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Around Maryland

Activist DeRay Mckesson escalates defense of Keith Davis Jr. by posting courtroom audio ahead of Baltimore man’s fifth murder trial

Escalating a campaign to defend Keith Davis Jr., activist DeRay Mckesson began posting videos Monday with excerpts of courtroom testimony to pressure State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby to drop the murder charges against the Baltimore man. With Davis’ fifth trial on the same murder charges — and sixth criminal trial stemming from the same day in 2015 — expected in May, Mckesson’s nonprofit Campaign Zero published online the first of what he said will be a series of videos bucking Maryland rules on broadcasting trial testimony.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
MD Attorney General And Secretary Of State Warn Of Charity Scams Claiming To Help Ukraine

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh and Maryland Secretary of State John C. Wobensmith are warning residents about the potential for charity scams from people posing as workers with organizations helping the Ukraine. Both recommended Marylanders research charities through sites such as Charity Navigator to see if there are any red flags. “Scam artists seek every opportunity possible to prey on the generosity of well-intended donors,” said Wobensmith. “If you choose to give to help relieve the pain and suffering in Ukraine, please be vigilant and donate wisely to reputable, well-established charities.”

Read More: WJZ
Protective masks, normally used for surgery, are now in use to fight the Corona Virus SARS-nCov-19.
To mask or not to mask? Where are we in the COVID pandemic.

Two years and multiple waves into the coronavirus pandemic, and state and local leaders now say most Marylanders can reenter society and do it without a mask. Some 90% of the country now falls in the low to moderate categories for levels and spread of COVID-19 under new calculations by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also sufficient to ditch the masks. “COVID-19 need no longer control our lives,” President Joe Biden said Tuesday during his State of the Union speech.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Prince George’s Co. announces new violence interrupters program to fight teen crime

Will violence interrupters work in Prince George’s County? On Feb. 28, Prince George’s County announced a multi-pronged approach aimed at reversing the increase in the number of violent crimes committed by kids. While the problem isn’t just unique to the county, leaders are hopeful that a collective of intervention efforts will have an impact by targeting kids before they commit crimes. County Executive Angela Alsobrooks announced one of the newest tools used in the fight: a violence prevention task force.

Read More: WTOP
Anne Arundel County schools graduate-turned-teacher recognized as one of the best math teachers in US

Joanie Gulden will do about anything to get Glen Burnie Park Elementary School students to engage with math. Anything. Gulden ate a pig’s foot. She got covered in slime. She tackled these and other fun (and gross) challenges to encourage students to practice and improve. For this dedication, and the results she and the school have seen, Guilden is among those being recognized as the best in the country by President Joe Biden through the Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching.

Ride On bus increases service in Montgomery Co.

As the word “normal” starts creeping back into everyone’s vocabulary, the Ride On bus in Montgomery County, Maryland, is starting to operate more normally as well. Beginning March 13, Ride On will increase its service by returning routes along with increasing the frequency of its current routes. The bump in service will bring Ride On to 86% of its pre-pandemic level of operations.

Read More: WTOP
Seven candidates are running for three open seats on Carroll County’s school board, so far

Seven candidates are running for three available seats on the Carroll County Board of Education. Of those candidates, two are incumbents seeking reelection, Tara Battaglia and Patricia Dorsey. In July, Battaglia announced her plan to run for reelection, saying her goals for her second term would be the same as her first: keeping communities together, drug prevention and consistency in education.

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