An eyewitness describes the circumstances surrounding the death of Baltimore sanitation worker Ronald Silver II, and the pressure on crews to work quickly with few breaks, no matter the weather.
Sharp Leadenhall hangs up banners to celebrate the area’s past and make sure residents have a say in its future.
“The defendant has not provided proof of income related to her new position,” Judge Griggsby says in an apparent crackdown on Mosby’s broad latitude in determining the terms of her home detention.
We’re not sure if this photo was shot when Mary Pat was a “councilwoman” or a “council president” and who she is posing with. We’re hoping someone can help us. “If it goes a certain way, people are ...
City Council President Brandon Scott calls on the Inspector General to review the businessman’s contracts, while Councilman Kristerfer Burnett says the current system is “open to bribery.” Mayor was ...
Reutter has been reporting and writing on Baltimore since 1970, when he started as a 19-year-old summer intern covering cops for The Evening Sun. He worked on a wide range of beats for the Sunpapers, ...
Black funeral home owners say they will lose money if the measure is passed, Black residents say they will be hurt if it’s not.
In the days before the November 5 election, MCB Real Estate poured another $167,000 into the ballot committee that successfully lobbied Baltimore voters to approve Question F, which permits the ...
The Board may issue a refillable container permit for draft beer to a holder of any class of license except a Class C license or a Class M–G license. 12–1604. (b) Except as provided in subsection (c) ...
BIG DOLLARS, LITTLE OVERSIGHT Police officers making more than $200,000 a year, over half of it in overtime. Patrol officers who make few arrests pulling down more than the mayor. Lieutenants and ...
With the state betting $400 million that a Pimlico makeover will make the racetrack profitable, this was the scene at Baltimore’s annual thoroughbred event. On exhibit at the Baltimore Museum of Art ...
The settlement, scheduled to be approved by the Board of Estimates next week, will partially resolve a 2021 lawsuit brought by three Baltimore residents with disabilities.