Maryland
Final Opportunity for One MSU Unit Against Maryland
The Michigan State Spartans have gone through a rollercoaster of emotions this season, and there have been bright spots accompanied by dark places almost every week.
Unfortunately for the team, though, there has been one unit that has consistently underperformed and let the team down every week, that being the offensive line.
They may have lost one of their starters in Luka Vincic at the beginning of the season, but they still have had plenty of room to prove that they are a capable unit, full of young talent and veterans alike.
So, with only one game left in the season against the Maryland Terapins, what will it take for the offensive line to prove that they can be good for next season and be reliable for freshman quarterback Alessio Milivojevic?
Allow Two Or Less Sacks
Make Room For The Running Backs To Do Their Job
Thrive Without The Tight Ends
MSU’s offensive line is on its last chance to prove itself to be a capable unit and not allow an immense amount of sacks, but if it can, then Spartan fans might have more to hope for come next year.
Keep up with all our content when you follow the official Spartan Nation page on Facebook, Spartan Nation, WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE, and be sure to share your thoughts on MSU’s offensive line when you join our community group, Go Green Go White, WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.
Maryland
Lawmaker pushes bill to prevent felony-charged teachers from working in Maryland schools
Hunt Valley, Md. (WBFF) — Calls continue to grow for Harford County Public Schools to investigate why the district hired a teacher who was charged with stealing $215,000 from taxpayers. Some lawmakers want answers.
“Parents are just like, ‘what has happened to our school system?’” Stated Delegate Lauren Arikan, a Republican representing Harford County.
On December 1, 2025, Arikan sent a letter to Harford County Public Schools calling on the district to investigate its hiring of Lawrence Smith.
“I think there’s a lot of unanswered questions,” Arikan told Project Baltimore.
Arikan’s letter follows a similar request for an investigation, sent to the district last month, by Harford County Executive Bob Cassilly.
ALSO READ || Demands grow for investigation into Harford County Schools’ hiring of accused felon
“I think the public deserves to know when they’re hiring teachers, what are the protocols that are supposed to be used – were they actually followed?” Questioned Arikan.
In September 2023, Smith, a former Baltimore City Public Schools police officer and state champion high school football coach, was arrested and charged with 15 federal counts, many related to overtime fraud. This past August, as he awaited trial, HCPS hired Smith to be an eighth-grade English teacher on a conditional teaching license.
In October, Smith pled guilty to felony wire fraud and income tax evasion. He admitted to stealing $215,000 in overtime from Baltimore City Schools. After he pled guilty, HCPS placed Smith on administrative leave where taxpayers continued to pay him his $57,997 salary for about a month. Smith faces a maximum of 25 years in prison. His sentencing date has not yet been set.
HCPS Superintendent Dr. Sean Bulson told Project Baltimore last month, when Smith was initially hired, he was not made aware. But he supports his district’s decision to hire Smith to teach at Edgewood Middle School.
Aaron Poynton, the President of the Harford County Board of Education, said Smith’s alleged crimes, at the time of his hiring, did not legally disqualify him from employment under current state law.
“It did not raise a red flag that prohibited him from being hired, and he was the most qualified person to be hired,” Poynton explained before a November Board of Education meeting.
This means, according to Poynton, the most qualified applicant to be an eighth-grade English teacher, was a person who was facing 15 federal charges and recently earned a conditional teaching license.
ALSO READ || Maryland school paying convicted felon/teacher who stole $215K, faces 25 years in prison
“We hire a lot of conditional teachers. The fact that he had charges that were pending did not disqualify him from being hired,” stated Poynton.
“It feels very much like to myself, and many other parents of young children, that the system is very broken,” explained Arikan.
Arikan told Fox45 News she is currently drafting legislation to help strengthen background checks for educators. Arikan believes if someone has been charged with certain felony crimes, that person should not be eligible to teach in Maryland public schools until the criminal charges have been resolved in court. The legislation, Arikan said, should be finalized by the start of the 2026 legislative session in Annapolis – which begins on January 14.
“If the teachers that they look up to are people who are scamming the system, ripping off the taxpayers, stealing money from people, I think most parents don’t want that kind of person teaching their children how to grow up,” Arikan told Project Baltimore.
Harford County Public Schools, so far, has not publicly agreed to investigate the hiring of Smith. The district says it did conduct a “formal review”, which Fox45 News has filed a public records request to obtain.
Follow Project Baltimore’s Chris Papst on X and Facebook. Send news tips to cjpapst@sbgtv.com
Maryland
‘Culture’ of violence: Maryland National Guard abused at-risk teens, records claim
MARYLAND (WBFF) — At the Maryland National Guard Freestate Challenge Academy, a residential boot camp and educational program for at-risk and troubled youth owned and operated by the Guard, staff abused the teens in their care, according to court records and criminal complaints The Baltimore Sun reviewed. The teens then, in turn, assaulted each other, even participating in an after-hours fight club.
The Sun reviewed more than 400 pages of documents, including two sets of criminal charges, a lawsuit and all serious incident reports filed since 2019 that documented allegations of cadet violations, as well as investigations into allegations of inappropriate staff behavior and subsequent disciplinary records.
In all internal documents provided by the program, the names of cadets and staff involved were redacted.
Time and again, staff members hit, humiliated or encouraged others to hurt the teens in their care at the Aberdeen Proving Ground camp, internal records indicate. Time and again, camp leaders fired the offending staff members, or cadre, as they are called in the camp’s military parlance; put them on administrative leave or “took them off the schedule,” the records said. At times, they referred the allegations to law enforcement.
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Read the full story on the Baltimore Sun.
Maryland
1 man dead in shooting at Walgreens involving Maryland Heights police officers
ST. LOUIS COUNTY, Mo. (First Alert 4) -The St. Louis County Police is actively investigating an officer-involved shooting at a Walgreens on Dorsett and McKelvey roads, which resulted in one man dead, Sunday evening.
According to police, at around 6 p.m., Maryland Heights police officers responded to the Walgreens on the 12000 block of Dorsett.
Once arriving, officers found a man with a gun. The man fired at the officers. One officer returned fire.
The man was hit and pronounced dead at the scene. His identity has not been released.
No officers were injured. St. Louis County Police Bureau of Crimes Against People detectives responded and assumed responsibility for the case.
The officer involved in the shooting is 30 years old, with two and a half years of experience with the Maryland Heights Police Department. The officer has previous experience in law enforcement.
Police say this is an active investigation, information will be shared as it becomes available.
This is a developing story that will be updated.
Copyright 2025 KMOV. All rights reserved.
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