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Tag: Baltimore

  • Another Sunday talk show, another rejection of federal troops, denial of presidential aspirations

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    Gov. Wes Moore on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, when he talked about the economy, the president’s threat to send federal troops into Baltimore and — again — his electoral plans. (Screengrab of NBC video)

    For a man who’s not running for president, Gov. Wes Moore sure has been making the rounds of the national Sunday talk shows recently. But there’s also been plenty to talk about, from vaccines to federal troop deployments.

    Moore, appearing Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” would not say he would “completely rule it out,” when asked about a presidential bit, but he did repeat his oft-stated assertion that he is not running for president in 2028, and is focused instead on seeking reelection next year as governor of Maryland.

    “I’ll be serving a full term. I’m excited about reelection. I’m excited about what I’m going to be able to do for the people of Maryland,” he said in response to a question from moderator Kristen Welker, before reciting a list of his administration’s accomplishments..

    It was similar to the discussion he had two weeks earlier on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” when he volunteered that he is not running for president during a discussion of President Donald Trump saying Moore is not “presidential timber.” Moore’s residential aspirations did not come up on last week’s “This Week” on ABC — but he wasn’t directly asked about it.

    What Moore has been asked about in each appearance was the president’s threat to send troops into Baltimore, among other cities, to respond to crime there.

    Moore — who on Friday announced a surge of Maryland State Police into the city to help further bring down crime rates — repeated his charge that Trump’s proposal would be “performative” and ineffective. He said Guard members are not trained for law enforcement and noted that those deployed last month to Washington, D.C., have been reduced in some instances to raking mulch and picking up trash, at what he said is an estimated cost of $1 million a day.

    “You know, the president’s proposed budget actually cuts supports for the FBI and ATF [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives] bureaus, which are things we actually could use,” Moore said. “When you’re looking at the Big Beautiful Bill, it actually cuts $30 million of funding for violence prevention programs that are happening in the city of Baltimore and across the state of Maryland.”

    Trump has said that the presence of federal troops has led to a drop in crimes that have made the District a “safe zone.” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser has said that crime was already at historic lows already, but she recently credited the presence of federal troops with a further drop in crimes.

    Moore acknowledged that crime is down in D.C., but said it has fallen just as fast, or faster, in Baltimore during the same time frame without federal intervention.

    “If you’re looking at the same time period of this D.C. occupation … if you look at assaults with a deadly weapon, they’ve actually increased in D.C. by 8%; in Baltimore, have decreased by 10%,” he said. “And on every other major indicator, from homicide, to carjacking, you could say that Baltimore has actually had the same type of drop as Washington D.C. has had during this period. And we didn’t mobilize the National Guard for it.”

    What Moore did do was announce plans Friday for a “renewed collaboration” between the Baltimore City Police Department and the Maryland State Police.

    “We are proud of the progress that we’ve been able to make, and we’re all very, very concerned about how much work still needs to happen,” Moore said at the time, flanked by Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott and city and state police officials. “If one person does not feel safe in their neighborhood, that is one too many.”

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  • Moore orders state police to assist Baltimore cops in crime reduction efforts – WTOP News

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    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore is ordering a surge in law enforcement presence in Baltimore, following weeks of sparring with President Donald Trump and his threat to deploy troops to deal with crime in the city.

    Gov. Wes Moore (D) is ordering a surge in law enforcement presence in Baltimore, following weeks of sparring with President Donald Trump (R) and his threat to deploy troops to deal with crime in the city.

    Neither Moore nor Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott (D) mentioned Trump by name Friday as they announced plans for a “renewed collaboration” between the Baltimore City Police Department and the Maryland State Police. But many of their remarks responded to charges by Trump, who recently called Baltimore a crime “hellhole.”

    Moore said violent crime has been dropping over the last few years in Baltimore, and that the increased police resources will continue efforts to bring down violent crime even further.

    “We are proud of the progress that we’ve been able to make, and we’re all very, very concerned about how much work still needs to happen,” Moore said. “If one person does not feel safe in their neighborhood, that is one too many.”

    The announcement came at a news conference outside St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, after a brief walk through the Park Heights neighborhood by officials. Despite his high-profile public feud with the president, Moore insisted that Friday’s announcement was not “inspired” by recent comments by Trump.

    “Nothing we do is inspired by the president,” he said, in response to reporters’ questions.

    While it may not have been inspired by Trump, Friday’s announcement included repeated references to the president’s continued threats to deploy the National Guard to Baltimore and other large cities, as he has done in Washington, D.C., over the last month.

    Moore has repeatedly pushed back on the use of National Guard troops for crime prevention, arguing that Guard members are not trained for policing and that such a deployment would be disrespectful to them and of little benefit to residents.

    “We do not need an occupation. We do not need people putting in performative and theatrical resources because they do not care about the actual results,” Moore said.

    Trump, who deployed Guard members and active-duty Marines to Los Angeles in June to quell immigration protests, followed up last month by sending the National Guard into Washington, D.C. The D.C. Guard members, along with Guard units from six Republican states, have been backing up local police, but have also been involved in removing homeless encampments and aiding with immigration arrests.

    In recent weeks, Trump has dangled the possibility of entering other cities, like Baltimore and Chicago, that he said were “so far gone” in terms of  violent crime. The list has continued to grow, with New Orleans and Portland, Oregon, the most recent potential targets.

    Moore shot back on Aug. 21 at the president’s suggestion that troops should be deployed to Baltimore, telling Trump to “keep our names out of your mouth.” Moore also invited the president Trump to come walk the streets of Baltimore to get a firsthand look at the city’s crime prevention efforts.

    The back-and-forth has continued since, with Trump again disparaging Baltimore earlier this week, saying that Moore needs to “get rid of the criminals” in the city.

    “These are hard-core criminals,” Trump said at a Tuesday press conference. “They’re not going to be good in 10 years, in five years, in 20 years, in two years they’re going to be criminals. They were born to be criminals.”

    Scott also did not name the president in his Friday comments but clearly referenced those comments and pushed back against Trump’s threat to deploy the National Guard in Baltimore.

    “We do not need troops on our streets,” Scott said. “We do need folks who want to be at the table to recognize that the people of Baltimore are humans — that our young people are not born to be criminals. They’re resources to invest in, not problems to be solved.”

    Scott has a personal connection to the area where the press conference took place: He grew up in the Park Heights neighborhood, and said that he witnessed a shooting in the area growing up.

    “None of us are celebrating, saying that we have solved gun violence,” Scott said, adding that the use of the Maryland State Police will help provide more government resources and allow the use of evidence-based policies targeted to a continued reduction in crime.

    Maryland State Police Superintendent Col. Roland L. Butler Jr. said with the renewed partnership, “there will be no daylight” between the state police department and the city police.

    “We intend to go out and provide the services that you need to feel safe,” Butler said, “and enhance the safety you already feel.”

    Baltimore City Police Commissioner Rich Worley agreed.

    “Adding additional resources to our neighborhoods is one important step towards creating safer communities and improving the quality of life in our city,” he said. “We have work to do, especially in communities like park heights.”

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    Tadiwos Abedje

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  • Trump claims Chicago is ‘world’s most dangerous city’. The four most violent ones are all in red states

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    As Donald Trump threatens to deploy national guard units to Chicago and Baltimore, ostensibly to quell violence, a pattern has emerged as he describes which cities he talks about.

    Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington DC and Baltimore.

    But not Jackson, Birmingham, St Louis or Memphis.

    An analysis of crime trends over the last four years shows two things. First, violent crime rates in America’s big cities have been falling over the last two years, and at an even greater rate over the last six months. The decrease in violence in America is unprecedented.

    Second, crime in large cities in the aggregate is lower in states with Democratic leadership. But the president focuses his ire almost exclusively on large blue cities in blue states, sidestepping political conflict with red Republican governors.

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    The four cities of populations larger than 100,000 with the highest murder rates in 2024 are in Republican states: Jackson, Mississippi (78.7 per 100,000 residents), Birmingham, Alabama (58.8), St Louis, Missouri (54.1) and Memphis, Tennessee (40.6).

    On Tuesday, Trump called Chicago “the most dangerous city in the world”, and pledged to send military troops there, as well as to Baltimore. “I have an obligation. This isn’t a political thing,” he said at a press conference. “I have an obligation when 20 people are killed over the last two and a half weeks and 75 are shot with bullets.”

    When talking about crime in Chicago, Trump regularly refers to the number of people who may have been shot and killed there. But Chicago has a population of about 2.7 million, which is larger than each of the least-populous 15 states. It is roughly the same population as Mississippi. Chicago’s homicide rate for 2024 was 17.5 murders for every 100,000 residents, only a few points higher than that of the state of Louisiana, which was 14.5 per 100,000 in 2024.

    As has become tradition, news outlets reported how many people were killed in Chicago over the Labor Day weekend. At Louisiana’s rates, one would predict almost twice as many people to have been murdered there over the long weekend.

    But those numbers are harder to count. Chicago police report a single figure. One has to scour a hundred local news sites around Louisiana to aggregate the count for comparison.

    Notably, Trump discussed sending troops to New Orleans this week. “We’re making a determination now,” Trump said in the Oval Office. “Do we go to Chicago or do we go to a place like New Orleans, where we have a great governor, Jeff Landry, who wants us to straighten out a very nice section of this country that’s become quite, you know, quite tough, quite bad?”

    And Landry signaled his willingness to accede. “We will take President Trump’s help from New Orleans to Shreveport!” he wrote on X, posting a clip of the exchange.

    Still, Chicago is bracing to be the next city targeted by the Trump administration. To date this year, 278 people have been killed in Chicago, 118 fewer people killed when compared with 2024. It is at pace for 412 deaths for the year, which would be a rate of about 15 per 100,000 residents. The rate is likely to be lower still than that, because homicide rates increase during summer months.

    The Windy City ranked 37th in homicide rate in 2024 for cities larger than 50,000 residents in the United States. For cities with more than 100,000 residents, it placed 14th. This year, it is likely to slide farther down the list, even as violence falls to 60-year lows.

    ***

    As reported by the FBI’s crime data unit in August, the United States had a homicide rate of about 4.6 per 100,000 residents in 2024. It is the lowest figure since 2014, and very close to the generational lows of 4 to 4.5 per 100,000 last experienced in the early 1960s. The pandemic wave of increased violence has largely receded.

    “We know that across the nation [violence is] going down,” said Dr Thaddeus Johnson, a former Tennessee police officer and senior fellow at the Council on Criminal Justice, a policy thinktank.

    The 2024 homicide rate in the US decreased by about 15%, one of the largest drops in American history. Most of that decrease can be attributed to declines in the largest cities, Johnson said.

    Criminal justice researchers tend to place higher value on murder rates than other indicators of violent crime, because murder statistics are harder to manipulate. “It’s the most trustworthy data point,” Johnson said. But it’s not the only data point. “When you start talking about aggravated assaults and robberies, generally, we’ve seen that going down across the nation as well.”

    Both Chicago and Baltimore implemented or expanded antiviolence programs in 2022 using American Rescue Plan funding – much of which has been cut under Trump. Baltimore’s homicide rate has fallen about 40% since 2020, and in 2025 is pacing a 50-year low to date.

    Violent crime had also been falling in Washington DC by substantial margins before Trump took over the city’s policing. His announcement last month referenced DC’s 2023 crime rates, which spiked during the pandemic, while saying nothing about the precipitous fall since.

    In January, the Metropolitan police department and US attorney’s office reported that total violent crime in DC in 2024 was down 35% from the prior year, marking the lowest rate in over 30 years.

    The Guardian analyzed the murder rates for the largest 50 cities in the US and found that cities in blue states had the lowest, with just 7.8 murders per 100,000 people. The cities in red states have a much higher murder rate, of 12.9. Cities in swing states sit in the middle, with a murder rate of 10.2.

    Baltimore ranks fifth on a list of cities over 50,000 population by murder rate in 2024, as reported to the FBI statisticians. Washington DC is 15th. Between them are Wilmington, Delaware; Detroit; Cleveland; Dayton, Ohio; North Little Rock, Arkansas; Kansas City, Missouri; Shreveport, Louisiana; Camden, New Jersey, and Albany, Georgia.

    Compliance with federal rules on crime reporting is incomplete, and some agencies report incomplete data. One notable example of this is Jackson, Mississippi, which has consistently gathered crime data but only started submitting it to the FBI’s system this year. Jackson recorded 111 homicides in 2024, in a population of about 141,000: a rate of 78.7, the highest in America for any city with a population over 50,000.

    Though St Louis posted the second-highest homicide rate in 2024, violence there has been falling since 2023, and is on pace today for a 10% annual drop. Its rate will fall less sharply, however, because St Louis is losing population.

    Memphis led the country’s homicide rate in 2023. To date in 2025, murders and non-negligent homicides are down about 25%, after a 22% decrease in 2024. Like Baltimore, Memphis leaders attribute the decrease in part to an aggressive gun violence reduction initiative, Memphis Allies.

    Notably, small changes in smaller cities can have a big statistical effect.

    Birmingham, with a population of about 200,000, has cut its murder rate by more than half since the start of the year. Local officials attribute this, in part, to the arrest of a handful of people accused of violence, including Damien McDaniel, who has been charged in the murders of 18 people as a hired hitman. His arrest in October – and that of four other people who are linked to him – coincides with a 55% drop in Birmingham’s homicide rate since.

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  • District of Columbia sues over Trump’s deployment of the National Guard

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    The District of Columbia on Thursday sued to stop President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard during his law enforcement intervention in Washington.The city’s attorney general, Brian Schwalb, said the surge of troops essentially amounts to an “involuntary military occupation.” He argued in the federal lawsuit that the deployment, coinciding with an executive order Aug. 11, that now involves more than 1,000 troops is an illegal use of the military for domestic law enforcement.A federal judge in California recently ruled that Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles after days of protests over immigration raids in June was illegal.The Republican administration is appealing that decision and Trump has said he is ready to order federal intervention in Chicago and Baltimore, despite staunch opposition in those Democrat-led cities. That court ruling, however, does not directly apply to Washington, where the president has more control over the Guard than in states.The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment to the new lawsuit.Members of the D.C. National Guard have had their orders extended through December, according to a Guard official. While that does not necessarily mean all those troops will serve that long, it is a strong indication that their role will not wind down soon.Several GOP-led states have added National Guard troops to the ranks of those patrolling the streets and neighborhoods of the nation’s capital.Schwalb’s filing contends the deployment also violates the Home Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, because Trump acted without the mayor’s consent and is wrongly asserting federal control over units from other states.The city’s attorney general, an elected official, is its top legal officer and is separate from Washington’s federal U.S. attorney, who is appointed by the president.The lawsuit is the second from Schwalb against the Trump administration since the president asserted control over the city’s police department and sent in the Guard, actions that have been with protests from some residents.Trump has said the operation is necessary to combat crime in the district, and Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, has pointed to a steep drop in offenses such as carjackings since it began.Violent crime has been an issue in the capital for years, though data showed it was on the decline at the start of Trump’s intervention.

    The District of Columbia on Thursday sued to stop President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard during his law enforcement intervention in Washington.

    The city’s attorney general, Brian Schwalb, said the surge of troops essentially amounts to an “involuntary military occupation.” He argued in the federal lawsuit that the deployment, coinciding with an executive order Aug. 11, that now involves more than 1,000 troops is an illegal use of the military for domestic law enforcement.

    A federal judge in California recently ruled that Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles after days of protests over immigration raids in June was illegal.

    The Republican administration is appealing that decision and Trump has said he is ready to order federal intervention in Chicago and Baltimore, despite staunch opposition in those Democrat-led cities. That court ruling, however, does not directly apply to Washington, where the president has more control over the Guard than in states.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment to the new lawsuit.

    Members of the D.C. National Guard have had their orders extended through December, according to a Guard official. While that does not necessarily mean all those troops will serve that long, it is a strong indication that their role will not wind down soon.

    Several GOP-led states have added National Guard troops to the ranks of those patrolling the streets and neighborhoods of the nation’s capital.

    Schwalb’s filing contends the deployment also violates the Home Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, because Trump acted without the mayor’s consent and is wrongly asserting federal control over units from other states.

    The city’s attorney general, an elected official, is its top legal officer and is separate from Washington’s federal U.S. attorney, who is appointed by the president.

    The lawsuit is the second from Schwalb against the Trump administration since the president asserted control over the city’s police department and sent in the Guard, actions that have been with protests from some residents.

    Trump has said the operation is necessary to combat crime in the district, and Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, has pointed to a steep drop in offenses such as carjackings since it began.

    Violent crime has been an issue in the capital for years, though data showed it was on the decline at the start of Trump’s intervention.

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  • What started with a friend group volunteering at Ronald McDonald House of Md. has grown to include a dozen schools – WTOP News

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    In elementary school, a group of friends in Montgomery County, Maryland, decided they wanted to volunteer to help kids with childhood cancer. Now, they’re seniors in high school and they’ve recruited a large group across many local schools.

    A group of friends from Montgomery County volunteers at the Ronald McDonald House in Baltimore with their families.
    (Courtesy Grace Xiao)

    Courtesy Grace Xiao

    The group puts on performances for the families staying at the Ronald McDonald House.
    (Courtesy Grace Xiao)

    Courtesy Grace Xiao

    A group of friends from Montgomery County volunteers at the Ronald McDonald House in Baltimore with their families.
    (Courtesy Grace Xiao)

    Courtesy Grace Xiao

    In elementary school, a group of friends in Montgomery County, Maryland, decided they wanted to volunteer to help kids with childhood cancer.

    Now, they’re seniors in high school and they’ve recruited a large group across many schools.

    “I just think that like volunteering gives so much growth,” said 17-year-old Grace Xiao, a senior at Holton-Arms School in Bethesda.

    Xiao said it started years ago, when the group was in fifth grade; the kids got together to help with a gift drive for the Super Joey Foundation. The foundation provides free gifts for children to pass the time in the hospital.

    “We actually ended up getting a ton of donations,” Xiao said. “They put these cardboard boxes at the library, and they actually ended up being kind of like overflowing by the end of the week.”

    Then they asked what they could do next.

    “We were like, ‘What can we do to help besides just this gift drive that we’ve just done?’ And they were like, ‘Well, you can come and serve dinner,’” Xiao said.

    So they gave it a try and got hooked.

    “It was us, and maybe two of our parents in the kitchen, kind of like making some food we had, I think, pasta and like pizza, just like all the main courses, and we ended up serving it,” Xiao said. “We found it was honestly incredible to see all of those people, face to face, and they were all so, so positive.”

    She said the beginning group of friends that have been volunteering since fifth grade includes Ethan Liu, 17, a senior at Montgomery Blair High School, and Kelly Wang, 17, a rising senior at Winston Churchill High School.

    Now, the group of friends has grown to more than 60 student volunteers across 14 Montgomery County schools. They volunteer monthly at Ronald McDonald House of Maryland in Baltimore by making and delivering meals to the families staying there.

    They now make it an event and go monthly, and there’s even a wait list. They also use their talents and sing and perform for the people there to give them a break in their day.

    “It’s crazy to me that I have so many volunteers working toward the same cause, but I’m really proud of how we’ve grown, and I think that the Ronald McDonald, it’s just like a very unique event in the way it draws people in,” she said.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

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

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    Valerie Bonk

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  • Baltimore awarded historic $62 million in damages in ghost gun lawsuit

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    BALTIMORE — The City of Baltimore was awarded $62 million after a jury ruled in the city’s favor Tuesday evening in its lawsuit against a Hanover-based firearm shop for selling untraceable “ghost guns” — the largest verdict against a gun dealer defendant in American history, according to a statement from Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott.

    In 2022, Scott announced the city’s lawsuit against Hanover Armory, a firearm shop in Anne Arundel County accused of dealing ghost guns, which are assembled from pieces and therefore don’t contain serial numbers, without screening customers for ID or background checks.

    Just as the suit was filed in 2022, Maryland began rolling out its statewide ban on ghost guns, driven in large part by a drastic increase in ghost gun recoveries by law enforcement, as well as crime committed with ghost guns.

    According to the suit, the Baltimore Police Department reported a 1,500% increase in ghost gun seizures between 2019 and 2022, “with many of the recovered firearms linked to shootings, homicides, and youth-involved crimes.”

    A plurality of ghost guns seized by BPD were manufactured by Polymer80, the nation’s largest ghost gun producer. The company was originally included in the suit filed by Baltimore but settled with the city in February 2024 and shut down later that year, citing financial stress from myriad lawsuits.

    The suit alleged that Hanover Armory, situated just a few miles southwest of BWI Marshall Airport, sold ghost gun kits that appealed to “prohibited purchasers” from Baltimore, such as children, felons and individuals who would otherwise not pass a background check.

    “Baltimore has lost generations of friends, neighbors, and loved ones to gun violence. Together, we are saying enough is enough. Today’s verdict is a massive victory in Baltimore’s fight against illegal ghost guns and the companies that have allowed these weapons to proliferate in our neighborhoods,” Scott said in a statement Tuesday.

    The sum awarded to the city by the court will be placed into an abatement fund managed by Baltimore’s government and distributed to three community violence intervention groups: Safe Streets, the city’s Group Violence Reduction Strategy and Roca.

    These groups “were identified by City witnesses at trial as community-based programs with a proven track record of effectively reducing gun violence in Baltimore City,” the Mayor’s Office of the Communications said in a statement Thursday.

    The City of Baltimore was awarded $62 million after a jury ruled in the city’s favor Tuesday evening in its lawsuit against a Hanover-based firearm shop for selling untraceable “ghost guns” — the largest verdict against a gun dealer defendant in American history, according to a statement from Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott.

    In 2022, Scott announced the city’s lawsuit against Hanover Armory, a firearm shop in Anne Arundel County accused of dealing ghost guns, which are assembled from pieces and therefore don’t contain serial numbers, without screening customers for ID or background checks.

    Just as the suit was filed in 2022, Maryland began rolling out its statewide ban on ghost guns, driven in large part by a drastic increase in ghost gun recoveries by law enforcement, as well as crime committed with ghost guns.

    According to the suit, the Baltimore Police Department reported a 1,500% increase in ghost gun seizures between 2019 and 2022, “with many of the recovered firearms linked to shootings, homicides, and youth-involved crimes.”

    A plurality of ghost guns seized by BPD were manufactured by Polymer80, the nation’s largest ghost gun producer. The company was originally included in the suit filed by Baltimore but settled with the city in February 2024 and shut down later that year, citing financial stress from myriad lawsuits.

    The suit alleged that Hanover Armory, situated just a few miles southwest of BWI Marshall Airport, sold ghost gun kits that appealed to “prohibited purchasers” from Baltimore, such as children, felons and individuals who would otherwise not pass a background check.

    “Baltimore has lost generations of friends, neighbors, and loved ones to gun violence. Together, we are saying enough is enough. Today’s verdict is a massive victory in Baltimore’s fight against illegal ghost guns and the companies that have allowed these weapons to proliferate in our neighborhoods,” Scott said in a statement Tuesday.

    The sum awarded to the city by the court will be placed into an abatement fund managed by Baltimore’s government and distributed to three community violence intervention groups: Safe Streets, the city’s Group Violence Reduction Strategy and Roca.

    These groups “were identified by City witnesses at trial as community-based programs with a proven track record of effectively reducing gun violence in Baltimore City,” the Mayor’s Office of the Communications said in a statement Thursday.

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    —Racquel Bazos contributed to this article.

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  • Some Guard units in Washington are now carrying firearms, Pentagon says

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    Some National Guard units patrolling the nation’s capital at the direction of President Donald Trump have started carrying firearms, an escalation of his military deployment that makes good on a directive issued late last week by his defense secretary.A Defense Department official who was not authorized to speak publicly said some units on certain missions would be armed — some with handguns and others with rifles. The spokesperson said that all units with firearms have been trained and are operating under strict rules for use of force.Video above: President Trump greets, thanks National Guard and federal agents during trip into D.C.An Associated Press photographer on Sunday saw members of the South Carolina National Guard outside Union Station with holstered handguns.A statement from the joint task force that has taken over policing in the nation’s capital said units began carrying their service weapons on Sunday and that the military’s rules say force should be used “only as a last resort and solely in response to an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm.” It said the force is committed to protecting “the safety and wellbeing” of Washington’s residents.The defense official who spoke to The Associated Press said only troops on certain missions would carry guns, and that would include those patrolling to establish a law enforcement presence throughout the capital. Those working in transportation or administration would likely remain unarmed.The development in Trump’s extraordinary effort to override the law enforcement authority of state and local governments comes as he is considering expanding the deployments to other Democratic-led cities, including Baltimore, Chicago and New York.Earlier Sunday, the president threatened to expand his military deployments to more Democratic-led cities, responding to an offer by Maryland’s governor to join him in a tour of Baltimore by saying he might instead “send in the ‘troops.’” He earlier said he was considering deploying troops to Chicago and New York.Thousands of National Guard and federal law enforcement officers are now patrolling the district’s streets, drawing sporadic protests from local residents.Trump made the threat to Baltimore in a spat with Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat who has criticized Trump’s unprecedented flex of federal power aimed at combatting crime and homelessness in Washington. Moore last week invited Trump to visit his state to discuss public safety and walk the streets. In a Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump said Moore asked “in a rather nasty and provocative tone,” and then raised the specter of repeating the National Guard deployment he made in Los Angeles over the objections of California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom. Video below: National Guard deployment increases in Washington, D.C.”Wes Moore’s record on Crime is a very bad one, unless he fudges his figures on crime like many of the other ‘Blue States’ are doing,” Trump wrote, as he cited a pejorative nickname he uses frequently for the California governor. “But if Wes Moore needs help, like Gavin Newscum did in L.A., I will send in the ‘troops,’ which is being done in nearby DC, and quickly clean up the Crime.”Moore said he invited Trump to Maryland “because he seems to enjoy living in this blissful ignorance” about improving crime rates in Baltimore. After a spike during the pandemic that matched nationwide trends, Baltimore’s violent crime rate has fallen. The 200 homicides reported last year were down 24% from the prior year and 42% since 2021, according to city data. Between 2023 and 2024, overall violent crime was down nearly 8% and property crimes down 20%.”The president is spending all of his time talking about me,” Moore said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “I’m spending my time talking about the people I serve.”Trump is “spouting off a bunch of lies about public safety in Maryland,” Moore said in a fundraising email. In Washington, where Trump is surging National Guard troops and federal law enforcement officers, a patchwork of protests popped up throughout the city over the weekend, while some normally bustling corners were noticeably quiet. In some of the most populated areas, residents walked by small groups of national guardsmen, often talking among themselves. Videos of arrests and detainments circulated on social media.Trump has said Chicago and New York are most likely his next targets, eliciting strong pushback from Democratic leaders in both states. The Washington Post reported Saturday that the Pentagon has spent weeks preparing for an operation in Chicago that would include National Guard troops and potentially active-duty forces.Asked about the Post report, the White House pointed to Trump’s earlier comments discussing his desire to expand his use of military forces to target local crime.”I think Chicago will be our next,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday, adding, “And then we’ll help with New York.”Trump has repeatedly described some of the nation’s largest cities — run by Democrats, with Black mayors and majority-minority populations — as dangerous and filthy. Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott is Black, as is Moore. The District of Columbia and New York also have Black mayors.The Rev. Al Sharpton, speaking during a religious event Sunday at Howard University in Washington, said the Guard’s presence in the nation’s capital was not about crime: “This is about profiling us.””This is laced with bigotry and racism,” he later elaborated to reporters. “Not one white mayor has been designated. And I think this is a civil rights issue, a race issue, and an issue of D.C. statehood.”Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a Democrat, said there is no emergency warranting the deployment of National Guard troops in Chicago.”Donald Trump is attempting to manufacture a crisis, politicize Americans who serve in uniform, and continue abusing his power to distract from the pain he’s causing families,” Pritzker wrote on X. “We’ll continue to follow the law, stand up for the sovereignty of our state, and protect Illinoisans.”Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said the city doesn’t need “a military occupation” and would sue to block one. He said there has been no communication from the White House about a possible military deployment.”We’re not going to surrender our humanity to this tyrant,” Johnson said Sunday on MSNBC. “I can tell you this, the city of Chicago has a long history of standing up against tyranny, resisting those who wish to undermine the interests of working people.” Cooper reported from Phoenix.

    Some National Guard units patrolling the nation’s capital at the direction of President Donald Trump have started carrying firearms, an escalation of his military deployment that makes good on a directive issued late last week by his defense secretary.

    A Defense Department official who was not authorized to speak publicly said some units on certain missions would be armed — some with handguns and others with rifles. The spokesperson said that all units with firearms have been trained and are operating under strict rules for use of force.

    Video above: President Trump greets, thanks National Guard and federal agents during trip into D.C.

    An Associated Press photographer on Sunday saw members of the South Carolina National Guard outside Union Station with holstered handguns.

    A statement from the joint task force that has taken over policing in the nation’s capital said units began carrying their service weapons on Sunday and that the military’s rules say force should be used “only as a last resort and solely in response to an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm.” It said the force is committed to protecting “the safety and wellbeing” of Washington’s residents.

    The defense official who spoke to The Associated Press said only troops on certain missions would carry guns, and that would include those patrolling to establish a law enforcement presence throughout the capital. Those working in transportation or administration would likely remain unarmed.

    The development in Trump’s extraordinary effort to override the law enforcement authority of state and local governments comes as he is considering expanding the deployments to other Democratic-led cities, including Baltimore, Chicago and New York.

    Earlier Sunday, the president threatened to expand his military deployments to more Democratic-led cities, responding to an offer by Maryland’s governor to join him in a tour of Baltimore by saying he might instead “send in the ‘troops.’” He earlier said he was considering deploying troops to Chicago and New York.

    Thousands of National Guard and federal law enforcement officers are now patrolling the district’s streets, drawing sporadic protests from local residents.

    Trump made the threat to Baltimore in a spat with Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat who has criticized Trump’s unprecedented flex of federal power aimed at combatting crime and homelessness in Washington. Moore last week invited Trump to visit his state to discuss public safety and walk the streets.

    In a Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump said Moore asked “in a rather nasty and provocative tone,” and then raised the specter of repeating the National Guard deployment he made in Los Angeles over the objections of California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom.

    Video below: National Guard deployment increases in Washington, D.C.

    “Wes Moore’s record on Crime is a very bad one, unless he fudges his figures on crime like many of the other ‘Blue States’ are doing,” Trump wrote, as he cited a pejorative nickname he uses frequently for the California governor. “But if Wes Moore needs help, like Gavin Newscum did in L.A., I will send in the ‘troops,’ which is being done in nearby DC, and quickly clean up the Crime.”

    Moore said he invited Trump to Maryland “because he seems to enjoy living in this blissful ignorance” about improving crime rates in Baltimore. After a spike during the pandemic that matched nationwide trends, Baltimore’s violent crime rate has fallen. The 200 homicides reported last year were down 24% from the prior year and 42% since 2021, according to city data. Between 2023 and 2024, overall violent crime was down nearly 8% and property crimes down 20%.

    “The president is spending all of his time talking about me,” Moore said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “I’m spending my time talking about the people I serve.”

    Trump is “spouting off a bunch of lies about public safety in Maryland,” Moore said in a fundraising email.

    In Washington, where Trump is surging National Guard troops and federal law enforcement officers, a patchwork of protests popped up throughout the city over the weekend, while some normally bustling corners were noticeably quiet. In some of the most populated areas, residents walked by small groups of national guardsmen, often talking among themselves. Videos of arrests and detainments circulated on social media.

    Trump has said Chicago and New York are most likely his next targets, eliciting strong pushback from Democratic leaders in both states. The Washington Post reported Saturday that the Pentagon has spent weeks preparing for an operation in Chicago that would include National Guard troops and potentially active-duty forces.

    Asked about the Post report, the White House pointed to Trump’s earlier comments discussing his desire to expand his use of military forces to target local crime.

    “I think Chicago will be our next,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday, adding, “And then we’ll help with New York.”

    Trump has repeatedly described some of the nation’s largest cities — run by Democrats, with Black mayors and majority-minority populations — as dangerous and filthy. Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott is Black, as is Moore. The District of Columbia and New York also have Black mayors.

    The Rev. Al Sharpton, speaking during a religious event Sunday at Howard University in Washington, said the Guard’s presence in the nation’s capital was not about crime: “This is about profiling us.”

    “This is laced with bigotry and racism,” he later elaborated to reporters. “Not one white mayor has been designated. And I think this is a civil rights issue, a race issue, and an issue of D.C. statehood.”

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a Democrat, said there is no emergency warranting the deployment of National Guard troops in Chicago.

    “Donald Trump is attempting to manufacture a crisis, politicize Americans who serve in uniform, and continue abusing his power to distract from the pain he’s causing families,” Pritzker wrote on X. “We’ll continue to follow the law, stand up for the sovereignty of our state, and protect Illinoisans.”

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said the city doesn’t need “a military occupation” and would sue to block one. He said there has been no communication from the White House about a possible military deployment.

    “We’re not going to surrender our humanity to this tyrant,” Johnson said Sunday on MSNBC. “I can tell you this, the city of Chicago has a long history of standing up against tyranny, resisting those who wish to undermine the interests of working people.”

    Cooper reported from Phoenix.

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  • Hale cites pragmatism as he switches party affiliation to run for governor

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    Baltimore businessman Ed Hale Sr. during a campaign event Wednesday in Canton, where said he will switch parties and run for governor next year as a Rebublican. (Photo by Bryan P. Sears/Maryland Matters)

    Ed Hale Sr., a Baltimore businessman, sports team owner and longtime Democrat, ended speculation about his party affiliation and declared Wednesday that he will run for governor as a Republican.

    Hale described himself as a moderate, but said his party switch was rooted in political pragmatism more than ideology.

    “There’s no way I could win running against Wes Moore with that machine he’s got,” Hale said of the incumbent Democratic governor. “He takes all the money and oxygen out of the room. I can’t do it. I’m a pragmatist and I’m a moderate person. That’s just the way I am.”

    Hale made the announcement — one that was expected — in an east Baltimore waterfront park that he once owned and sold to the city. It came after he hired Annapolis pollster Patrick Gonzales to look at a head-to-head race between himself and Moore.

    “I don’t believe I had a chance, based on the polling that was done, to beat him,” Hale said of Moore. “I had a chance, but it was not as good as it would be running as a Republican.”

    Hale said later that the poll only looked at him against Moore and did not include other Republicans who have filed or announced for governor, or who are the subject of speculation.

    Hale, 78, is well-known in the business community but is an unpolished political candidate.

    “So, the big thing here is, I like building things. I like making things. I like hiring people. That’s the way it is,” Hale said. “ What we have right now are these career politicians with smiling faces that really, really don’t give a sh-t. You all know it. I do. I care.”

    While Hale was blunt about his reasons for switching, Senate Minority Leader Stephen S. Hershey Jr. (R-Upper Shore) was equally blunt, casting doubt on Hale’s affiliation switch and portraying him as a political opportunist.

    “We’ve built a Republican movement in Maryland that stands for more than just opposition to the far left — it stands for authentic leadership and a clear governing philosophy,” Hershey said in a statement. “Our voters expect more than opportunism — they expect commitment.”

    Hershey noted that Hale has “spent decades” supporting Democrats.

    In remarks to reporters, Hale noted his relationships with former Baltimore mayor and Maryland Gov. William Donald Schaefer, a Democrat. He also spoke about raising money for Democrats including Dutch Ruppersberger, the former Baltimore County executive and congressman, and former Sens. Ben Cardin and Barbara Mikulski.

    “I did it because they were going to win and if you don’t do that, you’re just not very pragmatic or prudent,” Hale said.

    But he noted he also voted for Republicans, including former Govs. Larry Hogan and Robert Ehrlich.

    “It’s just the way that I am. I want to vote for the winner,” he said.

    Hale grew up in Baltimore. He said his record “stands for itself” more than political affiliation.

    “If you want to talk about labels, I’m the wrong person,” he said. “You’re born in Baltimore — I’m from east Baltimore not too far from here — and you’re automatically a Democrat. But I stopped thinking about party affiliation except when I voted.”

    He described his Democratic affiliation as a business tool.

    “If you’re building anything, you have to go with the party that’s in place, so you have someone to call to get a permit,” Hale said. “I can sugarcoat it any way you want, but that’s the tool.”

    Hershey, in his statement, questioned Hale’s commitment to core Republican principles.

    Senate Majority Sen. Stephen S. Hershey Jr. (R-Upper Shore) questioned Ed Hale’s reasons for switching parties to run for governor. (File photo by Bryan P. Sears/Maryland Matters.)

    “The Republican nomination for Governor will not be handed out to the highest-profile defector from the left. It must be earned,” Hershey said in his statement. “Maryland Republicans expect their leaders to stand firm on limited government, lower taxes, and personal responsibility.

    “We’ll be scrutinizing Ed’s record closely to ensure he genuinely embraces our values, not simply our party label,” Hershey’s statement said.

    Hale may also find himself at odds with Republicans aligned with President Donald Trump.

    “Now, I am not a Donald Trump guy. I’m going to make that very clear,” Hale said, but added that he would try to work with the president, who is very unpopular in Maryland.

    Hale said he would not “poke” Trump as Moore and other Democrats have done.

    “You have to have some pragmatism and common sense … so that you know that you’re going to be doing the right thing to make jobs in the state of Maryland,” he said.

    Hale laid out a platform of opposing taxes and fees and accused Democrats of misrepresentation as some, including Moore, claimed to have cut taxes.

    “I want to attack … what we all know is a problem,” Hale said. “I think we have dishonest people telling us things that are just not true, making us try to try to make us believe that these things are true, that the taxes are not going up. That fees are not going up. We all know it’s not true.”

    He said he backs nuclear power as a way to lower energy costs in the state and hinted at a tough-on-crime position, calling for juveniles as young as 14 to be jailed and for parents to be held responsible.

    “I think we should lower the date that they could go to jail — the age — down to 14,” Hale said. “If that’s the one stealing the cars and doing that, put them in jail. Find the parents and get judgments against the parents, too. That will begin the parenting.”

    Hale joins a growing field of Republicans who have formally filed or announced for governor.

     Baltimore businessman Ed Hale Sr., a Democrat, will seek the GOP nomination for governor next year, after realizing it would be difficult to beat current Gov. Wes Moore (D) in a Democratic primary. (Photo by Bryan P. Sears/Maryland Matters)

    Baltimore businessman Ed Hale Sr., a Democrat, will seek the GOP nomination for governor next year, after realizing it would be difficult to beat current Gov. Wes Moore (D) in a Democratic primary. (Photo by Bryan P. Sears/Maryland Matters)

    John Myrick, who previously ran an unsuccessful campaign for U.S. Senate, and Carl A. Brunner Jr., a Carroll firearms instructor, have both formally filed for the GOP nomination.

    Freshman Del. Christopher Bouchat (R-Frederick and Carroll) said he will run for governor rather than re-election to the House. Carroll County farmer Kurt Wedekind has also said he will seek the Republican nomination. Neither Bouchat nor Wedekind have formally filed their candidacy.

    And then there is the ongoing speculation about Hogan mulling a possible return to office. The former two-term governor has used social media to stoke that speculation.

    Hale himself raised the possibility of another Republican former governor – Ehrlich — attempting a comeback.

    “If Larry Hogan wants to run, if Bob Ehrlich wants to run — I’ve heard that, too – have at it. Let’s have a contest,” he said.

    Hale’s announcement Wednesday does not make him a formal candidate. He must change his party registration, something the Talbot County resident said he could do as early as Wednesday.

    Hale must also register his campaign committee with the Maryland State Board of Elections, as well as financial disclosure forms. Hale said some of that may also be done as early as Wednesday afternoon.

    He cannot file his formal candidacy with the state board until he chooses a running mate.

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  • Grading The Week: Broncos’ midseason MVP? These scouts say it’s safety Brandon Jones – The Cannabist

    Grading The Week: Broncos’ midseason MVP? These scouts say it’s safety Brandon Jones – The Cannabist

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    Miss Justin Simmons?

    The kids on the Grading The Week staff sure do, but the Broncos don’t. Not according to Pro Football Focus, at least.

    With the Broncos having already won more games (five) in eight weeks than many in the NFL thought they’d win in 18, the statniks on Team GTW scoured the popular scouting and analytics site, known colloquially as “PFF,” for some clues as to why.

    Read the rest of this story on TheKnow.DenverPost.com.

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • Arrest warrant out for Baltimore man shown on video beating Commanders fans after Sunday game – WTOP News

    Arrest warrant out for Baltimore man shown on video beating Commanders fans after Sunday game – WTOP News

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    An arrest warrant is out for John Callis, 24, who police say brutally assaulted two 23-year-old men on Sunday after the Washington Commanders and Baltimore Ravens football game in Maryland.

    Warning: The video above contains violent imagery that may be unsuitable for certain audiences.

    An arrest warrant is out for John Callis, 24, who police say brutally assaulted two 23-year-old men on Sunday after the Washington Commanders and Baltimore Ravens football game in Maryland.

    Video of a man wearing a Baltimore Ravens jersey beating two men went viral, and police identified the person as Callis. He is wanted on charges of first-degree aggravated assault and three counts of second-degree assault.

    Callis’ lawyer, Patrick Seidel, told WTOP in a statement, “We are aware of the criminal allegations and have been in direct communication with the State’s Attorney’s Office. Mr. Callis will be voluntarily surrendering himself.”

    The insurance company Maury Donnelly & Parr Inc., where Callis reportedly worked, posted a statement on X, saying, “MDP has a zero-tolerance policy for violence and aggressive behavior. This individual is no longer employed with our firm.”

    This is a developing story. Stay with WTOP for the latest.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

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

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    Ana Golden

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  • Women more likely to have asthma than men

    Women more likely to have asthma than men

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    WHEN YOU LOOK AT CHILDREN, MERCY MEDICAL CENTER DOCTOR ALBERT POLITO SAYS ASTHMA HITS ONE GROUP HARDER. IT ABSOLUTELY IS MORE COMMON IN BOYS VERSUS GIRLS. AND THEN YOU GET TO PUBERTY. AND WHEN PUBERTY HITS THE SHIFT HAPPENS. SO WE KNOW THAT THERE HAS TO BE SOMETHING HORMONAL INVOLVED IN THIS. BUT LATER IN LIFE, HE SAYS, THERE’S ANOTHER TREND. SOME STUDIES HAVE SHOWN THAT WITH THE ONSET OF MENOPAUSE, THERE’S ACTUALLY AN UPTICK IN THE DIAGNOSES OF ASTHMA THAT MAYBE THERE’S SOMETHING ABOUT ESTROGEN, WHICH WE KNOW FALLS IN MENOPAUSE, THAT’S PROTECTIVE. PEGGY HARRIS SAYS HER ASTHMA CAME ON JUST A FEW YEARS AGO, GETTING SOME RENOVATION IN MY HOUSE DONE. AND THE FLOORS AND THE DUST AND EVERYTHING. SO I WAS LIKE, OH MAN, I’M FEELING REALLY WHEEZY AND TIGHT IN THE CHEST. DOCTOR POLITO SAYS NOT ONLY ARE HORMONAL CHANGES A FACTOR, BUT WOMEN HAVE SMALLER LUNGS, TOO. HE SAYS GENETICS AND ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES ALSO COME INTO PLAY. BUT HE SAYS, LIKE OTHER CONDITIONS, PATIENTS NEED TO STAY ON TOP OF THEIR MEDICATIONS. I TELL PEOPLE, THINK ABOUT ASTHMA LIKE YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. YOU GET UP EVERY DAY. YOU TAKE YOUR HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE MEDICATION. YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOUR BLOOD PRESSURE IS, BUT YOU HAVE TO TAKE IT. AND PEGGY LOVES BEING OUTSIDE, SO SHE SAYS IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE WHEN YOU STAY ON TOP OF IT. YES. IF I FOLLOW THROUGH LIKE I SUPPOSED TO, THEN YES, IT’S BETTER. REPORTING

    Woman’s Doctor: Asthma can be more severe for women than men

    Women are more likely to have asthma than men — and it can be more severe.Dr. Albert Polito, medical director for the Lung Center at Mercy Medical Center in downtown Baltimore, explained to sister station WBAL why asthma affects women more than men and how to take care of yourself.”It absolutely is more common in boys versus girls, and then you get to puberty. And, when puberty hits, the shift happens. So, we know that there has to be something hormonal involved in this,” Polito said.Polito said there’s another trend later in life.”Some studies have shown that with the onset of menopause, there’s actually an uptick in the diagnoses of asthma, that maybe there’s something about estrogen, which we know falls in menopause that’s protective,” Polito said.Peggy Harris said that her asthma came on just a few years ago.”I was just getting some renovation in my house done — floors and the dust and everything — so, I was like, ‘Oh, man, I’m not feeling well.’ (I was) wheezing (and felt) tight in the chest,” Harris said.Polito said that not only are hormonal changes a factor, but women have smaller lungs, too. He added that genetics and environmental exposures also come into play, but, like other conditions, patients need to stay on top of their medications.”I tell people, ‘Think about asthma like you think about your high blood pressure: get up every day. You take your high blood pressure medication. You don’t know what your blood pressure is, but you have to take it,’” Polito said.Harris, who loves being outside, said it makes a difference when you stay on top of asthma.”If I follow through like I’m supposed to, then, yes, it’s better,” Harris said.

    Women are more likely to have asthma than men — and it can be more severe.

    Dr. Albert Polito, medical director for the Lung Center at Mercy Medical Center in downtown Baltimore, explained to sister station WBAL why asthma affects women more than men and how to take care of yourself.

    “It absolutely is more common in boys versus girls, and then you get to puberty. And, when puberty hits, the shift happens. So, we know that there has to be something hormonal involved in this,” Polito said.

    Polito said there’s another trend later in life.

    “Some studies have shown that with the onset of menopause, there’s actually an uptick in the diagnoses of asthma, that maybe there’s something about estrogen, which we know falls in menopause that’s protective,” Polito said.

    Peggy Harris said that her asthma came on just a few years ago.

    “I was just getting some renovation in my house done — floors and the dust and everything — so, I was like, ‘Oh, man, I’m not feeling well.’ (I was) wheezing (and felt) tight in the chest,” Harris said.

    Polito said that not only are hormonal changes a factor, but women have smaller lungs, too. He added that genetics and environmental exposures also come into play, but, like other conditions, patients need to stay on top of their medications.

    “I tell people, ‘Think about asthma like you think about your high blood pressure: get up every day. You take your high blood pressure medication. You don’t know what your blood pressure is, but you have to take it,’” Polito said.

    Harris, who loves being outside, said it makes a difference when you stay on top of asthma.

    “If I follow through like I’m supposed to, then, yes, it’s better,” Harris said.

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  • When shipping containers lost at sea burst open, what happens?

    When shipping containers lost at sea burst open, what happens?

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    Russ Lewis has picked up some strange things along the coast of Long Beach Peninsula in Washington state over the years: Hot Wheels bicycle helmets with feather tufts, life-size plastic turkey decoys made for hunters, colorful squirt guns.

    And Crocs — so many mismatched Crocs.

    If you find a single Croc shoe, you might think somebody lost it out on the beach, he said. “But, if you find two, three, four and they’re different — you know, one’s a big one, one’s a little one — that’s a clue.”

    These items aren’t like the used fishing gear and beer cans that Lewis also finds tossed overboard by fishers or partygoers. They’re the detritus of commercial shipping containers lost in the open ocean.

    Lost Shipping Containers
    Volunteer beach cleaner Russ Lewis holds detritus of shipping container spills washed up on Washington’s Long Beach Peninsula in Pacific County, Wash., Monday, June 17, 2024.

    Lindsey Wasson / AP


    Most of the world’s raw materials and everyday goods that are moved over long distances — from T-shirts to televisions, cellphones to hospital beds — are packed in large metal boxes the size of tractor-trailers and stacked on ships. A trade group says some 250 million containers cross the oceans every year — but not everything arrives as planned.

    More than 20,000 shipping containers have tumbled overboard in the last decade and a half. Their varied contents have washed onto shorelines, poisoned fisheries and animal habitats, and added to swirling ocean trash vortexes. Most containers eventually sink to the sea floor and are never retrieved.

    Belgium Europe Heatwave
    Stacks of cargo containers at the Port of Antwerp, Belgium.

    Virginia Mayo / AP


    Cargo ships can lose anywhere from a single container to hundreds at a time in rough seas. Experts disagree on how many are lost each year. The World Shipping Council, an industry group, reports that, on average, about 1,500 were lost annually over the 16 years they’ve tracked — though fewer in recent years. Others say the real number is much higher, as the shipping council data doesn’t include the entire industry and there are no penalties for failing to report losses publicly.

    Much of the debris that washed up on Lewis’ beach matched items lost off the giant cargo ship ONE Apus in November 2020. When the ship hit heavy swells on a voyage from China to California, nearly 2,000 containers slid into the Pacific.

    Court documents and industry reports show the vessel was carrying more than $100,000 worth of bicycle helmets and thousands of cartons of Crocs, as well as electronics and other more hazardous goods: batteries, ethanol and 54 containers of fireworks.

    Lost Shipping Containers
    This combination of Monday, June 17, 2024, photos, shows top row from left, a plastic turkey, a container of tennis balls, a child’s helmet; and bottom row from left, a toy football, a plastic squirt gun and a Crocs shoe, found by Russ Lewis after they washed up on Long Beach Peninsula in Pacific County, Wash.

    Lindsey Wasson / AP


    Researchers mapped the flow of debris to several Pacific coastlines thousands of miles apart, including Lewis’ beach and the remote Midway Atoll, a national wildlife refuge for millions of seabirds near the Hawaiian Islands that also received a flood of mismatched Crocs.

    Scientists and environmental advocates say more should be done to track losses and prevent container spills.

    “Just because it may seem ‘out of sight, out of mind,’ doesn’t mean there aren’t vast environmental consequences,” said marine biologist Andrew DeVogelaere of California’s Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, who has spent more than 15 years studying the environmental impact of a single container that was found in sanctuary waters.

    “We are leaving time capsules on the bottom of the sea of everything we buy and sell — sitting down there for maybe hundreds of years,” he said.

    This year’s summer winds washed thousands of plastic pellets ashore near Colombo, Sri Lanka, three years after a massive fire aboard the X-Press Pearl burned for days and sank the vessel a few miles offshore.

    The disaster dumped more than 1,400 damaged shipping containers into the sea — releasing billions of plastic manufacturing pellets known as nurdles as well as thousands of tons of nitric acid, lead, methanol and sodium hydroxide, all toxic to marine life.

    Hemantha Withanage remembers how the beach near his home smelled of burnt chemicals. Volunteers soon collected thousands of dead fish, gills stuffed with chemical-laced plastic, and nearly 400 dead endangered sea turtles, more than 40 dolphins and six whales, their mouths jammed with plastic. “It was like a war zone,” he said.

    Cleanup crews wearing full-body hazmat suits strode into the tide with hand sieves to try to collect the lentil-size plastic pellets.

    The waterfront was closed to commercial fishing for three months, and the 12,000 families that depend on fishing for their income have only gotten a fraction of the $72 million that Withanage, founder of Sri Lanka’s nonprofit Centre for Environmental Justice, believes they are owed.

    “Just last week, there was a huge wind, and all the beaches were full of plastic again,” he said in mid-June.

    Lost container contents don’t have to be toxic to wreak havoc.

    In February, the cargo ship President Eisenhower lost 24 containers off the central California coast. Some held bales of soon-waterlogged cotton and burst open. Debris washed ashore near Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, a federally protected area.

    The ship’s captain informed the U.S. Coast Guard, which worked with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and California State Parks to remove the debris. Each bale was too heavy to drag away — instead they had to be cut up, each filling two dump trucks.

    “A rancid soggy mess,” said Eric Hjelstrom, a chief ranger for California State Parks. “If tidal pools get filled with cotton, that can block out sunlight and harm a lot of organisms.”

    One bale landed in an elephant seal nursery, surrounded by baby seals. “You have to be careful how to approach it – you don’t want to injure the seals,” Hjelstrom said. A marine mammal specialist gently escorted 10 pups away before the bale was removed.

    Although the operators of the President Eisenhower helped pay for cleanup, neither California nor federal authorities have ordered the company to pay any penalties.

    As for the metal shipping containers, only one was spotted on a U.S. Coast Guard overflight, and it had vanished from sight by the time a tugboat was sent to retrieve it, said Coast Guard Lt. Chris Payne in San Francisco.

    When shipping containers are lost overboard, “Most of them sink. And a lot of times, they’re just in really deep water,” said Jason Rolfe of NOAA’s Marine Debris Program.

    ap24269664118204.jpg
    This image from video provided by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute shows fish and other sea life around a shipping container lost from the cargo vessel Med Taipei during a storm in February 2004, found around 1,280 meters (4,200 feet) below the surface of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary in California on Dec. 12, 2013. (MBARI via AP)

    / AP


    Most sunken containers — some still sealed, some damaged and open — are never found or recovered.

    The Coast Guard has limited powers to compel shipowners to retrieve containers unless they threaten a marine sanctuary or contain oil or designated hazardous materials. “If it’s outside our jurisdiction,” said Payne, “there’s nothing that we can do as the federal government to basically require a company to retrieve a container.”

    The long-term impact of adding on average more than a thousand containers each year to the world’s oceans — by the most conservative estimates — remains unknown.

    Scientists at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California are studying the cascade of changes wrought by a single container found by chance on the seabed.

    Their research team was operating a remote-control vehicle at 4,200 feet (1,280 meters) below the surface to study deep-sea corals in 2004 when they were surprised to encounter a metal box. “It’s just serendipity that we found it,” said marine ecologist Jim Barry. Despite multiple spills in nearby shipping lanes, “It’s the only container that we know exactly where it landed.”

    “The first thing that happens is they land and crush everything underneath them,” said DeVogelaere, who studied the sunken container. By changing the flow of water and sediment, the container completely changes the micro-ecosystem around it — impacting seafloor species that scientists are still discovering.

    “The animals in the deep have felt our presence before we even knew anything about them,” he said.

    Labels showed the container came from the Med Taipei, which had lost two dozen boxes in rough seas on a journey between San Francisco and Los Angeles. In 2006, the ship owners and operators reached a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice to pay $3.25 million for estimated damages to the marine environment.

    More than 80% of international trade by volume arrives by sea. All this cargo travels on increasingly vast ships.

    “On the modern big ships, it’s like a high-rise building,” said Jos Koning, a senior project manager at MARIN, a Netherlands-based maritime research organization that studies shipping risks.

    Today’s largest cargo vessels are longer than three football fields, with cranes required to lift containers and stack them in towering columns. When the industry took off some 50 years ago, ships could hold only about a tenth of the freight that today’s behemoths carry. According to the insurer Allianz, container ship capacities have doubled in just the last two decades.

    Greater size brings heightened risks. The largest ships are more difficult to maneuver and more prone to rolling in high waves. And there’s a greater chance that any single box could be damaged and crushed — a destabilizing accident that can send an entire stack of containers cascading into the sea.

    In February, the marine insurer Gard published a study based on six years of their claims that showed 9% of ultra-large ships had experienced container losses, compared to just 1% of smaller vessels.

    Accidents are often linked to cargo that has been inaccurately labeled, weighed or stored. Investigators determined that the X-Press Pearl’s devastating spill near Sri Lanka, for instance, was the result of a fire that likely started from a poorly stacked container that was leaking nitric acid.

    But cargo ship operators don’t have the capacity to verify all container weights and contents, and instead must rely on information that shippers provide.

    “It’s just completely impractical to think that you can open every container,” said Ian Lennard, president of the National Cargo Bureau, a nonprofit that works with the U.S. Coast Guard to inspect seagoing cargo.

    In a pilot study, the group found that widespread mislabeling and improper stowage meant that nearly 70% of shipping containers arriving in the U.S. with dangerous goods failed the bureau’s safety inspection.

    “Despite all these problems, most of the time it arrives safely,” Lennard said.

    But when there is a crisis — a ship hits rough weather, or a container carrying a chemical ignites in summer heat — accidents can have catastrophic impacts.

    How often do shipping container spills happen? There’s no clear answer.

    Existing tracking efforts are fragmented and incomplete. Although a few shipwrecks and disasters grab headlines, like the March crash of a cargo ship into a Baltimore bridge, much less is known about how often containers are lost piecemeal or away from major ports.

    To date, the most widely cited figures on lost shipping containers come from the World Shipping Council. The group’s membership, which carries about 90% of global container traffic, self-reports their losses in a survey each year.

    Over 16 years of collected data through 2023, the group said an average of 1,480 containers were lost annually. Their recent figures show 650 containers were lost in 2022 and only about 200 last year.

    Elisabeth Braw, senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Transatlantic Security Initiative, said self-reported surveys miss the full picture.

    For example, not included in the 2023 tally were 1,300 containers from the cargo ship Angel, which sank near Taiwan’s Kaohsiung port. That’s because the ship’s operators aren’t members of the World Shipping Council.

    Lloyd’s List Intelligence, a maritime intelligence company that’s tracked thousands of marine accidents on container ships over the past decade, told AP that underreporting is rampant, saying ship operators and owners want to avoid insurance rate hikes and protect their reputations.

    Marine insurers, which are typically on the hook to pay for mishaps, likely have access to more complete data on losses – but no laws require that data to be collected and shared publicly.

    World Shipping Council president and CEO Joe Kramek said the industry is researching ways to reduce errors in loading and stacking containers, as well as in navigating ships through turbulent waters.

    “We don’t like when it (a container loss) happens,” said Kramek. “But the maritime environment is one of the most challenging environments to operate in.”

    Earlier this year, the United Nations’ International Maritime Organization adopted amendments to two global ocean treaties aimed at increasing transparency around lost shipping containers. Those changes, expected to take effect in 2026, will require ships to report losses to nearby coastal countries and to authorities where the vessel is registered.

    But with no enforceable penalties, it remains to be seen how extensively operators will comply.

    Alfredo Parroquín-Ohlson, head of cargo in the IMO’s maritime safety division, said, “We just encourage them and tell them how important it is, but we cannot be a police.”

    It’s not just environmentalists who worry. Some lost containers float for days before sinking — endangering boats of all sizes, from commercial vessels to recreational sailboats.

    The sporting body World Sailing has reported at least eight instances in which crews had to abandon boats because of collisions with what were believed to be containers. In 2016, sailor Thomas Ruyant was 42 days into a race around the world when his sailboat’s hull split from a sudden crash with what appeared to be a floating container.

    “It gives me the shivers just thinking about it,” he said in a video dispatch from his damaged boat as he steered toward shore.

    In Sri Lanka, the consequences of the X-Press Pearl accident linger, three years after the ship went down.

    Fishermen have seen stocks of key species shrink, and populations of long-lived, slow-reproducing animals such as sea turtles may take several generations to recover.

    For his part, Lewis, the volunteer beach cleaner in Washington state, said he wonders about all the debris he doesn’t see wash up on his shores.

    “What’s going to happen when it gets down deep and, you know, it just ruptures?” he said. “We know we’ve got a problem on the surface, but I think the bigger problem is what’s on the seafloor.”

    ___

    Larson and Wieffering reported from Washington, D.C. Bharatha Mallawarachi contributed reporting from Colombo, Sri Lanka.

    ___

    This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • FBI agents have boarded vessel managed by company whose cargo ship collapsed Key Bridge

    FBI agents have boarded vessel managed by company whose cargo ship collapsed Key Bridge

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    Key Bridge victim’s wife on legal action


    Francis Scott Key Bridge victim’s wife wants legal action against Dali ship company

    03:55

    Federal agents have boarded a vessel managed by the same company as a cargo ship that caused the deadly Baltimore bridge collapse, the FBI has confirmed to CBS News. 

    In statements Saturday, spokespeople for the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Maryland confirmed that authorities have boarded the Maersk Saltoro. The ship is managed by Synergy Marine Group.

    “The Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Criminal Investigation Division and Coast Guard Investigative Services are present aboard the Maersk Saltoro conducting court authorized law enforcement activity,” the FBI told CBS News in a statement.

    The agency said it was “unable to comment further.” 

    In a lawsuit Wednesday, the U.S. Justice Department has alleged that Dali owner Grace Ocean Private Ltd. and manager Synergy Marine Group, both of Singapore, recklessly cut corners and ignored known electrical problems on the vessel that had a power outage moments before it crashed into a support column on the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March. Six men who were doing work on the bridge died. 

    The Justice Department is seeking to recover more than $100 million the government spent to clear the underwater debris and reopen the city’s port.

    Darrell Wilson, a Grace Ocean spokesperson, confirmed that the FBI and Coast Guard boarded the Maersk Saltoro in the Port of Baltimore on Saturday morning.

    Wilson has previously said the owner and manager “look forward to our day in court to set the record straight” about the Justice Department’s lawsuit.

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  • Gun violence in America: The root causes and the importance of data for prevention strategies

    Gun violence in America: The root causes and the importance of data for prevention strategies

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    Gun Violence is an issue in most cities across America. There are compounding factors that come into play that lead to the interaction between the shooter and the victim. Factors like disenfranchisement and poverty are some of the motivations that lead to this crime. Dr. Joseph Richardson is a professor of African American Studies in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Maryland. He has explored this topic on different investigations and is a part of crime intervention programs in Baltimore, MD. Dr. Richardson is an expert who shares why gun violence rises in the summer, the root cause of it, and why we need the data to create working strategies to save more lives.

    “Science is critical in translating information into prevention and intervention strategies. We need data in order to create strategies that save more lives. Suppose we consider gun violence to be a disease. We need to take the same approach the science who created the vaccines for polio took to reduce the level of homicides and non-fatal shootings,” said Dr. Richardson.

    Gun violence in most cities in America has been trending downward, according to the latest research from Dr. Richardson. Washington D.C., Dallas, TX, and Memphis, TN, are among the cities that have seen fewer homicides in 2024. Atlanta, GA, currently is at 78 homicides this year, according to the cobra report by The Atlanta Police Department. The most significant variable in this equation is the COVID-19 pandemic. Dr. Richardson explains that gun violence was at a 30-year high during the pandemic. The numbers recorded during this period rivaled what the early 1990s produced. Now, homicide numbers are dwindling back to the levels they were before the pandemic.

    Poverty, mass incarceration, and disenfranchisement are some of the structural issues that lead to gun violence. Dr. Richardson references a study done by his colleague, Dr. Mudia Uzzi. The Johns Hopkins University professor shows in the study the relationship between redlining and Baltimore neighborhoods impacted by gun violence. Redlining denies people access to credit because of where they live, even if they are personally qualified for loans. 

    Dr. Richardson reveals that Summer is the season when gun violence rises. The University of Maryland Professor breaks down how this time of the year leads to more social interaction, but those in low-income areas who may not be able to afford air conditioning can be more flustered and less patient in moments of conflict.

    “In the summertime, people may be a little bit more agitated and have less tolerance in terms of patience regarding conflict when more people are outside, which increases the likelihood of social interaction. Add that with the number of young people who are not in school and may not be engaged in summer youth employment programs, which are necessary also to keep a lid on gun violence during the summer months. You have this concoction, which is tailor-made for the increases in gun violence during those months,” said Dr. Ricahrdson.

    Dr. Richardson got into this line of work because he witnessed gun violence growing up and lost good people from it. Dr. Richardson grew up in Philadelphia during the crack era. He saw the impact gun violence had on his community. A personal discovery he made while pursuing his Ph.D. was parenting. Dr. Richardson’s dissertation was on the social context of adolescent violence in Harlem, NY. In the early 2000s, he followed two 7th-grade classes and how they navigated violence in New York City. After speaking with parents, he learned about different parenting styles and how to raise children in low-income neighborhoods.

    “I learned a lot from the parents in my study about the everyday challenges of parenting. Raising kids in disinvested communities that suffer from intergenerational poverty and trauma made me think a lot about my own upbringing. Parents are trying to keep their kids safe. Still, it is contingent on a parent’s skill set when navigating social systems in the community and the city government. Not all parents are equal regarding their knowledge about systems and resources.” said Dr. Richardson.

    The University of Maryland professor has had a series of experiences that make him aware of what attributes a good violence prevention program possesses. Dr. Richards shares that a skilled and committed frontline staff is the first item a good program should have. Frontline staff members build trust and rapport with the community, particularly high-risk individuals. The next item would be an efficient community violence intervention model. This model would show how an organization would intervene when an intense situation arises.

    Gun Violence is a matter that is not going anywhere anytime soon, but supporting the right programs in local communities can gradually shrink this problem.

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    Clayton Gutzmore

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  • Kevin Spacey’s waterfront Baltimore condo sold at auction after foreclosure

    Kevin Spacey’s waterfront Baltimore condo sold at auction after foreclosure

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    BALTIMORE (AP) — Kevin Spacey’s $5.6 million waterfront condominium in Baltimore has been sold at auction amid the disgraced actor’s financial struggles following a slew of sexual misconduct allegations.

    Last summer, a London jury acquitted Spacey on sexual assault charges stemming from allegations by four men dating back 20 years. That was his second court victory since he saw off a $40 million lawsuit in 2022 in New York brought by “Star Trek: Discovery” actor Anthony Rapp.

    But Spacey said in an emotional interview with British broadcast host Piers Morgan last month that he was millions of dollars in debt, largely because of unpaid legal bills, and facing foreclosure on the Baltimore property.

    Spacey moved to the Baltimore area when he started shooting the hugely popular political thriller “House of Cards” there in 2012. Speaking through tears during the interview, Spacey said he would have to go back to Baltimore and put all his things in storage. He said he nearly had to file for bankruptcy a couple times but managed to dodge it.

    His luxury condo on Baltimore’s Inner Harbor sold at auction Thursday morning for $3.24 million, according to the auctioneer’s website. It sits on a floating pier and boasts six bedrooms, seven full baths, an elevator, sauna, home theater, rooftop terrace, multiple verandas and a four-car garage.

    A small group of potential buyers gathered on the steps of the downtown Baltimore Circuit Court building and made their bids, according to local media reports. The suggested opening bid was $1.5 million.

    The winning bidder was acting as proxy for a real estate developer and local businessman whose identity hasn’t been disclosed, The Baltimore Sun reported.

    During tearful testimony in a London courtroom last summer, Spacey denied the allegations against him and told the jury how they had destroyed his acting career as the #MeToo movement gained momentum in the U.S.

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  • Fleet Week offers behind-the-scenes look at Navy warship in Baltimore

    Fleet Week offers behind-the-scenes look at Navy warship in Baltimore

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    It’s Fleet Week in Baltimore, and that means people can get a glimpse of life onboard the warship USS Fort Lauderdale.Watch the interviews and behind-the-scenes views in the video player aboveIn an exclusive look from the air and sea, 11 News takes you behind the scenes to speak with sailors who are happy to be home.With helmets on and life vest secured, it was onto the runway and into the air aboard a military helicopter to get a one-of-a-kind look at a real Navy ship.”This is actually my first Fleet Week, so I’m very excited,” Navy Lt. Katherine McAllister told 11 News. The view from the helicopter over the Patapsco River was breathtaking. While flying past the remnants of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge was sobering, landing on the flight deck of the USS Fort Lauderdale was exciting.”It’s pretty cool, actually. I never thought that I’d be in this position, but, you know, sometimes, when I’m standing watch up on the bridge kind of forward, we get to see a big view of the whole ocean, and it’s just very centering to realize I am doing this on my own and we’re here in the middle of the ocean,” McAllister told 11 News.The 684-foot warship based out of Norfolk, Virginia, can launch or land two helicopters, sail in excess of 24 knots and respond to disasters to provide emergency medical service.”I think, when you think of a surface warfare vessel, you think only of driving in the water, but we actually have lots of different missions, and one of them is landing aircraft,” McAllister told 11 News.Several sailors told 11 News they are looking forward to being back home, including Navy Ensign Charlie Marculewicz, of Severna Park, and McAllister, who’s looking forward to visiting the National Aquarium.”I’m definitely excited to be back in Maryland,” McAllister told 11 News. “I went to college for four years, and just seeing the sites that I’m familiar with is going to be a great time.”Navigating the ship is challenging as it has many doors and decks.”It’s easy to get lost the first couple of days you get on board,” Marculewicz told 11 News.The ship carries sailors and Marines, as well as equipment, like the Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) that is pulled up inside the ship.”It’s a hovercraft that rides on a cushion of air. The LCAC drives right into the back of the ship. It’s a high-speed, highly maneuverable craft,” Gas Turbine Senior Chief Aaron Walker told 11 News.The LCAC is used to carry cargo and Marines from ship to shore.”(It’s the) best job in Navy,” Walker said.There’s also the Joint Light Tactical Vehicles that Marines use on missions around the world.”We’ve had them in Afghanistan, pretty much; Quantico, Virginia; Fort Pickett, Virginia; Bahrain; Japan,” Marine Gunnery Sgt. Esteban Ramirez told 11 News.Sailors and Marines saluted Fort McHenry as the warship made its way through the channel before taking in the Baltimore City skyline as they prepared to tour visitors around their home at sea.”It’s a fun life, definitely involves a lot of hard work and dedication to do what you do,” Marculewicz told 11 News.Fleet Week runs through Tuesday. For more information on a schedule of events, tap here.Raw video below: Go behind the scenes aboard the USS Fort Lauderdale

    It’s Fleet Week in Baltimore, and that means people can get a glimpse of life onboard the warship USS Fort Lauderdale.

    Watch the interviews and behind-the-scenes views in the video player above

    In an exclusive look from the air and sea, 11 News takes you behind the scenes to speak with sailors who are happy to be home.

    With helmets on and life vest secured, it was onto the runway and into the air aboard a military helicopter to get a one-of-a-kind look at a real Navy ship.

    “This is actually my first Fleet Week, so I’m very excited,” Navy Lt. Katherine McAllister told 11 News.

    The view from the helicopter over the Patapsco River was breathtaking. While flying past the remnants of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge was sobering, landing on the flight deck of the USS Fort Lauderdale was exciting.

    WBAL

    View from the helicopter over the Patapsco River.

    “It’s pretty cool, actually. I never thought that I’d be in this position, but, you know, sometimes, when I’m standing watch up on the bridge kind of forward, we get to see a big view of the whole ocean, and it’s just very centering to realize I am doing this on my own and we’re here in the middle of the ocean,” McAllister told 11 News.

    The 684-foot warship based out of Norfolk, Virginia, can launch or land two helicopters, sail in excess of 24 knots and respond to disasters to provide emergency medical service.

    “I think, when you think of a surface warfare vessel, you think only of driving in the water, but we actually have lots of different missions, and one of them is landing aircraft,” McAllister told 11 News.

    Several sailors told 11 News they are looking forward to being back home, including Navy Ensign Charlie Marculewicz, of Severna Park, and McAllister, who’s looking forward to visiting the National Aquarium.

    uss fort lauderdale

    “I’m definitely excited to be back in Maryland,” McAllister told 11 News. “I went to college for four years, and just seeing the sites that I’m familiar with is going to be a great time.”

    Navigating the ship is challenging as it has many doors and decks.

    “It’s easy to get lost the first couple of days you get on board,” Marculewicz told 11 News.

    The ship carries sailors and Marines, as well as equipment, like the Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) that is pulled up inside the ship.

    “It’s a hovercraft that rides on a cushion of air. The LCAC drives right into the back of the ship. It’s a high-speed, highly maneuverable craft,” Gas Turbine Senior Chief Aaron Walker told 11 News.

    The LCAC is used to carry cargo and Marines from ship to shore.

    “(It’s the) best job in Navy,” Walker said.

    saluting Fort McHenry

    WBAL

    Sailors and Marines saluted Fort McHenry as the warship made its way through the channel.

    There’s also the Joint Light Tactical Vehicles that Marines use on missions around the world.

    “We’ve had them in Afghanistan, pretty much; Quantico, Virginia; Fort Pickett, Virginia; Bahrain; Japan,” Marine Gunnery Sgt. Esteban Ramirez told 11 News.

    Sailors and Marines saluted Fort McHenry as the warship made its way through the channel before taking in the Baltimore City skyline as they prepared to tour visitors around their home at sea.

    “It’s a fun life, definitely involves a lot of hard work and dedication to do what you do,” Marculewicz told 11 News.

    Fleet Week runs through Tuesday. For more information on a schedule of events, tap here.

    Raw video below: Go behind the scenes aboard the USS Fort Lauderdale

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  • Baltimore shipping channel closed after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse finally fully reopens

    Baltimore shipping channel closed after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse finally fully reopens

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    The main shipping channel into Baltimore’s port has fully reopened to its original depth and width following the March 26 collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge, which blocked most maritime traffic into the harbor.

    Officials announced the full reopening in a news release Monday evening. It comes after a massive cleanup effort as crews removed an estimated 50,000 tons of steel and concrete from the Patapsco River.

    The channel was blocked by wreckage of the fallen bridge, which collapsed after a container ship lost power and crashed into one of its supporting columns, sending six members of a roadwork crew plunging to their deaths. All of the victims were Latino immigrants working an overnight shift to fill potholes on the bridge.

    The Port of Baltimore, which processes more cars and farm equipment than any other in the country, was effectively closed for several weeks while the wreckage was removed. Crews were able to reopen portions of the deep-draft channel in phases, restoring some commercial traffic in recent weeks.

    On May 20, the wayward cargo ship Dali was refloated and guided back to port. The vessel had been stuck amid the wreckage for almost two months, with a massive steel truss draped across its damaged bow.

    After the Dali was moved, crews opened a channel that was 50 feet (15 meters) deep and 400 feet (122 meters) wide. The full federal shipping channel is 700 feet (213 meters) wide, which means two-way traffic can resume, officials said. They said other additional safety requirements have also been lifted because of the increased width.

    Thousands of longshoremen, truckers and small business owners have seen their jobs impacted by the collapse, prompting local and state officials to prioritize reopening the port and restoring its traffic to normal capacity in hopes of easing the economic ripple effects.

    The announcement Monday means the commerce that depends on the busy port can begin ramping back up.

    Officials said a total of 56 federal, state and local agencies participated in the salvage operations, including about 500 specialists from around the world who operated a fleet of 18 barges, 22 tugboats, 13 floating cranes, 10 excavators and four survey boats.

    “I cannot overstate how proud I am of our team,” said Col. Estee Pinchasin, Baltimore district commander for the Army Corps of Engineers. “It was incredible seeing so many people from different parts of our government, from around our country and all over the world, come together in the Unified Command and accomplish so much in this amount of time.”

    In a statement Monday, Pinchasin also acknowledged the loss of the victims’ families.

    “Not a day went by that we didn’t think about all of them, and that kept us going,” she said.

    The Dali lost power shortly after leaving Baltimore for Sri Lanka in the early hours of March 26. A National Transportation Safety Board investigation found it experienced power outages before starting its voyage, but the exact causes of the electrical issues have yet to be determined. The FBI is also conducting a criminal investigation into the circumstances leading up to the collapse.

    Officials have said they hope to rebuild the bridge by 2028.

    Subscribe to the CFO Daily newsletter to keep up with the trends, issues, and executives shaping corporate finance. Sign up for free.

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    Lea Skene, The Associated Press

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  • Marilyn Mosby Dodges Prison: Judge Orders Home Confinement

    Marilyn Mosby Dodges Prison: Judge Orders Home Confinement

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    Source: Jerod Harris / Getty

    From Prosecution to Probation: Marilyn Mosby’s Legal Twist

    In a dramatic turn of events, a federal judge has sentenced Marilyn Mosby, former Baltimore State’s Attorney, to time served and 12 months of home confinement.

    Convictions and Consequences

    Despite earning a gross salary of $247,955.58 at the time, Mosby falsely claimed financial hardship. In February, Mosby was found guilty of making a false mortgage application to purchase a Florida condo.

    Prosecutors demonstrated that she falsely claimed she received a $5,000 gift from her husband to secure a lower interest rate. Instead, they had the funds transferred back and forth between Mosby and her husband.

    Additional Penalties and Public Reaction

    Race & Justice: Marilyn Mosby Interview

    Source: Larry French / Getty

    In addition to her sentence, the court ordered Mosby forfeit 90% of her interests in the Longboat Key, Florida condo linked to her mortgage fraud conviction. The government has authorization to seize the property, with Mosby potentially receiving up to $47,600 plus 10% of the home’s appreciation value once sold.

    As they left, chants of “Justice for Marilyn” echoed, highlighting the community’s support.

    Expressing her gratitude, Mosby told the crowd, “This is not over. But God was here today and I know he’s with me, he touched the heart of this judge and has allowed me to go home to my babies.”

    The US Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland issued a statement post-sentencing, stating, “As always, we respect the judgment of the court.”

    Backstory: Mosby’s Murky Legal Waters

    Additional coverage shows that the government had initially recommended a 20-month prison sentence, but Mosby’s legal team fought for probation instead of incarceration.

    Mosby has claimed that her prosecution is politically motivated, stemming from her efforts to hold law enforcement accountable.

     NAACP’s Bold Move

    NAACP President Derrick Johnson stated, “We’ve watched, decade after decade, as Black Americans have faced wrongful prosecution at the hands of those who seek to promote injustice. The only thing Marilyn Mosby is guilty of is the desire to provide her family with a better life.”

    Johnson continued, emphasizing the broader implications of Mosby’s case: “As Black women take their rightful places in positions of power, dark forces seek to tear down both their progress, and that of our community. The NAACP refuses to stand idly by as injustice takes the wheel. We are proud to stand alongside our partners in calling on President Biden and the Department of Justice to reemphasize their commitment to racial equity by pardoning Attorney Mosby. Enough is enough. It’s time to stand with Black women.”

    Marilyn Mosby Moving Forward

    Mosby can now return home to her family. What a turn of events for a prosecutor once at the forefront of a high-profile legal battle! Her legal team and supporters continue to argue that her prosecution was politically motivated.

    This case is still developing. BOSSIP remains steadfast to providing updates. Mosby’s story remains an example of challenges faced by Black women in positions of power within the complex American legal system.

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    Lauryn Bass

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  • Netflix will carry NFL games on Christmas Day for 3 years, including 2 this season

    Netflix will carry NFL games on Christmas Day for 3 years, including 2 this season

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    Netflix and the NFL announced a three-year deal Wednesday to stream games on Christmas Day.

    The streaming giant will carry two games this year and at least one game in 2025 and ‘26. Netflix announced during a presentation to advertisers that it will have defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City at Pittsburgh followed by Baltimore at Houston.

    “Last year, we decided to take a big bet on live — tapping into massive fandoms across comedy, reality TV, sports and more,” Bela Bajaria, Netflix’s chief content officer, said in a statement. “There are no live annual events, sports or otherwise, that compare with the audiences NFL football attracts. We’re so excited that the NFL’s Christmas Day games will be only on Netflix.”

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    Associated Press

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  • 5/13: CBS Evening News

    5/13: CBS Evening News

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    5/13: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Michael Cohen testifies about Stormy Daniels payment at Donald Trump’s criminal trial; How conductor Xian Zhang is breaking barriers

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