ReportWire

Tag: neal augenstein

  • Chevy Chase will not get historic DC neighborhood designation, at least for now – WTOP News

    Chevy Chase will not get historic DC neighborhood designation, at least for now – WTOP News

    One of D.C.’s wealthier neighborhoods, Chevy Chase, will not get the designation of being a historic district, at least for now. D.C.’s Historic Preservation Office says it will not consider the application, citing lack of community consensus. 

    This page contains a video which is being blocked by your ad blocker.
    In order to view the video you must disable your ad blocker.

    Chevy Chase in D.C. will not get historic designation, at least for now

    One of D.C.’s wealthier neighborhoods, Chevy Chase, will not get the designation of being a historic district, at least for now.

    With recent median home sale prices between $1,237,500 and $1,700,000, an application to create the Chevy Chase Historic District was filed in 2002, which would be D.C.’s 38th neighborhood historic district.

    However, the District’s Historic Preservation Office said Monday, in a status update, that it will not consider the application, citing “the lack of community consensus.”

    Proponents for the Chevy Chase Historic District have said it was needed to protect the neighborhood’s “small town in a big city” feel from future development.

    “It is clear that public sentiment on the proposal is sharply divided,” according to the Historic Preservation Office update.

    The proposed historic district included 41st Street, Western Avenue, Chevy Chase Parkway and Military Road Northwest as its boundaries.

    The application was filed as the District sought to fill-in the community’s commercial corridor, along Connecticut Avenue, and redevelop the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library and Chevy Chase Community Center to include affordable housing and new public buildings.

    “Given the lack of community consensus and concerns about the proposed boundaries, as well as the need to conduct a citywide analysis in order to more effectively evaluate historic district nominations, HPO is not prepared to recommend that the current proposal for a Chevy Chase Historic District be considered by the [Historic Preservation Review Board] at this time,” the status update read.

    Opponents of creating a historic district have said there are no distinctive architectural styles in Chevy Chase that require preservation, and making the community more inclusive should be prioritized over seeking the historic designation.

    Beginning in fall 2024, the District’s Historic Preservation Office said it “will begin data collection, mapping, and equity analysis of historic resources across the District. This work will be critical in informing HPO’s evaluation of future historic district proposals.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Popular Mister Days sports bar set to return to Clarendon 5 years after closing – WTOP News

    Popular Mister Days sports bar set to return to Clarendon 5 years after closing – WTOP News

    Mister Days Sports Rock Cafe will return to the Clarendon neighborhood of Arlington, Virginia, opening in a few weeks, five years after the popular sports bar, dance club, and restaurant closed, WTOP has learned.

    Mister Days Sports Rock Cafe will return to the Clarendon neighborhood of Arlington, Virginia, in a few weeks — five years after the popular sports bar, dance club and restaurant closed, WTOP has learned.

    Bobby Lee opened the original Mister Days in 1977 south of D.C.’s Dupont Circle. The lunch counter served only a roast beef sandwich. Soon after, Mister Days moved to 18th Street Northwest between L and M Streets Northwest, and eventually moved to Clarendon in 1999.

    Lee said he’s in the process of securing the appropriate permits and hopes to be open in May at 1101 N. Highland Street.

    “It’s across the street from the old Mister Days,” Lee said.

    “The reason we were called Mister Days is because we were only open during the day,” he said.

    In the years that followed, the alley that housed Mister Days became home to other businesses owned by Lee: Captain Days Seafood Restaurant and Happy Days Diner, which operated in the evenings as Back Alley Cafe.

    In 1999, Mister Days moved to Clarendon, on the corner of Washington Boulevard and Highland Street. As Mister Days Sports Rock Cafe, near Courthouse Metro, amid the blossoming Clarendon neighborhood, Mr. Days was a popular place for people to watch a sporting event, eat and drink or dance.

    “We’re very excited,” Lee told WTOP, who said his decision to close the Clarendon business in April 2019 was in part due to health reasons.

    “I’ve beaten that back, and I’m ready to go,” he said.

    Why get back in the demanding business?

    “I’m old enough to collect Social Security, but not ready to die,” Lee joked. “And a space opened up, so I figured, why not?”

    The Alley moving to Clarendon

    During Mister Days’ stay in the District, Lee introduced a concept that he’ll bring to newly opened location.

    “Originally, on a St. Patrick’s Day we had live music in the alley, and people loved it. But I noticed that when the band stopped, and the spinners started playing recorded music, people were dancing,” Lee said.

    He realized the idea of dancing in the alley could be popular, even without the St. Patrick’s Day crowd.

    “So, we’d do the Rally in the Alley the weekend before or after St. Patrick’s Day, depending upon the calendar each year,” Lee said.

    He said the new Mister Days Sports Rock Cafe in Clarendon will occupy two floors and have a section called The Alley. He envisions getting permits for outdoor alley events after opening.

    While “we didn’t do much renovating — it’s mostly lipstick and rouge,” Lee said the sports viewing experience will be state of the art.

    “The huge screen we got just cleared customs, and may be the biggest one in Northern Virginia.”

    Lee said the menu of the new place will include new touches, “but we’re not throwing the baby out with the bath water — we’ll still have great bar food.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • With higher cancer death rates in rural areas, U.Va. seeks to improve prevention, access to clinical trials – WTOP News

    With higher cancer death rates in rural areas, U.Va. seeks to improve prevention, access to clinical trials – WTOP News

    For years, doctors, public health experts and researchers have known the risk of dying from cancer is substantially higher if a patient lives in a rural area, compared to an urban area.

    For years, doctors, public health experts and researchers have known the risk of dying from cancer is substantially higher if a patient lives in a rural area, compared to an urban area.

    Now, two University of Virginia Cancer Center experts have outlined steps to improve cancer prevention for millions of rural and medically underserved Americans, and improve their access to cutting-edge clinical trials.

    “Most of the over 50 comprehensive cancer centers are in urban areas,” said Dr. Linda Duska, referring to the National Cancer Institute-Designated Cancer Centers.

    The D.C. region is home to several of those centers.

    In addition to U.Va., Virginia Commonwealth University has achieved the designation, as have the Johns Hopkins University and University of Maryland centers in Baltimore. In D.C., Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center has earned the designation.

    Patients in rural areas often are unable to reap the benefits of cancer specialists.

    “To see a specialty provider requires a lengthy drive, taking time off work, getting child care, and there are many other socio-economic barriers that limit a patient’s ability to access care,” Duska said.

    “We definitely know that the rural population is at significantly increased risk for multiple health care problems — cancer is just one of them,” she added. “Groups of individuals in rural areas are more likely to have diabetes, they’re more likely to be obese, or more likely to have other conditions that in many ways complicate their lack of access to care.”

    Goal: Bring specialty care to rural areas

    Duska and U.Va. colleague Dr. Kari Ring outlined a plan in the medical journal Gynecologic Oncology they say could ultimately improve cancer care and prevention for more than 75 million people.

    “There are ways to bring our specialty care to the rural areas,” Duska said. “Telehealth can be a great opportunity for rural patients, even if they don’t have access to internet.”

    While in urban areas, telemedicine makes it possible for patients to see and hear their providers in a video chat.

    Duska said in many remote areas, high-speed internet or even cellphone service isn’t an option

    “We can accomplish a lot on a telephone,” in terms of screening high-risk patients. “We can collect family histories, which can be very helpful, and provide education — not just for the patients, but providers, as well.”

    In urban cancer centers, an at-risk patient would be encouraged to have genetic testing.

    “The blood draws can be done locally, once that screening and counseling has been completed on the telephone,” Duska said.

    In addition to screening, Duska and Ring are calling for continued efforts to “decentralize” clinical trials, which typically require participation at urban cancer centers.

    Nationally, in all settings — urban and rural — only 2% to 8% of Americans diagnosed with cancer enroll in a clinical trial, Duska said, meaning they can’t benefit from the latest novel approaches as they’re being developed and tested.

    “There’s a huge explosion right now of treatment opportunities that are targeted to specific mutations in a person’s tumor,” Dusk said. “We’re not just treating a generic tumor, we’re treating your tumor that has a particular mutation.”

    As with screening, Duska and Ring are looking for ways to enable rural patients to have access to clinical trials being run at urban comprehensive cancer centers. Currently, some patients have to pay for travel and lodging to participate in a trial.

    “So patients don’t have to travel to Charlottesville, for example, for a study,” Duska said. “They could get this study at a local hospital, where they feel a lot more comfortable, and that’s much closer to home.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • How police tracked down a suspected carjacker charged with fatally shooting 2 women in Manassas – WTOP News

    How police tracked down a suspected carjacker charged with fatally shooting 2 women in Manassas – WTOP News

    A 36-year-old man is being charged with two counts of murder, after police say two women were found shot to death in a Manassas, Virginia apartment.

    New details emerged Wednesday about what led Prince William County police to charge a 36-year-old man with two counts of murder, after two women were found shot to death in a Manassas, Virginia apartment.

    It started early Tuesday morning at approximately 12:45 a.m., when a man reported an armed carjacker stole his Toyota Camry in Manassas, according to a news release from police. Police were already in the area, after getting a separate call about a man with a gun.

    Prince William County police entered the information into the National Crime Information Center/Virginia Criminal Information Network database. The national database is used to enter or search for information about wanted or missing people, stolen property, criminal histories and to access the National Sex Offender Registry.

    Several hours after county police entered the information, police said they were informed a man, Edward James Jackson Bland, 36, of Manassas, was being detained in Shenandoah County.

    According to police, the Toyota that Jackson Bland was driving “became inoperable” in the area of Interstate 66 and Interstate 81, and he walked to a nearby convenience store.

    “The vehicle was located on Stoney Creek Road, in Edinburg, just west of I-81,” Major Kolter Stroop, with Shenandoah County Sheriff’s Office, who said the convenience store was located “at the Shell station on Stoney Creek Road.”

    While current technology allows law enforcement to remotely disable a stolen car, Kolter said “To our knowledge the vehicle was not disabled by anything digital, but the driver may have been having some type of vehicle issues.”

    Investigators were notified, and they confirmed the vehicle had been stolen from Prince William County. Jackson Bland was detained, police said.

    “During the investigation, additional information was learned prompting concern and a welfare check at an apartment on Porter Ridge Lane in Manassas,” according to news release from Prince William County Police.

    When nobody answered the door, police said officers forced their way in just after 5 a.m. and found the bodies of 34-year-old Leann Renee Harris and 22-year-old Asia Payne. Both had been shot to death.

    Jackson Bland was arrested and charged with two counts of murder, carjacking, plus three counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony.

    “He was arrested without incident,” said Stroop.

    Jackson Bland remains in custody in Shenandoah County.

    The women who were killed are both from Manassas, police said.

    Prince William County police said Jackson Bland and the two victims knew each other, but none of them lived in the apartment where Harris and Payne were killed. Police have not publicly released a possible motive.

    Prince William County Lieutenant Jonathan Perok said whether the gun used in the armed carjacking was similar to the caliber of weapon used in the fatal shootings is still under investigation.

    Online court records do not reflect when Bland Jackson will make his first court appearance in Prince William County.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Fairfax Co. au pair charged in fetish website killing visited gun range with victim’s husband, prosecutors say – WTOP News

    Fairfax Co. au pair charged in fetish website killing visited gun range with victim’s husband, prosecutors say – WTOP News

    Prosecutors said that the au pair charged in the fatal shooting of a man inside a Fairfax County house visited a shooting range with the husband of the woman who was also stabbed to death inside the Virginia home.

    Prosecutors say that the au pair charged with fatally shooting a man inside a Fairfax County house where a woman was also stabbed to death last year visited a shooting range with the woman’s husband just a few months before the bizarre double slaying.

    District Court Judge Michael Lindner on Monday found that there is enough evidence and the case can go forward against Juliana Peres Magalhaes, who is accused of firing the shot that killed 39-year-old Joseph Ryan in February 2023. She is facing charges of second-degree murder and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony.

    In making his decision Monday, the judge said he didn’t have to consider motive because based on the evidence, prosecutors demonstrated probable cause.

    Ryan and Christine Banfield, 37, were killed inside the home on Stable Brook Way in the Hattontown neighborhood of Herndon on Feb. 24, 2023. Nobody has been charged in Christine Banfield’s death.

    Prosecutors introduced business records that showed husband Brendan Banfield and Peres Magalhaes visited the Silver Eagle shooting range in Ashburn, Virginia, in the weeks before Christine Banfield and Ryan were killed.

    Range records showed that Brendan Banfield and Peres Magalhaes were at the range two months before the shooting. He then returned on Jan. 28, 2023, and bought a Glock. Prosecutors said the serial number from the receipt matched the serial number of a gun recovered at the scene.

    Subpoenaed to testify in court on Monday, Brendan Banfield took the Fifth when asked whether he returned to the shop and purchased a Glock, which prosecutors said was the weapon that Peres Magalhaes retrieved from a bathroom gun safe and used to shoot Ryan.

    Eric Clingan, with the Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, said the gun was used to “eliminate the only living witness.”

    During the preliminary hearing on Monday, Brendan Banfield refused to answer questions from prosecutors that alluded to an affair with Peres Magalhaes.

    Peres Magalhaes’ defense attorney Ryan Campbell repeatedly objected to the relevance of the alleged relationship between his client and the husband.

    “The purchase of the weapon before the incident is the relevance,” the judge said, who later described the court proceedings as, “The government may be playing two potential defendants against each other.”

    Fetish website

    Last December during a bond hearing, prosecutors revealed new evidence that could explain how Ryan found himself at the Banfield home on the day of the killings.

    Prosecutors said that someone had used Christine Banfield’s laptop to create an account on an adult fetish website. Ryan responded to the user’s profile, and he arrived at the home with the intention of having “rough sex” with Christine Banfield.

    Prosecutors have not said who created the account.

    At the December hearing, Campbell, Peres Magalhaes’ lawyer, said the defense theory “seems like the easiest to accept — that Joe Ryan communicated with Christine Banfield through a BDSM website.”

    Speaking during that December hearing, Campbell said it was difficult for him to accept that somebody other than Christine Banfield would be going on her computer to lure Ryan for months.

    At that earlier hearing, Campbell argued that the evidence showed that Christine Banfield established the adult website account, and also purchased tickets for Peres Magalhaes to take the couple’s 4-year-old daughter to the National Zoo in D.C. during her alleged assignation with Ryan.

    Ryan and Christine Banfield’s relationship was not discussed in the hearing on Monday, but prosecutors have alleged that Brendan Banfield and Peres Magalhaes were having an affair.

    “The defendant and her armed, law enforcement lover did not stand by and patiently wait to shoot Joe until after he was finished stabbing Christine several times. That’s just not believable. This is a story was made up to cover a murder,” prosecutors said during the December bond hearing.

    Brendan Banfield has not been charged in either killing.

    What happened inside the Banfields’ Herndon house

    A Fairfax County detective who interviewed Peres Magalhaes said that she told him she observed Ryan with a knife to the throat of Christine Banfield, who was nude.

    According to police and prosecutors, Brendan Banfield shot Ryan near his right eyebrow with his IRS-issued service weapon. Brendan Banfield is a criminal investigative division agent for the IRS.

    After Brendan Banfield wounded Ryan, Peres Magalhaes said he told her to get a gun from a safe in the bathroom of the master bedroom. She then fired a shot at Ryan, which struck him in the chest, and devastated his heart, according to the medical examiner who testified during Monday’s hearing.

    Immediately after the shootings, Peres Magalhaes denied having a romantic relationship with Brendan Banfield.

    However, in the months between the shootings and her arrest, prosecutors said photo and text evidence showed the two had been engaging in an affair.

    Campbell objected to Fairfax County senior assistant commonwealth’s attorney Eric Clingan’s attempts to probe Brendan Banfield about his relationship with Peres Magalhaes.

    Before Brandon Banfield took the stand on Monday, his defense attorney David Hall told the judge that his client intended to plead the Fifth to avoid self-incrimination.

    However, Judge Lindner said prosecutors were entitled to ask questions, and he would determine whether each specific question put Brendan Banfield at risk of self-incrimination.

    Banfield declined to answer any questions about his relationship with Peres Magalhaes. At one point, he refused to say whether he was married to Christine Banfield on the day she was killed.

    Peres Magalhaes is due in Fairfax County Circuit Court on Tuesday morning, to appeal an earlier District Court judge ruling that denied her bond before trial.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • DNA, jail calls, financial records: Md. prosecutors make case in 2010 murder of AU professor – WTOP News

    DNA, jail calls, financial records: Md. prosecutors make case in 2010 murder of AU professor – WTOP News

    When Jorge Rueda Landeros goes on trial for killing American University professor Sue Ann Marcum, it will be almost 15 years after Montgomery County prosecutors say he beat and asphyxiated her at her home in Bethesda, Maryland.

    When Jorge Rueda Landeros goes on trial for killing American University professor Sue Ann Marcum, it will be almost 15 years after Montgomery County prosecutors say he beat and asphyxiated her at her home in Bethesda, Maryland.

    Rueda Landeros is charged with first-degree murder in Marcum’s October 2010 death. He spent 12 years on the FBI’s “Most Wanted List” before he was arrested in Guadalajara, Mexico, in December 2022 and extradited to the United States.

    Dressed in a green short-sleeved jail shirt over a long-sleeved sweatshirt, Rueda Landeros sat quietly between his public defenders during a Friday status hearing in Montgomery County Circuit Court.

    After being indicted in August 2023, Rueda Landeros has been scheduled to go on trial in May of this year. However, on Friday, Rueda Landeros’s defense team requested — and was granted — a trial postponement, as one of his attorneys is leaving the public defender’s office.

    Judge Rachel McGuckian set jury selection for Jan. 21, 2025, for what both sides expect will be a five-day jury trial.

    Court documents shed light on prosecution’s case against Rueda Landeros

    Shortly after his extradition, prosecutors and police provided initial details of what led them to Rueda Landeros — and why it took 12 years to make an arrest.

    According to a July 2023 news conference, police said Rueda Landeros’s DNA matched DNA recovered from items in Marcum’s house, including the weapon police believe was used to bludgeon her and scrapings from under her fingernails.

    Recent filings provide a more specific outline of the evidence Montgomery County prosecutors plan to present and the expert witnesses who could testify.

    During the discovery process, prosecutors provided the defense with photos, audio and video interviews, jail call recordings, video surveillance and interactive brokerage reports.

    Prosecutors named a forensic scientist with the county police department to testify about both Marcum’s and Rueda Landeros’s DNA being found on shot glasses, as well as DNA found under Marcum’s fingernails.

    According to charging documents in the case, the scene of Marcum’s killing initially bore signs of a robbery. A rear window appeared to have been pried open, and the house was partially ransacked. However, several expensive items were left behind and investigators said evidence of a struggle indicated Marcum possibly knew her attacker.

    Suspicion eventually landed on Rueda Landeros, a yoga instructor and Spanish teacher who developed a personal and financial relationship with Marcum sometime in the mid-2000s. Police have not detailed exactly how the two knew each other.

    According to police, Rueda Landeros was the sole beneficiary of a $500,000 life insurance policy on Marcum, and the two also shared a joint investment fund.

    In addition, a 1099 form in Marcum’s name from 2008 listed proceeds of over $100 million to the fund, which investigators believed to be “very unusual” given her occupation as a university professor, according to the charging documents.

    Police declined to say during the 2023 news conference whether the fund actually had $100 million in it or if the tax form was bogus.

    The new expert witness notification specifies a forensic accountant who reviewed the financial records of Marcum and Rueda Landeros and drafted a report on his conclusions.

    A fingerprint analyst is set to testify about latent prints found in Marcum’s home on Massachusetts Avenue, located between Goldsboro Road and Westmoreland Circle, on the border with D.C.

    Rueda Landeros has maintained his innocence.

    “Mr. Rueda Landeros is innocent, has asserted his innocence before, and continues to today. We look forward to a trial in a courtroom in this case,” Michael Beach, the Montgomery County district public defender, said in an email to WTOP shortly after Rueda Landeros was extradited.

    WTOP’s Jack Moore contributed to this report. 

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • New health rankings: How do Maryland, Virginia counties fare? – WTOP News

    New health rankings: How do Maryland, Virginia counties fare? – WTOP News

    A county-by-county breakdown shows northern Virginia and Maryland’s suburbs of Washington, D.C. are generally much healthier than the national average. The 2024 County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, produced by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute, looks at why there are differences in health within and across communities.

    A county-by-county breakdown shows Northern Virginia and the Maryland suburbs of D.C.  are generally much healthier than the national average.

    The 2024 County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, produced by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute, looks at why there are differences in health within and across communities.

    Dr. David Goodfriend, Loudoun County’s health director, says the study allows counties to track their own progress, and see how they compare with similar counties nearby and across the country.

    The study looks at health outcomes and health factors, which generally play a role in a person’s overall health.

    “For health outcomes, some of the key measures are life expectancy, premature deaths — to what extent are people dying before we would expect them to, at the end of their life span. Also how was their mental health and physical health during that time being studied.”

    For health factors, 9% of Loudoun County adult residents are obese, below the Virginia average of 13% and the national average of 15%.

    “We know that tobacco use is more likely to cause premature death, and it looks at alcohol use,” Goodfriend said of the study.

    The study also looks at the physical environment, including air pollution and drinking water violations.

    “It looks at driving times, because the longer someone’s on the road, the less likely they’re able to exercise, and the more likely they are to be in a car accident,” said Goodfriend.

    Wealthier counties tend to have healthier residents, according to the study.

    “Insured individuals tend to live longer than uninsured individuals, because they can catch diseases earlier,” said Goodfriend. “Having easy access to health care providers and mental health providers tend to factor into health outcomes as well.”

    Even for a wealthy county, such as Loudoun County, Goodfriend said the study is valuable in pointing to disparities.

    “In Loudoun County, if you’re an Asian-American, on average, you’re going to live 10 years longer than if you’re a Black American in Loudoun County,” said Goodfriend. “If you’re a child in Loudoun County, you’re twice as likely to die if you’re Black or Hispanic, than if you’re Asian and white.”

    Goodfriend said studies like this one are a first step toward improving health outcomes for all county residents.

    “We see these disparities. In different data sets we can see disparities on where within the jurisdiction people live,” said Goodfriend. That allows local governments, health departments, and schools to focus what can be done to make all county residents as healthy as possible.

    “Are there areas where people don’t have access to quality food? Or to exercise? And how do we invest in those areas,” said Goodfriend.

     

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Urban Verbs frontman Roddy Frantz reflects on birth of DC’s downtown music, arts scene – WTOP News

    Urban Verbs frontman Roddy Frantz reflects on birth of DC’s downtown music, arts scene – WTOP News

    This weekend, Frantz and the surviving Urban Verbs will recount their ascent and descent, and their role in the development of D.C.’s downtown music and art scene.

    Rod Frantz on Urban Verbs, and the beginning of DC’s downtown music scene

    Roddy Frantz and his band Urban Verbs were at the center of D.C.’s music scene before there was a scene.

    In the late 1970s, The Urban Verbs were Washington D.C.’s most popular band. Robert Goldstein is far left, Roddy Frantz is second from right. (Courtesy Rod Frantz)

    This weekend, 47 years later, Frantz and the surviving Verbs will recount their ascent and descent, and their role in the development of D.C.’s downtown music and art scene.

    In 1977, lyricist and vocalist Frantz, guitarist Robert Goldstein, keyboardist Robin Rose, bassist Linda France and drummer Danny Frankel began rehearsing in the Atlantic Building, at 930 F Street — the location of the original Atlantis nightclub, which transformed into the 9:30 Club. Goldstein died of cancer, in 2016, at the age of 66.

    Sunday, as part of the Backstage at the Sanctuary series, hosted by NBC Washington reporter and After Dark Fund promoter Mark Segraves, Frantz will participate by Zoom, while Rose, France and Frankel join the conversation in person.

    “We were the first ones in downtown Washington making music,” Frantz told WTOP. “There wasn’t anyone else.”

    In the late 1970s, Urban Verbs often played shows in off-beat venues, including the Corcoran Gallery and School of Art, and the Pension Building, which is now the National Building Museum.

    “There weren’t any clubs at that time that were interested in new wave bands, or the new sound of music at the time,” said Frantz, whose brother Chris played drums in Talking Heads. “We had to find places that would both advertise us, and pay us for putting on shows in those locations.”

    By 1979, the Urban Verbs signed a two-record contract with Warner Brothers Records. On Feb. 3, 1979, the Verbs participated in the iconic Hall of Nations show at Georgetown University, with The Cramps, and another D.C. band, The Chumps.

    The Hall of Nations show is often pointed to by members of what would become D.C.’s hardcore punk scene as the time they decided to join bands.

    The show was sold out. For some reason, concert promoters had set up tables for audience members to sit around.

    “We already had a good following in Washington, so all of our following came out, and it turns out The Cramps had a good following in Washington, as well,” said Frantz. “You had two bands playing to very favorable audiences — and things got out of hand.”

    Frantz and other people who attended the show have described teens climbing through windows, and squeezing through supposed-to-be-locked doors. Fans were standing on the folding wooden tables, which collapsed.

    The dichotomy of The Cramps and Urban Verbs wasn’t lost on Frantz.

    “The Cramps were the great cartoon band of the day — and we weren’t,” he said.

    Frantz was momentarily stumped when asked what he thought Urban Verbs sounded like.

    “Both Robert Goldstein and I were very much in agreement that we didn’t want to sound like any other band — we wanted to come up with a sound of our own,” Frantz said.

    Eventually, the band’s sound, blending Goldstein’s guitar work, which Frantz said influenced U2’s The Edge, and Rose’s synthesizer was characterized by many music reviewers as “art rock.”

    The Urban Verbs’ eponymous first album was followed by “Early Damage,” before the band was dropped by the label.

    “I’m not trying to steal anyone else’s glory, but ours has been sort of usurped by the acts that came later,” said Frantz. “Some of those were very successful acts, and I don’t begrudge them their success or popularity at all.”

    Within years, the D.C.’s hardcore punk scene became internationally known.

    Frantz is looking forward to reflecting upon that moment in D.C.’s music and art history, he said. Sunday’s event will also include cuts from Flameproof Mascara. Frantz is the singer of the pandemic project, which has an all-star lineup including Frankel, Slickee Boys guitarist Marshall Keith and Abaad Behram, of Razz.

    “It was a magical time,” said Frantz. “It was a time where the world was still new — there were things to still be discovered, places to go, people to meet.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Next steps for U.Md. greek life

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

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

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

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

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Fairfax Co. police to use AI to analyze body camera footage, improve interactions with public – WTOP News

    Fairfax Co. police to use AI to analyze body camera footage, improve interactions with public – WTOP News

    Video captured on police body-worn cameras is becoming a widely used method of documenting how officers interact with the public — one local Northern Virginia police department will now use artificial intelligence to try to improve those interactions.

    An example of the body-worn cameras being used by Fairfax County police.(Courtesy Fairfax County Police Department)

    Video captured on police body-worn cameras is becoming a widely used method of documenting how officers interact with the public. A local Northern Virginia police department will now use artificial intelligence to try to improve those interactions.

    Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis told the Board of Supervisors Tuesday that the department will be the first in Virginia to utilize Truleo, a Chicago-based company, which analyzes and automatically categorizes body camera videos instead of having people manually review them.

    “It captures audio only, and transcribes every word that the body-worn camera catches — every word,” Davis told the supervisors.

    Davis said the department trains the Truleo AI on words that officers shouldn’t generally be using in their interactions with the public.

    “There are occasions in policing when language is used that’s not always pristine,” Davis said. “But we’re also interested in other words, like ‘thank you,’ ‘you’re welcome,’ and ‘how can I help you?’”

    Davis said having artificial intelligence sort through officers’ interactions with the public is far more efficient than hours spent manually reviewing tapes during performance reviews.

    “So now, you’ll be able to pull up Kevin Davis’ Truleo, and see what words he is using to interact with the community, and are these words consistent with our expectation?” Davis told the supervisors.

    He said information on the officers’ word choice can be used in training, “to keep ahead” of problems and live up to the department’s goals of transparency and trust-building.

    “We look at (the words) and say, ‘Are they consistent with what we say out loud — are we walking the walk, or just talking the talk?’” Davis said.

    In response to privacy concerns raised by Providence District Supervisor Dalia Palchik, Davis said information that would currently be redacted would continue to be redacted, in transcriptions gathered by Truleo.

    “Truleo is only on when the body-worn camera is activated. When the body camera is not on, Truleo will not be on,” Davis told Palchik.

    According to the company’s website, Truleo is being used with dozens of law enforcement agencies across the country.

    “Truleo partnered with FBI National Academy to build models that detect critical events and deconstruct officers’ language into professionalism metrics to help agencies promote best practices, train new officers, and mitigate risk,” Truleo’s website outlined.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Why parents text their child at school — and why they should stop – WTOP News

    Why parents text their child at school — and why they should stop – WTOP News

    Parents texting their children who are in school aren’t just staying in touch — they’re sabotaging their children’s learning and development, according to doctors.

    Parents texting their children who are in school aren’t just staying in touch — they’re sabotaging their children’s learning and development, according to doctors.

    Although most schools allow a student to carry a cellphone for an emergency, and some teachers require students to place their phones in a box when entering a classroom, in many cases students are hearing or feeling the buzzing vibration of notifications, while they should be focused on what’s being taught.

    “Anybody under the age of 26 does not have a fully-formed frontal lobe, which is kind of what helps to separate what’s important from what’s not,” said pediatrician John Farrell, from his office in South Riding, Virginia. “Any distraction can really separate them from what they should be paying attention to.”

    Farrell said children, and especially their parents, are still feeling the effects of the COVID pandemic.

    “I think, as a society, we are still recovering. I think there’s still that underlying level of anxiety, so there is certainly something to staying connected,” said Farrell. “Kids texting their parents may be different than their parents texting the kids.”

    Farrell said constant texting between parent and child while the student is in school robs the child of an important aspect of development.

    “Teaching them, through trial and error, is kind of what both a school and parents are trying to do,” said Farrell. “Ultimately, we’re all striving for independent children, who kind of think and make decisions on their own.”

    Some children either feel the need, or are told to immediately report class grades that they receive to their parents.

    Farrell said he hopes parents communicate that that type of information can wait: “I hope they show their kid this isn’t the most important thing, and ask more about how their day went and how their social interactions are, in addition to their grades, and success academically.”

    Much of the important learning has nothing to do with subject matter being taught, says Farrell. “A lot of it is through face-to-face contact with their peers, which every time they’re on their phone, that is minimized.”

    Parents’ anxiety fuels texts to students, adds ‘extra burden’

    Psychologist Judith Danovitch, professor of psychological and brain sciences at University of Louisville, empathizes with parents who feel the need to be in constant touch with their child.

    “I’m a parent of an eighth grader myself, so I’m very familiar with this phenomenon, and I understand why parents might want to text their kids in school,” said Danovitch.

    However, sending the text makes learning more difficult.

    “Particularly for kids, whose executive function and inhibition skills are still developing,” said Danovitch. “It’s like you’re adding another extra burden on top of that.”

    Danovitch said humans are not good multi-taskers.

    “Receiving that text message takes your attention away from what the teacher is saying, away from a math problem that you might be working on,” said Danovitch. “And getting back to it has a cognitive cost — it makes it harder to understand, to comprehend, to figure out the solution to the problem.”

    The distraction has consequences, even if the text message isn’t read — the buzz, beep or vibration from the notification derails the child’s learning.

    “You’re thinking, ‘Whoa, what’s the text message going to say?’” said Danovitch. “You’re not thinking about what was Shakespeare trying to say in this passage.”

    Danovitch said parents feeling the urgency to text their child at school is typically fueled by the parent’s anxiety.

    “We, as parents, should strike to model for children (how to) manage anxiety,” said Danovitch. “Really making thoughtful choices about how to act on it.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Dark Sky Week resolution highlights ‘awe-inspiring’ skies above Virginia – WTOP News

    Dark Sky Week resolution highlights ‘awe-inspiring’ skies above Virginia – WTOP News

    Gazing at twinkling stars against a dark sky is one of life’s simple pleasures — now Virginians will have a yearly reminder that light pollution can compromise the Commonwealth’s starry, starry nights.

    This page contains a video which is being blocked by your ad blocker.
    In order to view the video you must disable your ad blocker.

    Dark Sky Week resolution highlights ‘awe-inspiring’ skies above Virginia

    Gazing at twinkling stars against a dark sky is one of life’s simple pleasures — now Virginians will have a yearly reminder that light pollution can compromise the Commonwealth’s starry, starry nights.

    “We need to take a moment to be able to recognize that the light pollution we have around us, prevents us from being able to see the awe-inspiring nature of the starry sky above us,” Del. David Reid, a Democrat from Loudoun County, told WTOP.

    Reid introduced House Joint Resolution 74, to designate the week of the new moon each April as International Dark Sky Week. This year, International Dark Sky Week will occur from April 2-8.

    While the lights shining from major cities are the worst offenders, Reid said light pollution extends to the suburbs.

    “Our streetlights, our lights that are in our communities, on our homes, all have a tendency to radiate in many different directions, including radiating light upward,” said Reid.

    According to the Dark Sky International organization, light pollution harms migratory birds and other wildlife.

    One of Reid’s favorite places to stargaze is in nearby Fauquier County at Sky Meadows State Park.

    “You’re out there, and you have this wide-open view of the night sky, and not a lot of light pollution. You just see so many stars, and you can actually see parts of the Milky Way.”

    Reid calls himself an amateur astronomer, who has shared the joy of looking toward the heavens within his family’s backyard in Ashburn.

    “I remember looking through that telescope, and see the rings of Saturn, and the bands on Jupiter, with your own eye. It’s not like what you’re going to see from the James Webb or Hubble telescope, but then being able to have my teenage daughters at the time, look and see those things is just so much more compelling than what you see in a magazine,” Reid said.

    In addition to Sky Meadows, James River, Natural Bridge and Staunton River state parks are also designated as Virginia’s Dark Sky parks, which follow strict ordinances to avoid light pollution.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • ‘School boards are the front lines for democracy’: Prince William Co. chair Lateef launches lieutenant governor run – WTOP News

    ‘School boards are the front lines for democracy’: Prince William Co. chair Lateef launches lieutenant governor run – WTOP News

    Babur Lateef, the chairman of the Prince William County School Board, has launched his campaign to be lieutenant governor, saying “the idea that Virginia somehow is in an educational crisis is a complete myth.”

    This page contains a video which is being blocked by your ad blocker.
    In order to view the video you must disable your ad blocker.

    Babur Lateef announces candidacy for Lt. Governor of Virginia

    Babur Lateef, the chairman of the Prince William County School Board, has launched his campaign to be lieutenant governor, telling WTOP in an exclusive interview that “the idea that Virginia somehow is in an educational crisis is a complete myth.”

    “Glenn Youngkin has done real harm to the spirit of partnership within our communities,” Lateef said, while announcing his bid to be the Democratic candidate for the November 2025 election, to succeed Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

    Lateef is currently the sole candidate who has filed for the position, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. 

    In his six years as school board chair, Lateef points to his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic, the transition back to in-person learning and the focus on Northern Virginia school boards, which fueled Youngkin’s election in 2020 and continues today.

    “I think we’ve done a good job in Prince William County over the last few years of focusing and prioritizing student and family needs, and as the largest employer in the county, also doing a lot for teachers, in giving them historic pay raises,” said Lateef.

    Lateef said the Prince William County Board added to its core mission: “Mental health (care) for our students, as well as safety and security, which unfortunately in this day and age requires us to do more things such as artificial intelligence scanners, and adding more police officers and SROs to schools.”

    Echoing the themes of his first campaign video, released Friday, Lateef said “School boards are the front lines for democracy.”

    Lateef said school board meetings have always been a place for parents to voice their opinions and suggestions to the school board members they’ve elected.

    In the past several years, school board meetings in Northern Virginia are often contentious, with attendees and political advocates often sharing video clips on social media.

    “There’s been a lot of folks trying to divide us with culture wars on book banning, diversity, equity and inclusion,” Lateef said. “I would call much of this ‘manufactured crisis,’ because we are really doing a great job in our county, the 10th most diverse county in the country and the most diverse county in the Commonwealth.”

    Lateef says he stands proudly behind Virginia’s public schools.

    “There are folks that are not happy with the way things are being run, and I think there are just people manufacturing a lot of this crisis, and making it look like the schools are something they are not,” Lateef said. “They remain to be America’s greatest hope.”

    Under Virginia’s election system, voters could choose a governor of one party to serve with a lieutenant governor of another party.

    Youngkin is barred by Virginia law from seeking a second term. WTOP asked Lateef how well he could work with a Republican governor.

    “I think I would tell the current governor, if I was in office, that there is no crisis there,” said Lateef. “And, if you believe there’s a crisis, let’s solve those crises, let’s invest in the things that we all agree need work.”

    As he launches his campaign early, in hopes of spreading his message outside the Northern Virginia enclave, Lateef said teacher pay statewide needs to be increased, plus older schools need to be replaced, “especially in southwest Virginia, and the different parts of the state that don’t have the tax base we have in Northern Virginia.

    “There’s a lot more work that we can do in the southwest, in Virginia Beach and Norfolk, and Richmond — health care, and we’ve got to commit to working for families and helping create jobs.”

    Lateef points to the state’s ability to lure Amazon to build its second headquarters, which in part was because of Virginia’s education opportunities and educated workforce.

    “We want to attract those kinds of jobs here, high-paying jobs. We want to help working families, reproductive rights for women, and education — those are our real priorities,” Lateef said.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Michael Reidy, dynamic front man of revered DC rock band Razz, dies at 73 – WTOP News

    Michael Reidy, dynamic front man of revered DC rock band Razz, dies at 73 – WTOP News

    Michael Reidy, the whirling dervish singer of Razz, one of Washington, D.C.’s most popular bands, has died, at age 73, according to a family member. Reidy’s sister, Joanna Olshonsky, tells WTOP he died Tuesday, at George Washington University Hospital, from complications resulting from a stroke.

    Michael Reidy, the whirling dervish singer of Razz, one of D.C.’s most popular bands, has died, at age 73, according to a family member.

    Michael Reidy, seen here on stage, in an undated photo, was the lead singer to Razz. (Courtesy Skip Groff)

    Reidy’s sister, Joanna Olshonsky, told WTOP he died Tuesday, at George Washington University Hospital, from complications resulting from a stroke.

    He is survived by his wife, Stephanie.

    “He was always a captivating front man,” said Jeff Krulik, a friend, music historian, and co-director with Richard Taylor, of “Razz (The) Documentary,” which WTOP highlighted in 2023.

    Krulik said Reidy, who was born in 1950, grew up in a military family, and settled in Camp Springs, Maryland. He graduated from Crossland High School in the class of 1968.

    Reidy formed Razz — or (The) Razz — from his friendship with guitarist Bill Craig, at University of Maryland. The band started in 1971 and broke up in late 1979.

    “They logged many months and years off and on early in the decade, but hit their stride in 1977, at The Keg, on Wisconsin Avenue,” in the Glover Park section of D.C., Krulik said. “A straight-ahead, two-guitar rock band assault that proved memorable and was a fan favorite.”

    In its early configuration, Razz was made up of Reidy, Craig, guitarist Abaad Behram, bassist Ted Nicely and drummer Doug Tull.

    Reidy, known for his nonstop stage presence, once cut open drummer Tull’s bass drum head and climbed inside, during a live performance.

    In 1978, Behram left the group, and was replaced by the late Tommy Keene.

    Razz’s music predated D.C.’s still-to-be-hatched hardcore punk scene, yet they were connected to the younger Georgetown Punks. Skip Groff, owner of Yesterday & Today Records produced records by Razz, along with early efforts from teen punks Teen Idles and Minor Threat.

    “They ultimately couldn’t crack the code for a coveted major label contract,” Krulik said.

    “Michael was also a tremendous fine artist, with work shown at galleries and museums, such as the Katzen Center, and his graphic work was found in Unicorn Times, City Paper and fanzines such as The Infiltrator and Capitol Crisis,” said Krulik.

    The University of Maryland has compiled archival material of Razz.

    Reidy’s talent and charisma spanned both fine arts and rock and roll.

    “His style was unmistakable and instantly recognizable,” said Krulik. “You know when you were looking at a Reidy.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Appeals court: Va. deputy should have done more to prevent handcuffed man from shooting himself – WTOP News

    Appeals court: Va. deputy should have done more to prevent handcuffed man from shooting himself – WTOP News

    Virginia’s Court of Appeals says a Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s deputy should have done more to prevent a handcuffed man from shooting himself while detained in the back seat of a deputy’s cruiser.

    Virginia’s Court of Appeals says a Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s deputy should have done more to prevent a handcuffed man from shooting himself while detained in the back seat of his cruiser.

    In August 2018, Dennis Christopher Howard had been taken into custody, after his girlfriend had received a protective order, and Howard threatened to “take down” any law enforcement officers who tried to arrest him, according to the appeals court opinion published Tuesday.

    Howard slipped out of his handcuffs, reached through an open partition into the front seat, grabbed a loaded handgun that had been seized a day earlier in a traffic stop, and shot himself in the head, according to the opinion.

    “Surviving this suicide attempt, Howard sued Spotsylvania County Sheriff Roger L. Harris and Deputy David Setlock, alleging that they were grossly negligent in supervising Howard during his detainment,” according to the opinion. The Spotsylvania County judge ruled in favor of the deputies, granting summary judgment before a civil trial.

    Spotsylvania Judge Designate Marcus Williams had granted summary judgment on two grounds: By attempting suicide, Howard was a felon in possession of a gun, and that Howard’s claim didn’t meet the “gross negligence” standard required.

    Now, the Virginia Appeals Court has reversed the trial court’s judgment, and the civil case can be reheard.

    How a handcuffed man was able to access a loaded gun and shoot himself

    According to the opinion, written by Appeals Court Judge Dominique Callins, Howard had a heated argument with his girlfriend on Aug. 15, 2018. She obtained an emergency protective order and swore out a warrant for his arrest.

    The next day, Howard took a shotgun belonging to his friend, and left a suicide note, that included: “Tell everyone I love them and I’m sorry. See ya in the next life bro.”

    Sheriff’s deputies located Howard near an abandoned warehouse, and took him into custody. He was placed in the back seat of the deputy’s vehicle with his hands cuffed behind his back, according to the opinion.

    “At the time of the Howard’s detainment, a loaded handgun that Deputy Setlock had seized during a traffic stop the day prior was stored in plain view in a bag on the front passenger seat, and the window partition separating the front and back seats was open and unlocked,” according to Callins’ opinion.

    When Setlock searched Howard, he couldn’t find the shotgun he had reportedly taken from a friend earlier. Howard denied having a gun when asked about it, according to court documents.

    Setlock periodically walked away from the cruiser to search for the missing shotgun. At one point, while the deputy was away from the cruiser, “Howard ‘jumped’ his handcuffs by bringing his hands underneath his legs to the front of his body,” Callins wrote.

    Howard reached through the partition, took the gun from the bag, confirmed it was loaded with a round in the chamber, “then moved his hands back underneath his legs and concealed the handgun beneath his legs.”

    At some point, the deputy noticed Howard’s hands were underneath his knees, according to the opinion.

    “Deputy Setlock warned Howard that he would pepper spray him if he tried to jump his handcuffs, but otherwise took no actions to resecure Howard’s handcuffs or ensure that Howard was still safely detained,” according to the opinion.

    Howard told deputies where the shotgun was located, it was recovered, and he was driven back toward his home. Setlock stepped away from the vehicle to discuss with his superior officer whether to charge Howard with several felonies and take him to jail, or take him to a hospital for a mental evaluation, in light of Howard’s threats of suicide.

    As Setlock walked back to the cruiser, to take Howard for a mental evaluation, he heard a single gunshot. The opinion said that Howard “survived the suicide attempt. Deputy Setlock was later suspended for two weeks for violating general orders pertaining to the transportation of custodial detainees and procedures for storing evidence.”

    Trial judge ruled in favor of sheriff and sheriff’s deputy

    In the deputy’s defense, his attorneys argued Setlock had exercised “some degree of care” for Howard’s safety as part of his duty to supervise Howard during his detainment, but that he “had an equally important duty to protect the public by finding the missing shotgun,” which necessitated his walking away from the cruiser.

    The Spotsylvania County trial judge ruled in favor of law enforcement, granting summary judgment before a trial was held.

    However, the appeals court disagreed.

    According to the panel, while Setlock initially exercised appropriate care, “the threat that Howard posed to himself and to others changed significantly once Deputy Setlock was on notice that Howard’s handcuffs were not effectively restraining him and that Howard appeared capable of jumping his handcuffs.”

    Combined with Deputy Setlock’s knowledge that (1) Howard was a suicidal detainee, (2) a loaded handgun was in plain view in a bag on the front passenger seat, and (3) the window partition separating the front and back seats was open and unlocked, a reasonable jury could find that Deputy Setlock’s inaction constituted ‘a degree of negligence showing indifference to another and an utter disregard of prudence that amounts to a complete neglect of the safety of such other person.

    In reversing the trial court’s judgment, the case is remanded to Spotsylvania County’s Circuit Court, where the civil case can be reheard.

    WTOP is seeking comment from the Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s Office about the high court’s ruling.

    Editor’s note: This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, please call the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. This is a hotline for individuals in crisis or for those looking to help someone else. To speak with a trained listener, call 988. Service members and veterans can call 988 and then press “1.” There is also an online chat at 988lifeline.org.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • ‘Pedestrians don’t win in crashes’: Prince William Co. police hope to quell deadly crashes – WTOP News

    ‘Pedestrians don’t win in crashes’: Prince William Co. police hope to quell deadly crashes – WTOP News

    Three deadly crashes involving pedestrians in the first two months of 2024 have prompted Prince William County, Virginia, police to remind walkers and drivers to more safely coexist.

    Three deadly crashes involving pedestrians in the first two months of 2024 have prompted Prince William County, Virginia, police to remind walkers and drivers to more safely coexist.

    “Pedestrians don’t win in crashes,” said Lt. Jonathan Perok, with Prince William County police.

    In January and February, county police investigated 17 pedestrian-related crashes — three of them were deadly.

    “Our numbers right now are significantly higher than what we’ve seen in the past four years,” Perok said. “In 2022, we had a historic number of 11 fatal pedestrian crashes, and we certainly don’t want to reach that milestone this year.”

    In an analysis of 2023 data, Perok said there was a concentration of crashes “in the more densely populated areas that mirror traditional rush hour times in the morning and in the evening.”

    Perok said there was a “considerable concentration” of crashes in busy corridors — Route 1, Richmond Highway, Sudley Road and Old Bridge Road.

    “It’s hard to explain why they’re occurring because they’re often and every single one of them is preventable,” Perok said.

    While pedestrians being distracted by smartphone activity has been a problem for years, Perok said improving technology is exacerbating the problem.

    “Headphone technology is becoming much more advanced,” Perok said. “Headphones now offer the ability to block out sounds,” and a person wearing noise canceling headphones may be unable to hear oncoming traffic or horns.

    Police suggest pedestrians and drivers follow similar safe practices by:

    • Following all traffic laws.
    • Planning time and a route ahead of leaving your home.
    • Obeying all posted signs and signals.
    • Limiting phone and other distractions.
    • Avoiding impairments, such as alcohol and drugs.
    • For pedestrians specifically, dressing to be seen and keeping out of the roadway unless legally crossing in a designated area, such as a crosswalk.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • ‘No single or specific incident’ led to U. Md. suspension of fraternity, sorority activities – WTOP News

    ‘No single or specific incident’ led to U. Md. suspension of fraternity, sorority activities – WTOP News

    The University of Maryland said “no single or specific incident” prompted last Friday’s order to fraternities and sororities on campus to suspend social and recruitment activities, after receiving several reports of unsafe activities.

    The University of Maryland said “no single or specific incident” prompted last Friday’s order to fraternities and sororities on campus to suspend social and recruitment activities, after receiving several reports of unsafe activities.

    In a statement released Monday evening, the university said “Our decision to suspend new member and alcohol-related activities was made after careful consideration of reports, observations and data-driven analysis of behaviors that we felt posed a threat to the safety and well-being of some members of our community.”

    The school has not specified what misconduct led to the suspension of Greek activities involving alcohol, as well as any communication with potential new members.

    “No single or specific incident led to this decision. Our decision was made to prevent such a significant incident,” according to the university.

    A letter sent Friday from university officials to fraternity and sorority presidents informing them of the suspension referred to “activities that have threatened the safety and well-being of members of the University community.”

    The letter included in capital letters that members of the Greek organizations “are to have absolutely NO CONTACT with any new member or prospective new member,” during the investigation.

    “Any attempts to coordinate responses, deceive investigators, or provide false information to University officials will be pursued for the appropriate disciplinary action,” according to the Friday letter to the sorority and fraternity groups.

    The suspension applies to all organizations affiliated with the College Park campus’ Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Council, which represent 21 fraternities and 16 sororities, respectively.

    Monday’s statement suggested the school intends to hire or retain an outside group, while it continues to gather facts.

    “We plan to engage an external resource to assist with an investigation that moves as quickly as possible, and we aim to stay in close coordination with chapter and council presidents, as well as national organizations and Department of Fraternity and Sorority Life advisors. We are also actively identifying the best ways to communicate with fraternity and sorority alumni now and in the future.”

    The action at Maryland comes just days after the University of Virginia suspended its Kappa Sigma chapter after an alleged hazing incident Feb. 21.

    The university’s Interfraternity Council also imposed a three-week suspension on all fraternity-sponsored social events “as a commitment to anti-hazing efforts and out of respect for the ongoing situation.”

    News outlets reported the Kappa Sigma chapter at Virginia was suspended after a pledge who had been drinking heavily fell down a staircase and hit his head, leading to his hospitalization.

    In Virginia, the 2021 death of Virginia Commonwealth University student Adam Oakes after a fraternity hazing incident resulted in passage of anti-hazing legislation and a nearly $1 million settlement payment from the university to Oakes’ family.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Body camera shows what happened after police fatally shoot suspect in deadly Md. carjacking spree – WTOP News

    Body camera shows what happened after police fatally shoot suspect in deadly Md. carjacking spree – WTOP News

    Police body camera footage shows the moments after New Carrolton, Maryland, police shot and killed the man suspected in a string of deadly shootings and carjackings in D.C. and Maryland.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6sZnY9SzQs

    Editor’s Note: The video may contain scenes upsetting to some viewers. 

    Police body camera footage shows the moments after New Carrolton, Maryland, police shot and killed the man suspected in a string of shootings and carjackings in D.C. and Maryland that killed two people.

    Artell Cunningham, 28, of Suitland, died after being shot Jan. 30 in a parking lot on Annapolis Road.

    The footage was released by the Independent Investigations Division of the Maryland Office of the Attorney General, which continues to investigate the shooting. The officers had been identified earlier as Sgt. Byron Purnell and Cpl. Carlos Batenga.

    According to the attorney general’s investigation, the officers were on patrol at approximately 4:35 a.m. when they saw a disabled, unoccupied SUV in the roadway, which had been reported as carjacked in Prince George’s County.

    Purnell and Batenga searched the area for occupants of the SUV, but didn’t find anyone.

    “A short time later, the officers were standing outside a patrol in a nearby parking lot when they were approached by a man with two firearms. The officers both discharged their weapons, striking the man,” according to the narrative posted on the just-released footage.

    However, the shooting of Cunningham wasn’t captured in the footage.

    “The officers activated their body-worn cameras after firing their weapons,” according to the Attorney General’s office.

    What the body-worn camera footage shows

    The footage begins with both Batenga and Purnell with their service weapons trained on Cunningham, who was already lying in the parking lot.

    The officers report shots fired, and that there were two guns present.

    As Cunningham raised his arm and leg, both officers ordered, “Don’t touch the gun, don’t touch the gun.” Cunningham complied, as the guns rested near his left shoulder on the pavement.

    Batenga then approached Cunningham and kicked the two guns away.

    At least four officers — apparently all from New Carrolton police — pointed their weapons at Cunningham until officers from “an assisting police department” arrived and began treating Cunningham.

    “Flip him over, put him in handcuffs, then we’ve got to work him” with CPR, said an unknown arriving officer. Other officers turned Cunningham over to be handcuffed behind his back, then quickly returned him to lying on his back. The lead officer directed others to “check his pulse,” as he put on rubber gloves.

    In the background, another officer called for the fire and emergency department’s assistance on the police radio.

    An officer who was checking for Cunningham’s pulse reported, “he’s barely breathing.”

    The lead officer urged, “Come on man,” as he began chest compressions on Cunningham. Another officer who witnessed the CPR, responded “he’s still breathing, he’s still breathing.”

    As officers got ready to cut off Cunningham’s clothes, the video ended.

    Cunningham was the suspect in a string of shootings and carjackings that stretched from D.C. into Prince George’s County, Maryland in January, which killed 35-year-old Alberto Vasquez Jr. and 56-year-old Mike Gill, a former D.C. Board of Elections member and a member of former President Donald Trump’s administration.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Another Alexandria arena project bill dead, negotiations will move to budget bill – WTOP News

    Another Alexandria arena project bill dead, negotiations will move to budget bill – WTOP News

    Another bill that would create a sports arena in Alexandria, Virginia, for the Wizards and Capitals is dead, according to the Prince William County delegate who sponsored it.

    Another bill that would create a sports arena in Alexandria, Virginia, for the Wizards and Capitals is dead, according to the Prince William County delegate who sponsored it.

    House Appropriations Committee Chairman Luke Torian, a Democrat, said his stand-alone bill, that would establish a sports and entertainment authority that could fund the project by issuing bonds will not be taken up by the Senate.

    Torian was informed by Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman L. Louise Lucas (D) that Torian’s bill, HB1514, would not be docketed, so would not be heard and would die, according to an aide for Torian.

    Torian was told his bill would not be heard since Lucas had also declined to docket Sen. Scott Surovell’s Fairfax County casino bill, which died last week without a hearing.


    More Wizards, Capitals Arena News


    However, Torian remains optimistic that the arena plan will be kept alive during discussion of a House budget bill, HB29, which includes setting up a state sports and entertainment authority.

    Monumental Opportunity, an entity created by Ted Leonsis’s Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which owns the Capitals and Wizards, said it was not surprised that Torian’s bill will die.

    The group said it’s been encouraged to see support for the budget language, as well as Torian and Surovell’s stand-alone bills, but has always known the budget conference committee would have the final say.

    Torian’s comments about his discussions with Lucas were first reported by the Washington Post.

    WTOP is seeking comment from the office of Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who participated in the announcement of the sports and entertainment district project.

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • ‘Close doesn’t count:’ Biomarker testing crucial for modern lung cancer treatment – WTOP News

    ‘Close doesn’t count:’ Biomarker testing crucial for modern lung cancer treatment – WTOP News

    One of the most important reasons for the recent improvements in lung cancer treatments is biomarker testing — testing to determine the exact kind of cancer a patient has, in order to enable the most personalized treatment possible.

    This page contains a video which is being blocked by your ad blocker.
    In order to view the video you must disable your ad blocker.

    ‘Close doesn’t count:’ Biomarker testing crucial for modern lung cancer treatment

    One of the most important reasons for the recent improvements in lung cancer treatments is biomarker testing — testing to determine the exact kind of cancer a patient has, in order to enable the most personalized treatment possible.

    For many patients, a lung cancer diagnosis comes as a surprise. Lung cancer remains the most deadly form of cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute.

    Yet, in the past two decades, Dr. Stephen Liu, director of Thoracic Oncology and Developmental Therapeutics at Georgetown University’s Lombardi Cancer Center, said knowing as much as possible about a patient’s specific cancer can greatly affect treatment’s effectiveness.

    “Within lung cancer, there are dozens of different types of cancer,” Liu said. “And we now have personalized treatments that are tailored to those types of cancers.”

    Lung cancer biomarker testing, which is also known as tumor testing, genetic mutation testing, next-generation sequencing (NGS) or genomic testing, looks for changes in the DNA of tumor cells.

    “And it is absolutely essential in choosing the right therapy,” said Liu, since a growing number of mutations have targeted therapies available.”

    “These tend to be oral medications, taken once or twice a day, and while they have their share of side effects, they’re generally and consistently, much better tolerated than chemotherapy,” which affects both cancerous and healthy tissue.

    Liu, who co-hosts the “Lung Cancer Considered” podcast that is produced by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer (IASLC), said the effectiveness of targeted therapy is dramatic.

    “More effective than chemotherapy, we can see immediate responses, sometimes within days, but only if we get it right” through biomarker testing, Liu said. “Close doesn’t count. We need to match this perfectly.”

    Often, biomarker testing doesn’t begin until after a patient has been diagnosed with lung cancer, which coincides with CT scans and brain MRIs, to determine whether the newly diagnosed cancer had already spread.

    Liu said it is important for an oncology team to gather all test results before beginning treatment.

    “It’s very common for there to be this urgency to begin therapy — completely understandable,” said Liu. “You get the sense that this cancer has some momentum, and you want to start treatment, yesterday.”

    While waiting for test results can be frustrating for a newly-diagnosed patient, Liu said biomarker testing is important.

    “I’m not looking for the fastest treatment,” Liu said. “We’re looking for the right treatment.”

    Despite the importance of biomarker testing, Liu said surveys show a surprising number of doctors, even oncologists, aren’t aware of its value.

    “I think we’ve moved past this paternalistic era, where the doctor knows everything,” Liu said. “In oncology, even within the world of lung cancer, things move at a pace we’ve never seen before.”

    Still, given the dramatic improvements in the effectiveness and relatively gentle side effects of targeted therapy, and its reliance on biomarker testing, Liu hopes patients will feel empowered to ensure they’re tested.

    “There’s no harm at all in asking your doctor, ‘What biomarker tests were done, and what were the results of those tests?’” Liu said. “I will tell you, if a doctor is threatened by someone asking a question, I think you really need to reconsider that relationship.”

    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.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link