• The FBI just raided the government IT contractor Carahsoft's offices in Reston. According to court records filed in Baltimore, the DOJ has been looking into if Carahsoft conspired with the German software firm SAP to fix prices. [Newsweek]
• Baltimore's Constellation Energy will lead Microsoft's effort to restart the nuclear plants on Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. [Technical.ly]
• Maryland officials are looking to nuclear to fulfill clean energy mandates. Part of that push comes alongside talks to develop more data centers, known to guzzle energy, in the state. [Maryland Matters/Technical.ly]
• The Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, host of events like Artscape, is reportedly insolvent. Its CEO is asking for a bailout from the city. While Baltimore will keep giving the organization cash to fulfill a previous contract, the city is now ordering its own audit of BOPA. [Baltimore Banner]
• Baltimore County is suing the owner of the cargo vessel that collapsed the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March. Its suit follows similar ones from the State of Maryland and DOJ. [Baltimore Sun/NPR]
• Six companies also filed a class action lawsuit against the Singaporean manager and operator of the Dali, including Baltimore-based American Publishing LLC and the California trucking company Captain C Logistics. [Baltimore Biz Journal]
• Johns Hopkins Technology Ventures has raised more than $4 billion in venture funding and has helped launch more than 150 startups. With programs like the Social Innovation Lab, JHTV remains one of the main drivers behind the tech scene in Baltimore. [Fast Company]
• The University of Maryland Medical System is integrating a new program for billing. Gallion was developed by the system's innovation center, iHarbor. [UMMS]