Maryland
Former Maryland mayor Patrick Wojahn to be sentenced in child pornography case

BALTIMORE — A former Maryland mayor is set to be sentenced Monday after pleading guilty to more than 100 counts connected to the possession and distribution of child sexual abuse material.
Patrick Wojahn was the mayor of College Park — home to the state’s flagship University of Maryland campus — until March when he was arrested.
Prince George’s County officials said an investigation was launched in February after the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children notified them a social media account had distributed suspected child pornography. Detectives traced the account to Wojahn, authorities said.
He pleaded guilty in August to more than 100 counts connected to the possession and distribution of child sexual abuse material.
Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy’s office said the plea deal calls for Wojahn to serve a 30-year prison sentence.
Wojahn was serving his second term as mayor of College Park after winning an election in 2015. He previously served eight years as a city councilman.
Originally from Wisconsin, Wojahn graduated from Georgetown University Law Center and has worked in legal advocacy and government relations.
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Maryland
Maryland AG asks full appeals court to rehear handgun license case
Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown on Tuesday asked the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit to rehear a case in which a panel of three judges ruled that a law requiring handgun buyers to get a license is unconstitutional.
“The Second Amendment does not prohibit states from enacting common-sense gun laws like Maryland’s handgun licensing law,” said Brown, a Democrat, in a statement. “My office will continue to defend laws that are designed to protect Marylanders from gun violence.”
In response to the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, Maryland lawmakers passed a gun control measure in 2013 that required people purchasing a handgun to first get a handgun qualification license, which involves submitting fingerprints, completing a firearms safety training course and filling out an application.
In a 2-1 decision on Nov. 21, Judge Julius N. Richardson cited a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case from 2022 called New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which held that a firearms regulation is unconstitutional unless the government can show it is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition.
“The challenged law restricts the ability of law-abiding adult citizens to possess handguns, and the state has not presented a historical analogue that justifies its restriction; indeed, it has seemingly admitted that it couldn’t find one,” Richardson wrote. “Under the Supreme Court’s new burden-shifting test for these claims, Maryland’s law thus fails, and we must enjoin its enforcement.”
Judge G. Steven Agee joined the majority opinion. But Senior Judge Barbara Milano Keenan wrote a dissenting opinion in which she described the position that the other two members of panel took as a “hyperaggressive view of the Second Amendment.”
In the petition, Assistant Attorneys General Ryan Dietrich and Robert Scott quoted from the dissenting opinion and warned that the analysis from the majority has “far-reaching implications.”
Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, said after that ruling that he would “continue to fight for this law.”
Maryland Shall Issue, an organization that seeks to preserve and advance the rights of gun owners, was among those who sued in 2016 over the measure.
The requirement to obtain a handgun qualification remains in effect.
Maryland
Maryland transportation chief proposes $3.3B in budget cuts

The approach includes about $1 billion in reductions in the transportation department’s operating budget, $2 billion from the capital program and about $400 million in grant reductions to local governments, the department said in a news release Tuesday.
“We’re trying to pull as many levers as we can to make this as painless as we can,” Paul Wiedefeld, Maryland’s transportation secretary, told The Associated Press in an interview.
The proposal is part of a larger budget challenge the state is facing. Moore, a Democrat, and the legislature, which is controlled by Democrats, are grappling with projected future budget deficits in the state’s operating budget, which is separate from the transportation spending plan.
Moore put officials on notice in August that tough budget decisions were coming, during a speech at the Maryland Association of Counties summer conference.
When state lawmakers convene for their annual legislative session in January, they will be working to balance the budget for the next fiscal year with an estimated shortfall of about $400 million. They also are facing rising budget gaps i n future years, as the state continues to implement an education funding reform law with phased-in funding.
One of the biggest cuts in the transportation funding plan would be to major highway and transit expansion projects that are not advertised by Jan. 1. Those construction dollars would be moved out beyond fiscal year 2029, Wiedefeld said.
The plan also would cut funds for maintenance projects by 30%. For highways, that reduction would affect day-to-day operations such as mowing lawns, picking up litter and fixing potholes.
“They’re still going to be doing them, but not at the degree that we would prefer,” Wiedefeld said.
The plan also calls for saving roughly $40 million a year by shutting down smaller branch offices for the MVA and reducing office hours. The plan also includes increasing airport parking fees.
Wiedefeld said the state will maintain matching money to receive federal funding. The transportation department said federal investments add up to about $7 billion.
“We’re not going to leave any money on the table because you’re getting roughly 80 cents on the dollar,” Wiedefeld said.
The proposal retains project development funds for Baltimore’s Red Line, Southern Maryland Rapid Transit, the Frederick Douglass Tunnel Project, the replacement American Legion Bridge and other key projects, the transportation department said in a news release Tuesday afternoon.
The secretary, a former general manager and CEO of Metro, said Maryland won’t back away from investments needed to support the subway system linking Maryland and Virginia with the District of Columbia.
The funding crunch comes as revenue sources have not kept up with operating costs, Wiedefeld said. Operating costs have risen roughly 7% annually, while revenues have gone up only about 1%, he said.
The state’s vehicle titling tax isn’t keeping up with costs, as more people keep their vehicles longer, and the gas tax also doesn’t keep pace due to increasing efficiency and electric car use. Wiedefeld also noted that transit ridership has not bounced back to what it was before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The secretary also pointed out that the state has hit a debt-limit cap, creating another challenge for capital needs.
Despite the difficulties, Wiedefeld noted that Maryland will still be spending almost $20 billion in the transportation spending plan.
“We are building projects out there today, and we’re not stopping things that are under construction,” Wiedefeld said. “We have bus purchases in the future. all of those things are still funded. It’s just that where we’d like to be, we can’t afford right now.”
Maryland
Maryland weather: Showers expected Tuesday evening with possibility for light snow Wednesday

An approaching cold front will cause scattered showers, potentially followed by scattered snow, in the Baltimore region Tuesday night, the National Weather Service predicts.
Temperatures are anticipated to reach a high of 48 degrees then drop to a low of 33 degrees Tuesday.
There’s a 50% chance of scattered showers before 4 a.m. Wednesday. Then, forecasters project more scattered rain or snow. The Baltimore metro area is expected to get less than an inch of snow.
However, the NWS has issued a winter advisory for Garrett County, which is forecasted to get 3 to 6 inches of snow Tuesday afternoon between 4 p.m. and 7 a.m. the next day.
In the Baltimore metro area, Wednesday is expected to see a high near 44 degrees and a low around 25 degrees. It’ll likely be a windy day with gusts expected to reach as high as 24 mph.
Forecasters expect Thursday to have temperatures between 47 degrees and 28 degrees.
Friday is anticipated to be the warmest day of the week, a mostly sunny day with a high around 58 degrees. In the evening, it will become partly cloudy with a low around 38 degrees.
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