insider trading
- Under Armour has paid $70.3 million for land in Port Covington where it plans to build its new headquarters campus — more than double what CEO Kevin Plank's private real estate firm purchased the waterfront site for in 2014, according to land records.
- We should forgive the student debts of graduates who choose professions in social work, child care, elder care, nursing and teaching
- Maryland companies raised $64 million in venture capital funding this spring, with the biggest payouts in the Baltimore area flowing to cybersecurity startups. More companies snagged funding, but the grand tally dropped sharply.
- My revised list of people who have to die: Quinn, Fitz -- and though it hurts my heart to say this -- James. There is a whole lot of whininess and poor decision-making happening in "Scandal's" Washington, D.C. and the majority of it is coming from that little trio.
- Thirty years after he pitched for the Orioles in the World Series, Sammy Stewart is out of prison and free of a drug addiction that ruined his life for nearly two decades.
- Details of financial transactions by members of Congress and thousands of high-level federal workers were supposed to be posted online last month for anyone in the world to see — a key step, supporters of the move said, toward greater transparency in government.
- Repeal of insider trading ban frees top officials to line their pockets again
- Some federal workers are fighting the STOCK Act, saying it invades their privacy and will leave them vulnerable to identity thieves, blackmailers and kidnappers.
- When Eddie Murray's sculpture is unveiled at Camden Yards on Saturday, if the sun catches the bronze just so, onlookers might get a glimpse of themselves in the mirrored shine. It's fitting for the Orioles' most prolific hitter ever.
- Seven senior federal employees and four employees' groups filed a federal lawsuit Thursday to stop their agencies from posting their personal financial disclosure forms online.
- Libor affair shows banks have been betraying consumers' trust on a massive scale
- Hall-of-Famer Eddie Murray declined all comment when asked Saturday about being investigated by the federal government as part of an insider trading operation that involved Murray¿s former Orioles teammate Doug DeCinces.
- Members of the Senior Executive Service warn that the public disclosure of their personal finances could leave federal executives vulnerable to identity theft, make their children "prime kidnapping targets" and blow the covers of intelligence operatives.
- Legal filings by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reveal the trail of stock purchases that led former Oriole Doug DeCinces to face insider trading charges. Hall-of-Fame teammate Eddie Murray is part of the same investigation, according to a Reuters report.
- The Baltimore area is bearing down for a second day of 100-degree heat, a man was stabbed in Glen Burnie after accepting a ride, and the 40th anniversary of Tropical Storm Agnes has arrived.
- Eddie Murray, the former Orioles Hall of Famer, has been linked to an investigation by federal authorities in a wide-ranging insider trading case that already has ensnared teammate Doug DeCinces, according to a Reuters report.
- Republicans have it backward, they would regulate our private lives but let banks do whatever they want
- Occupy Wall Street protesters should set up camp on Capitol Hill to discuss insider trading
- Recent disclosures of insider trading by members of Congress is of a piece with the fraud, misappropriation of funds and corruption that goes along with all the money they are spending and wasting
- The Sun's partisan motivations are on full display in its failure to mention former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in its article about Congressional insider trading.
- A bill in Congress would ban lawmakers with access to insider trading information from using their knowledge to enrich themselves at others' expense