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Tag: Charles County

  • Charles County taps Yonelle Moore Lee for vacant House seat, in conflict with Prince George’s pick – WTOP News

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    The conflict means that Gov. Wes Moore will make the choice between Yonelle Moore Lee and Darrell Odom Sr., the Prince George’s County nominee, to represent the district that straddles the two counties.

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

    The Charles County Democratic Central Committee chose Yonelle Moore Lee on Saturday to fill the vacant District 27A seat in the House, setting up a conflict with Prince George’s County Democrats who backed a different candidate Tuesday.

    The conflict means that Gov. Wes Moore (D) will make the choice between Moore Lee and Darrell Odom Sr., the Prince George’s County nominee, to represent the district that straddles the two counties.

    Moore Lee, 50, chair of the county’s school board, won the support of 12 of the 14 central committee members present at Saturday morning’s roughly two-hour meeting.

    “Your trust in me really means a lot. I will not let you down,” Moore Lee said after the vote. “I’m not sure what the next steps may be and what will happen, but either way, I’m very, very proud.”

    The governor has 15 days to choose between Moore Lee and Odom, once the names are forwarded to him, but the 2026 General Assembly is set to convene sooner than that, on Jan. 14.

    The seat became vacant after Kevin Harris was sworn in last month as state senator for District 27, that includes portions of Charles, Calvert and Prince George’s counties. Harris replaced former Democratic Sen. Michael Jackson, who left to become superintendent of Maryland State Police.

    Harris attended Saturday’s special public hearing in Charles County and spoke on behalf of Odom, 71, a member of the Prince George’s Democratic Central Committee who received one vote.

    Lamont Tyler Bunyon, who runs an optometry practice in Prince George’s, also received a vote from the Charles County Democrats, as he did at the Prince George’s meeting.

    As at Tuesday night’s meeting in Prince George’s, Harris was among a few elected officials to speak on behalf of a candidate Saturday.

    Reuben Collins II, president of the Charles County Board of Commissioners, and Del. Debra Davis (D-Charles) both spoke on behalf of Moore Lee.

    “As chairperson of the Board of Education, she leads one of the most complex public institutions in our region overseeing a $529 million budget and serving over 28,000 students,” Davis said. “She has proven her ability to lead in high-stakes environments, build consensus across diverse viewpoints and deliver outcomes that matter to families. That’s real governing experience.”

    Each candidate was asked several questions that included their plans to support the central committee as a “valued” partner. They all agreed.

    They differed slightly when asked what legislation or policy areas they would be most prepared to immediately work on.

    Although each candidate mentioned education as a priority, Moore Lee specifically touched upon the multibillion-dollar Blueprint for Maryland’s Future education reform plan.

    “We have made a promise and a commitment to a world class education with the Blueprint. It’s supposed to be fully implemented by 2030, that is something that’s very important to me,” she said.

    Bunyon said a main priority for him would be health care, especially with his work as an optometrist. He noted how several friends died in their 50s.

    “We have to do a better job arguing for better health care, advocacy [and] awareness resources, because it’s a lot of preventable things that can be done,” he said. “I hate to say that I’m going to run there and try to be a doctor to folks, but I’m supposed to because I’m trained to do it.”

    Odom said public safety “is a strong suit” for him, with a specific focus on juvenile justice reform, domestic violence and emergency response and prevention. Besides his 31 years of service in the Army and Coast Guard, he also worked as an acting fire chief in Prince George’s.

    The meeting did have a little humor when Charles County committee Vice Chair Elaine Hardee asked Odom how he would define ethical leadership and model it as a delegate.

    In a previous question, Odom summarized ethics in public service.

    “Should I say ditto on that?” Odom said to several laughs in the room.

    In the meantime, the Prince George’s Central Committee has scheduled another public hearing Monday to select someone to replace Del. Jazz Lewis (D-Prince George’s). The former House majority whip, who has represented District 24 since 2017, announced more than two weeks ago he’s stepping down to work as the director of government relations at the University of Maryland, his alma mater.

    Lewis’ last day will be the same day as the central committee meeting.

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    Sam Delgado

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  • Waldorf man sentenced in fatal shooting of girlfriend’s husband – WTOP News

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    A Waldorf man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for the 2022 killing of his girlfriend’s husband, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C.

    A Waldorf man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for the 2022 killing of his girlfriend’s husband, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C.

    On Dec. 5, 2022, prosecutors said Keyon Slaughter, now 28, shot and killed Dana Bailey Jr. in Bailey’s apartment in Southeast D.C., fled the scene and went to North Carolina. Slaughter was in a relationship with Bailey’s wife, and Bailey was aware of the affair since earlier that year, according to prosecutors.

    At the time of the murder, Slaughter was on supervised probation for a 2019 armed robbery conspiracy conviction in Charles County, Maryland.

    Slaughter was arrested in July 2023 and pleaded guilty to second-degree murder while armed in June. Bailey’s wife was also indicted and pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice.

    He was sentenced Friday and will serve five years of supervised release after serving the prison sentence.

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

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    Jeffery Leon

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  • Sheriff: Domestic assault, car chase end with man, woman killed in Maryland – WTOP News

    Sheriff: Domestic assault, car chase end with man, woman killed in Maryland – WTOP News

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    Two people are dead following what the St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office in Maryland described as a domestic assault.

    Two people are dead following what the St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office in Maryland described as a domestic assault.

    Just before 11 a.m. on Wednesday, the sheriff’s office got a call about a reported domestic assault on Rosewood Drive in Lexington Park.

    There, they found 25-year-old Alaysia Janell Milburn suffering from a gunshot wound. She was taken to MedStar St. Mary’s Hospital, where she later died. A 7-month-old infant was also taken to the hospital with no reported injuries.

    A man in a Hyundai Kona fled the scene, according to witnesses. The man was heading northbound on Route 5, and deputies began to chase the car. Charles and Calvert County Sheriff’s offices, as well as the Maryland State Police, joined the chase as the man crossed into Charles County.

    While the man was driving on Prince Frederick Road in Hughesville, a Calvert County deputy crashed into his car, stopping it and rending it inoperable.

    The man quickly got out of his car, then got back in. Once inside the car, the man fired a shot. Deputies found him with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, a sheriff’s office news release said. Deputies performed lifesaving measures and took the man to a nearby hospital. He was prononounced dead just before 1 p.m.

    The man has not yet been identified as investigators are waiting to notify his next of kin.

    A Calvert County Deputy was transported to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    St. Mary’s County Sheriff Steve Hall said in a release, “We mourn the loss of this young mother, and we hold her family in prayer. Today’s tragic set of circumstances brings light to the need to continue efforts on all fronts to prevent violence in domestic relationships.”

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    © 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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  • Rare Essence headlines Summer Soul Music Festival in La Plata on Labor Day weekend – WTOP News

    Rare Essence headlines Summer Soul Music Festival in La Plata on Labor Day weekend – WTOP News

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    The beloved D.C. go-go band Rare Essence headlines the third annual Summer Soul Music Festival at the Charles County Fairgrounds in La Plata, Maryland.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Rare Essence at the Summer Soul Music Fest (Part 1)

    Dancing on the eve of Labor Day means you can party without having to worry about work the next day!

    Rare Essence performs live at U Street Music Hall. (Courtesy U Street Music Hall)

    The beloved D.C. go-go band Rare Essence headlines the third annual Summer Soul Music Festival at the Charles County Fairgrounds in La Plata, Maryland, on Sunday from noon to 8 p.m.

    WTOP caught up with founding member Andre “Whiteboy” Johnson as Rare Essence leads a lineup that includes Northeast Groovers, DCVybe, The Kim Michelle Experience and All-Star Experience, as well as DJ Frisco and DJ Biggs.

    “For decades now, we’ve always done a big show on Labor Day Sunday,” Johnson told WTOP. “This is the very first time that we’ve done this festival and this venue, so this is going to be a really big deal here. We used to play in that area a lot back in the ’80s and ’90s, some of the venues aren’t there anymore, but the people that live in that area, they travel up to D.C. and Prince George’s County sometimes, but we’re glad to be going to them this time.”

    Johnson met his future bandmates as kids at St. Thomas More Academy in Southeast D.C., including Quentin “Footz” Davidson, Michael “Funky Ned” Neal and John “Big Horn” Jones. How did he get his nickname?

    “I used to listen to a lot of pop music, which was rock music at the time, so a lot of Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Kansas, The Eagles, all of those groups, and all the music was guitar-driven. I’m a guitar player, so I would learn those songs and play those songs at band practice,” Johnson said. “They started teasing me saying, ‘You’re playing all that white music, we’re gonna call you ‘Whiteboy.’”

    Rare Essence officially formed as a band in 1976, playing all the clubs in the D.C. area and moving to bigger venues, such as the Washington Coliseum, the Capitals Center and the D.C. Armory.

    “They were just gigs to us. We had no idea because we were young. We just knew we were playing in a big place today, we didn’t realize the magnitude of what we were doing at that time,” Johnson said.

    While E.U.’s hit song “Da Butt” went nationwide thanks to Spike Lee’s classic film “School Daze” (1988), Rare Essence’s song “Lock It” similarly went nationwide thanks to the soundtrack of Kevin Hooks’ comedy flick “Strictly Business” (1991) starring D.C. native Tommy Davidson and future Oscar winner Halle Berry.

    “That was great,” Johnson said. “The record already had really good buzz on the East Coast and we were signed to Uptown Records, who Andre Harrell was one of the producers of that movie. He said, ‘I want to put one of the songs in that movie,’ so we were like, ‘Yeah, great, that’s fine.’ After he put it in, that’s what made it really national.”

    After many live albums, the band’s first studio album was “Work the Walls” (1992), including a hit title track that came to be with help from a cement bench along the side wall of The Celebrity Hall, later known as The Black Hole.

    “When we were playing a lot of the women would jump up on there and start dancing facing the wall, so that’s actually where the idea came from. We’re watching them and screaming, ‘Work the walls! Work the walls!’ — and it turned into a song,” Johnson said.

    Their second album, “So What You Want?” (1995), was partially recorded at The Eastside Club in D.C., where they used to play every Wednesday night.

    “The Eastside just had a vibe to it. Every time we walked in there on a Wednesday night until 3 in the morning, they jam packed in there and everybody was just all the way amped up. Plus it had a really good sound to it, the ceilings weren’t real high, there was a lot of wood, so that’s why we figured it would be a good spot for a live set,” Johnson said.

    That same year, they joined the holiday go-go compilation album “Let’s Go-Go Christmas” (1995), doing for D.C. what Kurtis Blow’s “Christmas Rappin’” did for Harlem and Run-D.M.C.’s “Christmas in Hollis” did for Queens.

    “The great thing about that is every Christmas since the release of that song and that album, they play those songs on the radio, so it’s great to even be part of the Christmas holiday,” Johnson said.

    Evolving from “Body Snatchers” (1996) to “We Go On and On” (1998), their music continued to reflect the times as the song “Overnight Scenario” delivered lyrics that influenced Jay-Z’s “Do It Again” released the next year.

    Meanwhile, their album “RE-2000” (1999) featured Redman on “We Push” and their album “Turn It Up” (2016) featured collaborations with DJ Kool and Raheem DeVaughn.

    “We are going along with what’s current, we’ve always been able to do that,” Johnson said. “We’re from the ’70s, but you can’t sound like you’re from the ’70s in the ’90s, so we were able to morph into a ’90s sound, a 2000s sound. Even today, we make sure that we keep the band sounding current while still being able to do the classics.”

    Today, Rare Essence has carved a spot on the proverbial Mount Rushmore of D.C. go-go bands, including the Chuck Brown Band, Trouble Funk and Experience Unlimited (WTOP has gratefully interviewed them all).

    “It’s absolutely an honor to be a part of the first generation of go-go,” Johnson said. “We’re all following Chuck Brown’s lead. Again, at the time, we had no idea that it was gonna turn into what it turned into. We were just out there having a good time playing from clubs to school gyms to rec centers and out at the parks. We were just having a good time performing and this all morphed into a genre and it just kept us going decade after decade.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Rare Essence at the Summer Soul Music Fest (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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

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  • Maryland woman competes on reality TV series ‘The Anonymous’ on USA Network – WTOP News

    Maryland woman competes on reality TV series ‘The Anonymous’ on USA Network – WTOP News

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    A Maryland woman is competing on the cutthroat TV series “The Anonymous” on USA Network. Episode 4 airs Monday at 11 p.m., right after WWE’s “Monday Night Raw.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘The Anonymous’ on USA Network (Part 1)

    A Charles County, Maryland, woman is competing on the cutthroat TV series “The Anonymous” on USA Network.

    Tyrenna Tolbert appears in a scene from “The Anonymous.” (Rico Torres/USA Network)(Rico Torres/USA Network/USA Network)

    Episode 4 airs Monday at 11 p.m. — fittingly right after WWE’s “Monday Night Raw.”

    “I’m gonna lay the smack down right on ’em,” Tyrenna Tolbert told WTOP. “I’m so excited to see what goes down tonight. I’m telling you, if you’re not watching tonight, you are missing out on some big stuff. You’ve gotta watch.”

    The show pits contestants against each other in various group challenges as they live in two different houses. First, they share face-to-face interactions mingling on the grounds of the lavish “Circle House.” Then, they spend each night in the “Square House,” where they log into a digital realm to hide behind anonymous avatars.

    “You’re two different people,” Tolbert said. “You have this ‘Anonymous’ mode, you pick out a handle from different characters … something so removed from your personality that you can throw people off. In anonymous chat mode, you can talk as much trash as you want. … In the real world, you have to be this phony kumbaya, ‘you can trust me, tell me your secrets,’ then you use that against them because at the end of the day, it’s about $100,000.”

    Filming took place over about a month back in April, with one consistent theme emerging.

    “Don’t trust anybody, that is the whole premise,” Tolbert said. “When money is involved, you have to make sure, double, triple, don’t trust anybody at face value because who you think is your friend may be your frenemy, your enemy, your backstabber, your front stabber, trust no one. $100,000? You have to always be sharp and ready.”

    Proudly born in the Bronx in New York City, Tolbert moved to Charles County in 2004, meaning this year marks her 20th anniversary of living in the DMV working for the federal government.

    “It’s part of Southern Maryland, so I’m kind of in the backwoods, so to speak, but it’s a really nice place,” Tolbert said. “I moved because my job was here and a better quality of life, so that’s how I ended up in the Maryland area. Working for the government brought me down here, they moved me here, it was a promotion, so I took the job, they paid for me to move here, it was a great opportunity, so why miss it?”

    Her big break into TV came when she auditioned for a different show but didn’t make it.

    “I loved this show called ‘The Circle,’ I had been watching it all during COVID, just binge-watching, so I applied,” Tolbert said. “I got a call and thought it was a spam call, so I almost hung up and realized that it was an actual legit casting agent. Fast forward, I got all the way to the end and I wasn’t selected, but I then got another call for ‘The Anonymous’ asking would I be interested and of course I said yes because it was something right up my alley.”

    If the 54-year-old wins the competition, how would she spend the $100,000 prize money?

    “I’m a little bit more seasoned; I would probably put some away toward my retirement,” Tolbert said. “I have two wonderful parents that I would definitely help out with whatever needs they had around the house, same with my fabulous daughters, just so I can share some of it amongst my family — and of course take a fabulous trip! You just have to be luxuriating and demure in all of the gloriousness of that $100K that I can stand on a trip.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘The Anonymous’ on USA Network (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation here.

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

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    Jason Fraley

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  • Charles County students, staff revive teacher after heart attack

    Charles County students, staff revive teacher after heart attack

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    A Charles County teacher’s life lesson not to give up may have saved his life.Frank Holiday’s students are inspired by his lessons in welding class at North Point High School in Waldorf.”He doesn’t sugarcoat stuff. He tells us the truth about life,” said Kayden Chavers, a student.But while playing a game of 3-on-3 basketball on Sept. 30, using a hoop that students built, something went wrong.”He got his last shot off. We when to check him, he started leaning back and fell,” said Dylan Farmer, a student.Charlie Burch, who teaches construction next door, was first to respond.”All of a sudden, I heard yelling and screaming down the hall. A couple of (students) ran in my room and said, ‘Something happened, he just passed out,’” Burch said.Amy Robinson, the school’s aquatics manager and CPR trainer, responded.”I started applying the (automated external defibrillator) pads,” Robinson said.Teachers trained in CPR knew it wasn’t a good situation.”To be honest, Frank did not look good. He definitely didn’t. There were no signs of life from him,” Robinson said.”In my training and experience, he was dead on the scene. It was, I think, about 21 minutes of continuous CPR between everybody,” said Charles County sheriff’s Cpl. Tiffany Smith, the school resource officer.Holiday suffered a heart attack known as the widow maker, which is almost impossible to survive. But thanks to fast-thinking students and persistent teachers, he’s OK.”It’s overwhelming to think the amount of people who didn’t give up, and I’m here today,” Holiday said.On Tuesday night, Charles County Public Schools honored everyone who helped save Holiday, who said how he survived is the greatest lesson he could ever teach.”If it gets hard, don’t quit. I think that’s the lesson,” Holiday said. “I really think it’s a gift from God that I’m here — 100%.”

    A Charles County teacher’s life lesson not to give up may have saved his life.

    Frank Holiday’s students are inspired by his lessons in welding class at North Point High School in Waldorf.

    “He doesn’t sugarcoat stuff. He tells us the truth about life,” said Kayden Chavers, a student.

    But while playing a game of 3-on-3 basketball on Sept. 30, using a hoop that students built, something went wrong.

    “He got his last shot off. We when to check him, he started leaning back and fell,” said Dylan Farmer, a student.

    Charlie Burch, who teaches construction next door, was first to respond.

    “All of a sudden, I heard yelling and screaming down the hall. A couple of (students) ran in my room and said, ‘Something happened, he just passed out,’” Burch said.

    Amy Robinson, the school’s aquatics manager and CPR trainer, responded.

    “I started applying the (automated external defibrillator) pads,” Robinson said.

    Teachers trained in CPR knew it wasn’t a good situation.

    “To be honest, Frank did not look good. He definitely didn’t. There were no signs of life from him,” Robinson said.

    “In my training and experience, he was dead on the scene. It was, I think, about 21 minutes of continuous CPR between everybody,” said Charles County sheriff’s Cpl. Tiffany Smith, the school resource officer.

    Holiday suffered a heart attack known as the widow maker, which is almost impossible to survive. But thanks to fast-thinking students and persistent teachers, he’s OK.

    “It’s overwhelming to think the amount of people who didn’t give up, and I’m here today,” Holiday said.

    On Tuesday night, Charles County Public Schools honored everyone who helped save Holiday, who said how he survived is the greatest lesson he could ever teach.

    “If it gets hard, don’t quit. I think that’s the lesson,” Holiday said. “I really think it’s a gift from God that I’m here — 100%.”

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