Legal news roundup
An arts and crafts chain asks a federal appeals court to exclude it from part of the federal health care law involving the morning-after pill.
View ArticleWho’s most challenged in Barnes case retrial?
In a retrial that begins Tuesday, prosecutors will try to again convict Michael Maurice Johnson of murdering North Carolina teenager Phylicia Barnes.
View ArticleRetrial in death of Phylicia Barnes postponed until October
Michael Maurice Johnson must wait at least four more months for his second trial on charges that he killed North Carolina teenager Phylicia Barnes.
View ArticleMother sues 266 people, alleging they traded images of her children
An Anne Arundel County mother has filed a federal lawsuit against hundreds of people she said viewed an online video that allegedly shows her children being sexually assaulted, molested and forcibly...
View ArticleHarborView owner files new suit over mold
When Paul C. Clark purchased a penthouse apartment in Baltimore’s HarborView tower in October 2009, he and his wife thought they were getting their dream home.
View ArticleCSA: Montgomery County not bound by union deal
The Montgomery County Council did not violate county or state laws when it passed an operating budget that rejected part of the police union’s collective bargaining agreement and did not fund three...
View ArticleHenson’s robocall conviction affirmed on appeal
A Maryland appellate court has upheld the conviction of political consultant Julius Henson for his role in sending robocalls to voters in Prince George’s County and the city of Baltimore during the...
View ArticleBaltimore adopts local hiring preference
The Baltimore City Council passed a proposed local hiring mandate at its meeting Monday night and Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake must now decide whether to sign or veto the bill, which the city’s legal...
View ArticleCity to settle student bullying suit for $45K
The Baltimore City Board of Estimates is slated to approve the settlement of a lawsuit filed by a mother who said her daughter was assaulted and verbally harassed by another classmate.
View ArticleBaltimore City Council seeks its own counsel
On the same day the Baltimore City Council passed a mandatory local hiring law that the city solicitor deemed unconstitutional, its leader introduced legislation that would let the council hire its own...
View ArticleLegal news roundup
An arts and crafts chain asks a federal appeals court to exclude it from part of the federal health care law involving the morning-after pill.
View ArticleWho’s most challenged in Barnes case retrial?
In a retrial that begins Tuesday, prosecutors will try to again convict Michael Maurice Johnson of murdering North Carolina teenager Phylicia Barnes.
View ArticleRetrial in death of Phylicia Barnes postponed until October
Michael Maurice Johnson must wait at least four more months for his second trial on charges that he killed North Carolina teenager Phylicia Barnes.
View ArticleMother sues 266 people, alleging they traded images of her children
An Anne Arundel County mother has filed a federal lawsuit against hundreds of people she said viewed an online video that allegedly shows her children being sexually assaulted, molested and forcibly...
View ArticleHarborView owner files new suit over mold
When Paul C. Clark purchased a penthouse apartment in Baltimore’s HarborView tower in October 2009, he and his wife thought they were getting their dream home.
View ArticleCSA: Montgomery County not bound by union deal
The Montgomery County Council did not violate county or state laws when it passed an operating budget that rejected part of the police union’s collective bargaining agreement and did not fund three...
View ArticleHenson’s robocall conviction affirmed on appeal
A Maryland appellate court has upheld the conviction of political consultant Julius Henson for his role in sending robocalls to voters in Prince George’s County and the city of Baltimore during the...
View ArticleBaltimore adopts local hiring preference
The Baltimore City Council passed a proposed local hiring mandate at its meeting Monday night and Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake must now decide whether to sign or veto the bill, which the city’s legal...
View ArticleCity to settle student bullying suit for $45K
The Baltimore City Board of Estimates is slated to approve the settlement of a lawsuit filed by a mother who said her daughter was assaulted and verbally harassed by another classmate.
View ArticleBaltimore City Council seeks its own counsel
On the same day the Baltimore City Council passed a mandatory local hiring law that the city solicitor deemed unconstitutional, its leader introduced legislation that would let the council hire its own...
View Article