“courthouse security”
233 results for "courthouse security"
- The Howard County sheriff under fire for using racist language and retaliating against employees is resigning from office.
- Even in times of pandemic those two hallmark features of life — love and justice — are essential to normalcy. Love and justice are inextricably a part of the American identity, and their daily exercise are legally vested in public servants like Heather DeWees.
- What's with conservative Republican politicians and their Bible-thumping demagoguery? They give religion a bad name the same way they imply Muslims do — and not just the "radical Islamic terrorists" that no sensible person condones.
- Howard County Sheriff James Fitzgerald is expected to speak publicly Thursday for the first time about allegations that he made racist comments and retaliated against employees who did not support his election campaign.
- Howard County Executive Allan Kittleman is calling on Sheriff James F. Fitzgerald to resign, following the release of a scathing report finding discrimination and harassment of his employees.
- Recently, another important milestone in making our schools safer and secure was announced with the selection of the 14 Harford County Sheriff’s Office deputies who will be assigned to county middle and high schools on a permanent basis. More is still needed, however.
- A Baltimore Police officer has been banned from the city courthouses after an incident last month in which he was caught filming a witness and a television reporter in a courthouse hallway.
- Longtime Anne Arundel County Sheriff Ronald Bateman plans to return to work Tuesday after his arrest this weekend on a misdemeanor charge he assaulted his wife.
- A group of Baltimore County sheriff’s deputies is suing Sheriff R. Jay Fisher and the county government, alleging they are owed tens of thousands of dollars in overtime.
- Chief Deputy Ruby Hernandez was promoted Aug. 28, becoming the first women to take up the job in the department's more than 350-year history.
- Apparently, the fact that Gray asked for help was not evidence enough to show that he needed it.
- As was the case four years ago, voters in Harford County have two solid choices in the race to be sheriff, leader of the county's main law enforcement agency.
- A "functionally obsolete" circuit courthouse, one which has both security and safety issues, is only one of several deficient facilities owned by Harford County that make up the government center in downtown Bel Air.
- The Times reached out to those working in law enforcement or as emergency responders during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
- Property owners in downtown Baltimore, concerned about crime and delayed maintenance, plan to add their voices, and possibly their resources, to improving the downtown area that has been getting an influx of residents and office workers.
- Sheriff Jim DeWees was sworn in Tuesday as county's 58th sheriff before members of the county and state law enforcement community.
- As Anthony Batts' deadline neared for providing results of the investigation to Baltimore State¿s Attorney Mosby, signs of tension between police and prosecutors surfaced.
- Starting this past Monday, people with business in the Harford County Courthouse are no longer sent back to their cars if they're carrying cell phones.
- Frank M. Conaway Sr., the long-time clerk of the Baltimore City Court, died in his sleep at his Northwest Baltimore home. He was found Sunday morning. He was 82.
- For those who live by the credo to do everything in moderation, our world and our culture have missed the boat. Technology, the role it plays, its impact on our lives and our addiction to it roared way past moderation years ago.
- The race for Baltimore's sheriff is shaping up to be one of the most competitive in years.
- Representatives of Harford County government, law enforcement and fire and EMS community gather in front of the county administration building in Bel Air Friday for a moment of silence in honor of the upcoming two-year anniversary of the murder of two Sheriff's Office deputies.