cell phones
- 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.
- Laurel Police reported four burglaries where game systems, jars of coins and bicycles were taken.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Two robberies and two attempted robberies were reported at the Columbia mall within the span of 43 hours, and Howard County police are investigating whether some or all of the incidents are related
- Ordinary citizens with cell phones are allowing the world to see what's happening in Syria
- In addition to the well-publicized tax increases that Gov. Martin O'Malley is proposing this year, his administration is also calling for a wide range of increases in the fees Marylanders pay for specific services — from recording an adoption to getting a copy of a death certificate.
- Ten youths from Lansdowne United Methodist Church and Halethorpe-Relay United Methodist Church gave up food for 30 hours starting after lunch on Friday. They raised money for an organization that sends food abroad and donated food to Southwest Emergency Services.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- New rules on videotaping are a belated first step toward addressing embarrassing behavior by Baltimore police
- House holds hearing on making cell phone violiations a primary offense
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- Shipowner and operator fined $1.85 million in pollution case exposed by a whistle-blower.
- There is no excuse for a cell phone ringing during a symphony.
- The issue of audience members interfering with the art is an old one. Candy wrappers, talking, coughing, whistling hearing aids — those used to be the primary culprits. Now it's the cellphone, and that means not just calls, but texting, emails, calendar reminders, and, of course, alarms.
- Technology may have a solution to problem of drivers using cell phones
- Glenwood/Glenelg/Dayton: Attention seventh- and eighth-grade students. The Horizon Foundation and Howard County Recreation and Parks are sponsoring a fun after-school sports and games activity just for you.
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- A Baltimore City woman has filed a lawsuit in federal court against the county, its Police Department, several officers and officials, claiming she was assaulted and her constitutional rights violated when she was arrested while recording an encounter with police near a Towson bar two years ago.
- Christopher Tkacik, lost in the dark in a state park on Catoctin Mountain, had his dog, iPhone and a slowly draining battery. He could talk to the police trying to find him, but neither they nor the GPS on his smart phone could guide him out.
- Yes, our gadgets our addictive and potentially dangerous, but let he who is without fingers cast the first iPhone out the car window
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- 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.
- He remains playful, but Terrell Suggs has focused on winning a championship
- Hand-held devices get a fashionable upgrade with customized covers
- Baltimore police blotter for week of Dec. 7, Southeast Baltimore
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- Parents will be relieved to know that most children have better uses for their cell phones than sending out sexually graphic images
- Regulations to allow Maryland campaign contributions by text message are winding their way though a state approval process, and the system is expected to be in place early next year. The new method of giving is intended to encourage younger, tech-savvy donors to get involved in campaigns.
- Editorial: A towering question: Where the cell do we put them all?
- Cell phone towers often go unnoticed in the populous parts of Howard County, as antenna are often attached to existing structures, such as government and commercial buildings. But in the rural western part of Howard County, where farmland and residences stretch for miles, the proliferation of cell phone towers has caused quite an uproar in the community.
- Since Heather L. Hurd was killed by a distracted driver, her mother and father have lobbied for new laws and raised money to help students at her alma mater
- Homicides don't happen often in Howard County, but when they do, detectives in the police department's violent crimes sections are there, leading the investigation.
- Laurel Police reported four burglaries in city in latest crime report.
- York Road at Gibbons Boulevard, 5:32 p.m. Oct. 22. A man between ages 40 and 50, with short black hair, driving a late model gold Jeep SUV with tinted rear windows, followed a car on York Road in Cockeysville and pulled up next to it at Gibbons Boulevard. The Jeep driver fired a shot at the car's driver. The shot missed and the shooter drove away. The bullet was not recovered.
- Episode featuring quadriplegic airs tonight on ABC
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- Valley Frost Court, unit block, between 12:40 and 10 p.m. Oct. 14. Television, Xbox, black machete, music video games and money stolen. Entry through unlocked bedroom window
- Maryland drivers will routinely ignore the "hands free" cell phone law until (1) the Maryland legislature makes it a primary offense, and (2) it is enforced and memorably marketed
- Glancing at a text message or an e-mail from behind the wheel will cost $500 in fines starting Saturday, when a new law goes into effect clarifying Maryland's muddled driving-while-texting rules.
- Glancing at a text message or an e-mail from behind the wheel will cost $500 in fines starting Saturday, when a new law goes into effect clarifying Maryland's muddled driving-while-texting rules.
- Lisbon/Woodbine: Howard County Executive Ken Ulman approves 1,220 more acres of farmland in the west county has been approved for preservation.
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