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Maryland

    State warns Eastern Shore school district seeking to oust superintendent
    Maryland's schools leader says they could withhold funding or seek to remove school board members if Somerset County tries to oust its superintendent.
    How life has gotten worse for immigrant children under Trump 2.0
    As deportation efforts and anti-immigrant rhetoric ramp up, kids are feeling more isolated, losing benefits and risking long-term detriments.
    Montgomery Police arrest suspect in 1995 killing of DC police officer
    The Montgomery County Police Department in Maryland did not immediately identify the person arrested in the fatal shooting of 24-year-old Denna Fredericka Campbell, an officer for the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington.
    A Baltimore County police vehicle’s lights flash while parked outside of the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland in Baltimore, Md. on Thursday, March 13, 2025.
    Baltimore County is Maryland’s only ‘sanctuary’ county in revised DOJ list
    Baltimore County Executive Kathy Klausmeier believes the county's inclusion on the list was “in error.”
    Baltimore County is the only Maryland jurisdiction on a revised list of local governments identified by the Trump administration as impeding the enforcement of federal immigration laws
    Horse killed in crash at Assateague Island — first since 2022
    The 16-year-old horse was known as Gizmo.
    The wild horses at Assateague Island split into two main herds, according to the National Park Service, one on the Virginia side and one on the Maryland side.
    After Smithsonian controversy, Amy Sherald’s painting of trans model lands New Yorker cover
    After painter Amy Sherald pulled her National Portrait Gallery exhibit, the MICA alum’s work — "Trans Forming Liberty’ — is on the cover of the New Yorker.
    “Trans Forming Liberty,” a painting by Maryland Institute College of Art alum Amy Sherald, is the New Yorker’s latest cover image.
    Letter: Renewed housing policy can rebuild Black families, restore social fabric
    Redlining destroyed the Black family in Baltimore, and the city is in the position and has the obligation to restore it through housing policy, says Antoine Lovell, an assistant professor at Morgan State University.
    Many vacant houses still stand in the Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood on March 19, 2025. Empty and vacant lots replace them, but residents say it hasn't improved the area.
    They speak for the Gunpowder River. That includes warning about E. coli.
    Volunteers with the Gunpowder Riverkeepers are uncovering dangerously high E. coli levels in parts of Baltimore’s beloved river, raising concerns about water safety, pollution and what’s at stake for 1.8 million residents who rely on it for drinking water and recreation.
    Tubers float down the Big Gunpowder Falls River in Monkton last month.
    Feud between Anne Arundel judges heads toward finale. Unfortunately, they dragged me into it.
    The two-year feud between two Anne Arundel County Orphans Court judges heads toward a denouement this month, when a disciplinary commission considers complaints against one of them. Unfortunately, they dragged me into this.
    The sign outside an obscure office building near Annapolis points toward the Anne Arundel County Orphans Court.
    Owners of cargo ship that crashed into Baltimore bridge sue company that built vessel
    The owners of the Dali, the ship that hit the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March 2024, are suing the builders of the vessel for defective design.
    Workers walk along the destroyed bow of the Dali in May 2024.
    Baltimore County Council rejects Klausmeier’s pick for inspector general
    The Baltimore County Council was to vote Monday night on the nomination of former EPA program manager Khadija Walker to be inspector general. County Executive Kathy Klausmeier tapped Walker to replace IG Kelly Madigan, who has ruffled feathers in the suburban county.
    Baltimore County Inspector General nominee Khadija Walker attends a Baltimore County Council work session ahead of addressing the council at the Old Baltimore County Courthouse in Towson on July 29, 2025.
    Iconic Pimlico stall is too termite-damaged to be fully preserved, state says
    As Maryland rebuilds Pimlico, demolition is underway, including the historic Stall 40, once home to Derby champions.
    Mystik Dan in Stall 40.
    Ravens training camp highlights: How technology is helping kicker Tyler Loop find his groove
    Here’s a look at the highlights from the Ravens’ training camp practice Monday in Owings Mills.
    Place kicker Tyler Loop (33) kicks a field goal during the team’s stadium practice Sunday.
    CEO to leave Maryland’s largest health insurer for Florida job
    Brian Pieninck, CareFirst CEO, will take over as CEO of another BlueCross BlueShield insurer in Florida.
    Brian D. Pieninck, President and CEO of CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield speaks at Impact Maryland, a thought leadership conference hosted by The Baltimore Banner Tuesday, Oct.10, 2023 in Baltimore.
    Maryland mother reindicted for murder 11 years after children disappeared
    Catherine Hoggle has been rearrested and charged with killing two of her children, who disappeared in 2014 as toddlers and have never been found.
    A grand jury reindicted Catherine Hoggle, center, on two counts of first-degree  murder, according to the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office. Her children, Sarah and Jacob Hoggle, were ages 3 and 2 respectively when they were last seen in September 2014.
    Cicada killer wasps stop mail in parts of Baltimore
    Baltimore residents went weeks without mail. The reason? Wasps. The Postal Service gave no warning — just silence, frustration, and missed medication.
    An Eastern cicada killer wasp in the Belair Edison neighborhood on Monday.
    Arts office leader Tonya Miller Hall, Mayor Brandon Scott’s office part ways
    Tonya Miller Hall, senior advisor of arts and culture for Baltimore, is no longer working for Mayor Brandon Scott’s office, which established a new arts office in April.
    Tonya Miller Hall, pictured here giving remarks at an Inviting Light event in Station North in March, is no longer working with Mayor Brandon Scott’s office.
    Check your student loan status: Millions could move into default by August
    Until past due payments are paid or the loan’s default status is resolved, borrowers are at risk of having their wages garnished.
    In this May 5, 2018, file photo, graduates at the University of Toledo commencement ceremony in Toledo, Ohio.
    Johns Hopkins is at a critical moment. Can Baltimore capitalize?
    Federal cuts and a local push to get more money for Baltimore are squeezing the city’s most powerful entity.
    Johns Hopkins University, like other elite schools, is facing unprecedented scrutiny from the federal government.
    What you can expect from import taxes as the US sets new tariff rates
    It’s been almost 100 years since the U.S. had tariffs at the level they could reach next Friday.
    Trucks navigate the container yard at the Port of Baltimore’s Seagirt Marine Terminal on March 19, 2025.
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