Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label MD Baltimore city crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MD Baltimore city crime. Show all posts

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Update http://tinyurl.com/23vwll4: motorcyclist dies in accident with city police - Officer reportedly suspended pending investigation

Cockeysville motorcyclist dies in accident involving city police officer - Officer reportedly suspended pending investigation http://tinyurl.com/23vwll4

http://www.explorebaltimorecounty.com Baltimore City Officer reportedly suspended pending investigation after Cockeysville motorcyclist dies in accident involving city police officer


By Kevin Dayhoff, Posted 7/25/10

A Cockeysville motorcyclist died Sunday morning as result of a traffic accident that involved a Baltimore Police Department officer.
The motorcyclist is identified as Haines E. Holloway-Lilliston, 27, of the 200 block of Lord Byron Lane, Cockeysville. He was operating a 2002 Suzuki GSX 600 motorcycle, according to a report by Maryland State Police spokesperson Greg Shipley.

[…]

The Baltimore Sun is reporting that Beall was suspended pending an internal investigation, according to Baltimore City Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi.

[…]


20100725 ExpBC Cockeysville motorcyclist dies in accident expbcked
*****

Cockeysville motorcyclist dies in accident while fleeing police

For updated story see: http://www.explorebaltimorecounty.com/news/107669/cockeysville-motorcyclist-dies-accident-involving-city-police-officer/ Cockeysville motorcyclist dies in accident involving city police officer - Officer reportedly suspended pending investigation http://tinyurl.com/23vwll4

July 25, 2010

By Kevin Dayhoff

A Cockeysville motorcyclist died this morning as result of a traffic accident that involved a Baltimore Police Department officer.

The motorcyclist is identified as Haines E. Holloway-Lilliston, 27, of the 200-block of Lord Byron Lane, Cockeysville, Md. He was operating a 2002 Suzuki GSX 600 motorcycle, according to a report by Maryland State Police spokesperson Greg Shipley.

Maryland State Police report that troopers at the Golden Ring Barracks were called around 3 a.m. this morning by the Baltimore City 911 Center and advised that Baltimore City police officer Timothy E. Beall, 31, was behind a motorcycle that was speeding north on I-83. Holloway-Lilliston had allegedly previously been observed committing traffic violations in the city.

Beall, according to Shipley, was operating a marked Baltimore Police Department patrol car. “Preliminary information indicates the police officer had witnessed the motorcycle involved in a possible speed contest with a car on Northern Parkway. When the officer attempted to pull the motorcycle over, the driver did not stop and continued north on I-83.”

State Police also report that “Beall was the only police officer involved in following the motorcycle. No other police units from the city or other police agencies were involved.”

“Soon afterwards, State Police were notified by the Baltimore County Emergency Operations Center to respond to a traffic crash on the ramp to southbound Dulaney Valley Road from the Inner Loop of I-695,” reports Shipley.

Maryland State Police and Baltimore County fire department and EMS personnel arrived on the scene where they found that the accident involved Holloway-Lilliston and Beall.

EMS personnel pronounced the motorcyclist, Holloway-Lilliston, dead at the scene.

The Maryland State Police CRASH Team responded to conduct a detailed crash investigation which “indicates the motorcycle was in front of the police car as both proceeded south on the off-ramp where the vehicles collided and the motorcyclist was ejected from the motorcycle onto the hood of the police car and then onto the roadway. The speeds of the vehicles at the time of the collision have not been determined,” report State Police.

The investigation continues as the Maryland State Police CRASH Team is conducting a “detailed accident reconstruction.” No charges have been filed at this time. . The completed investigation will be forwarded to the Baltimore County State’s Attorney’s Office for review.

####

*****

Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://kevindayhoffart.blogspot.com/ or http://kevindayhoffart.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.com/ Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/ or http://www.westgov.net/ = www.kevindayhoff.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoff Twitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/ = www.newbedfordherald.net Explore Carroll: www.explorecarroll.com The Tentacle: www.thetentacle.com

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Investigative Voice: Two bikes stolen from former first daughter's Baltimore home

News Flash – Two bikes stolen from former first daughter's Baltimore home

Saturday, 19 June 2010 12:22 http://tinyurl.com/2w7m6lq

Two bikes were stolen from the rear garage of the Federal Hill home of former first daughter Jenna Bush, the Baltimore Sun is reporting.

The bikes, two Trek sports bicycles, were taken Friday afternoon. The bikes are worth approximately $3,500.

Read the rest here: http://investigativevoice.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4558:news-flash-two-bikes-stolen-from-former-first-daughters-baltimore-home-two-bikes-were-stolen-from-the-rear-garage-of-the-federal-hill-of-former-first-daughter-jenna-bush-the-baltimore-sun-is-reporting-the-bikes-two-trek-sports-bicycles-were-taken-&catid=25:the-project&Itemid=44

20100619 IV 2 bikes stolen from Jenna Bush

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Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://kevindayhoffart.blogspot.com/ or http://kevindayhoffart.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.com/ Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/ or http://www.westgov.net/ = www.kevindayhoff.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoff Twitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/ = www.newbedfordherald.net Explore Carroll: www.explorecarroll.com The Tentacle: www.thetentacle.com

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Investigative Voice goes national! http://tinyurl.com/274gfws

http://www.investigativevoice.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4096:news-flash-sex-offender-on-city-payroll-story-goes-national-picked-up-fox-news&catid=25:the-project&Itemid=44

http://tinyurl.com/274gfws

On release from jail, was regularly sent by supervisors to work in private residences and schools

MAYOR'S EXECUTIVE ORDER MANDATES NOTIFICATION TO HIGHER-UPS UPON ARREST
Fox News Network credits Investigative Voice with breaking story, revealing fraud

The story of a Baltimore City sex offender who remained on the Department of Public Works payroll while in jail — first reported by Investigative Voice — has now become national news.

National broadcaster Fox News Network is today (Saturday) reporting Mayor Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake’s executive order requiring city employees who have been arrested to inform their supervisors within 24 hours.

The order was signed by Rawlings-Blake this past week following the release of a report by the office of the city's Inspector General that determined Bureau of Water and Wastewater employee Dennis J. McLaughlin was paid by the city while he was serving an eight-month jail term for sexually abusing a minor.

The network credits Investigative Voice with breaking the story.

Fox is also reporting the outcome of the investigation, which determined that city employee McLaughlin was paid $12,700 in sick pay while in jail, including 24 days of sick bank time approved by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 64 , a union representing city workers. He also received vacation and holiday pay for days when the city government was shut down, such as Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Read the entire story and follow the news thread of this incredible story here: http://www.investigativevoice.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4096:news-flash-sex-offender-on-city-payroll-story-goes-national-picked-up-fox-news&catid=25:the-project&Itemid=44

http://tinyurl.com/274gfws

http://www.investigativevoice.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=46&Itemid=2

LINK TO FOX NEWS ONLINE STORY:

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/05/15/baltimore-cracks-city-employees-getting-paid-jail/?test=latestnews

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2010/05/investigative-voice-goes-national.html http://tinyurl.com/2c9xyyf

*****

Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://kevindayhoffart.blogspot.com/ or http://kevindayhoffart.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.com/ Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/ or http://www.westgov.net/ = www.kevindayhoff.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoff Twitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/ = www.newbedfordherald.net Explore Carroll: www.explorecarroll.com The Tentacle: www.thetentacle.com

Friday, February 26, 2010

Investigative Voice celebrated a birthday Wednesday night

Investigative Voice celebrated a birthday Wednesday night

By Kevin Dayhoff February 25, 2010 http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2010/02/investigative-voice-celebrated-birthday.html

Folks started crowding into a chic, trendy, upscale, restaurant and lounge, the Red Maple, in the Mount Vernon neighborhood of Baltimore, unfashionably early last Wednesday night as the Investigative Voice celebrated its first anniversary.

The outside of the building is relatively non-descript and brought back memories of the delightfully quirky Martick’s Restaurant Francais. Once located at 214 West Mulberry Street; it was the behind the blue door and ring the secret doorbell eatery that had, as my memory serves me, little on the outside that indicated the exciting adventures in eating that were to be found within.

I walked right by the Red Maple several times before I spotted the “930” above the door. It looked as if Ayn Rand has designed the outer egg of the experience – a grand post-modernist yet relatively unadorned objectivist gray edifice. Of course, all the TV videographers hanging around outside could have been a clue. Well, duh.

Outside, it was relatively quiet, but once the glass door was opened, one entered another world of multi-layered synesthetic commotion. After one’s eye became adjusted to the darkened interior, the sounds blended with the colors, you tasted the shapes, heard the colors, and saw the sounds of a wall of folks standing shoulder-to-shoulder at the top of the stairs – in the upper room.

It was an uncanny impression in consideration of the synesthetic commotion one observes in the burgeoning new – web-based – media phenomena of which the event was celebrating…

It has not been since the early 1960s that such a profound shift has occurred in information delivery systems. It was around 1960 that more Americans got their news from TV instead of newspapers…

Increasing in today’s brave new technology era, more folks are increasingly getting their news from internet media, such as Investigative Voice, than TV or print media…

Immediately inside the door, the front room was relatively vacuous – as if the upper room had sucked all the air out of the room in a rapacious fit of needing all the available oxygen - with the exception of a lone sentry sitting at what seemed a leftover, after-thought little table with a white tablecloth.

He was friendly and identified himself as the dutiful spouse of part of the Investigative Voice management team – and he was there to collect my 20 bucks, which I gladly forked over to support the cause.

At the top of the steps I immediately encountered retired Baltimore Police detective Irving Bradley, who seemed much larger than life as he stood by the doorway.

Just beyond Detective Bradley, I spotted Stephen Janis, who along with fellow defunct Baltimore Examiner refugees, Luke Broadwater and Regina Holmes, gave birth to the Investigative Voice – well – a year ago.

As the media attempts to re-invent itself and adapt to the mercurial changes in technology, the Investigative Voice has been a model that has been studied nationwide.

It began from the ashes of the Baltimore Examiner’s demise last February. The first stories went up on the website about a week or so later …

Word of the new adventure-in-journalism spread quickly in the uniquely small community of tech savvy writers in Maryland.

An article in the City Paper by Chris Landers on April 1, 2009, “New Media Player - Will the future of journalism come from journalists?” called to our attention:

“The 2009 State of the News Media report by the Pew Research center is about as uplifting as a suicide note, but it does contain some hopeful notes for what may be coming next.

“One of the more promising new trends identified by the report is a number of new independent online ventures springing up around the country--specialized outlets, ‘often led and staffed by refugees from the mainstream press,’ providing ‘original reporting meant to fill what they see as an expanding void in what mainstream media now offer.’

“‘For now,’ the report continues, ‘our sense is that they represent something complementary to the traditional news media.’

Hmmm, you know, one may argue that increasingly the traditional news media complements the new media…

Investigative Voice is good example of the evolution of meaningful web-based media that has - thankfully - evolved from tacky blogs and the traditional print media pasted on to a web site. There are many good examples in the Maryland area.

The “celebration party” and the panel discussion featured at the event is another good example of the vertical integration of web-based media into the structure of a community that has embraced a meaningful interactive relationship with readers, instead of remaining inaccessibly and condescendingly above it all.

By way of Facebook, reader comments, and Twitter, new media is developing a relationship with readers and events such as last Wednesday’s event further involves the public that journalism serves.

The mission statement of Investigative Voice explains that it “is dedicated to providing ongoing, in-depth, and thoughtful investigative journalism to the city of Baltimore and beyond. We believe that citizens should actively participate in their governments and that being informed is a civic duty.

“To that end, we strive to shed light on the local governments and agencies that affect our lives, and to hold them accountable to constituents. Never shying away from controversy, the Investigative Voice staff offers another voice to Baltimore residents.”

Last Wednesday evening, Mr. Janis was his usual peripatetic whirlwind blur of activity. I always like being near Mr. Janis – he makes me feel well dressed.

Making his way to a table immediately to the stage left of the upper room was former Baltimore Police commissioner Ed Norris and I noticed Baltimore City NAACP president Dr. Marvin L. “Doc” Cheatham being swallowed by the crowd off in the distance.

They were all there, in addition to president of the Union Square Community organization, Chris Taylor, City Paper writer ‘Murder Ink’ Anna Ditkoff and former Baltimore mayor Sheila Dixon; for a panel discussion on Baltimore crime and the media.


In one way or another, all the panelists may quality as expert witnesses on Baltimore’s public policy approaches to crime.

Mr. Taylor is fresh at the table after being arrested for asking a question, err, ‘impeding an investigation.’ Not, that wasn’t it – the police finally settled upon ‘disturbing the peace’…

In an article by Investigative Voice by Mr. Janis on January 21, 2010, it was revealed that “on the eve of the trial,” prosecutors decided, ‘oh, nevermind,’ and dropped the charges…

The buzz was that the evening would be the first public appearance by former Mayor Dixon after she left office on February 4, 2010 as part of an agreement with prosecutors in the wake of charges of perjury, embezzlement, and the misuse of shoes while in office.

Mayor Dixon presented as her usual thoughtful intelligent self; a bit rested and articulate, yet still with her characteristic chip-on-her-shoulder ever-present edge.

However, in what was an otherwise wise, and indeed scholarly and academic hour-long discussion on the substantive, sociological, institutional, and public policy causality of crime; Mayor Dixon opened with an introduction that this was her second public appearance since she left office.

For the outside observer, it was a ‘cult of personality’ incongruous moment juxtaposed into a conversation about a city plagued with a nationwide perception of being dangerous and victimized with a ‘Mad Max’ or ‘Clockwork Orange’ variety of wonton, meaningless mayhem, and chaos.


In response to Mr. Janis’ opening question about the role of the media with respect to crime in Baltimore City, all the panelists had thoughtful statistics-filled, analytical responses.

Particular poignant was Commissioner Norris’ response that the media fuels a perception of rampant crime in a city that seems remarkably lacking in outrage over the matter that Baltimore is considered to “still be one of the most dangerous places in the U.S.”

In the ensuing discussion, the panelists identified a certain superficial approach to crime in the city - that there is a lack of thoughtful insight and analysis in the media coverage of crime. After the ‘breaking news,’ the public is dropped off a cliff as to the whys, hows and whats of a particular event, as the happy talk continues…

In a weird irony, after an evening of intelligent give-and-take about the underlying systemic causation of crime in the city; traditional media coverage of the event seemed somewhat superficially preoccupied with the public resurrection and apparition of Mayor Dixon.

There was little coverage of the intelligent conversation of the root causes and possible long-term solutions that were brought-out in the panel discussion.

Moreover, Mayor Dixon’s presentation was essentially trivialized in the traditional media as an attempt on her part, to establish her historical legacy of decades of public service.

A keen contemporary new media observer could not have scripted the coverage by traditional media outlets any better to drive home the point as to why information dissemination platforms such as Investigative Voice are attracting so much interest and attention.


In the panel discussion Wednesday evening, Mayor Dixon declared that there needs to be a balance in the media’s coverage of crime...

The former mayor explained her “three-prong” approach to crime, which included gun control, and a focus on the courts and prosecutor’s responsibilities for holding people who commit crimes responsible for their actions.

She explained the environmental, sociological, and educational impacts on crime and possible remedies as well as her third prong of prenatal care, childcare, and the responsibilities of the parents.

So when we talk about a cleaner, greener, healthier, and safer city, it wasn't just empty buzzwords, said Mayor Dixon.

In a follow-up question, Mr. Janis questioned the wisdom of, what is perceived to be, so many unwarranted arrests in which the charges are dropped or later proven to be without merit.

To which Dr. Cheatham explained that “we cannot arrest ourselves out of this (crime) problem.” We have to decide for ourselves, as a community, to address all the aspects of crime, said Dr. Cheatham. “We cannot police ourselves out of this problem.”

Doc Cheatham observed that during the administration of former-Baltimore mayor, now Maryland governor Martin O’Malley, crime did not go down in an era of record arrests.

However, Commissioner Norris was quick to note that many of the examples of unwarranted arrests – zero tolerance – occurred after he left office… “Everyone is referring to a time between my time and Mayor Dixon.”

As the discussion began to analyze comprehensive approaches to crime that go beyond simplistically putting all the blame on the mayor and the police commissioner, Mr. Taylor and Ms. Ditkoff only agreed to a point.

Each explained that the police department does have a significant responsibility. Everyone wants to pass the buck… It’s not my administration or my police department… We’re all responsible for this…, said Mr. Taylor.

“Politicians have destroyed this country,” decried Mr. Taylor.

Ms. Ditkoff volunteered an experience in which she was arrested at 6 a.m. one morning for failure to appear in court. In a story so often heard about Kafkaesque Baltimore experiences; she was not aware of the scheduled court appearance.

As a result, Ms. Ditkoff spend 19 hours in Central Booking and subjected to a humiliating strip-search, in which the door to the room in which she was bent-over and naked, was opened for her to be put on display.

The audience seemed to easily understand the points made Mr. Taylor and Ms. Ditkoff. That is, in a city that is perceived to be inundated with serious crime, why are their so many stories emanated from Baltimore about “a city parking agent … writing fake tickets,” bureaucratic ‘Catch-22’ nightmares, vexatious and meaningless arrests which result in a citizen being released without being charged?

All of which erodes the public’s faith and trust for their safety, further drives a flight of citizens and businesses from the city and perpetuates a perception of hopeless lawlessness and urban decay, while public officials bicker with each other as to who is to blame.

Mayor Dixon stressed a focus on the systemic issues underlying the cycle of crime. We need to develop a strong strategy… A long tern process… and we have to start somewhere. Each of us has to take responsibility and understand that it may not come from state and city government. We’ve got to focus on breaking cycles, articulated Mayor Dixon.

Commissioner Norris explained that in an environment when most Baltimore city school children do not graduate from high school, of failed social programs, and a variety of publicly institutionalized dysfunctia, police officers “work their asses off… the mayor’s office works their asses off…”

The police department (and the mayor’s office) have their role – but it is a role,” and not the role, said Commissioner Norris.

A further discussion developed about public drug policies after Mayor Dixon noted that Baltimore has been a drug-addicted city for 70 years.

Commissioner Norris said that doesn’t think any drugs ought to be illegal… As long as it is illegal, it will be in demand… We didn’t learn from Prohibition.

Detective Bradley backed him up by saying, “We have to take the profit out of drugs.”

After an hour-long discussion in which the role of the media, the police, the mayor’s office and how society needs to step back and take a comprehensive systemic approach to crime; Mr. Janis concluded the panel discussion portion of the evening.

The audience seemed quite satisfied with the in-depth and insightful discussion.

It should not go unnoticed that new media such as the Investigative Voice, is driving an analytical approach to not just what is happening in our community but why it is happening. A point not lost on Ms. Ditkoff, who explained that she always wants to know more than ‘what’ happened. “I want to know how things work.”

In addition to ‘how’ things work – or do not work, in the case of Baltimore - one point emphasized in the panel discussion is that we have to start somewhere to address the issues in our community. It would appear that although the Investigative Voice is only one year old, it represents that new media has taken one big step in the correct direction.

We all look forward to many more birthday celebrations.

####
~~~~~
Photo captions:

“An evening with Investigative Voice” Collage by Kevin Dayhoff February 24, 2010 [20100224 IV party collage 2sm] Investigative Voice celebrated a birthday Wed night By Kevin Dayhoff Feb 25, 2010 http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 #art
http://twitpic.com/15hxtx http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/416112944/an-evening-with-investigative-voice-collage-by http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=12159&id=1040426835&saved#!/photo.php?pid=979276&id=1040426835

The Red Maple, at 930 North Charles St., in the Mount Vernon neighborhood of Baltimore, was the scene of a one-year anniversary celebration for Investigative Voice. Photo by Kevin Dayhoff [20100224 IVAnnivPrty (18) c sm 930 Red Maple] Red Maple was scene of 1-yr anniversary celebration for Investigative Voice http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 http://twitpic.com/15kxaf http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/416316780/the-red-maple-at-930-north-charles-st-in-the http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=27398&id=1040426835&saved#!/photo.php?pid=979724&id=1040426835

http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 Investigative Voice co-founder Stephen Janis website brief bio: http://tinyurl.com/yf7ohxd http://twitpic.com/15p7oi
http://www.investigativevoice.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=46&Itemid=50 http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=25713&id=1040426835&saved#!/photo.php?pid=979196&id=1040426835 http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/416027521/http-tinyurl-com-ye6kkc4-investigative-voice

Investigative Voice Feb 24 Baltimore crime panelists included (left to right): Former Baltimore Police Commissioner Ed Norris, Retired Homicide Detective Irving Bradley, NAACP Baltimore City President Marvin L. 'Doc' Cheatham, Baltimore City Paper Reporter Anna Ditkoff, and Union Square Community Activist Chris Taylor, and former Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon. Photomontage By Kevin Dayhoff February 24, 2010 [20100224 IVAnnivPrtyPanelcomp sm] Investigative Voice Feb 24 Baltimore crime panelists included http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 http://twitpic.com/15lc5c http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/415008229/investigative-voice-feb-24-baltimore-crime http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/416032763/investigative-voice-feb-24-baltimore-crime http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=13661&id=1040426835&saved#!/photo.php?pid=979586&id=1040426835

Investigative Voice co-founder Stephen Janis questions the panel about the role of the media with respect to crime in Baltimore City at an event last Wednesday night hosted by the new media news website. Photo by Kevin Dayhoff February 24, 2010. [20100224 IVAnnivPrty (12)c smJanis] Investigative Voice SJanis qs panel re media role w respect 2 crime n Baltimore http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 http://twitpic.com/15kzi5 http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/414945556/investigative-voice-co-founder-stephen-janis http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=25713&id=1040426835&saved#!/photo.php?pid=979574&id=1040426835

Former Mayor Sheila Dixon makes a point, as Chris Taylor, president of the Union Square Community organization, looks on, at the Investigative Voice panel discussion February 24, 2010 Photo by Kevin Dayhoff [20100224 IVAnnivPrty (11) c sm Dixon] A public resurrection and apparition of former Baltimore Mayor Dixon http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 #photo #writing http://twitpic.com/15hzk3 http://kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/post/414823036/former-mayor-sheila-dixon-makes-a-point-as-chris http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=979231&id=1040426835

http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2010/02/investigative-voice-celebrated-birthday.html

, , , , , , ,
Investigative Voice celebrated a birthday Wed night By Kevin Dayhoff Feb 25, 2010 http://tinyurl.com/ye6kkc4 #art

Investigative Voice celebrated a birthday Wed night By Kevin Dayhoff Feb 25, 2010 http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2010/02/investigative-voice-celebrated-birthday.html
*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://www.kevindayhoffart.com/ Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: http://www.westgov.net/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoff Twitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/

Friday, August 28, 2009

Baltimore & Mayor Dixon Are Targets Of Hoax

BALTIMORE (WJZ) Aug 28, 2009 4:54 pm US/Eastern

The mayor and some journalists are mad at a man who used Baltimore to take a satirical look at the crime in England.


As Mike Schuh reports, the city is now looking at taking legal action.

Last week, an English politician compared a crime-ridden city in England with the Baltimore seen in the TV show, "The Wire."

It appeared Mayor Sheila Dixon struck back via her city webpage Thursday. The Baltimore Sun and two leading British newspapers, The Guardian and The Independent, published her quote.

[...]

Read more: http://wjz.com/local/hoax.mayor.baltimore.2.1149834.html
20090828

WJZ's most popular:
*****

Monday, August 24, 2009

WBAL: Ravens rookie linebacker Tony Fein was arrested

Ravens rookie linebacker Tony Fein was arrested at the Inner Harbor

Statement from Ravens senior vice president of public and community relations Kevin Byrne regarding Tony Fein: “Like all citizens, Tony will get his due process and have his opportunity to explain. There are two sides to every story.”

Ravens Player Arrested At Inner Harbor, Sunday, August 23, 2009 Scott Wykoff and Associated Press

Baltimore City Police say Ravens rookie linebacker Tony Fein was arrested and charged with assaulting an officer and is being held in custody.

[…]

Statement from Ravens senior vice president of public and community relations Kevin Byrne regarding Tony Fein:

“Like all citizens, Tony will get his due process and have his opportunity to explain. There are two sides to every story.”

[…]

He is an Iraq veteran who served as an Army infantry scout.

Before attending Ole Miss, Fein enlisted in the Army in 2001

He was honored with the Pat Tillman Patriot Award by the Military Order of the Purple Heart his senior year at Ole Miss. The honor is bestowed upon Americans who have served on both the gridiron and the battlefield.

[…]


Read the entire article here: Ravens rookie linebacker Tony Fein was arrested at the Inner Harbor

20090823 WBAL Ravens rookie linebacker Tony Fein was arrested

Related Articles

Wideouts Headline Rookie Camp Tryouts (Monday, June 15, 2009)
Ravens Sign Rookie Free Agent Linebacker (Friday, June 19, 2009)
Ravens Welcome 500 Military Members (Thursday, August 20, 2009)

http://wbal.com/apps/news/templates/story.aspx?articleid=34158&zoneid=3&utm_source=twitter
*****

Friday, August 21, 2009

Nine year old raises money for Baltimore police horses

Nine yr old raises money for police horses

Channel 13 WJZ TV http://wjz.com/ Baltimore video. For more great WJZ videos, go here: http://wjz.com/video. Go here for the entire story: http://wjz.com/local/city.horse.funding.2.1136988.html http://tinyurl.com/n25p4o

“August 20, 2009, A nine-year-old girl steps up to help the Baltimore City Police Horse Patrol.” http://wjz.com/video/?id=59551@wjz.dayport.com

WJZ News Mike Schuh reports Girl 9 helps raise funds for Baltimore police horse patrol
http://wjz.com/local/city.horse.funding.2.1136988.html

Aug 20, 2009

Mike Schuh reports:
Girl Raises Money For City's Mounted Police Patrol

Related story:
Funding For City Police Horses Cut (8/3/2009)

Sophia Litrenta raised $2,000 for the city's Mounted Police Patrol.


A tight city budget is threatening the historic Baltimore Police Mounted Patrol Unit, which needs $150,000 to stay open.

At the crack of dawn Thursday morning, Mike Schuh met with Police Commissioner Frederick Bealefeld to give an exclusive look at how a 9-year-old girl stepped up to help.

Thursday will be a day third grader Sophia Litrenta will always remember. But it's what she's done that will be remembered by many.

Sophia set up a lemonade stand to raise money for Baltimore City's Mounted Police.

[…]

Sophia took in more than $2,000 in just two hours at her lemonade stand.

[…]

The Mounted Patrol Unit is the longest continuously-running unit in the entire country. It has been in action since 1888.

Sophia's parents say they will continue to collect money and turn all the donations over to police.

To donate money for the horses, click on this
link. Or, you can mail a check, labeled "Mounted Patrol," to:

Baltimore Community Foundation
2 East Read Street
Baltimore, MD 21202

http://wjz.com/local/city.horse.funding.2.1136988.html

Read the entire story here: Girl Raises Money For City's Mounted Police Patrol
*****

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Dispatch from Bodymore, Murderland By: Gregory Kane

Related: 20090601 Baltimore police try to quell violence downtown

Dispatch from Bodymore, Murderland By: Gregory Kane

Examiner Columnist 6/15/09

Whitey, don’t let the sun set on you in Bodymore, Murderland. That’s neither an official or unofficial slogan for Baltimore yet, but it’s not because some of our more dysfunctional citizens aren’t trying to make it so.

Bodymore, Murderland IS the unofficial city nickname. It comes to us courtesy of those who appeared in the first “Stop Snitching” DVD, and they should know: They’re responsible for many of the dead bodies and the murders.

The overwhelming majority of those bodies are black ones, dispatched by black perps. But the few white bodies may end up giving Baltimore a notorious reputation as a city where whites just aren’t safe.

Some of those white bodies are still alive, no thanks to their attackers. George Williams, a police officer from Brick Township, N.J., is a white guy who survived after a group of black teens kicked his head “back and forth like a soccer ball” he said in one news story during a late-May incident in downtown Baltimore. Williams said the teens accused him of uttering a racial slur to justify the attack, but he denies making any derogatory racial remarks.

Williams’ case sounds similar to that of Sarah Kreager and Troy Ennis, a white couple who were assaulted on a Baltimore transit bus in late 2007. A group of middle-school teens were the culprits in that case, who accused Ennis of using the racial slur and Kreager of spitting on one of the students.

[…]

How do we account for black teens in this day and age, who’ve seen little to none of the racism and segregation that their elders have seen, harboring such a sense of racial grievance and dudgeon? Might it be black leadership? (Although I’m fond of calling it “black misleadership.”)

Bad as the cases of Williams, Kreager and Ennis were, they pale in comparison to the ones of Zachary Sowers, Jennifer Morelock and David Woycio. Three black teens robbed Sowers; one beat him so badly that it left him comatose for nearly a year before his wife, Anna Sowers, had his doctors remove him from life support.

Morelock and Woycio were a white couple from Carroll County who ventured into the western section of Baltimore in the spring of 2006. Both were shot dead. A police officer, acting on a tip, stopped then-17-year-old Davon David Temple to question him as a possible suspect.

According to the cop, Temple agreed to a search of his cell phone’s contents. The officer found this text message in the cell phone’s inbox: “I shot 2 white people around my way 2day and one of them was a woman.”

[…]

In three years, not one Baltimore elected official has protested the disgrace of a guy who might be a confessed murderer walking the streets. Not the current mayor, Sheila Dixon. Not Gov. Martin O’Malley, who was Baltimore’s mayor when this shameful incident happened and who criticized Baltimore State’s Attorney Patricia Jessamy for everything BUT this one decision.


Read the entire column here: Dispatch from Bodymore, Murderland By: Gregory Kane

And be sure to follow all Gregory Kane’s columns in the Washington Examiner. He tells it like it is.

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columns/gregory-kane/Dispatch-from-Bodymore-Murderland-48061142.html

20090615 Dispatch from Bodymore Murderland by Gregory Kane

Meanwhile in other news from the Examiner:

Gerald Walpin speaks: The inside story of the AmeriCorps firing

What's behind Obama's sudden attempt to fire the AmeriCorps inspector general?

First lady extends her reach at the White House

Gangster government's grip on the AmeriCorps

Krispy Kreme fires back; suit moved to federal court

Raising taxes by the mile

Tysons Corner ad shocks Vietnam vets

Dispatch from Bodymore, Murderland

NASCAR Mexico driver Carlos Pardo killed in crash at race in Puebla

The RAT hiding deep inside the stimulus bill

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Baltimore police try to quell violence downtown

STATE: Baltimore police try to quell violence downtown

By The Associated Press Monday, June 01, 2009

BALTIMORE — A string of random attacks in downtown Baltimore has prompted police to beef up patrols around the Inner Harbor and other tourist-friendly areas.

In several incidents, tourists and city residents have been beaten by roving groups of young people who say little and take nothing from their victims.

The victims include an off-duty police officer from New Jersey and his girlfriend, who said they were beaten by a group of young men and women. The officer, George Williams, wrote a letter to Mayor Sheila Dixon saying that they now feel unsafe in Baltimore.

[…]


20090601 Baltimore police try to quell violence downtown

http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2009/06/01/news/breaking_news/99baltimore.txt