
Articles
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1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
Baltimore County Police are investigating the fatal shooting of a 16-year-old boy Sunday afternoon near Arbutus. Police from the Wilkens precinct in southwest Baltimore County responded to the 4000 block of Alan Drive at around 2:10 p.m. When they arrived, officers found a 16-year-old male who had sustained at least one gunshot wound. The boy was pronounced dead at the scene, police said in a news release Sunday night. Baltimore County Police Homicide Unit detectives are investigating the shooting.
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1 week ago |
gazettextra.com | Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
BALTIMORE - A decade later and Freddie Gray 's name still elicits a visceral response from those who lived or worked in Baltimore in the spring of 2015. Those who were nearby during those weeks of turmoil, anger, and despair can recall it - the sirens, the protest chants, and the faint smell of smoke as parts of the city burned. But what about newcomers - the city is growing - or those who were too young to remember?
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1 week ago |
thederrick.com | Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
BALTIMORE — A decade later and Freddie Gray ‘s name still elicits a visceral response from those who lived or worked in Baltimore in the spring of 2015. Those who were nearby during those weeks of turmoil, anger, and despair can recall it — the sirens, the protest chants, and the faint smell of smoke as parts of the city burned. But what about newcomers — the city is growing — or those who were too young to remember?
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1 week ago |
baltimoresun.com | Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
A decade later and Freddie Gray's name still elicits a visceral response from those who lived or worked in Baltimore in the spring of 2015. Those who were nearby during those weeks of turmoil, anger, and despair can recall it - the sirens, the protest chants, and the faint smell of smoke as parts of the city burned. But what about newcomers - the city is growing - or those who were too young to remember?
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1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Michelle Deal-Zimmerman
A decade later and Freddie Gray‘s name still elicits a visceral response from those who lived or worked in Baltimore in the spring of 2015. Those who were nearby during those weeks of turmoil, anger, and despair can recall it — the sirens, the protest chants, and the faint smell of smoke as parts of the city burned. But what about newcomers — the city is growing — or those who were too young to remember?
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