jarrod ramos
- ‘Love Punch,” a collection of columns written by former Capital Gazette editor Rob Hiaasen, will be released on June 28, the first anniversary of the mass shooting that claimed five lives.
- The coming year will bring several high-profile trials to the Baltimore region.
- Six months later, the mass shooting at the Capital Gazette newsroom remains a defining event, for survivors, of course, but also the Annapolis community and the journalism profession.
- Jarrod Ramos' attorney has requested a hearing for a "good cause" extension, which would give him more time to consider a potential plea of not criminally responsible by reason of insanity. He is charged in the deaths of five Capital Gazette employees.
- Anne Arundel County Circuit Judge Laura A. Kiessling has been assigned to preside over the case of the man accused of killing five Capital Gazette staffers last month.
- Anne Arundel County prosecutors filed a 23-count indictment on Friday against Jarrod Warren Ramos, the suspect in the deadly shooting at the Capital Gazette newsroom last month.
- Prosecutors have asked jail officials to give them regular access to letters Capital Gazette killing suspect Jarrod Ramos sends or receives, but on Thursday his attorneys said the move violates his rights and that they intend to fight it.
- For half a decade, Jarrod Ramos’ anger poured out in court papers, tweets and email messages. He saw enemies. He wrote that he’d like to kill one of them. He suggested another kill herself. He created online images marking others out for sacrifice. Then, in 2016, it all stopped.
- Jules Witcover says the deaths of five staffers at the Capital Gazette last week hit him hard.
- A Virginian-Pilot editor who was harassed for years by the man charged in the killings of five journalists in Maryland received a letter Thursday that police believe was sent by the suspect.
- Then journalists at The Capital and Maryland Gazette newspapers — the survivors – stood and remembered their five murdered colleagues. It was 2:33 p.m. Thursday, the week after the attack. One week, precisely.
- What we know about the attack on the Annapolis Capital Gazette newsroom Thursday.
- Trif Alatzas, publisher and editor in chief of The Baltimore Sun Media Group, called for staff in Annapolis, Carroll and Baltimore to hold a moment of silence exactly a week after a man shot five Capital Gazette employees in the Annapolis newsroom.
- Journalists from The Baltimore Sun and other newspapers in the tronc chain are helping the Capital Gazette staff continue to publish after five colleagues were killed in a rampage Thursday afternoon.
- Maryland has some of the strictest gun laws in the country, yet the man accused of killing five staff members of the Annapolis Capital Gazette legally purchased a shotgun. What more can we do?
- A 38-year-old Laurel man was charged in killing five people and injuring two more at the Capital Gazette newspaper. Here's what we know about him.
- Though Maryland has some of the most restrictive gun laws in the country, none of them could have prevented the massacre of five people in the Annapolis Capital newsroom Thursday. The weapon police say was used, a pump-action rifle, isn't regulated by state law.
- A moment by moment account of the rampage that left five Capital Gazette staff members dead.
- The 38-year-old Laurel man accused of gunning down five employees of The Capital on Thursday swore a “legal oath” in court documents to kill a writer for the Annapolis newspaper. Yet he legally purchased the pump-action shotgun he allegedly used in the rampage, authorities said Friday.
- Online harassment and hatred appears to have led to the killings at the Annapolis Capital Gazette — and followed it, too.
- A Laurel man with a long-running feud with the Annapolis Capital is being held as the suspect in the deadly shooting at the newspaper Thursday, according to law enforcement sources.
- Journalists dove under their desks and pleaded for help on social media. One described the scene a “war zone.” Another said he jumped over a dead colleague and fled for his life.
- The horror of mass shootings hit home for the media today with the shooting at the Annapolis Capital-Gazette newsroom. But it is sadly familiar.