johns hopkins bayview medical center
- Jonathan Clay Hickey, 28, of the 7500 block of North Point Road, has been charged with first and second degree murder and is held without bond.
- Baltimore County police believe the two men involved in the fight knew each other before the shooting.
- The family of Zubida Byrom was awarded a record $229.6 million, which could help the brain-damaged child, but isn't likely to mean any more changes.
- A Baltimore jury has awarded $229 million to a mother in what her attorneys say is the largest medical malpractice verdict ever in the U.S.
- The crash was the first of two separate crashes at Route 155 and Interstate 95 in Havre de Grace Sunday morning.
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- Edward W. "Bill" Rothe, 68, a former radio engineer who had been the voice of the Blast, died Tuesday at Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
- A residential fire in Woodbine displaced a family, killed a dog and did significant damage to the house before firefighters from six companies brought it under control in a little under an hour Monday night.
- Gerrard Eugene Taylor, of the 5900 block of Winter Ave., was removed from life support Friday at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, according to police.
- The American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations sent a letter to the Maryland Health Care Commission opposing an expansion of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
- One person was treated following a working fire in Overlea Friday afternoon, according to Baltimore County fire officials.
- A fire in the 1200 block of Ridgeshire Road in Dundalk left one firefighter injured, according to Baltimore County Fire Department.
- George Antonas coached award-winning Baltimore County athletic teams in the 1970s and 1980s.
- An 88-year-old man who was critically injured in an accidental fire in Rosedale last month has died, the Baltimore County Fire Department said Monday.
- A worker at the city of Baltimoreās Back River Wastewater Treatment plant died Monday after being struck by an excavator, according to Baltimore County fire officials.
- Maryland hospitals were safer for patients this fall than they were six months ago, according to the latest assessment from the Leapfrog Group.
- Victor Lengrand, Sr., of the 3400 block of Dundalk Ave., was crossing Belclare Road inside the marked crosswalk around 2:40 p.m. Sunday when a 2007 Ford E350 van struck him, according a Baltimore County police news release.
- Vernon A Turner, a career Baltimore County public school educator who enjoyed coaching an after school sports program for disadvantaged kids, died Tuesday from a heart attack at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The Dundalk resident was 71.
- One group is looking to bring more life to a network of "sacred places" in Baltimore by helping communities engage their green spaces.
- Dr. Alvin A. Stampler, a retired Baltimore pediatrician who cared for generations of infants, children and adolescents during a professional career that spanned 60 years, died Sept. 27 at Gilchrist Center in Towson from complications of a fall. The longtime Lutherville resident was 9
- Upgrading Baltimore public transit is about more than serving local employers.
- Richard E. Ashton Sr., a Korean War veteran and retired law enforcement officer, died Sept. 24 from lung cancer at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The Essex resident was 87.
- Dr. Peter J. Fagan, a former Roman Catholic priest who became a medical psychologist and was director of Research and Clinical Outcomes for Johns Hopkins HealthCare LLC, died Saturday of multiple myeloma at his Fulton home. He was 77.
- The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia is hosting a three-day conference in Baltimore for more than 500 government planners, bankers and nonprofit leaders to study the city and its neighborhood transformations and economic inclusion efforts.
- On Monday night, Purna Acharya lay on a hospital bed inside Baltimoreās Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. He still had serious pain in his stomach, where he had been shot Thursday while on the job at a Rite Aid warehouse in Aberdeen.
- Harford County law enforcement released the identities of the victims in the shooting at the Rite Aid distribution center and more information about the timeline of events that left four dead and three injured Thursday.
- Here is how a shooting at a Rite Aid distribution center in Aberdeen, Maryland, and its aftermath unfolded Thursday.
- The suspect, Snochia Moseley, 26, who lived in White Marsh, died at a hospital where she had been taken after the shooting. She was a temporary employee at the distribution center, Harford County Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler said.
- The University of Maryland's Institute of Human Virology is testing a drug that could curb the cravings that often lead to drug use relapse.
- Diebold Ellsworth Hughes, a retired Edgewood Arsenal chemist who founded a Northeast Baltimore real estate firm, died Wednesday at the age of 83.
- Dr. Gary K. Gold, a retired dentist who co-invented a battery-powered tooth polisherĀ and had a private practice in Laurel for nearly 40 years, died of a cerebral hemorrhage at theĀ Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Neuroscience Critical Care Unit on Aug. 22, his wife said. He was 80.
- A woman died after being stabbed at a home in Northeast Baltimore Friday afternoon, according to Baltimore Police.
- A teenage boy died after being shot by a pellet gun and suffering cardiac arrest in Middle River Thursday night, according to Baltimore County Police.
- The Gaithersburg pharmaceutical company Emergent Biosolutions has bought the maker of Narcan, a widely used opioid overdose reversal drug, and said it plans to develop more products to combat the nationwide opioid addiction and overdose epidemic
- Baltimore County Police are searching for a man they believe opened fire in a Dundalk home Monday night, killing a woman and seriously injuring a man.
- Streets Market Cafe will open a grocery store in the redevelopment of the former PEMCO factory site in Southeast Baltimore.
- The double home at 1001 N. Calvert Street was the first to be built on its block in the years after the Civil War
- Police are searching for a suspect after they responded to the 7800 block of Eastern Ave. in Dundalk and found a man with a gunshot wound. The man's condition was not immediately clear.
- Baltimore County Police are looking into the death of a 50-year-old man who was found on a sidewalk in Essex.
- Carl Beernink, a Brown Advisory investment counselor, was a three-time All America lacrosse player at Towson State.
- The Hogan administration's commitment to Baltimore transit continues to fall short.
- George M.c. Doub Jr.,former Venable LLP partner who later entered private pactice, died June 24 from a neurological disease at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The Owings Mills resident was 78.
- Ronald R. Peterson helped create the Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System we know today. The highlights of his history there would put him on a short list of the most influential figures in the history of the hospital and health system.
- Emergent BioSolutions plans to expand a plant in Baltimore that produces vaccines and therapeutics for its own products and those developed by other pharmaceutical companies.
- Most doctors used to adhere to a six-hour window to treat some of the worst strokes, but that threshold is now up to 24 hours.
- Two people, including an Edgewood High School student, have been arrested and charged with allegedly shooting a man outside an Edgewood convenience store 10 days ago.
- The Democrats have a clear vision of the Red Line - they hate that Larry Hogan cancelled it but after that, their view of Baltimore transit gets a little hazy
- A Churchville man suffered serious burns Tuesday night while setting off fireworks that exploded, said state fire officials, who cautioned about the dangers of setting off illegal fireworks.
- The redevelopment of the former PEMCO factory site in southeast Baltimore ā a project four years in the making ā got underway with a formal groundbreaking Wednesday.
- Transportation is in a bad way in Baltimore. The elephant in the room, however, continues to be the cancellation of the proposed Red Line and its aftermath. Here's a path forward.