ReportWire

Tag: rockville

  • Teen charged in Wootton High School shooting to remain in jail after bond hearing – WTOP News

    A 16-year-old boy is due in court Wednesday for a bond hearing after the Wootton High School shooting in Rockville, Maryland.

    A Montgomery Police officer blocks the road as people wait outside Thomas S. Wootton High School for students in Rockville Md., Monday, Feb. 9, 2026, after a person was shot inside the school. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)(AP/Jose Luis Magana)

    The 16-year-old boy accused of shooting a fellow student inside Rockville, Maryland’s Wootton High School on Monday texted a friend and asked him to bring a backpack to the school that prosecutors believe was carrying the gun, prosecutors said during a bond hearing Wednesday.

    The teenager, who’s charged with attempted second-degree murder, will remain in jail after a judge ordered him held without bond at the conclusion of that hearing.

    The 16-year-old is being charged as an adult with an additional two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree assault and possession of a dangerous weapon on school property.

    At a Tuesday news conference, Rockville Police Chief Jason West said the teen pointed a gun at a 15-year-old girl earlier Monday before shooting a 16-year-old schoolmate. The teen charged in the shooting then left the school and hid the gun in his backyard, according to prosecutors.

    West said the suspect and victim knew each other, but police are still investigating the motive behind the shooting.

    West said the student who was shot is in stable condition.

    “In this case, the second victim did not suffer injury,” West said. “However, through investigation, we learned that the suspect in the case pointed a firearm at that person earlier in the day, prior to this shooting occurring.”

    Officers with the Montgomery County Police Department were dispatched to the high school around 2:15 p.m. Monday following a report of shots fired inside the school.

    A student was found shot in a school hallway and taken to a hospital.

    Police said officers recovered the weapon: a Polymer80 9 mm handgun, that they believe was used in the shooting. West said the weapon is commonly referred to as a “ghost gun,” and officers found it late Monday night, away from the school.

    “We know that those types of firearms are very difficult to trace, if we can do that at all,” West said.

    “Part of our investigation will include, ‘Where did that firearm come from? How did that student come into possession of that firearm, and how did it get into the school?’”

    WTOP’s Luke Lukert and José Umaña contributed to this report.

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

    © 2026 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Neal Augenstein

    Source link

  • Tractor-trailer rolls through fence, nearly strikes 3-story apartment building in Rockville – WTOP News

    A tractor-trailer rolled down a hill Friday night and nearly hit a three-story apartment building in Rockville, Maryland.

    A tractor-trailer rolled down a hill Friday night and nearly hit a three-story apartment building in Rockville, Maryland.

    It happened around 7:30 p.m. in the 2500 block of Baltimore Road, near Norbeck Road in Montgomery County.

    Photos taken at the scene and shared by Montgomery County Fire and Rescue spokesperson Pete Piringer showed how the Safeway tractor-trailer rolled down a hill and went through a fence, stopping just short of hitting the apartment building.

    Hazmat officials were called to assess the scene as the tractor-trailer’s saddle tanks ruptured during the incident, causing a fuel spill of over 60 gallons of diesel.

    A tractor-trailer rolled down a hill and almost hit a three-story apartment building in Rockville, Maryland, on Friday, Dec. 26, 2025.
    (Courtesy Pete Piringer)

    Courtesy Pete Piringer

    Tractor-trailer incident in Rockville
    According to officials, a Safeway tractor-trailer rolled down a hill and went through a fence, stopping short of hitting the apartment building.
    (Courtesy Pete Piringer)

    Courtesy Pete Piringer

    Tractor-trailer incident in Rockville
    The truck’s saddle tanks were ruptured and it spilled over 60 gallons of diesel fuel.
    (Courtesy Pete Piringer)

    Courtesy Pete Piringer

    Tractor-trailer incident in Rockville
    The Safeway tractor-trailer after it almost hit the apartment building on Dec. 26, 2025.
    (Courtesy Pete Piringer)

    Courtesy Pete Piringer

    Piringer said first responders worked to clean up the spill with the help of officials from the Maryland Department of the Environment to ensure all environmental concerns were properly addressed.

    Authorities are investigating what prompted the tractor-trailer to roll down the hill.

    Below is a map of the area where the incident took place:

    Map of tractor-trailer incident in Rockville
    (Courtesy Google Maps)

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

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

    Tadiwos Abedje

    Source link

  • Classes resume at Wootton High School after suspected gas leak – WTOP News

    Classes are back in session at Maryland’s Thomas S. Wootton High School after students were evacuated moments after the first bell rang Monday due to a gas odor.

    Classes are back in session at Thomas S. Wootton High School in Rockville, Maryland, after students were evacuated moments after the first bell rang Monday morning.

    The school building was evacuated at about 7:20 a.m. due to a gas odor.

    According to Montgomery County Public Schools spokesperson Liliana Lopez, school facilities staff and the gas company found  failed gas regulator and a bees nest that was located in a venting pipe for the school’s boiler system.

    If the needed part is available, it will be installed later Monday, Lopez said.

    Wootton will continue its previously scheduled noon dismissal.

    Lopez told WTOP an update “will be provided to the community as soon as more details are available.”

    Last week, students from Wootton spoke at a Montgomery County Board of Education meeting, telling board members that evacuation procedures at the school cause bottlenecks, and the odor of gas and mold are “a part of the Wootton experience.”

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

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

    Kate Ryan

    Source link

  • Police identify 11-year-old girl killed by Montgomery County school bus – WTOP News

    The driver of a Montgomery County school bus struck and killed an 11-year-old bicyclist in the Aspen Hill area of Maryland. 

    Police vehicles surround a Montgomery County school bus that struck and killed an 11-year-old girl on Thursday.
    (WTOP/Mike Murillo )

    WTOP/Mike Murillo

    police cars near a school bus
    The scene at Russett Road and Bauer Drive near Earle B. Wood Middle School where a young girl was killed after being struck by a school bus.
    (WTOP/Mike Murillo)

    WTOP/Mike Murillo

    police cars near a school bus

    A Montgomery County school bus struck and killed an 11-year-old bicyclist in the Aspen Hill neighborhood of Maryland.

    The crash happened just after 3:10 p.m. Thursday at Russett Road and Bauer Drive near Earle B. Wood Middle School.

    Police said in a release that when they arrived on the scene, 11-year-old Summer Lim was found near the rear of the bus. At the time of the crash, the bus was traveling eastbound on Bauer Drive and was turning right onto southbound Russett Road, according to police. Lim was also traveling eastbound on Bauer Drive when she was hit, police said.

    Shiera Goff, the public information officer for Montgomery County police, said at a news conference on Thursday afternoon that the 11-year-old girl lived in the area.

    I don’t know whether or not she was on the bicycle or whether she was walking the bicycle, but there was a bicycle involved,” Goff said.

    The bus was taking kids home from Earle B. Wood Middle School, where Lim was a student.

    We are so deeply saddened by this news, exponentially saddened. On behalf of the school system, I want to express our deepest condolences to the students, family, friends, teachers and classmates. No words can truly capture the pain that our school community is feeling at this time. This is every parent’s worst nightmare and every educators greatest fear,” Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Thomas Taylor said.

    The bus driver, whose identity was not made public, was taken in to speak to the department’s crisis team. No charges will be filed until an investigation has been completed, Goff said.

    Goff said the bus was full of children who witnessed the crash, but no additional injuries were reported.

    Counseling and other services will be made available to the students. A second bus transferred the students to a reunification location with their guardians.

    Our focus right now is on supporting the family, our school community that is hurting, and our staff,” Taylor said.

    Taylor said the school system will be evaluating “walk zones” in the region to determine where students can safely walk and “arrive to school safely and get home safely every day.”

    An investigation into the collision is being conducted by the Collision Reconstruction Unit, and police said it could take several weeks to be completed.

    Below is the area where the crash happened:

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

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

    Ciara Wells

    Source link

  • A pizza ‘innovator’ celebrates 50 years of serving the DC area – WTOP News

    Armand’s Pizza is celebrating 50 years of serving authentic Chicago-style deep-dish pizza, staying true to its original recipes and community spirit.

    In the 1970s, Armand’s owner, Lew Newmyer, brought a new style of pizza to D.C. This line of customers was out the door.
    (Courtesy Ron Newmyer)

    Courtesy Ron Newmyer

    Armand’s Chicago Pizzeria on Wisconsin Avenue
    Armand’s Chicago Pizzeria on Wisconsin Avenue in Northwest D.C. in 1980.
    (Courtesy Ron Newmyer)

    Courtesy Ron Newmyer

    Chelsea Clinton, the only child of former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, celebrates a friend’s birthday party at Armand’s.
    (Courtesy Ron Newmyer)

    Courtesy Ron Newmyer

    Sonny Jurgensen
    Former Washington player Sonny Jurgensen smokes a cigar at a party catered by Armand’s Pizzeria.
    (Courtesy Ron Newmyer)

    Courtesy Ron Newmyer

    Armand's catering van
    Armand’s Pizzeria introduced Chicago style, deep-dish pizza to the District in 1975.
    (Courtesy Ron Newmyer)

    Courtesy Ron Newmyer

    When you think of pizza in the D.C. area, most people would say they don’t have one favorite over others. There are so many styles, with so many variations and presentations nowadays, that quality and history are often ignored.

    However, one name that usually has people saying, “Ah, I remember having their pizza,” is Armand’s, which is celebrating 50 years in the business of serving Chicago-style pizza in the District.

    In the 1970s, Armand’s owner, the late Lew Newmyer, had the idea of bringing a new style of pizza to D.C.

    “New York or thin crust never entered into the conversation,” said Lew’s son and the business’ current co-owner, Ron Newmyer.

    He his dad constantly thought ‘outside-the-pizza-box’ and was determined to bring something different to the D.C. area and he did — Chicago-style deep dish pizza.

    Lew Newmyer was originally a liquor salesman, then moved into the food business selling submarine sandwiches. While on a business trip to Chicago, Lew discovered deep-dish pizza and was determined to bring the thick crust and heavy cheese recipe to upper Northwest D.C.

    In 1975, Armand’s opened on Wisconsin Avenue in Tenleytown.

    “It kind of took off like a rocket. It was exciting and thrilling,” Ron Newmyer said.

    Popular dishes included the usual cheese and pepperoni slices, but Armand’s took a chance and succeeded at a veggie pizza and even a spinach and garlic one.

    Through the years, the Tenleytown location not only became a popular hangout with area college and high school students, but Kennedy Center actors and former first families visited Armand’s as well.

    With a huge smile and gleam in his eyes, Ron Newmyer told WTOP the story of how back in 2009, the restaurant line rang and the U.S. Secret Service called to ask if the Obama family could visit.

    “A gentleman introduced himself as a member of the Secret Service and said that Michelle Obama and her daughters were going to be coming in with some friends for a party … and that I should be downstairs to greet them,” he said.

    Other notable Tenleytown guests included late President Jimmy Carter’s daughter, Amy Carter, along with professional hockey, basketball and football athletes.

    Aside from the who’s who that made Armand’s a D.C. destination, it was Lew Newmyer who was one of the first people to introduce the area to pizza delivery.

    Newmyer didn’t just buy a few cars and hire area teenagers to deliver his food. Instead, he bought a fleet of specially designed mini-trucks that were customized for Armand’s and featured built-in heaters to keep the pizzas warm.

    “He is a visionary in the senses of business, and he foresaw that pizza delivery was going to be a big thing,” Ron Newmyer said. “He did it in such a big way.”

    Now, with a post-COVID environment of inconsistent customer traffic and out of control pricing, Armand’s is still able to stand strong and celebrate 50 years in the restaurant business.

    While Armand’s has not changed its pizza or style through the years, the Tenleytown location is long gone. But Armand’s continues to serve loyal, deep-dish customers in Rockville, Maryland.

    That’s where customers will find the same mural from Tenleytown featuring Lew Newmyer and his smiling face, overlooking the main dining room as he makes sure every pizza is a winner, just like his longtime business.

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

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

    Steve Dresner

    Source link

  • Md. Task Force 1 ends deployment after 18-day stint assisting with Hurricane rescues, recovery – WTOP News

    Md. Task Force 1 ends deployment after 18-day stint assisting with Hurricane rescues, recovery – WTOP News

    Both two and four-legged members of Maryland Task Force 1 arrived back in Rockville on Monday afternoon, after their latest stint helping with hurricane rescues and surveying damage in North Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

    Maryland Task Force 1 returns from a trip to Florida to help with Milton cleanup and aftermath.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    Both two and four-legged members of Maryland Task Force 1 arrived back in Rockville on Monday afternoon, after their latest stint helping with hurricane rescues and surveying damage in North Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

    They grabbed their luggage and unpacked other supplies, and after entering a warehouse, Montgomery County Fire Chief Corey Smedley eagerly welcomed them home.

    The crew of about 45 members is the second to return home in less than a week. On Thursday, other members of the group arrived home after spending time in North Carolina after Hurricane Helene.

    The members who returned to Maryland on Monday relieved the first crew. FEMA, Smedley said, extended the task force’s deployment.

    “We sent two teams, because we had not only catastrophic weather event from Hurricane Helene, but right behind that was Milton,” Smedley said. “So we needed to ensure that we take the appropriate steps to maximize the time we were down there. So we decided to send two teams, let one team come back and another team go so they can stay there as long as needed.”

    In total, Maryland Task Force 1 was deployed for 18 days and about 100 people were involved in helping after the storms, Smedley said. The group includes first responders from Montgomery County, Howard County, D.C., Frederick, Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties.

    It included responders with different types of certification, Smedley said, including K-9 teams, communication specialists, and those specifically trained for water rescues, structural collapse and search and rescue.

    Helping out ‘decimated’ Southern towns

    The teams spent time in Georgia, North Carolina and Florida, traveling wherever FEMA advised them the most need was.

    “They did things from structural collapse evaluations to see that if there’s somebody trapped in the home, to see how stable the structure is; to land rescue, to water rescues,” Smedley said. “They had simple things as handing out potable water, so people can have to hydrate. Also any kind of medical emergencies they were able to take care of.”

    The two units that were deployed briefly overlapped, before the group that returned Monday took over.

    Capt. Jason Light, who was on the second team that was deployed, said their group searched about 776 miles in Brevard County, Florida, handling damage assessments and reviewing the impact of the wind and flooding.

    The group also assisted with medical emergencies, Light said, and stepped in upon seeing a family that was struggling to raise its American flag.

    “That was our team that decided to lend a helping hand and help reraise and get this flagpole and this flag back up flying,” Light said.

    Howard County Fire Battalion Chief Steve Hardesty, who was on the first deployment, said their first group started in Macon, Georgia, and observed a lot of wind damage, specifically trees down on houses and damage to power line infrastructure.

    The town of Swannanoa, North Carolina, “was just decimated, just houses missing, everything in the flood’s path or in the water’s path got wiped out,” Hardesty said.

    A section of homes on a mountain there, he said, wasn’t impacted by water damaged, but suffered damage because of mudslides.

    The trip marked the group’s fourth deployment of the year through FEMA, Smedley said, “and we still have eight weeks left in the hurricane season. So if FEMA calls us right now, we already are demobilizing, we’re checking everything so we can be ready to go back on the road in a moment’s notice.”

    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.

    Scott Gelman

    Source link

  • Maryland, D.C. and Virginia get more money for house calls for moms and infants – WTOP News

    Maryland, D.C. and Virginia get more money for house calls for moms and infants – WTOP News

    The U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration will provide an additional $23.1 million in federal aid to the agency’s national Home Visiting Program in the District, Maryland and Virginia.

    More money is on the way for a home-visiting health care program designed to provide better care for pregnant women, new parents and infants.

    The U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) announced an additional $23.1 million in federal aid to the agency’s national Home Visiting Program in the District, Maryland and Virginia.

    The extra money is the first time in a decade that the program has received an increase in federal funds, HRSA administrator Carol Johnson said.

    “What those resources mean is that we’re able to support nurses, social workers and trained home visitors, and help with those early days of being a new parent,” Johnson said. “All of this has been shown to really make a difference in kids’ outcomes. Kids are so much stronger because they get these kinds of supports.”

    Johnson said the program’s success hinges on convenient health visits in a comfortable at-home setting.

    “When you’re a new parent, if you have to take off from work and take a few buses to get to an appointment, you’re probably not going to do it,” she said. “But if that person comes to your house and they’re full of resources and knowledge, it’s going to make a huge difference to you.”

    Rockville, Maryland-based HRSA spearheads the national program, teaming up with local health organizations to target and reach parents.

    Home health care workers can provide breastfeeding support, safe sleep tips and developmental screening for babies. They can even help parents find key services like affordable child care or job and educational opportunities.

    “It’s changed my life,” past program participant Fatima Ray said.

    Ray said she was introduced to the program in 2015 when she needed help with her infant daughter. She and her husband were first-time parents and stumbled through the first few months with a newborn.

    “It felt good, like I had someone on my team,” Ray said. “Those questions you forget to ask the doctor sometimes, she would answer them.”

    The experience impressed Ray so much that she became a home health visitor. She is the maternal health coordinator at Primo Center, a homeless shelter for families in Chicago.

    “The same care that was given to me, I just want to pass it on,” Ray told WTOP. “I know how much it made a difference in my life. Home visiting matters.”

    President Joseph Biden signed bipartisan legislation in 2022 that doubles funding for the program over five years. The move was part of a campaign promise to lower risks linked to pregnancy and improve maternal health, especially among women in rural, tribal and low-income communities.

    The national home visiting program will receive $440 million Maryland’s local programs will get $10 million of those funds. Virginia is slated to receive $11 million and D.C.’s home visiting programs will see a $2.5 million increase.

    “This will push home visiting forward a lot more,” Ray said. “It’s just going to help tremendously.”

    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.

    Gigi Barnett

    Source link

  • How Rockville became a hub for Asian Americans in the DC area – WTOP News

    How Rockville became a hub for Asian Americans in the DC area – WTOP News

    Sitting down to a plate of pork dumplings at MaMa Wok, a popular Chinese restaurant in the town, John Lin shared the story of how Rockville became a hub for the Asian American community.

    All throughout May, WTOP is celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month with stories about the people and places shaping the D.C. region.

    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.

    How Rockville became a hub for Asian Americans in the DC area

    Rockville, Maryland, a town of around 67,000 residents, has over the past four decades become an enclave for Asian Americans living in the D.C. area.

    From businesses that cater directly to the community to the many Asian grocers the town has seen, the Asian American community became its largest racial minority group.

    John Lin is president of CapStar Commercial Realty and is also a member of the city’s Asian Pacific American Task Force. He said that he has watched the town grow since moving to the region from Taiwan in the 1970s.

    “It’s a place where all the Asians want to move in because they have all they want,” Lin said.

    Sitting down to a plate of pork dumplings at MaMa Wok, a popular Chinese restaurant in the town, Lin shared the story of how the town became a hub for the community.

    It began, according to Lin, on Maryland Route 355 with the opening of Meixin Supermarket in the 1980s. Other Asian grocers would soon follow, and so would other Asian American-owned businesses.

    “Over time, you see a lot of others. Businesses like restaurants and salons and doctors and (lawyers) moving near that, and all the new immigrants would come in,” Lin said.

    He said grocery stores were key to the growth of the Asian American community in the town.

    “[Residents] can go to other grocers and get exactly the things they have back home,” he said.

    Another factor he believes is the gentrification of D.C.’s Chinatown neighborhood which lead to an exodus of Asian businesses from the nation’s capital.

    “D.C.’s Chinatown is pretty much phased out. It’s like a tourist spot because it only has a few businesses left,” Lin said.


    More AAPI stories


    Lin added that you’ll even see businesses which may not be owned by Asian Americans, going out of their way to welcome in residents who are. One example, according to Lin, is the Citibank on Research Parkway, which has its sign also in Chinese.

    “So when immigrants come in, they feel comfortable. They can walk into the bank and talk to the cashier and do what they need. That makes a difference,” Lin said.

    The other big draw for families is the quality of education in the county.

    “The Rockville area has the best schools in the nation, and that’s what’s attracting all the people to come,” he said.

    Lin said while the city should be a case study for other towns, there is more that he hopes to see come down the road when it comes to restaurants and shops.

    “I will say, compared with Virginia, I feel that they are moving so fast. We need to catch up a little bit,” he said.

    But Lin said when it comes to those in the Asian community, Rockville continues to rank as the best place to call home.

    Rockville, Maryland, has become an enclave for the Asian American community in the D.C. area.
    (WTOP/Mike Murillo)

    WTOP/Mike Murillo

    chefs
    Restaurant staff prepare foods at a Rockville eatery.
    (WTOP/Mike Murillo)

    WTOP/Mike Murillo

    restaurant sign
    MaMa Wok is a popular Chinese restaurant in Rockville, Maryland.
    (WTOP/Mike Murillo)

    WTOP/Mike Murillo

    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.

    Mike Murillo

    Source link

  • Patients are ‘really excited’ about drug to protect food allergy sufferers, Md. doc says – WTOP News

    Patients are ‘really excited’ about drug to protect food allergy sufferers, Md. doc says – WTOP News

    For close to two decades the drug Xolair or omalizumab has been FDA approved to help people with Asthma or chronic hives. Now, the FDA has added to the list of potential uses for the drug: protecting people with severe food allergies.

    For close to two decades the drug Xolair or omalizumab has been FDA approved to help people with Asthma or chronic hives. Now, the FDA has added to the list of potential uses for the drug: protecting people with severe food allergies.

    “Essentially, we’re sort of repurposing the drug, the use of the drug, for prevention of food allergy reactions to a small amount of accidental exposure,” said Dr. Rachel Schreiber with Schreiber Allergy in Rockville.

    The drug can now be prescribed to boost a person’s tolerance just a little, in case of accidental exposure to small amounts of the foods that normally can cause anaphylaxis, Schreiber said.

    “Let’s say it would take someone half a peanut to react, maybe this drug raises that threshold to like three peanuts,” she said.

    But she cautions it is not a cure, and people who know they have food allergies still need to always have an EpiPen with them.

    It was well known in the medical community, before the FDA decision, that the drug can help food allergy sufferers. The problem, with off-label use, insurance coverage for the expensive drug was rare. The cost for Xolair treatment can go for nearly $35,000, according to Schreiber.

    “It could have been used in that way in the past, but now it has (FDA) approval and so we will be able to get our patients covered,” she said.

    It’s administered as an injection every two to four weeks, according to Schreiber. While a version that could be taken at home could be available in the future, she said right now it must be administered in a doctor’s office. Even with an at-home version, patients would still need to take the medicine in a doctor’s office for the few doses, due to one reported side effect.

    “There is a black box warning on this drug for ironically anaphylaxis,” Schreiber said.

    Also, not everyone with food allergies will benefit from the drug. Getting it prescribed will require bloodwork to see if a patient’s body responds to allergic reaction by producing antibodies called Immunoglobulin E or IgE.

    Schreiber cautions that even though approval has been granted to use the drug in this way, there will be a delay in getting it covered as insurance companies update their systems to allow it to be covered.

    Schreiber said patients have been calling her office since the FDA announcement and “are really excited” about the new potential protection against the foods to which they are allergic.

    “I think it really is a big step forward in the treatment of food allergy,” said Schreiber.

    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.

    Mike Murillo

    Source link