Traffic was closed around the Clarence Mitchell Courthouse in downtown Baltimore during Tuesday evening rush hour while hazmat units investigated a report of a suspicious…
Posts published in “Day: June 19, 2018”
In steamy, rainy conditions Tuesday afternoon, a cluster of rainbows made its way through Annapolis. The city’s first official pride celebration— a walk from City…
Maryland Public Service Commission Chairman Kevin Hughes, the panel’s last remaining member who was appointed by Gov. Martin O’Malley, will step down from his role…
A 25-year-old member of the Cherry Hill based gang “Up Da Hill” faces up to life in prison after he was found guilty of conspiracy…
Former NAACP president Ben Jealous, one of the two front-runners in the Democratic race for governor, released three years of his tax returns on Tuesday,…
A year after the overhaul of Baltimore’s bus system, real-time tracking of the Maryland Transit Administration buses has arrived. The state agency spent just over…
Sister Catherine Phelps, who headed the Trinity School in Howard County for more than four decades, died of leukemia June 15 at the Johns Hopkins…
Maryland State Police say criminal charges are pending following a five-vehicle crash on Interstate 95 in Harford County on Monday night that sent six people…
The Trump administration’s new health insurance option offers lower premiums for small businesses and self-employed people, but the policies are likely to cover fewer benefits.…
Sixteen fifth-graders at Centennial Lane Elementary School became budding political activists this spring. The students, members of Eric Pellegrino’s science-based reading class at the Ellicott…