cell phones
- Some Harford County residents are still without power for nearly a week.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrests, crimes and other police reports.
- Police impersonator arrested for robbery in Fells Point
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrests, crimes and other police reports.
- Quarterly meeting draws slim attendance during council president's son's viewing
- For the poor, the lack of health insurance can be deadly
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Grocery shoppers can use smartphones to download deals, scan bar codes, get personalized offers
- The Baltimore County school board voted Tuesday night to get rid of a zero-tolerance approach to discipline and replace it with a policy that will give principals more discretion in deciding how to handle serious offenses.
- Baltimore County residents can now sign up to receive emergency alerts from the county on their cell phones and through email, officials announced Monday.
- Towson, Cockeysville, Timonium: Crimes reported
- War of 1812 battlefields and other historic sites in Maryland could get a boost from legislation pending in Congress that would give the U.S. Department of Interior power to acquire the properties for preservation. Currently the federal government may do so only for Civil War battlefields.
- The Baltimore Metropolitan Council launches its annual Street Smart campaign to curb the number of pedestrians hit by cars each year. Baltimore accounts for one-third of all such accidents across the state.
- The U.S. Department of Justice isn't satisfied with the Baltimore Police Department's recently issued orders on citizens' right to record officers.
- A Lake Evesham girl is raising money to help her former teacher at Cathedral of Mary Our Queen School. The teacher's arms and legs were amputated due to a serious medical problem and she is unable to drive because her car must be retrofitted, which is expensive
- For transgender attack victim Chrissy Lee Polis, trauma remains
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Arbutus and Lansdowne incidents from Baltimore County police.
- Since the Baltimore Tattoo Arts Convention started five years ago, technology has changed how people behave while they are tattooed — and how artists go about doing business and creating designs, said attendees of the 2012 event, which ends Sunday.
- Towson, Cockeysville, Timonium: Crimes reported April 28-May 6
- Lisbon/Woodbine: Poplar Springs United Methodist Church is selling spaces for upcoming Historic National Road Yard Sale
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Six weeks after Scott M. Greenberg was found shot to death in Owings Mills in August, 2009, police arrested Gerald E. Sears and charged him with murderThe police never found the murder weapon, nor did they find Sears' fingerprints or DNA in the house.
- Maryland's highest court upheld a law that allows police to listen in on cell phone calls that suspects make from across state lines, a tool law enforcement says is key to fighting the drug trade.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Arbutus and Lansdowne incidents from Baltimore County police.
- The case before the Maryland Court of Appeals is straightforward. Detectives in Montgomery County got a warrant to intercept cell phone calls of a suspected drug dealer. They caught him in the act and made an arrest, finding marijuana in his suitcase.
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- The National Weather Service is launching text-message severe-weather alerts in May.
- On the heels of a successful inaugural event last spring that drew nearly 200 cars, Sappari Solutions and Harford Community College are hosting a second Clear Your Clutter Day this Saturday, April 28, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
- Cyber-bullying creates a vexing situation for parents and schools to police, because the harassment and intimidation is pervasive and inescapable in a culture that is becoming more reliant on the Internet.
- Arbutus and Lansdowne incidents from Baltimore County police.
- The following is compiled from police reports from the Towson and Cockeysville precincts. Our policy is to include descriptions when there is enough information to make identification possible.
- The word is out -- Baltimore police are to leave people with cameras alone. The police commissioner quickly suspended an officer last month who grabbed a camera phone away from a lady taping a car stop outside her house.
- Meet Nick Hyson, manager of the new Giant store in Hampden. He came over from the Rotunda, knows many of his customers by name, and is a tireless, youthful, engaging, rise-through-the-ranks kind of guy, who says he has not had a day off in three weeks — "by choice."
- Longtime Rotunda Giant closes March 29 at 6 p.m., and new Giant opens in Green Spring Tower Shopping Center at the same time.
- The inaptness of the analogies skeptical justices used point to the uniqueness of health care and the propriety of Congress' approach to addressing the problem of the uninsured.
- The following is compiled from police reports from the Towson and Cockeysville precincts. Our policy is to include descriptions when there is enough information to make identification possible.
- Hampden: Converted former SuperFresh and Fresh and Green's store in Greenspring Tower Shopping Center in Hampden will reopen March 29 as the new Giant for the area. The Giant in the Rotunda will close the same day.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Carroll County man is arrested in theft of statue from front lawn of a Pikesville home, and is linked to other thefts around the state, according to police.
- Hopkins researchers aim to uncover which mobile health applications work
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.