-
Baltimore council stops hearing after Brooklyn shooting victim’s mother delivers emotional testimonyThe council planned to hear from the city agencies that prepared after action reports. The mother’s testimony came after a two-hour long conversation about police and community relationships.
-
This is the fifth individual police have arrested on charges related to the shooting. All of the arrested suspects are teenagers. Police say at least 10 people may be responsible for the incident.
-
The meeting was supposed to give residents a chance to be heard while also being a first step towards a “community compact.”
-
“It's one of the last linchpins on technology for getting us over the finish line when it comes to having the tools to be able to demonstrate compliance.”
-
There are now four people in custody on charges related to the Brooklyn Day shooting that killed two and wounded 28 others in July.
-
“We are setting a path forward with the goal of ensuring every mistake outlined in these reports is never repeated,” said Mayor Brandon Scott.
-
CAO Faith Leach wrote in a summary that the reports revealed a “disconnect between Brooklyn Homes residents and the city government agencies that serve them.”
-
It was the third in-person town hall where residents had a chance to ask the commissioner questions before his nomination this fall. Some were concerned that Worley has been with the department through a time when police scandals led to a federal consent decree.
-
Tristan Brian Jackson was arrested and taken into custody on charges of attempted murder, conspiracy to attempt murder, and 41 related charges, say police.
-
One message was clear among dozens of the residents who braved the Monday night rain to meet Worley at a church in Park Heights: Baltimore needs a police force invested in its communities.