As Scott gets ready for a sponsored trip to Savannah, Georgia, his aides and underlings head for San Francisco, Las Vegas, Texas and across the pond. The costs add up.
The lawsuit charges MoneyLion Technologies with saddling Baltimore residents with high-cost, short-term loans that violate the city’s consumer protection law and exceed Maryland’s allowable interest ...
Reginald Davis was indicted in 2023 as part of a larger investigation of the nonprofit, which squandered millions of dollars as the fiscal sponsor for small Black-run organizations.
Geoffrey Himes hopes his new book, out next week, will be the definitive account of the celebrated musician, who recently performed with Bob Dylan and Sheryl Crow at the Merriweather Post Pavilion.
They’re trying to scare the union into silence,” says a Guild leader, addressing the negotiating tactics used by the newspaper’s management.
Police failed to preserve the accident scene and Mercy Medical Center’s 50-year-old breathalyzer was “of no value,” says a report by State’s Attorney Ivan Bates. Mayor Scott defends his administration ...
EXCLUSIVE: Maryland’s largest union, now representing 50,000 public employees including in Baltimore, made a series of unusual payments in 2022 to an apparently fictitious Washington law firm.
Citing bedbugs and roaches, brown water and spoiled food, harassment and assaults, advocates demand better protection for vulnerable people experiencing homelessness.
Task force will study whether to keep the Sisson Street trash transfer facility where it is, move it to another location or close it down.
Approved by a committee vote today, legislation removing the two-staircase requirement for certain multi-family buildings, councilman says, will spur development without endangering public safety.
In a stark reversal from a week ago, the union accedes to Stancil McNair’s demand that it not hold a new election until it investigates his charge of union misuse of members’ resources.
EXCLUSIVE: Three bills are being withdrawn from the agenda. A fourth bill, eliminating the two-staircase requirement in certain buildings, is still scheduled for a vote tonight.