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Thursday, Jun 7 Former Gun Trace Task Force Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, perhaps the most corrupt officer uncovered in Baltimore Police Department history, was sentenced Thursday to 25 years in federal prison for his role in a stunning range of crimes. Former detective Marcus Taylor received 18 years in prison. | | |
| As many as 42 percent of Baltimore police officers patrolling the city last month were working overtime as commanders struggle to deploy enough to keep the public safe. |
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| Staff Sgt. Eddison Hermond Jr. “put his life at risk for someone he didn’t even know,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said before a packed room of hundreds of mourners, including many military service members, during funeral services at the Church at Severn Run in Severn. |
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| With early voting starting next week, Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby on Thursday is scheduled to face challengers Ivan Bates and Thiru Vignarajah in the first debate of their race to be the city’s top prosecutor. |
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| Maj. Sabrina Tapp-Harper, a longtime law enforcement presence in Baltimore who currently serves as a top commander and spokeswoman in the Baltimore City Sheriff’s Office, has submitted her name to be Baltimore’s first female police commissioner. |
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| After announcing national schedule, coach answers questions about his motives and his recruitment of players. |
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| “It's been a tough week for everybody,” former Terps coach Gary Williams said at a memorial service for Cliff Tucker, who died in late May in a single-vehicle accident in Texas. |
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| A funeral is planned for Sunday for Kyle Hancock, the young employee who died on Tuesday when he was trapped under deep trench collapse in the Clifton Park neighborhood. |
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| The Democrats are about to have a primary election, but the best ad belongs to a Republican: Gov. Larry Hogan. |
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| The “Watching Oprah: The Oprah Winfrey Show and American Culture” exhibit, to open Friday at Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, chronicles the life and work of media mogul Oprah Winfrey and touches on her life in Baltimore. |
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