bernard c young
- Here's what led up to former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh's indictment on 11 counts of fraud and tax evasion.
- Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young turned 65 on Wednesday.
- Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan and Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young are marking progress in a city-state partnership that demolishes vacant homes.
- As the city digs out from the ransomware attack, officials said they would be unable to send water bills in June.
- Saying that impeding traffic is illegal, Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young pledges to develop a plan to address panhandlers and squeegee kids.
- Baltimore City Council's newest member Danielle McCray sworn in Tuesday ahead of vote on the budget.
- Lester Davis, a long-serving aide to Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young, is taking on an expanded role as both the mayor's spokesman and lobbyist.
- Two employees at the Baltimore transportation department spent much of the workday at home, an investigation by the Inspector General found.
- Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young said Wednesday that he would like to see the struggling Harborplace mall at the Inner Harbor overhauled.
- Baltimore and federal authorities are investigating documents posted to a Twitter account tied to the hackers behind the ransomware attack, a spokesman said.
- Boxing won't drive knock out Baltimore's drug-related murders but here are some steps that might.
- Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young and State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby hosted a 'Bmore United' rally against gun violence at the Parkside Shopping Center Sunday.
- U.S. Rep. C. A. Dutch Ruppersberger says the National Security Agency tells him a tool called "Eternal Blue" wasn't used in a hack of Baltimore's systems.
- Maryland legislative leaders are calling on Gov. Larry Hogan to release $1.6 million in funding set aside for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
- A nominating committee recommended Daniel McCray, a former aide to now Council President Brandon Scott, replace him as District 2's council member.
- Baltimore’s IT office issued a warning that the city was using computer systems that were out of date, vulnerable to attack and not backed up.
- Baltimore needs to keep the pressure on The Stronach Group over the fate of Preakness at Pimlico — but it needs to keep communications lines open, too.
- As the end of the school year looms, adults are grappling to answer the question: Where can teens spend free time without getting into trouble?
- Baltimore's budget office estimates a ransomware attack on city computers will cost $18.2 million in lost or delayed revenue and contracts to restore systems.
- Baltimore Schools honored 12 students lost to violence this year during a Wednesday event on the steps outside its North Avenue headquarters.
- Del. Robbyn Lewis is calling on Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young to save a protected bike lane in East Baltimore.
- Citing concerns of conflict of interest, Mayor Young moves Office of Civil Rights from under city solicitor's office
- The creation of a large amount of accounts triggered Google's automated security system.
- Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young and other city officials will spend much of the week in Las Vegas to attend an annual retail convention.
- Maryland politicians weigh in on the future of Pimlico Race Course during the festivities surrounding the 144th running of the Preakness Stakes.
- A plan backed by the real estate industry to get Baltimore’s property market moving again in the midst of a crippling ransomware attack will start Monday.
- The new strain of ransomware used to cripple Baltimore's computer networks relies on attackers gaining "unfettered access" to victims' networks.
- Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young has tapped Tisha Edwards to lead his Office of Children & Family Success.
- City Hall's computer hackers gave Mayor Young a chance to clean up the streets.
- People whose last minute payments to avoid the annual tax auction were disrupted by ransomware attack will be "held harmless," a Baltimore official said Monday
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'We’re going to get them': Baltimore Mayor Young vows to go after hackers who disrupted city systems
Democratic Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young vows to go after hackers who infiltrated and disrupted the city of Baltimore's technology systems. - Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young on Friday announced his executive leadership team for his new administration.
- Bernard C. “Jack” Young formally took an oath of office as Baltimore’s 51st mayor. He became mayor last week when fellow Democrat Catherine Pugh resigned.
- Gov. Larry Hogan and Sen. Ben Cardin will speak at Baltimore Mayor Bernard "Jack" Young's mayoral inauguration Thursday.
- Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young said as the city works to recover from a ransomware attack, it's had go to "manual." That was clear at the Abel Wolman Municipal Building next to City Hall, where property owners tried to meet a deadline to pay overdue bills before they turned into liens.
- With Mary Pat Clarke and Ed Reisinger opting against reelection bids, more than 50 years of institutional memory will exit the Baltimore City Council chambers. They say it's time to let younger members carry on. City Hall is in flux because of the resignation of Mayor Catherine Pugh.
- Newly named City Council President Brandon Scott wants to be mayor. Now we get to see what he's got.
- Newly installed as the 51st mayor of Baltimore, Jack Young joined with police commissioner Michael Harrison Sunday to ask residents for information related to Friday's mass shooting that left five injured, including two toddlers.
- A 1 year-old was shot in the leg and a 2-year-old in the torso in a triple shooting in South Baltimore on Friday night, Baltimore Police said.
- The fight for Baltimore City Council president is on now that Bernard C. "Jack" Young has become the city's 51st mayor after the resignation of Catherine Pugh. And the final faceoff may come down to council members Sharon Green Middleton and Brandon Scott.
- Baltimore's 51st mayor — Bernard C. "Jack" Young — spends his first full day on the job in Detroit for an economic development conference. With his phone ringing nonstop, Young said the city government is still fighting crime and council members are "making sure that things are getting done."
- Minutes after Catherine Pugh announced that she had resigned as Baltimore’s mayor Thursday, city leaders expressed relief and hope for a brighter future.
- Where is Catherine Pugh? Where is Jack Young? Baltimore just lost its mayor; is anybody home in City Hall?
- Catherine Pugh has represented her community as an elected official for nearly two decades on the City Council, in the General Assembly and, until Thursday, as Baltimore mayor. So what's next?
- Here's what Baltimore needs to pick up the pieces after Mayor Catherine Pugh's resignation Thursday.
- The ouster of Catherine Pugh thanks to strong reporting in The Sun and elsewhere doesn't mean City government will suddenly become transparent, open and honest.
- Baltimore City solicitor Andre Davis said it is “possible” that Mayor Catherine Pugh may resign Thursday.
- Baltimore can't recover if it continues to be stuck in controversies like 'Healthy Holly' or the Gun Trace Task Force.
- A lawyer for Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh says not to expect her to make a decision Tuesday on whether to resign. The Democratic mayor announced a leave of absence April 1 to recover from pneumonia. Acting Mayor Jack Young says he hasn't talked with her in about three weeks.
- Hospital executives and Baltimore government officials scrambled to figure out how many "Healthy Holly" books Mayor Catherine Pugh had sold. After she said University of Maryland Medical System was her sole customer, Kaiser Permanente told Pugh's chief lobbyist that it, too, had bought books.