kevin davis
- Federal immigration officials say 28 people have been arrested in Maryland during a nationwide sweep that targeted "sanctuary" jurisdictions.
- Baltimore police force welcomes newest addition — a horse named Slurpee
- Meet the Baltimore area’s most intriguing movers and shakers of 2017.
- Baltimore is on track to break its all-time record for most murders in a year, even as the city’s population is falling. Politicians and even Police
- Called “1930s-style gangsters” by Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, the seven Baltimore Police officers federally indicted in March for allegedly stealing drugs
- An 18-year-old Baltimore man has been charged with raping and strangulating to death a homeless woman in downtown Baltimore last week, according to Baltimore Police.
- During evening rounds, Police Commissioner Kevin Davis talks about the nature of homicides in Baltimore
- Expressing concern that violent crime in Baltimore is not being taken seriously, Gov. Larry Hogan is stripping state funding from a city crime panel.
- Baltimore Police Commissioner recounts his day of jury duty.
- Baltimore 'Innovation Team' to target police recruitment in first assignment
- This is not “seeking justice,” but rather pure politics in an attempt to salvage Mosby’s damaged career.
- Trials for the five officers facing internal discipline by the Baltimore Police Department in connection with the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray in police custody in 2015 have been scheduled.
- The Baltimore Police Department has hired 144 new officers so far this year, Commissioner Kevin Davis said Monday -- the first time in years that hiring has outpaced the number of officers leaving.
- Baltimore is on pace to set a homicide rate record for the third year in a row. State senators devised an hours-long hearing to look for solutions.
- City leaders are planning to offer police officers, firefighters and sheriff's deputies a $2,500 a year break on their property taxes if they own a home in the city.
- Andre Davis, Baltimore's new City Solicitor who left his position as a federal appeals judge, said that reform to the police department will be his top priority.
- With exceptional violence raging across Baltimore, many top officials have started pointing their fingers of blame in direction: The city’s judges.
- Gov. Larry Hogan will hold a meeting Tuesday with criminal justice leaders about what he calls the “tragic and disturbing” homicide rate in Baltimore.
- Body-worn cameras are an effective tool to increase police accountability and restore community trust, but only if they are turned on and kept on as required by department policy.
- Police Commissioner Kevin Davis gets car washed by Squeegee Corps
- It would be a shame, and a missed opportunity, if allegedly manipulated videos cast a permanent shadow on Baltimore's police body-camera program, a valuable tool.
- Baltimore Police say there was no reason to drop cases related to latest questionable body camera incident
- A new Baltimore Police crisis intervention team helped peacefully resolve a barricade situation involving a suicidal woman holed up with two kids in a West Baltimore apartment, police said.
- Mosby, Davis sit down to talk about crime, collaboration
- A 15-year-old boy was fatally shot amid a hail of bullets on a West Baltimore street Tuesday afternoon. He was the third teenager killed this month, and the 227th homicide victim of the year.
- Officials from Baltimore and the B&O Railroad Museum on Monday announced a joint effort to raise $2.5 million in charitable donations to build new digs for the police department's mounted unit.
- Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis told the U.S. Department of Justice its suggestion federal crime assistance is contingent on city policies for immigrant detainees was "perplexing."
- While violence elsewhere captures national attention, Baltimore City's violence continues at record levels. Aside from the murders, there were also 18
- Police also named a new "Public Enemy No. 1" for the June 14 murder of Charmaine Wilson, a mother of eight.
- Two teen boys and an older auto-repair shop owner shot under unclear circumstances in Northwest Baltimore are among the latest victims in a city experiencing homicides at an unprecedented pace.
- A look at what a few days of violence reveal about the city's many challenges
- The impact of body camera videos showing Baltimore officers acting questionably goes far beyond the cases in which they were involved.
- Isiah Jones, 24, one of dozens of people to have criminal charges dropped since a Baltimore police officer was accused of planting drugs, said he was innocent of the charges against him.
- Body camera footage recently released in Baltimore shows officers committing crimes, and law enforcement leaders in the city are wrong to downplay it, legal analysts say.
- Stephen Schenning, serving as Maryland’s acting U.S. attorney after Rod Rosenstein left for the Justice Department, says Baltimore’s raging gun violence is a top priority for his office.
- Trump administration would deny city crime-fighting funds because of a policy over which it has no control.
- I understand the Baltimore police commissioners' impulse in wanting to stand up for his officers after two body camera videos appeared to show them staging drug recoveries. But it was still wrong.
- Sessions wants Baltimore to make potentially unconstitutional changes at a jail it doesn't control in order to join a crime-fighting program.
- Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said there is “no doubt” that illegal drugs were legitimately found in two criminal cases recently dropped because of concerns about body-camera video.
- A defense attorney on Tuesday released a new police body-camera video that he says shows police planting drug evidence.
- Baltimore needs to stop arguing about how to view its crime problem and start solving it.
- Baltimore police partner with behavioral health workers to help with crisis response
- Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis has redeployed more than 150 police officers and supervisors to 21 new special operations teams tasked with disrupting the city's historic pace of violence.
- "Damn, where'd you come from," a man who just walked out of the Baltimore City Detention Center back in early June asked as he filled a plate with pit beef,
- Baltimore debates mandatory minimum gun bill
- Would mandatory minimum gun sentences reduce violence? Maybe in some cases, but we can achieve the same result at lower cost.
- In Baltimore you can already get five years for carrying a gun but Mayor Catherine Pugh wants a mandatory minimum—a city-wide mandatory one-year jail sentence
- Baltimore City Council debates bill mandating 1-year sentence for gun crimes
- Even if we assume the best in the case of Baltimore officers allegedly planting drugs, it's a big problem for the department's integrity.
- The footage shows an officer planting drugs, the public defender's office says.