mayo a shattuck iii
- Former Ravens cheerleader Molly Shattuck was sentenced Friday on charges she sexually assaulted a teenage boy.
- A hearing in the case of Molly Shattuck, the former Ravens cheerleader accused of sexually assaulting her son's 15-year-old classmate in Delaware, is scheduled for Wednesday.
- No teen ever was better off for having been victimized by an adult sexual predator
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- The 47-year-old mother of three is launching her first book and redefining a future of her own
- United Way of Central Maryland distributed 3,600 Thanksgiving meal boxes this year, an increase over last year as the economic recovery passes some people by and others are struggling with cuts to food stamps.
- Mayo A. Shattuck III, who helped sell two Baltimore institutions to out-of-state concerns and ran the region's energy firm for a volatile decade, has retired from the parent company of Baltimore Gas and Electric Co.
- Where do some big donors from Maryland donate? Super PACS
- The CEO pay disclosed this year by the 20 largest publicly traded companies in the Baltimore region offers plenty of fodder — as it does every year — to steam the ranks of workers with paychecks that barely budge.
- A sortable list of salaries for executives at Maryland's largest public companies
- The Public Service Commission needs to consider not just BGE's request for higher rates but also the potential costs and benefits of investments to harden the electric grid against storm damage.
- Recent power outages are another indicator of how profits for a relative few motivate the market
- The linemen from BGE and other companies did their jobs much better than the utility's executives did theirs.
- Mayo A. Shattuck IlI -- who successfully engineered the sale of Constellation Energy Group to Chicago-based Exelon Corp. – took in $17.3 million in total compensation last year, a nearly 11 percent increase from 2010.
- With the sale of Constellation Energy, Baltimore is now the largest city in the nation without a Fortune 500 company headquarters. Still, this is no reason for despair.
- Constellation Energy Group's proposed sale to Chicago-based Exelon Corp. cleared its final regulatory hurdle Friday, approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
- Constellation Energy Group, which is selling itself to Exelon Corp., reported Friday a loss in the fourth quarter in what is expected to be the energy giant's last earnings release as a publicly traded Baltimore company.
- Maryland energy regulators approved Constellation Energy Group's sale to Chicago-based Exelon Corp. Friday, but directed the companies to create a $113.5 million fund for customers of Baltimore Gas and Electric that would provide energy efficiency and low-income assistance and to meet other conditions.
- The proposed Constellation-Exelon merger would be a disaster for BGE ratepayers
- Forcing the rich to pay more in property taxes will only worsen Baltimore's problems
- Gov. Martin O'Malley reached a strong settlement with Exelon in its proposed merger with Constellation Energy that should allow the Maryland Public Service Commission to approve the deal.
- Five Constellation Energy Group executives would hold key executive positions in the combined company if the proposed sale to Chicago-based Exelon Corp. is approved, Exelon said Wednesday.
- A major investment in Maryland-based renewable energy stands to be extracted from the proposed merger of Constellation and Exelon
- What's good for Constellation isn't necessarily good for the rest of us
- As the Occupy movement protests corporate culpability in the recession and unemployment crises, the merger of Constellation Energy and Exelon Corp. provides some fodder.
- Two Maryland senators called on state energy regulators Thursday to order the spinoff of Baltimore Gas and Electric as an independent, publicly traded company as a condition of approving the merger between BGE's parent Constellation Energy Group and Chicago-based Exelon Corp.
- Exelon COO Christopher M. Crane said Wednesday that some 600 corporate positions would be eliminated under a Constellation-Exelon merger.
- Constellation Energy Group CEO Mayo A. Shattuck III defends the Baltimore company's plans to sell itself to Chicago-based Exelon Corp. before Maryland energy regulators.
- Maryland energy regulators have added at least two more days to review Constellation Energy Group's plans to sell itself to Chicago-based Exelon Corp.
- The proposed merger of BGE/Constellation and Chicago-based Exelon would only benefit a few already obscenely wealthy power company executives while hurting Baltimore consumers
- Blame management, not Hurricane Irene, for BGE outages and slow response
- The Constellation/Exelon merger would fatten Mayo Shattuck's wallet to the detriment of Marylanders.
- Rate rebates are nice, but the governor, people's counsel are right to make ensuring the sufficiency of Maryland's electric supply a central issue in the Public Service Commission's consideration of the merger.
- Perhaps if the CEO took a pay cut, Baltimore Gas & Electric could afford dry ice
- A critic of Constellation Energy Group's proposed merger with Chicago-based Exelon Corp. wants the two companies to provide $810 million in incentives to Maryland ratepayers and other stakeholders as part of their deal.
- Constellation Energy has taken a very different approach to its proposed acquisition by Chicago-based Exelon Corp. than it has for past offers, according to president and CEO Mayo A. Shattuck III.
- Something is amiss when U.S. corporate executives earn 340 times worker pay while foreign CEOs earn a fraction of that
- It would be interesting to know just what decisions Constellation Energy Group CEO Mayo A. Shattuck made last year that were worth $15.7 million
- The financial crisis and economic recession may not be over for most people, but last year brought an embarrassment of riches for chief executives
- Fourteen of the 19 companies in the Baltimore region that paid their CEOs at least $1 million last year reported increases in that compensation in 2010, according to a Baltimore Sun analysis. The increases largely reflected improved performance by the companies.
- Mayo Shattuck's big payday from sale of Constellation Energy could vault him past Bob Irsay on city's most hated man list.
- Constellation Energy Group CEO Mayo A. Shattuck III and other top executives of the Baltimore company are eligible to receive more than $36 million in cash severance and previously-owned incentive awards if the proposed merger with Chicago-based Exelon Corp. is successful.