kevin davis
- As one Baltimore tragedy comes to a close — the death of Freddie Gray — another heats up — the killing of homicide detective Sean Suiter.
- Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis drops administrative charges against Sgt. Alicia White in Freddie Gray case
- Baltimore homicide Detective Sean Suiter was shot and killed with his own gun and there was evidence of a struggle between Suiter and his killer, Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said Wednesday.
- With no sign of a suspect, officers responding to the shooting of Baltimore Police Det. Sean Suiter feared the shots could have been fired from inside nearby buildings, dispatch audio shows.
- For nearly a week after the killing, police officers locked down the neighborhood and required residents show ID to get past police tape to enter their homes.
- Pamela R. Davis is currently the Director of the Professional Development and Training Academy for the Baltimore police department.
- An autopsy has ruled that Baltimore Police Detective Sean Suiter’s death was a homicide by gunshot wound, police Commissioner Kevin Davis said Monday afternoon.
- The Baltimore Police Department plans to clear the crime scene in Harlem Park where a gunman killed Detective Sean Suiter last week, police said, after officers locked down the neighborhood for six days.
- Mourning a police detective, beleaguered Baltimoreans wonder when the city will get a break from violent crime.
- There’s a heavy police presence in West Baltimore Friday morning as authorities continue to search for the gunman responsible for the death of Baltimore Detective Sean Suiter, shot on duty Wednesday night.
- A three-member panel of law enforcement officers has cleared Baltimore Police Lt. Brian Rice of all administrative charges related to the 2015 arrest and death of Freddie Gray
- The money from the governor is in addition to the $69,000 reward being offered by local authorities and the Metro Crime Stoppers of Maryland.
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Baltimore police detective dies after being shot; police seek 'heartless, ruthless, soulless killer'
The Baltimore homicide detective who was shot in the head on Wednesday has died, police said. Sean Suiter was an 18-year veteran of the department. - The question of whether Baltimore Police Lt. Brian Rice acted with reason or neglect in the arrest of Freddie Gray was left Thursday to members of a police trial board.
- The Baltimore Police detective who was fatally shot Wednesday is Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran of the force.
- Maryland fire and law enforcement agencies reacted on Twitter to the Wednesday shooting of a Baltimore homicide detective.
- An off-duty Baltimore police officer was shot in West Baltimore on Wednesday afternoon, according to Baltimore Police.
- Residents attended a meeting hosted by the Baltimore State’s Attorney’s Office on the juvenile justice system Wednesday night at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Baltimore.
- A 41-year-old man was fatally shot early Tuesday in South Baltimore between Key Highway and Fort Avenue after resisting a robbery, the most serious incident yet in an area where residents have increasingly become alarmed about violent crime, police confirmed.
- It was a problem to centralize so much of Baltimore police's gun enforcement activity in the hands of the Gun Trace Task Force.
- “We are invisible ... We need to be seen.” Baltimore's Latino families wrote of their fears and delivered them Monday to police officials.
- The administrative trial of Lt. Brian Rice on charges he violated police policies during the 2015 arrest of Freddie Gray began Monday at the University of Baltimore.
- Baltimore gun arrests drop after indictments of Gun Trace Task Force members
- Baltimore's police commissioner decries a “broken juvenile justice system” in which he said judges, prosecutors, parents and other guardians are failing the city
- Recent reports of Baltimore youth crime don't justify turning back the clock on juvenile justice reform
- HBO's "Baltimore Rising" opens on a brilliant note. The documentary directed by Sonja Sohn, of "The Wire," instantly establishes itself visually with a slow scan of the boarded-up row houses that have become the dominant media image of this city. But that is just the platform for a very deep dive.
- Baltimore's approach to crime has failed and it's time to try New York's methods.
- Baltimore Police Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. was found not guilty on all administrative charges in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray.
- Officer Caesar Goodson's acquittal reflects his defense's ability to pick apart the Baltimore Police Department and the case it brought against him.
- An expert forensic pathologist called as a defense witness in the ongoing administrative trial for Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. on Friday testified that Freddie Gray’s death was an accident, not a homicide resulting from the negligence or actions of Goodson or any other officer.
- Most highly paid Baltimore employees are police officers
- Judges to blame? A behind-the-scenes look at plea bargaining in Baltimore.
- Attorneys for Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. began his defense at his administrative trial in the death of Freddie Gray on Thursday by calling a series of police witnesses whose testimony highlighted policy and training failures by the city police department.
- Attorneys for the city have rested their case against Baltimore Police Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. in his administrative trial on more than 20 charges of violating policies in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray.
- Baltimore prosecutors have determined that a city SWAT officer was justified in shooting a man threatening two small children with a knife in West Baltimore in March, and federal agents were justified in shooting a man who allegedly pulled a gun on them in South Baltimore in May.
- The Baltimore Police Department forced a Greenmount Avenue convenience store to close on Monday, using a controversial city law for the second time in two years to “padlock” a business.
- Immigration agents have asked the Baltimore Central Booking and Intake Center to hold dozens of immigrants in custody, documents reviewed by The Baltimore Sun show.
- Keith Davis Jr. was convicted on second-degree murder and use of a firearm in a violent crime or felony charges in the shooting death of Kevin Jones, a security
- Keith Davis Jr. found guilty of second-degree murder in Pimlico guard's killing
- I believe Baltimore is trying to address the issues at the heart of the NFL protests every day and that we should say it out loud.
- A Baltimore police officer fatally shot an armed robbery suspect at a convenience store in northeast Baltimore early Monday, police said.
- After Baltimore police officers resoundingly rejected a city-proposed labor contract with their police union on Thursday night, both city and union officials hinted at continued negotiations.
- Police union officials in Baltimore are urging their members to reject a city-proposed contract that would put patrol officers on a schedule preferred by commanders in exchange for salary increases.
- Det. Momodu Gondo pleaded guilty Thursday to robbing and extorting citizens and protecting a North Baltimore heroin ring.
- Freddie Gray case trial boards to be prosecuted by outside lawyer, a former school board chair
- The Baltimore Sun was granted a front-row seat this month to observe a patrol officer working an average shift.
- A federal judge has appointed Venable attorney Kenneth Thompson as monitor of the sweeping consent decree mandating local police reforms.
- A 25-year-old man was shot in the head Monday morning in West Baltimore, police said.
- Baltimore's new information technology boss is to be paid $250,000 a year, a sum that is almost $100,000 more than his predecessors and that makes him the highest paid city employee.
- Maryland needs to let police departments set their own rules about recruits' past marijuana use.