version - of a 911 call made by an off-duty Baltimore officer who is fighting to hold on to his sight in his left eye after taking a beer mug to the face as he returned home.  We sought the audio for one main reason: the family of the accused, who is being held without bond, has said the altercation was two-way, between two "loudmouths," and we wanted to see if the call would shed any new light on what it was like at the scene.

What you'll hear is the officer, Detective Jermaine Cook, calmly, but urgently, calling for backup as a man (or men) in the background threaten him and hurl obscenities and racial epithets. They maintain that the officer was struck only with a fist - clearly untrue - and they reference a knife that the suspect later says was used to stab him - though he suffered no stab wound and no knife was recovered. We can't know what truly happened in the leadup to Cook being struck in the eye, but the audio from afterward appears telling.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 9:52 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: East Baltimore, Harford County
        

Charges dropped in killing of Cherry Hill youth leader

Baltimore prosecutors on Friday dropped all charges against a 34-year-old man accused of killing a dog's owner because he was afraid of the pit bull.Angelo Dangerfield - Courtesy Dangerfield family

Ronald Edward Hall of the 1100 block of Cherry Hill Road was charged with murder, assault and weapons violations in conjunction with the November murder of 21-year-old Angelo Dangerfield, who was walking his dog "Princess" outside his home on Spelman Road when he was gunned down.

Police were not able to corroborate a witness's account, according to the Baltimore State's Attorney's Office, leading prosecutors to drop the charges against Hall during a preliminary hearing in District Court.

"The police continue to investigate this matter," said Margaret T. Burns, a spokeswoman for the city state's attorney's office.

 

Posted by Justin Fenton at 9:15 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Courts and the justice system, South Baltimore
        

May 7, 2010

Safe Streets reactivated; alleged gang leader pleads not guilty

A task force appointed to review the operations of a government-funded anti-violence program could not substantiate allegations that the group was taking cues from a powerful gang, but found flaws in the oversight of the Safe Streets program and recommends that control be shifted away from the city. Responding to the report, Mayor Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake lifted a funding freeze on the programs. Safe Streets - Photo by Ken Lam

The panel’s report was released the same day an alleged leader of the Black Guerrilla Family, accused of using violence outreach work as a cover for drug-dealing and gang activities, made his first appearance in federal court.

Todd Duncan, 36, pleaded not guilty to heroin conspiracy charges at a brief hearing in US. District Court. Duncan was hired through the Safe Streets process in 2007 when the non-profit Communities Organized to Improve Life was chosen to operate a West Baltimore site. Though the group’s funding was terminated a year later due to non-compliance, COIL continued to perform outreach work independently, officials said.

Posted by Justin Fenton at 8:03 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: City Hall, East Baltimore, Gangs, South Baltimore, West Baltimore
        

Michael Vick says he fought dogs in Baltimore

Michael Vick came to Baltimore to rehabilitate himself after his conviction on dog fighting charges in Virginia that sent him to prison for 18 months. For the first time, he admitted to attending a dog fight in an abandon house somewhere in the city.

The Philadelphia Eagles quarterback -- who was an Atlanta Falcons at the time the charges were brought -- spoke to kids at the Baltimore juvenile detention center. He told them he didn't know why he fought dogs.

Vick was speaking at an event organize by the Humane Society of the United States, and he met with about 35 people. Before this, the only Baltimore connection Vick and this sordid story was that some of the dogs seized from his Bad Newz Kennels -- where dogs were electrocuted and hanged -- had come to Baltimore through a rescue mission (video of Vick's talk).

The last time Vick was in Baltimore was to pick up an award, and was met with protesters.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 8:22 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Confronting crime, Neighborhoods
        

May 6, 2010

Officer may lose eye after Harford attack, police say

Note: This entry has been updated with the new version of the story. 

A Baltimore police officer could lose sight in an eye after being hit with a beer mug during an off-duty altercation near his Joppa home, an incident the Harford County sheriff's office is calling a hate crime.

Detective Jermaine Cook was struck in the face after, police say, a man approached Cook's car at a stop sign early Thursday, and yelled at him about his driving. Sheriff's deputies who arrived at the scene said the officer, who is black, had a large cut near his left eye and was bleeding profusely, said Monica Worrell, a spokeswoman for the Harford County Sheriff's Office.

James Aaron Kimble, 20, was arrested at the scene and faces assault and hate crime charges. He was being held on $1 million bail at the Harford County Detention Center, pending a bail review hearing today.

Kimble's family disputed the sheriff's office's version of events. Michael Sullivan, who said he is Kimble's stepfather, said Cook drove through a stop sign and nearly hit Kimble, sparking an argument. He said Cook pulled out a knife and a shoving match ensued, leading Kimble to swing a beer bottle — not a mug — at the officer.

"Just because this gentleman is a police officer doesn't change the fact that this was a two-way altercation." Sullivan said.
Posted by Justin Fenton at 4:09 PM | | Comments (9)
Categories: Harford County
        

Operations Mother's Day

No, the Baltimore City Sheriff's Office is not going after mothers on Mother's Day, but deputies are going after child support offenders.

Consider it their Mother's Day gift to the city.

Deputies will be out again before dawn Friday morning rounding up even more suspects. So far, they've arrested 48 offenders.

Sheriff John W. Anderson asked deputies to try and serve 250  outstanding child support warrants.  “As the Sheriff, I recognize this is a priority issue effecting families in Baltimore City," he said in a statement. "The Sheriff’s Office role in enforcing these warrants is unfortunately often the only method to insure that an absent parent will provide financial support for their children.”

Here is a full statement from Anderson: 

WEEK LONG “OPERATION MOTHERS DAY” RAID TARGETS CHILD SUPPORT OFFENDERS
Baltimore City, Maryland, Thursday, May 06, 2010- Baltimore City Deputy Sheriff’s hit the streets at 4:30AM for their fourth day of warrant operations that are targeting child support offenders. By 11:30AM Deputies had arrested 11 individuals bringing the weeks total arrests to 48 offenders taken into custody and 54 warrants cleared by arrest.

Sheriff John W. Anderson tasked his Deputies with the goal of attempting 250 outstanding child support warrants during this operation. “As the Sheriff, I recognize this is a priority issue effecting families in Baltimore City”. The Sheriff’s Office role in enforcing these warrants is unfortunately often the only method to insure that an absent parent will provide financial support for their children” said Sheriff Anderson. In total over $193,731.00 in cash bails were listed on the warrants Deputies have served.

During the investigative phase leading up to this operation the Sheriff’s Office was able to close 43 additional child support warrants. Captured on the raid were ten individuals wanted for child support violations that were also wanted on criminal warrants ranging from felony assault in the first degree, to narcotics violations.

“It is always better for everyone when people with warrants turn themselves in” said Sheriff Anderson. “However, if they do not, we are a participating Agency in The Maryland Drivers License Suspension Program and we maintain a full-time investigator who forwards all credible tips to the Warrant Squad Deputies. The Sheriff’s Office of Baltimore City will continue this operation through Friday and conduct follow-up investigations in the following weeks.

Persons with outstanding warrants or individuals wanting to provide information on individuals with outstanding warrants are encouraged to contact the Baltimore City Sheriff’s Office. Information may be provided anonymously. Contact the Baltimore City Sheriff’s Office at (410) 396-1155

Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:06 PM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime
        

When tragedy came to Hopkins

A bright, young University of Virginia lacrosse player from Cockeysville is killed in her dorm, and Charlottesville police have charged her boyfriend, a lacrosse player from Chevy Chase in her death. Now, everyone is speculating whether anyone missed signs that their apparently tumultuous relationship would reach this level.

Friends are asking friends and family is asking family and everyone is asking the cops and the university, whose officials said on Wednesday they had no reports of violence involving the suspect George Huguely against the victim, 22-year-old Yeardley Love. At left, in an AP photo, is a Wednesday night memorial service on the university campus.

Let's go back to 1996, when Robert Harwood Jr. was charged with standing over his best friend and Johns Hopkins University Republican clubmate Rex Chao and shooting him with a .357 Magnum handgun in the back of the head and then again in the chest as he lay on the library lawn on the Homewood campus.

Harwood, 22, wanted to remain friends with Chao, 22, and got angry when his pleas were rebuffed. Chao and his girlfrend told a Hopkins dean about threats, about stalking and about Harwood's gun. The university ordered that Harwood notify security when he visited campus.

Similiar questions are being raised now in Virginia and for the moment university officials are attributing it to distraught students searching for warning signs they might have missed. The big question in the coming days leading up to Saturday's funeral in Baltimore will be whether any officials, be it police or campus security, knew Love feared for her safety and what they did about it.

At the old case in Hopkins, Harwood -- who pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and handgun violations is serving a 35-year prison sentence -- relayed his frustratings in a series of lengthy emails. Reporter Scott Shane, now at the New York Times, detailed the relationship in a long story. Here is part of it:

The slaying of Rex Chao was an extraordinary double tragedy for Johns Hopkins -- the loss of a gifted student and the discovery that the man charged in the killing was one of their own.

The bullets were the terrible culmination of an obsessive relationship between two very serious young men. It was colored with a curious formality and an old-fashioned moralism, growing from a shared devotion to Republican politics into a deep mutual affection. The almost-Victorian language of their exchanges contrasted with its new-age electronic medium.

"In the seven months we have known each other, you have been the older brother I never had," Mr. Chao wrote in December, weeks before he would declare the friendship over. "I am forever grateful and indebted to you, and my pride in knowing you and my support and love for you transcend the written word. As the cultivator of my moral awakening, you are the pivotal figure in my life."

The exchanges also document the crumbling of the relationship. On Jan. 31, Mr. Chao speaks of his "fear" of his friend. "I do fear what can be a certain unpredictability on your part. In the past you have become angry or upset at me, sometimes over things I consider trivial, and often at unpredictable times," he wrote.

To a distinguished university whose students usually draw attention for academic diligence and lacrosse prowess, the killing brought an avalanche of unwelcome publicity. Across the campus, students and professors probed the mysteries of this staggering act of violence.

What might have driven Mr. Harwood, a fastidious and deeply religious man, to brutally execute his former protege? And did Hopkins officials take sufficient precautions by requiring Mr. Harwood, who had completed his degree requirements in December and moved home to Rhode Island, simply to give notice when he visited the campus?

For the parents of Ms. Hubbard, Hopkins' actions fell short. "I do not feel they took adequate steps," Linda Hubbard, Suzanne's mother, said Friday. At a minimum, Mrs. Hubbard said, university officials should have notified Baltimore police about the danger to Mr. Chao and her daughter.

Both Mr. Chao and Ms. Hubbard had told friends and their parents they were being "stalked" by Mr. Harwood, Mrs. Hubbard said. Ms. Hubbard, 20, had told her suite mates to keep the doors locked. Rosetta Chao, Mr. Chao's mother, had called the university a month before the killing to express her own concerns, again mentioning Mr. Harwood's gun. (The Chaos declined to be interviewed for this article.)

Hopkins officials insist that they were not told of any threat of physical danger and had no evidence that one existed.

"I honestly don't think there was anything we would do any differently," Dr. Boswell said Friday. Mr. Harwood had never explicitly threatened to harm anyone, she said. The mere fact that he possessed a gun, she said, did not mean he posed a danger.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:52 AM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Confronting crime, Crime elsewhere, North Baltimore
        

May 5, 2010

Three city officers charged with kidnapping, misconduct

Three city officers were indicted Tuesday on charges that they kidnapped two West Baltimore teens last year, leaving one in a Howard County state park without shoes, socks or his cell phone, which was snapped in half and thrown out of the window on the drive there. The article is here.  This incident first surfaced last May, and the NAACP handed out a sworn statement from the teen and called for swift action. Now, a year to the day later, prosecutors handed the case to a city grand jury and secured an indictment.

Such serious charges are no slap on the wrist. The teen's attorney Dwight Pettit, who brings a number of lawsuits against the police department each year on allegations of misconduct, says State's Attorney Patricia A. Jessamy should pursue charges more often. Meanwhile, the police union is saying they're confident the officers were doing their jobs and will be vindicated. Bob Cherry, FOP president, called the charges "trumped up." 

I've heard whispers from some veteran officers that indeed, suspected offenders into other areas of the city or out of the city has been used as an unofficial intimidation tactic. Cherry wouldn't go there when I asked about it. But after my story was posted Tuesday afternoon, a writer from "The Wire" emailed me to point out that the practice was well known enough that they had incorporated it in an episode of the show. Indeed, with the help of a follower on Twitter, we traced it to season three, episode six. Here's a summary of that part of the episode:

Trade in Hamsterdam is thriving, but Major Howard "Bunny" Colvin insists that his men crack down hard on any remaining drug crews operating outside the tolerance zones. He gives Sergeant Ellis Carver free rein to use any force necessary to make the drug dealers relocate. The drug enforcement unit tows cars, delivers brutal beatings and pepper sprayings, throws away shoes and drives dealers out into the countryside to make their point. Major Colvin finds his district safer with honest people back out on the corners again, but the reality of the tolerant zones is shocking.
Posted by Justin Fenton at 10:09 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: West Baltimore
        

Tased at the ballpark

Fans jump onto baseball fields all the time and television stations usually turn their cameras away from scene, arguing they don't want to encourage such activity by granting publicity. But one video has made it to YouTube -- of 17-year-old Steve Consolvi being tased as he ran around the filed at a Philadelphia Phillies game.

Authorities are examining the video to determine whether authorities used excessive force to stop the prank. And the boy's parents, in an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer, apologized for the incident. There's a nice succession of pictures on Philly.com.

Philadelphia police have at least for the moment backed the officer, though a spokesman for the department told The Inquirer that the take-down is under review and police are now pondering whether they should go onto the field at all, and instead let private security handle future incidents.

Inquirer columnist Daniel Rubin takes issue with such a quick pronouncement. The Phillies Shane Victorino told The Inquirer's Bob Brookover: "I've seen guys go out there and juke for 10 minutes and run around and juke five, six security guards. We're out there to play baseball. I just want somebody to learn from this. Maybe next time someone will think twice because they don't want to get Tased."

Baltimore police do go onto the field at Camden Yards but I don't recall them ever tasing a fan. Once, back in July 1996, Matthew J. Noleman, then 21, ran onto the field and managed to dodge police and security for quite a while. Instead of chasing down a runner, police slowly box him in until he has no where to go.

But with Noleman, a frustrated police officer, Guy Thacker, tried to run him down singlehandedly. It was scene right out of Keystone Kops, with Thacker trying to run the guy down while his baffled colleagues stood around and watched, wondering why this officer wasn't following his training. Police eventually got their man, but they also provided the fans plenty to chear about toward the end of a 6-0 defeat to Toronto.

Back then, Thacker's boss, Lt. Donald E. Healy, explained that officers usually let the fans run "to avoid getting into a situation where you try to intercept them and you become part of the spectacle."

At least in Baltimore, the specctacle ended without anyone hurt. 

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:12 AM | | Comments (8)
Categories: Crime elsewhere
        

May 4, 2010

The boat, the unnamed woman and the windfall

It's safe to say that reader David Sigman wants me to stop writing about Jon Cardin and his use of a police boat and helicopter to propose to his girlfriend. It happened last summer and it's time to put this story to bed. He wrote:

A public official uses poor judgement and makes a mistake that does not cause harm or injury to anyone.  It is a mistake of the heart and he is flogged for days in the media regarding this. He is upfront and direct regarding his "mea culpa." He pays what is asked of him to make public restitution, apologizes again, and the ordeal has ended. Why the need to bring this incident up again other than a very slow news day. Does it sell more newspapers. Is this a story worthy of a Pulitzer Prize or will it make you the next Woodward or Bernstein? You bio states that you are a crime reporter. Where is the crime.

It's safe to say that Mr. Sigman is not going to like Wednesday's Crime Scenes column in which I revisit some old stories that have nagging, unanswered questions. And yes, one of them involves Jon Cardin's boat. Who owns it? It's important because the Democratic delegate from Baltimore County has refused answer and I'll bet some want to know who his friends are that had so much pull with city cops they pull off this ruse.

Mr. Sigman asks where's the crime? How about on-duty city cops being used to help a politician on a personal adventure instead of protecting the citizens of Baltimore at a time (last summer) when Inner Harbor crime was all the rage? And I'm betting the police sergeant who was charged with misconduct and could still lose his job over this doesn't think the story is over.

Wednesday's column will also look at some other issues, such as who was the woman in former City Councilman Kenneth N. Harris' car the night he was shot and who got the secret $200,000 settlement from the city in a claim against Baltimore police?

Leaving unanswered questions leaves even old stories to linger.

 

Posted by Peter Hermann at 2:17 PM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Confronting crime
        

Woman shot in head in Belair Road robbery

UPDATE: The Sun's media partner, WJZ, is reporting the victim owned a salon and was opening up for the day when she was robbed. The station identifies her as Paulette Dawson and says she was only grazed by the bullet.

A woman in her early 30s was shot in the head this morning during an armed robbery at a busy shopping center on Belair Road in Northeast Baltimore, a few blocks from the county line and Overlea.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the woman was rushed to Maryland Shock Trauma Center but was alert. He said the attack occurred about 11:30 a.m. near a fast-food restaurant and a CVS pharmacy in the sprawling shopping plaza in the 6600 block of Belair Road. It is just south of the Overlea Diner.

Police said at least one gunman approached the woman and shot her after getting a small amount of money. Other details were not immediately available. He said detectives were scouring footage from video cameras to determine if any leads can be developed.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 12:49 PM | | Comments (27)
Categories: Breaking news, Northeast Baltimore
        

MICA student attacked

The Maryland Institute College of Art in Bolton Hill put out this campus alert Monday evening:

At approximately 11:15 p.m. on Saturday 5/1/2010 a MICA student was walking on the 200 block of West Lanvale Street when she passed two unknown males that asked her for the time. They began following her and after quickly closing the distance they held her against a wall, struck her, showed a handgun and tried to pull her bag away. Her calls for help were answered by neighbors that came out to investigate thereby causing the suspects to flee. Baltimore City Police and Campus Safety responded quickly and searched the area. Suspects have not been apprehended in this incident.

Suspects were described as:
Male, Black (light completion), late twenties in age, 6’ tall, slender build, wearing a dark brown hoody with blue stripes, light blue jeans and white sneakers.

Male, Black, late twenties in age, 5’6”, wearing a dark colored hoody with yellow circular text on the front and blue jeans.

Baltimore City Police are investigating the incident and will deploy more patrols to the area. Campus Safety will be increasing deployment to this area during evening hours. Campus Safety Patrol officers and Police-Eagle patrols will be on foot, bike, motorized and Segway patrol.

• Don’t allow strangers to approach or follow you on the street. If asked to stop or talk – keep moving away while you listen and watch to size up the situation. If you sense that someone may be following or moving toward you, abruptly change direction several times while moving quickly toward a safe public area or place where you know assistance will be available. You will see how the person responds, and by moving toward a place where assistance is available, you will be that much closer to help if you decide escape is necessary.

• Be extra cautious whenever outside – night and day. Always be alert to your immediate surroundings and keep track of who is in front and behind you.  Be especially vigilant in the evening and on weekends when there is less pedestrian traffic in Bolton Hill and on campus.

• Avoid isolated areas and walking alone; use the evening shuttle 5:00 pm - 7:00 am (last call at 6:40 am).

• Report suspicious persons parked, hanging around or walking through your neighborhood to Baltimore City Police and Campus Safety before you come into close contact with them.  Let us check it out before something happens.
 
If you are a victim of or witness to a crime, contact Baltimore City (911) immediately and then report it to Campus Safety (443-423-3333).

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:54 AM | | Comments (15)
Categories: Breaking news, Confronting crime, Neighborhoods
        

Old Baltimore police face back in the news

The last time I put Tim Longo's name in a story was back in 2000, and it was about the retired colonel having to return to the police department to testify at an administrative hearing against a cop seven years earlier had taken a bribe from a drug dealer. He had led the investigation.

I knew Longo had gone on to lead the Charlottesville Police Department in Virginia (he's at left in a photo by The Daily Progress), but I haven't kept in touch. Today, Timothy J. Longo Sr.'s name is all over the news -- from the pages of his old Baltimore Sun to The New York Times -- talking about Yeardley Love, the 22-year-old senior from Cockeysville who was found slain at the University of Virginia.

The varsity lacrosse player was allegedly killed by another lacrosse player, 22-year-old George Huguely, of Chevy Chase. The slaying has stunned the college campus and our region and there's Longo front and center, straddling both worlds with ease.

Here is a little of what I wrote in February 2000 when Longo left the Baltimore Police Department:

Another Baltimore police colonel has announced his retirement, continuing a stream of high-level departures since January, when a new commissioner took over and began to reorganize the force and reinvigorate efforts to stem violent crime. Col. Timothy J. Longo Sr., 37, said yesterday that he will leave the department March 10. The 18-year veteran is stepping down two years shy of being eligible for a full pension."This is a positive move for me personally," said Longo, who met with Commissioner Ronald L. Daniel a week ago. "He was very complimentary of what I could contribute to this agency. As a result of the conversation, I felt it was in my best interest and his for me to seek an early retirement." Longo was well-regarded as a young commander who began his career as an 18-year-old cadet, earned a law degree while on the force and rose quickly through the ranks.

Here's a bit more:

The departing Longo joined the police force in 1981. He has commanded the Southeastern District, worked in internal investigations, headed the communications division and was Frazier's chief of staff. He was promoted to colonel in March.

As head of the technical services division, he oversaw the $32 million construction of the police headquarters annex and implemented the nation's first 311 nonemergency phone system, which has been copied in several major cities.

Longo was most recently called upon to explain a new warrant initiative after officials discovered that thousands of people wanted by police had never actively been sought. He plans to seek a police chief position elsewhere.

"I have a passion for what I do," he said.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:30 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Top brass
        

May 3, 2010

Comstat intelligence meetings to resume

The Baltimore Police Department's intelligence gathering and sharing meetings known as Comstat will resume this week, the department says. This is where commanders gather for hours to discuss crime trends and tactics, with plenty of fist-pounding accountability. Baltimore's been using the New York-based process, now a law enforcement staple across the country, since 2000. But Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III suspended them one month ago, amid concerns that they had become "stale" and "laborious," according to his chief spokesman. It's now coming back with few changes, namely a cut-off limit on presentations, a new seating configuration, and a ban on cell phones. After a month of hand-wringing, they're basically telling people to keep it snappy and turn off their darn phones.

Here's part of the memo distributed to officers:

"In addition to these new policies, the Commissioner expects all commanders to be prepared to apply the four tenets of Comstat (gather accurate and timely intelligence and distribute it to everyone, rapidly deploy resources, use effective tactics, and conduct relentless follow-up and assessment) to address the following issues in the 28-day period:

-Violent crime and other trends

-Resource needs

-Handgun violations

-Juvenile enforcement

-Community engagement

-Investigative progress on Part 1 crimes

The Commissioner affirms his uncompromising commitment to accuracy in reporting and intelligence sharing. Commanders are expected to accept responsibility for the information they report; it is better to admit ignorance than to make inaccurate or misleading statements. Integrity violations will not be tolerated.""

Posted by Justin Fenton at 7:24 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Top brass
        

A third of the way into 2010, killings, overall crime down

With April in the books and the year a third of the way complete, police are again touting crime declines, led by a 25 percent drop in homicides. As of this morning, 57 people have been slain in Baltimore - still a large number compared with other cities, but down considerably from the 75 killed at this point in 2009 and 94 who were killed at this point in 2007. The city had seen 154 non-fatal shootings on average over the past three years, but has recorded "only" 95 so far this year. That's a drop of 40 percent, despite the first weekend of May bringing at least three non-fatal shootings and a homicide.

I know many people continue to point to the snow as a driving force for this decline, but April wrapped with 16 homicides. Since 1970, the city has recorded 16 homicides or less only 10 times, according to my records. The Southeast District, which includes Canton, Fells Point, part of the Monument Street corridor, and Greektown, has yet to record a single homicide after notching 27 last year.

Total crime is down 6 percent as of April 24, but has been on the increase over the past month, according to most current police statistics available. In the past four weeks, the city notched 751 violent crimes, compared to 621 the previous month, and 2,029 property crimes, compared with 1,822 in the previous month. Those numbers, however, still compare favorably with the corresponding period last year, just not as favorably. To put it succinctly: crime increased in the past month but has still been down compared with the same period last year.

Homicides, at the moment, are the lowest since 1977, when the city had nearly 200,000 more people but recorded its lowest homicide total in the past 40 years. Looking at recent monthly averages, those numbers would seem virtually impossible to duplicate over the course of the year, but here's how they track so far:

1977

Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

10  15   14     10    16   12    16  16    9      16  17  20

2010

Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

12  12   16     16    ?     ?      ?    ?     ?       ?    ?     ?

Posted by Justin Fenton at 11:01 AM | | Comments (13)
Categories: Top brass
        

Police identify juvenile who escaped

Maryland State Police searching for a juvenile who escaped from the Charles H. Hickey School in Pikesville have released the young suspect's name and photo. As we've reported, two juveniles escaped and one has been caught.

Here is the statement from state police:

Maryland State Police and allied law enforcement continue to search for one of two juveniles who escaped from a Baltimore County detention center last night. The escapee, who remains at large, is identified as Frederick Catchings, 17, who was being held at the Charles H. Hickey School in Parkville, Maryland.

He is an African American male, 5’9” and weighs approximately 140 pounds. Catchings has black hair, brown eyes and has a noticeable tattoo on the right side of his neck. He was last seen wearing yellow athletic shorts, no shirt and white tennis shoes.

The other juvenile escapee was apprehended at approximately 2:00 a.m. this morning. State police apprehended him at a nearby convenient store. He was transported back to the detention center where he remains in custody.

Maryland State Police were contacted last night by Hickey school staff members who reported two juveniles had escaped from custody at approximately 10:00 p.m. Baltimore County Police were also notified and an immediate search of the area was conducted. The Maryland State Police K-9 Unit and Aviation Command also assisted.

The search for Frederick Catchings is ongoing. Anyone who may have seen Catchings is urged to contact the Maryland State Police at Golden Ring Barrack at 410-780-2700.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 10:50 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: Breaking news
        

Woman indicted in fire that injured firefighter

In case you missed it over the weekend, prosecutors said a 19-year-old woman was indicted on charges that she set a fire her apartment last month, severely injuring a firefighter who rescued two people, because she was angry during a domestic fight.

The Baltimore Sun's Jessica Anderson reported that Brittany Katina Garcia was indicted on charges of first-degree arson, seven counts of reckless endangerment and malicious burning. The April 7 fire on Liberty Heights Avenue left Jeffrey Novack of Truck Company 12 recovering from a fractured hip and burns to his arms and hands:

Fire union officials said that Novak went into the apartment building without back up because another engine company was delayed due to rotating closures of fire companies that are being done to save money. It was the latest salvo in this long-running battle between firefighters and the mayor's office. Last year, a man died in a fire that union officials said was due in part because of delays from the closures.

Novack is expected to make a full recovery. Here is the statement from the Baltimore State's Attorney's Office:

Baltimore, MD – April 30, 2010 – State’s Attorney Patricia C. Jessamy announced today that the Baltimore City Grand Jury indicted Brittany Katina Garcia, 19, of the 4800 of Hawksbury Road for first-degree arson, seven counts of reckless endangerment and malicious burning.  The indictment was filed April 29, 2010.

Court documents allege that on April 7, 2010 Brittany Katina Garcia was responsible for burning a three-story apartment building in the 3900 block Liberty Heights Avenue.  When fire units arrived at the scene of the fire the second floor apartment was engulfed in flames and a second alarm was requested for additional manpower.

The investigation revealed the fire was incendiary in nature and deliberately set.  Damages were estimated at $90.000.00 for structural and $20,000.00 for content.  Witness(es) identified Garcia as the person allegedly responsible for the fire.
 
An indictment is not a finding of guilt.  An individual charged by indictment is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty at some later criminal proceeding. Garcia is being held at the Baltimore City Detention Center without bail. An arraignment is scheduled for May 27, 2010 before Judge Lynn K. Stewart, 430 Courthouse East.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:46 AM | | Comments (4)
Categories: City Hall, Confronting crime
        

Juveniles escape; another city shooting

Some breaking news this morning: authorities are searching for one of two juvnenile who escaped from the Charles H. Hickey Jr. School Sunday night.

Police said the juveniles were reported missing from the Baltimore County detention facility about 8:45 p.m., but had escaped at around 8:25 p.m. One was captured this morning; police the one still being sought is not considered dangerous.

Meanwhile, police in Baltimore are investigating another shooting, this one on West Fayette Street. Authorities say the unidentified man was found about 12:35 a.m. lying face down in the 1500 block with a gunshot wound to the upper body. He was pronounced dead at Maryland Shock Trauma Center.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 7:36 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: Baltimore County, Breaking news, West Baltimore
        
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About Peter Hermann
Peter Hermann started covering news for The Baltimore Sun in 1990, first in Anne Arundel County and, starting in 1994, reporting on the Baltimore Police Department. In 2001, he was assigned to Jerusalem as the Baltimore Sun's Middle East correspondent. He returned in 2005 as an assistant city editor overseeing crime coverage. In 2008, Peter returned to the beat as a daily reporter and blogger. A recent BBC report featured him in a segment on the harsh realities of covering crime in Baltimore.

Coverage will focus on crime trends, problems in neighborhoods in the city and elsewhere, profiles of victims and police officers and try to offer readers a fresh perspective on one of the most vexing issues facing Baltimore and its future.



Contributing to this blog is Justin Fenton, who joined The Sun in 2005 and has covered the Baltimore City Police Department and the criminal justice system since 2008. His work includes an investigation into Cal Ripken Jr.’s minor league baseball stadium deal with his hometown of Aberdeen, a three-part series chronicling a ruthless con woman, coverage of the killing of five Amish children at a schoolhouse in Nickel Mines, Pa., and a job swap with a British crime reporter to explore differences in crime-fighting. A special report looking into how city police handle rape cases led to sweeping reforms that changed the way sexual assaults are investigated in Baltimore. He was recognized as the best reporter in Baltimore by the City Paper in 2010 and by Baltimore Magazine in 2011.
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