Maryland
And then there were two – Maryland Matters
A Democratic state senator and Republican delegate are the last of their colleagues who have yet to complete anti-sexual harassment training required of all lawmakers.
Of all 188 lawmakers, only Sen. Mary-Dulany James (D-Harford) and Del. Barrie S. Ciliberti (R-Frederick) haven’t completed the training. Both were part of a group of six lawmakers who earlier this year missed nine sessions — all offered virtually — between Sept. 14, 2023 and Jan. 26. All of the sessions were offered by the legislature’s human resources department.
Del. Barrie Ciliberti (R-Frederick). File photo by Bryan P. Sears.
Four lawmakers took the course before the end of session, leaving only James, 64, the daughter of the late Maryland Senate President William S. James and an attorney, and Ciliberti, 87, and a nine-year veteran of the legislature who voted for the 2018 law.
Reached by phone, Ciliberti said Wednesday that he is scheduled to take the training in person in Annapolis next Tuesday.
A spokesperson for House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County) said the speaker “takes the training very seriously and is in communication” with Ciliberti about completing it.
James, who served from 1999-2015 in the House before being elected to the Senate in 2022, did not respond to a request for comment.
“I take this seriously,” James said in February when asked why she had yet to complete the training. She said at the time that she missed trainings because they were scheduled “when I have floor session or voting or other obligations.”
Sen. Mary-Dulany James (D-Harford). Photo by Bryan P. Sears.
A spokesperson for Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) did not respond to a request for comment.
Lawmakers are required to take the training every two years. The mandated sessions were part of a 2018 law that broadened protections for women working in the General Assembly.
That law created an independent investigator to review complaints of sexual harassment, and made it illegal to retaliate against those who make complaints.
Even though the training is required, the repercussions for failing to do so are relatively minor.
First, lawmakers are subject to public shaming. The names and training status of each lawmaker is published on the General Assembly’s website. The list, however, is in an out of the way spot on the website so many people are likely to miss it.
In extreme cases, other sanctions can be imposed including preventing a lawmaker from hiring staff until completing the training. Such punishments are rare.
In 2019, then-Del. Hasan “Jay” Jalisi (D-Baltimore County) was ordered to not hire staff until he completed an anger management course approved by the speaker of the House.
Jalisi ignored the requirement, hiring a 20-year old to work on his legislative staff. The staffer, Brian Agandi, quit a month later for not being paid.
Agandi, in a lawsuit in 2019 against Jalisi, said the delegate misrepresented his ability to hire staff. Agandi, in 2020, won almost $20,000 in back pay and damages.
That same year, the legislature unanimously reprimanded Jalisi for chronic abuses of staff following the release of a 16-page report from the Joint Committee on Legislative Ethics.
Maryland
Full-length Replay: Oregon at Maryland
Maryland
Philadelphia car rally driver accused of hitting 2 separate troopers in Maryland
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, Md. (7News) — A Philadelphia man is facing charges after authorities said he hit two Maryland State troopers during illegal car rally events in Prince George’s County.
Isaiah Vega, 19, faces first-and second-degree assault and assault on a law enforcement officer, according to Maryland State Police (MSP). He is being held without bond.
Troopers struck during attempts to stop vehicle
The incidents date back to Nov. 16, 2025, when investigators with the Maryland Car Rally Task Force spotted a black Chrysler 300 without registration plates near MD 704 and Glenarden Parkway in Glenarden.
MSP officials said Vega fled during an attempted traffic stop and struck a trooper who was outside of his vehicle. That trooper was not hurt.
A short time later, officers found the same Chrysler at a gas station on Crain Highway in Bowie. During another attempt to stop the car, investigators say Vega hit another trooper before fleeing again.
The second trooper was taken to a hospital and later released.
SEE ALSO | Attending an illegal car rally could soon mean jail time in Prince George’s County
Alleged driver identified, arrested months later
Through an investigation involving multiple agencies, including the U.S. Marshals Service, Virginia State Police, and Pennsylvania State Police, authorities identified Vega as the driver.
He was arrested on March 23 in Prince George’s County.
Maryland
‘Riots,’ violence, questions over privately run youth facility in Maryland
KEYMAR, Md. (WBFF) — A privately operated youth treatment and foster home facility in rural Carroll County is facing renewed scrutiny after repeated emergency calls, violent incidents, and growing concerns from local law enforcement over whether the state’s current model is failing some of Maryland’s most vulnerable children.
Silver Oak Academy, a staff-secured residential treatment campus that does not use fencing, locks, or restraints in Keymar, has generated more than 100 calls for service since January 2025, according to public records obtained by Spotlight on Maryland.
Police records obtained show 35 incident reports resulted from those calls, including arson, destruction of property, assaults, escapes of at-risk juveniles and motor vehicle thefts.
Silver Oak Academy in Carroll County, Md., a privately operated foster setting for juveniles under state care. (Steve Pierce/Spotlight on Maryland)
Carroll County Sheriff Jim DeWees told Spotlight on Maryland that his office has been swamped with emergency calls for service from Silver Oak Academy staff and juveniles since it was reopened in late 2024 after a cycle of failed relaunches and abrupt closures.
Dana Rexrode, executive director for Rite of Passage’s eastern district, which includes Silver Oak, disputed characterizations made by DeWees that the alternative environment was spiraling out of control. She said the “open campus” model focused on therapeutic intervention rather than confinement.
“We don’t have locks on our doors,” Rexrode told Spotlight on Maryland by Zoom on Thursday. “They [foster juveniles] move freely with direct supervision around the campus. We don’t use any sort of mechanical restraints.”
The Maryland Department of Human Services and the Department of Juvenile Services oversee Rite of Passage’s contract and enforcement of Silver Oak. DJS did not accept Spotlight’s interview request, while DHS said Silver Oak is on its ‘hot list’ of facilities.
‘Overtaking the campus’
A February 2025 emergency call Spotlight on Maryland obtained included a female staffer who told the dispatcher that teens were “overtaking the campus.”
“They have rocks,” said the caller in February 2025. “They’re breaking windows.”
“I’ve had a youth spray a fire extinguisher in a staff’s face, and we are not able to manage it,” the caller said in a panicked tone.
Three Silver Oak juveniles, ages 13, 14, and 17, were arrested in that incident.
DeWees said the incident was, at the time, the second major fight in just two weeks. The sheriff added that at least eight assaults have been linked to the facility since January 2025.
The latest flashpoint came last week.
Body-worn camera footage obtained by Spotlight on Maryland on Thursday – matched with dispatch audio reviewed – revealed a staff member calling 911 again to report that three juveniles at the facility were actively setting fires on campus.
Go, go, run, run,” said the Silver Oak staffer. “We have three youths setting things on fire at our campus.”
When asked by dispatch whether anyone was in danger, the staffer promptly responded: “Honestly? Yes.”
Carroll County Sheriff’s Office offense/incident report for a Silver Oak Academy call on March 24, 2026 (Carroll County Sheriff’s Office)
Click here to view the PDF file
A staffer told Carroll County deputies that Silver Oak teens “threw a flaming book” at him as he attempted to get the juveniles under control.
‘Escalated and elevated’
Rexrode described the most recent incident that Carroll County Sheriff’s Office incident reports dispositioned as a riot, malicious burning, arson, and second-degree assault, as “three students who became escalated and elevated.” She said that staff were able to de-escalate the situation and safely return the teens to their dorms within about 45 minutes.
“I’m not sure three students constitute a riot,” Rexrode said.
ALSO READ | Maryland DJS workers beg leadership for help in leaked emails: ‘Continue to be in danger’
DeWees said he sharply disagrees with that assessment.
We’ve had riots out there where we’ve had multiple units respond to take over the facility and had multiple arrests,” DeWess said. “Our understanding is that it had been going on for quite some time. It was about 50 to 55 minutes later that they finally decided it was so much out of control that they had to pick up the phone and dial 911.”
Despite making arrests during the incident two weeks ago, the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services released the teens back to Silver Oak’s custody within days.
Carroll County Sheriff Jim DeWees told Spotlight on Maryland on Tuesday, April 7, 2026, that his office has been overwhelmed with calls for service related to incidents that have occurred at Silver Oak Academy. (Steve Pierce/Spotlight on Maryland)
State records showing Silver Oak has the capacity to house 96 male juveniles ages 14 to 18. The privately run facility is overseen as an interagency partnership with the Maryland Department of Human Services and the Department of Juvenile Services.
More recent local emergency management records describe the current program as serving up to 24 male youths with high-acuity mental health and trauma-related needs in a foster care-like environment.
Assault reported
DeWees said that despite more than 60 staff members, the population as the time of the recent incident was a low as six students.
“For the amount of staff that they have, I don’t think there have been more any more than 10 or 12 students there,” DeWees said.
ALSO READ | Schiraldi hired convicted murderer to help reform Maryland’s juvenile justice system
The sheriff asserted that staff have told him and his deputies that they are discouraged from contacting law enforcement while on duty and managing potentially violent situations internally.
We had a staffer walk into our office [on Monday] to report an assault,” DeWees said. “The staffer disclosed to us that they came here while they were off work because they were told not to come and make a call during the day because it’s not looking good for them if staff were claiming they were assaulted.”
Rexrode was asked by Spotlight on Maryland if staff and juveniles were safe, given the large number of calls for intervention from the sheriff’s office.
Dana Rexrode is the executive director of Rites of Passage’s eastern district, the private organization that operates Silver Oak Academy in Carroll County, Md. (Steve Pierce/Spotlight on Maryland)
“We greatly respect our staff and we encourage them to reach out to law enforcement if they feel that they need to do so,” Rexrode said.
Costs to taxpayers
Meanwhile, DeWees said that, besides being worried about the welfare of his deputies, he is alarmed by the costs of Silver Oak’s program to taxpayers.
According to public records reviewed by Spotlight on Maryland, Rite of Passage receives approximately $893 per day per youth housed at Silver Oak. Extrapolated out, that figure amounts to roughly $326,000 annually per occupied bed.
“I almost feel like the state is writing a blank check to Rite of Passage and they’re just simply cashing the checks,” DeWees said.
Rite of Passage is headquartered in Nevada. The organization operates similar alternative youth programs around the country.
ALSO READ | Maryland officials silent about housing juvenile offenders in hotels after alleged rape
Silver Oak operates on the site of the former Bowling Brook Preparatory School, a juvenile facility that long faced controversy, including past investigations into serious incidents and litigation involving a youth death and safety failures. Another private organization operated the location during the time of the incident.
DeWees said that prior youth death years ago remains top of mind.
“What keeps me up is I’ve seen that particular facility, under that particular group [Rite of Passage], not work,” DeWees said. “It’s absolutely a recipe for disaster.”
Do you have news tips about privately operated juvenile facilities that are funded by Maryland tax dollars? Send tips about this story or others to gmcollins@sbgtv.com or contact Spotlight on Maryland’s hotline at (410) 467-4670.
Follow Gary Collins on X and Instagram. Spotlight on Maryland is a collaboration between FOX45 News, WJLA in Washington, D.C., and The Baltimore Sun.
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