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Tag: Anthony Brown

  • ‘Free trials should actually be free’: DC, Va., Md. sue Uber alleging manipulative subscription service – WTOP News

    The attorneys general in D.C., Maryland and Virginia are suing Uber, accusing the rideshare app of having a “deceptive” subscription service, Uber One.

    All three attorneys general in the D.C. region are suing Uber, accusing the rideshare app of taking advantage of consumers through its “deceptive” subscription service, Uber One.

    Nineteen states, including Virginia, Maryland and D.C., filed a joint lawsuit with the Federal Trade Commission against Uber on Monday. The complaint says Uber didn’t follow through on advertised savings, charged consumers during their free trial periods, and signed up users for Uber One without their consent.

    The lawsuit comes after the FTC sued Uber in April 2025 for its subscription service. This new amended complaint requests penalties for the app’s alleged violation of the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act, which ensures that consumers fully understand the terms of a subscription service before signing up.

    The new coalition allows the 21 states and D.C. to seek restitution for these alleged violations.

    The lawsuit says Uber not only charged people for subscriptions that they never signed up for, but didn’t deliver on promised savings supposedly included in the subscription. The FTC said in a news release that users have reported they didn’t receive $0 delivery fees and $25 in monthly savings, two key discounts Uber One advertises.

    Another major complaint is that Uber One allegedly signed up and charged consumers for the subscription service without their knowledge.

    D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb said these subscription violations are unacceptable, especially given the high cost of living.

    “No one should ever be stuck paying for a subscription they do not want,” Schwab said in a news release. “We are joining this lawsuit to stop Uber’s deceptive and illegal conduct and to ensure that the more than 100,000 DC residents who are paying for Uber One subscriptions have an easy way to cancel if they no longer wish to use the service.”

    Uber One offers a free trial, which the court filing claimed was breached. Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown said many users were charged for Uber One before their trial ended.

    “Free trials should actually be free — not traps that lock Marylanders into unwanted monthly charges,” Brown said in a news release.

    The lawsuit also says Uber made it extremely difficult to cancel Uber One subscriptions, stating that consumers had to go through 12 actions and seven different screens. Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares said these steps trapped consumers.

    “Deceptive enrollment and billing practices have no place in the marketplace,” Miyares said in a news release.

    In addition to D.C, Virginia and Maryland, the other states on the lawsuit are Alabama, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Abigail Stuckrath

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  • A popular L.A. sheriff touted reforms in a troubled system. Then a young FBI agent showed up

    When Leah Marx began visiting Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles in 2010, it did not immediately raise alarm among the people who ran it. Most of the time, jailers just looked at her federal ID and let her in without asking why she was there. If they did, she said she was investigating a human trafficking case. It was a good-sounding story. Believable. Perfect to deter further questions.

    Marx was in her late 20s, just beyond her rookie year at the FBI. She had been sitting at her desk when her supervisor handed her a letter from an inmate alleging jailers were brutalizing people in their custody. It was different from other letters. It had details.

    Now she and her FBI colleagues were at the jail conducting secret interviews, trying to separate fact from rumor. The L.A. County Sheriff’s Department ran the jails. With a daily population of 14,000 inmates or more, it was the nation’s largest jail system, and had been known for years as a cauldron of violence and dysfunction.

    An inmate at Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles.

    (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

    The agency was in the hands of a would-be reformer, Sheriff Lee Baca. He’d promised transparency. He’d won praise for his ambitious inmate education program. But stories persisted of violent and corrupt jailers, of deputy gangs, of an institutional culture so entrenched it resisted all efforts to root it out.

    Marx seemed an improbable federal agent (at first, even to herself). She had been getting a master’s degree in social work when someone suggested she try the FBI. She did not know they hired people like her.

    She was new to L.A., and living alone with her dog. As she gathered inmate stories, she made it a point to emphasize that their charges were irrelevant to her.

    “I think they started to believe that I was there to actually hear what was going on,” she told The Times.

    Inmates were telling her versions of the same story. A jailer would assault an inmate while yelling “Stop resisting,” then charge the inmate with assault on a police officer.

    Then-Sheriff Lee Baca meets with inmates at Men's Central Jail in Los Angeles in October 2011.

    Then-Sheriff Lee Baca meets with inmates at Men’s Central Jail in Los Angeles in October 2011 to listen to their complains and issues about the jail.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    As she weighed the credibility of inmates against jailers, Marx was informed by a painful episode in her family history. Growing up in Wisconsin, she knew only the outlines of a tragedy too painful for the family to discuss — her grandmother and uncle had long ago died in a house fire in California.

    In high school, she learned that the fire had been intentionally set, that the suspected arsonist worked at the local police department. He’d benefited from the air of impunity his position afforded.

    “Someone’s position doesn’t dictate whether they are more truthful or less truthful than anyone else,” Marx would recall. “You don’t get instant credibility due to your position or your role.”

    In this series, Christopher Goffard revisits old crimes in Los Angeles and beyond, from the famous to the forgotten, the consequential to the obscure, diving into archives and the memories of those who were there.

    At the jail, she found an inmate eager to help — Anthony Brown, a bank robber waiting to be transported to state prison on a 423-year prison sentence.

    He told her about a jailer who had offered to bring him a contraband cellphone for the right price, and she orchestrated a sting in summer 2011. An undercover agent handed over the money, and the jailer delivered the phone to Brown.

    The phone was supposed to help Brown document what he saw. And it gave the FBI leverage to launch an ambitious operation. The FBI would rent out a warehouse said to be full of drugs, and use the compromised jailer to recruit corrupt colleagues to moonlight as guards.

    But the plan was dead before it could even get off the ground. Nor did Brown get anything useful with his phone during the week and a half that he had it. On Aug. 8, 2011, deputies found the phone in his cell, stashed in a Doritos bag.

    Baca shakes hands with a trainee.

    Baca shakes hands with a trainee at a 2022 graduation ceremony at the Sheriff’s Training Academy and Regional Services Center in Whittier.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    Baca did not talk like other lawmen. He often sounded like a social worker, or a panelist at a self-improvement seminar. “I tend to be one that says, ‘All right, constant growth, constant creativity,’” he would say. “All humanity matters.”

    Baca had been raised by his grandparents in a Mexican American family in L.A. He dug ditches, washed cars and hauled barley sacks. He joined the Sheriff’s Department at age 23 in 1965, got a PhD from USC and worked his way up to become one of the state’s highest-ranking Latino law officers.

    When he took over the Sheriff’s Department in 1998, he promised a new age of law enforcement at the vast, scandal-plagued agency. By the summer of 2011, he was almost 70 and had run the department for 13 years. Voters had reelected him three times.

    Baca celebrates with supporters at a Pasadena hotel in November 1998 after hearing he leads the sheriff's race.

    Baca celebrates with supporters at a Pasadena hotel in November 1998 after hearing he leads the sheriff’s race.

    (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

    When it became clear that the FBI had been secretly investigating his jails for a long time, the man who preached reform and accountability faced an unprecedented test. He could cooperate fully with the federal investigation. Instead, he decided to go to war.

    His department turned Marx’s informant into a ghost, shuttling him between facilities under a series of fake names, as Marx tried doggedly to find him. Even a federal writ failed to produce him. When Marx finally found him 18 days later, at Lancaster State Prison, he met her with hostile silence — he believed the FBI had left him for dead.

    Baca, furious about the intrusion onto his turf, told the local FOX 11 morning show “Good Day L.A.” that the feds had broken the law by planting a phone on one of his inmates.

    “Who polices the police?” a host asked.

    “We police ourselves,” Baca replied.

    Even as he spoke, his department had a surveillance team on Marx. That afternoon in September 2011, as she approached her apartment, two sheriff’s sergeants were waiting for her.

    “I’m in the process of swearing out a declaration for an arrest warrant for you,” said Sgt. Scott Craig. He had his jacket off, and his gun was showing.

    Marx interpreted it as an attempt to intimidate her. She told him to call the FBI.

    “And the first thought I had is if they were willing to come to my house and do this, what else are they capable of?” she said.

    U.S. Atty. Andre Birotte Jr. announces indictments of Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department officials in 2013.

    U.S. Atty. Andre Birotte Jr. announces indictments of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials in 2013.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    Baca confronted U.S. Atty. Andre Birotte, who had approved the jail investigation. According to Birotte’s trial testimony later, Baca erupted angrily, “I’m the goddamn sheriff. These are my goddamn jails. You want to gun up in here? Is that what you want?” Birotte took the phrase to mean, “Do you want our agencies to go to war?”

    Inside the FBI, there was an ongoing debate about whether to include Baca in the jail investigation. He was a valuable law enforcement ally. His deputies worked with the feds on many task forces. But the incident outside Marx’s apartment largely ended that debate.

    “If that isn’t a clear indication that we cannot work with them, I don’t know what is,” said Carlos Narro, who was the FBI’s public corruption supervisor in L.A. at the time.

    The sheriff had catastrophically misjudged his adversary. Instead of quashing the probe, his heavy-handed tactics had only fueled it. Was it possible to expand the case beyond civil rights violations to an obstruction of justice case? How exactly was Brown made to vanish inside the jail system?

    James Sexton had some answers. The son of a Southern sheriff, he had joined the LASD hoping to make his name. He was only a few months into his job as a custody deputy at the downtown jail in 2009 when he learned the price of nonconformity. A robbery suspect sucker-punched him, he says, and his colleagues ostracized him for failing to retaliate with a beating.

    Still, Sexton’s tech prowess and other skills began to win him some attention, and ultimately earned him a job with an elite intelligence unit. In August 2011, his expertise with the jail computer system made him useful. The brass had an unusual request. They wanted him to make an informant disappear.

    “We were going to make it difficult for other law enforcement agencies to find him on the computer,” he said. “And then they all looked at me.”

    Sexton had learned the price of defiance. He helped to change Brown’s name. The aliases included John Rodriguez, Kevin King, Chris Johnson and Robin Banks.

    When sheriff’s officials decided to unload Brown on the state prison system, Sexton wrote an email notifying his bosses.

    “Gents,” Sexton wrote, “I’m going to handle booking our friend back under his true alias.”

    The email would become a crucial piece of evidence. In it, Sexton coined the term that would become inseparable from the whole scheme. The subject line: Operation Pandora’s Box.

    Sexton thought the Brown episode was behind him. But in early 2012, he said, he was scared. He had reported misconduct on an unrelated case, involving another jailer’s possible association with a skinhead gang.

    He knew he would never be trusted again. Co-workers were calling him a rat.

    He decided to become an informant for Leah Marx. He was surprised at how little she acted like a cop. “I got a social worker,” he said. “You gotta love the calculation of the FBI. She is easy to talk to. I should have been smarter.”

    The main exercise yard on the roof of Men's Central Jail.

    The main exercise yard on the roof of Men’s Central Jail.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    Sexton talked to the FBI dozens of times. He told a federal grand jury how he had manipulated the jail computers to hide Brown from his federal handlers. This admission would hurt him severely. In December 2013, he was indicted, one of 18 current or former sworn members charged with civil rights violations, corruption, inmate abuse or obstruction. Among them were the two sergeants who had confronted Marx outside her home.

    At trial, Sexton’s attorney portrayed him as an “overeager kid” trying to help the FBI, a low-ranking jailer who exaggerated his importance in the scheme. The attorney compared him to Walter Mitty, the character with the boring office job who escapes into elaborate imaginative worlds — a defense Sexton hated. He was convicted and received an 18-month term. He was thrown into solitary confinement. He counted the days by plucking teeth off a comb.

    After four months in prison, Sexton appeared before a federal judge and said, “I stand before you as a broken man.” The prosecutor agreed to let him go home.

    The sheriff was not an easy man to pin down. As he sat down to face questions from the feds, his sentences traveled winding paths through vague precincts to fog-filled destinations.

    He bragged about the thousands of inmates who were getting an education in his jails, thanks to programs he had established. “No one is a greater believer in inmate rights than I am,” he said.

    His answers were frequently long-winded, muddled and incoherent. Again and again, he denied having advance knowledge of what his department had done — from making Brown disappear, to threatening Marx with arrest.

    The FBI had not asked his permission to infiltrate his jails because it had not trusted him, but Baca seemed to find this fact intolerable, if not incomprehensible. He seemed personally hurt by it.

    “There’s no evidence of a malicious intent on my part to undermine the mission of the FBI,” Baca said. “You wanna catch all the crooked deputies I have; in fact, it’s helpful because I don’t have enough budget to do it all myself.”

    For Baca, this interview — which prosecutors would portray as a web of falsehoods — represented the culmination of a long series of misjudgments and self-inflicted wounds.

    Baca announcing in January 2014 that he would not seek a fifth term.

    Baca announcing in January 2014 that he would not seek a fifth term.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    Baca had once told the ACLU, “I will never, ever resign. I intend to be sheriff as long as I live.” He had run unopposed at the last election, his fourth. But in January 2014, he stood outside the department’s Monterey Park headquarters, fighting emotion as he announced his resignation. He had been sheriff for 15 years and had worked at the department for nearly half a century.

    In late 2016, the 74-year-old Baca went to trial. His supporters wore lapel pins in the shape of a badge. His defense: He had been in the dark about what his subordinates were doing to foil the feds. Some of Baca’s prominent friends, including two former L.A. County district attorneys, testified to his law-abiding reputation. The jury deadlocked.

    At the retrial, prosecutors called convicted high-ranking co-conspirators to the stand. A former captain said Baca had personally approved the plan to send sergeants to Marx’s house, adding: “his advice to us was just not to put handcuffs on her.”

    In March 2017, Baca became the 10th and highest-ranking participant in the obstruction scheme to be convicted. His lawyer pleaded with the judge, saying Baca had Alzheimer’s disease that amounted to its own terrible punishment, “a sentence that will leave him a mere shell of his former self.” But the judge gave Baca three years, excoriating him for abusing the public trust.

    Baca leaves federal court in August 2016 after arraignment.

    Baca, flanked by attorneys David and Nathan Hochman, leaves federal court in Los Angeles after he was arraigned on charges of obstructing justice, and lying to the federal government. Nathan Hochman is now L.A. County district attorney.

    (Los Angeles Times)

    At 77, Baca turned himself into a low-security facility outside El Paso. According to a friendly biography, he reorganized the prison library and renovated the prison pond, and cleared brush from the grounds. He inspired other inmates by his example. He made friends, he gave advice. He told people to make use of their time.

    He went home in 2021. Three years later, at age 82, he wandered away from home in San Marino. He turned up six miles away at a Denny’s, badly confused.

    If not for Baca’s decision to “gun up” against the feds, they probably would have brought a handful of civil rights cases against jailers — and Baca would have won reelection.

    “All the big prosecutions we did was because of how they reacted,” says Brandon Fox, the former prosecutor. “This was an existential threat to the Sheriff’s Department, but it was of their own making because of what they did.”

    Brown is in state prison serving his 423 years. He filed suit claiming the Sheriff’s Department had effectively kidnapped him during those 18 days, and the L.A. County Board of Supervisors approved a $1-million payout to settle the claim. Among the ironies: He got nothing of value on the cellphone that so enraged the sheriff, and prosecutors never called him to testify at trial, knowing the defense was likely to eviscerate him.

    In the end, 22 members of the Sheriff’s Department were convicted as a result of the probe initiated by special agent Leah Marx. It seems likely her youth and inexperience helped her, that veteran agents would have weighed the odds and decided it wasn’t worth pursuing.

    “We don’t know how many more civil rights cases we could have brought because the department came in and disrupted our investigation,” Marx says. “They tried to intentionally stop what we were doing. And so, sadly, we don’t know where it would’ve gone. And that’s a little frustrating.”
    The podcast “Crimes of the Times,” featuring “Pandora’s Box: The Fall of L.A.’s Sheriff,” is now available wherever you get your podcasts.

    Christopher Goffard

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  • Md. AG Brown joins lawsuit in support of policy on undocumented spouses, stepchildren – WTOP News

    Md. AG Brown joins lawsuit in support of policy on undocumented spouses, stepchildren – WTOP News

    Maryland AG Anthony Brown (D) joined 19 other attorneys general Tuesday in support of a Biden administration plan that would let undocumented spouses and stepchildren of U.S. citizens apply for permanent residency without first having to leave the country.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown (D) joined 19 other attorneys general Tuesday in support of a Biden administration plan that would let undocumented spouses and stepchildren of U.S. citizens apply for permanent residency without first having to leave the country.

    The amicus brief, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, supports the Department of Homeland Security’s “Keeping Families Together” program. The program would allow U.S. citizens’ family members to “parole in place” — remain in the U.S. while they apply for a green card. Without the policy, family members would have to leave the U.S. and apply to get back in.

    The program was announced Aug. 19 and quickly challenged by a coalition of Republican-led states. A federal judge in the case ruled Oct. 4 that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services can continue to accept applications, but cannot approve any cases before Nov. 8.

    “Our country’s immigration policy should not split families apart but aspire to keep them together,” Brown said in a statement. “Immigrants are an essential part of our State, and those with family members who are citizens should be allowed to remain in the country as they pursue their own path to permanent residency.”

    The coalition supporting the program note it includes specific requirements for applicants: undocumented spouses have to have be in the country for at least 10 consecutive years; a parent had to have entered into a legal marriage by June 17 of this year, and before a child’s 18th birthday; applicants can have no disqualifying criminal history and must “submit biometrics and pass national security and public safety vetting.”

    The brief claims more than 325,000 undocumented spouses work in “labor-short” industries such as construction, food and accommodation services and at-home health care.

    “Historically, immigrants often fill important jobs that may otherwise be difficult to fill …” according to the brief.

    Brown and the other attorneys general request the court to reject a request from 16 states, led by Texas, that filed a complaint to block the program from being implemented in those states.

    The Texas complaint says at least 433,000 people are married to U.S. citizens in 13 of the 16 states — it did not include estimated numbers of undocumented spouses in North Dakota, South Dakota or Wyoming — and would be eligible for the program.

    Officials from the Republican-led states claim not only would those undocumented take jobs from residents in their states, but would also “incur considerable financial injuries on education, healthcare, and law-enforcement costs.”

    A hearing, and if necessary, a bench trial would begin Nov. 5 in Tyler, Texas.

    Brown and the other attorneys general wrote in their brief filed Tuesday if the court agrees to any injunctive relief, it “should, at a minimum, be tailored to the specific plaintiffs in this case.”

    Besides Maryland, other attorneys general that joined the brief are from Washington, D.C., and the states of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawai’i, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin.

    Will Vitka

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  • Online protection bills for kids pass in Maryland House, Senate — but Big Tech companies continue their fight – WTOP News

    Online protection bills for kids pass in Maryland House, Senate — but Big Tech companies continue their fight – WTOP News

    Bills that would limit how much data can be harvested from kids online passed overwhelmingly in their respective chambers in Annapolis, but there are signs that opponents aren’t finished objecting to the measures.

    Bills that would limit how much data can be harvested from kids online passed overwhelmingly in their respective chambers in Annapolis, Maryland, but there are signs that opponents aren’t finished objecting to the measures.

    House and Senate bills would bar tech companies from using data to push personalized ads to children or to track them in real time. The exception would be apps that are used for navigation.

    In addition, tech firms that make products that require an account would have to default to the highest privacy setting possible.

    While the bills must pass in both chambers before final passage, Net Choice — which represents tech giants Google, TikTok and Meta — has already written a letter to Gov. Wes Moore asking that he veto the bills.

    Testifying before a House panel last month, Carl Szabo, vice president and general counsel for Net Choice, told lawmakers that the bill was unconstitutional and infringes upon the First Amendment rights of digital companies.

    “California tried to do an end run around the First Amendment. They lost. Their law has done absolutely nothing to protect children in the state of California,” said Szabo.

    Szabo, who pointed out he’s a parent and lives in Maryland, said, “I am happy to provide solutions; just this is not one of them.”

    In the same hearing, Del. C.T. Wilson, chair of the Economic Matters Committee, said lawmakers were intent on passing protections for children online.

    Wilson referenced earlier testimony on suicides linked to online bullying.

    “I guess … we don’t do anything about that because of freedom of speech?” Wilson continued. “Teddy Roosevelt said: ‘The best thing you can do is the right thing. The second-best thing is the wrong thing, but the worst thing is nothing.’”

    Net Choice has filed lawsuits in other states on similar bills. While the organization has anticipated ultimate passage of the bills and asked for a gubernatorial veto, it’s not yet clear if the group will file suit in Maryland.

    Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown has expressed support for online protections for children. In written testimony to the House Economic Matters Committee, Brown wrote in support of the House bill.

    HB 603 prohibits the use of deceptive design patterns that mislead and confuse underage users. Thus, [the bill] imposes permissible limits on commercial activity aimed at protecting children from documented harms,” the attorney general said.

    Sen. Ben Kramer, who has sponsored a Senate version of the legislation, told WTOP he is confident the bills will be enacted. And in case of a legal challenge, Kramer said, “If Big Tech wants to have a run at it [in the courts], so be it, and we’re not going to be intimidated by them.”

    In an email, Gov. Moore’s press secretary Carter Elliott said the governor will review the legislation once it passes both chambers.

    “When bills hit his desk, he will thoroughly review them all to ensure that the Moore-Miller Administration is enacting legislation that is in the best interest of all Marylanders,” the press secretary said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kate Ryan

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  • Details of hazing claims that prompted suspension of U.Md. fraternities, sororities – WTOP News

    Details of hazing claims that prompted suspension of U.Md. fraternities, sororities – WTOP News

    Maryland’s Attorney General has detailed allegations of hazing that prompted the University of Maryland to temporarily suspend fraternities and sororities. The claims were made public in the state’s response to a federal lawsuit filed early last week by a group representing several fraternities, which sought a restraining order against the ban.

    Maryland’s Attorney General has detailed allegations of hazing that prompted the University of Maryland to temporarily suspend fraternities and sororities.

    The claims were made public in the state’s response to a federal lawsuit filed early last week by a group representing several fraternities, which sought a restraining order against the ban.

    Last Friday, the university lifted the suspension on campus for 32 chapters, clearing them to return to normal activities. However, five chapters remain under investigation, according to the school’s statement.

    Shortly after the suspensions were lifted, Attorney General Anthony Brown filed a response to the lawsuit, saying it was moot, because the suspension was no longer in place. Brown’s filing also provided details of why, in his opinion, the suspension was appropriate.

    The university’s Office of Student Conduct received two referrals alleging conduct violations in February, in which a resident director reported that he found several prohibited substances and drug paraphernalia in a fraternity house, according to court records.

    The office also received an anonymous report from a parent that their son was being subjected to harmful hazing by being required to stay outside in the cold for several hours, requiring a trip to the university health center for suspected hypothermia.

    Later that month, the office received an anonymous email alleging multiple unidentified fraternities were hazing new members by beating them with a paddle, burning them with cigarettes and having them lay on nails, according to court records. They also were forced to consume live fish, chewing tobacco and urine, according to the documents.

    The person who sent the anonymous email also reported he was forced to attend a “Line Up,” where he was abused for “hours on end,” forced to wall sit, do push-ups, planks and “be naked/in underwear for the purpose of public humiliation, and be physically assaulted,” according to court documents.

    “At one of these events one individual passed out as they refused to provide us with water and forced us to drink straight vodka and they did nothing to help him, in fact they hit him in the face with a plastic bat and poured beer on him until he woke up,” the student wrote in the email.

    A court hearing has been set for Monday in federal court in Greenbelt. It was not immediately clear how the university’s action to clear most of the fraternities for normal activities would affect the lawsuit.

    Next steps for U.Md. greek life

    In a letter to the campus community on Friday, the school said it remains “cautious, watchful and deeply committed to safety” in fraternities and sororities.

    The university said it’s taking actions now to address the areas of concern revealed by the investigation.

    “We want to lift up the many positive aspects of our fraternities and sororities and lay the groundwork for this important part of campus life to flourish,” the letter states.

    The university is reviewing each group’s training programs on recruitment and alcohol-related activities, according to the letter. It’s establishing a way for students, faculty, families and alumni to report possible hazing in real-time. The school’s also reviewing the code of student conduct, as it relates to hazing, to make sure it aligns with best practices.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Neal Augenstein

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  • Analysis: Third-string QBs rise up to the challenge

    Analysis: Third-string QBs rise up to the challenge

    Brock Purdy outplayed Tom Brady, leaving his dad in tears with a stellar performance in his first career start.

    Anthony Brown displayed a veteran’s poise under pressure in his NFL debut.

    Third-string quarterbacks had quite the Sunday leading a pair of division leaders to important wins.

    Other backups, including former Super Bowl MVP Joe Flacco, saw action in Week 14. Purdy stole the show.

    The rookie quarterback chosen with the last pick in the draft this year threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score, helping the San Francisco 49ers rout Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 35-7, spoiling the GOAT’s Bay Area homecoming.

    “I grew up watching him, seeing him make plays and win Super Bowls, so to be out on the same field and being able to compete against one another, it’s literally a dream come true,” Purdy said. “I’m very blessed and honored to play against him.”

    After his second TD pass of the game, Purdy’s father wiped tears from his eyes. Purdy, who played four seasons at Iowa State before the Niners selected him with the 262nd pick, had many family members in the stands.

    “It’s everything,” he said about their support. “Being the last pick, my family has always been the rock and the people to tell me ‘you’re good enough,’ especially my dad. To do this and have this kind of performance with them here watching, it means the world to me. I’m thankful.”

    The NFC West-leading 49ers (9-4) are relying on Purdy to take them to the Super Bowl after losing Jimmy Garoppolo to a foot injury. Trey Lance, who opened the year as San Francisco’s starter, already went down for the season in Week 1.

    Purdy’s teammates are confident he can do the job.

    “I’m not surprised,” Niners receiver Ray-Ray McCloud III said. “If you just watch Brock when he first walked in this building, from when he was drafted here, when he practices even in preseason, his personality just reflects on the field hands down. He’s an animal and he’s passionate about his craft. He is going to let you know how, but he is not cocky. He is very confident and as a quarterback that’s all you need back there.”

    The Baltimore Ravens had to turn to an undrafted rookie after backup Tyler Huntley, who filling in for Lamar Jackson, entered concussion protocol in the third quarter against Pittsburgh. Brown took his first snap from the Ravens 1 with the team leading 13-7. He tossed a 3-yard pass. Brown finished 3 of 5 for 16 yards and guided the offense on a field-goal drive that ended up being the decisive score in a 16-14 victory over the Steelers.

    The AFC North-leading Ravens (9-4) don’t know when Jackson will return so they’ll be counting on Huntley and Brown, if needed.

    “He’s kind of calm, cool and collected,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said of Brown. ”(He’s) very much a student of the game, works very hard at it in terms of preparing himself.”

    Baker Mayfield got things started for reserve QBs Thursday night, leading the Los Angeles Rams to an improbable comeback 17-16 win over the Las Vegas Raiders just two days after the team claimed him off waivers from Carolina.

    The Rams (4-9) are headed nowhere after winning the Super Bowl last season but Mayfield makes them at least interesting to watch.

    Other backups had varying results.

    Flacco briefly replaced Mike White in the New York Jets’ 20-12 loss at Buffalo. White was battered by the Bills throughout the game and ended up going to a hospital in an ambulance afterward for what the team said was a precautionary trip.

    The Houston Texans used a two-QB system with Davis Mills and Jeff Driskel sharing snaps in a 27-23 last-minute loss at Dallas.

    Mitchell Trubisky took over for Kenny Pickett after Pittsburgh’s rookie starter entered the concussion protocol in the first quarter. The Denver Broncos turned to Brett Rypien after Russell Wilson slammed his head into the turf at the end of a run. Rypien tossed a TD pass in a 34-28 loss to Kansas City.

    With so many QBs going down, backups and reserves must stay ready, especially for teams with playoff hopes down the stretch.

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    Follow Rob Maaddi on Twitter at https://twitter.com/robmaaddi

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    AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP—NFL

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