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Attorney for Adnan Syed: Disregard ‘highly inappropriate’ affidavit from retired Baltimore chief judge

The attorney for Adnan Syed is asking the Maryland Court of Special Appeals to disregard an affidavit from the judge who presided over his second trial in support of an appeal in the case, calling it “nothing more than a highly inappropriate attempt by a former judicial officer” to condemn him. Assistant Public Defender Erica Suter, Syed’s attorney and director of the Innocence Project Clinic at the University of Baltimore School of Law, wrote in a nine-page motion and reply on Monday that retired Baltimore Circuit Judge Wanda Keyes Heard’s affidavit “does not and cannot provide any information on the question at issue,” which is whether the appeal is moot.

Md. governor tests positive for COVID-19

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has tested positive for the coronavirus, he said in a tweet on Monday. “Just wanted to let Marylanders know that after testing positive for COVID-19, I am working from home,” Hogan said. “Fortunately, I’m up to date on my boosters and my symptoms are minimal.” This is the second time Hogan has been diagnosed with COVID-19. In December 2021, Hogan tested positive, but said his case, at that time, was mild.

Read More: WTOP
Baltimore City school board to begin limited in-person meetings

More than two years after the pandemic shut down in-person schools and school board meetings, the Baltimore City school board will begin meeting at its North Avenue headquarters on Nov. 9, but only five seats will be available for members of the general public. “We are grateful to the staff for thoughtful planning to create more opportunities for the public to participate in our meetings. We are looking forward to this transition”, said board chair Johnette Richardson in a statement.

City of Annapolis attorneys ask federal judge to consider receivership for public housing authority

The city of Annapolis has asked a federal judge to consider placing its troubled public housing authority in receivership. If U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Blake agrees, the rare step would pass control of the five communities managed by the authority to either the federal government or court-appointed administrators.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Aide to Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby pleads guilty to Baltimore County handgun charge, gets probation before judgment

An assistant for Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby — who was arrested in Baltimore County in June — pleaded guilty Monday to having a loaded handgun in her vehicle. Jade Kala Johnson, 24, was sentenced to probation before judgment, meaning her conviction can be expunged if she completes the one year of unsupervised probation imposed by the county judge.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
yellow school bus on road during daytime
Clean Bus Program awards almost $1 billion for clean buses across the U.S., including in Baltimore

The Montgomery County School District added 61 new electric buses to its fleet on Monday, part of a planned 326 buses to be added by 2024. Although Montgomery now has the largest operating electric fleet in the nation, the Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday that 391 school districts across the U.S will soon receive nearly $1 billion combined for new clean school buses. The awards were part of the Clean School Bus Program, included in President Joe Biden’s infrastructure bill. The program will award roughly $5 billion to school districts for zero- and low-emission buses over the next five years. The EPA report said that 95% of these buses will be electric. This round of awards received roughly 2,000 applications from school districts around the country. The first round of awards gave out $913 million, which will cover an estimated 2,468 buses.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Renovated and reopened National Cryptologic Museum a spymaster’s delight; newly declassified artifacts on display

The newly renovated and reopened National Cryptologic Museum, run by the National Security Agency and located near the spy agency’s headquarters at Fort Meade, deals a fatal blow to one of the most enduring myths of the Cold War: There is no “red phone” linking the Oval Office to the Kremlin. Presidents Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin do indeed communicate, but there is no crimson handset that the two leaders can pick up during a global crisis to be immediately connected. “The red phone? That’s Hollywood,” museum director Vincent Houghton said. What’s actually on display might be even better. Most of the artifacts — 85% says Houghton — are either the first of their kind, were used by a key person or are the only ones left.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland’s last coal-heated public school, Fort Hill, to get natural gas conversion

For nearly 90 years as temperatures dropped, crews have worked in shifts around the clock to feed coal into and remove ashes from boilers at Fort Hill High School. As Maryland’s last public school heated by coal, new boilers at Fort Hill will mark the end of an era to make way for needed change. Jay Marley, a mechanical engineer, is supervisor of maintenance and construction at Allegany County Public Schools. Earlier this month, the Board of Education gave him approval to award a roughly $4.7 million bid to Carl Belt, Inc. of Cumberland to replace one dated natural gas and two coal boilers with state-of-the-art natural gas systems, and provide new HVAC in the school’s gymnasiums, and locker, weight and wrestling rooms.

Photographer Devin Allen highlighted in ‘Impact of Images’ exhibit

Devin Allen admits that he occasionally behaved like a knucklehead, growing up in Baltimore. But he was not so irreverent as a tenth grader that he could see an image of Emmett Till’s open casket and not find it arresting. The story of the 14-year-old Black boy who was lynched in Mississippi became widely known because his mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, asked a press photographer to document Emmett’s funeral. The horrifying 1955 photographs depicted tangible evidence of how violent racial hatred was plaguing the U.S., catalyzing the civil rights movement. “Back then, I was like, ‘Wow, that happened so long ago. It would never happen now,’” Allen said, recalling the first time a high school history teacher showed him the images.

A wooden gavel on a white marble backdrop.
Baltimore has one of the most complex consent decrees but remains on track, federal judge says

Baltimore remains on track to implement one of the nation’s most complex policing consent decrees, but persistent struggles continue in several reform areas, including the department’s progress in improving technology and hiring more officers, according to the federal judge overseeing the process. “While police consent decrees have been entered in other cities since the 1990s, no decree entered before this one has had the length, breadth and complexity of ours,” said U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar at Thursday’s quarterly public hearing about the Baltimore Police Department’s progress in implementing sweeping police reforms.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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