Maryland regulation enforcement and college district officers are investigating why an elementary faculty instructor made unfounded claims that a number of stabbings occurred on the faculty earlier than strolling 27 fifth-graders off campus to an area café.
Shortly earlier than 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, deputies acquired a name about a number of stabbings at Inexperienced Valley Elementary College in Monrovia, in line with a information launch from the Frederick County Sheriff’s Workplace. Monrovia is roughly 40 minutes west of Baltimore.
As a substitute, deputies shortly came upon there had not been any stabbings within the faculty however that 27 college students and a instructor have been lacking, the sheriff’s workplace mentioned. Authorities quickly discovered all the scholars and the instructor at an area cafe, the sheriff’s workplace added. All the lacking college students have been accounted for and reunited with their households and guardians, authorities mentioned.
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Earlier within the day, the instructor had allegedly tried to name the entrance workplace to get permission to take college students outdoors however didn’t obtain a response and believed the college appeared “eerily quiet,” the sheriff’s workplace mentioned.
The instructor then determined to steer the scholars by means of the woods as much as a close-by cafe – a choice which authorities say she made resulting from her taking a component in emergency administration procedures.
“As they’re strolling by means of the woods, she has the kids take away any brightly coloured clothes or equipment and removes her personal brightly coloured shirt to keep away from detection,” the sheriff’s workplace added.
In accordance with an announcement from Frederick County Public Colleges, the instructor believed “there was a priority for security” and acted in what the district known as the “keep away from technique,” which workers and college students are educated to make use of once they consider there may be an instantaneous risk to scholar security.
There was no credible risk of violence on the faculty Thursday, the college district confused.
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“We’re grateful that this was a non-credible risk, however we all know that the expertise was upsetting for the scholars concerned and our neighborhood at massive. We remorse that this occurred,” the college district added.
When the scholars and the instructor arrived on the cafe, the instructor had retailer representatives name 911 and report that there have been a number of stabbings on the faculty and later defined to dispatchers what she thinks occurred, authorities mentioned.
The instructor was taken into custody, which doesn’t imply she was criminally arrested or charged, authorities mentioned. She was taken to a hospital for analysis however was not handcuffed, they added.
The instructor’s identify was not publicly launched by authorities nor was her present standing.
The varsity district and sheriff’s workplace are conducting a joint investigation to find out if fees can be forthcoming, the sheriff’s workplace mentioned.
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“As to why the instructor reported a number of stabbings, that’s nonetheless a part of the continuing investigations,” the sheriff’s workplace mentioned.
The varsity district mentioned faculty officers held a gathering for fogeys of the impacted college students to get extra data and companies for the kids and also will have extra psychological well being workers on the faculty over the approaching says for youngsters and workers who want assist, district officers mentioned.
CNN reached out to the district for additional remark.
BALTIMORE — On November 5, Maryland polls will be open for the 2024 election between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m.
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To vote, you’ll need to go to your assigned polling place.
How to find your voting location
You can find your assigned polling place by visiting the Maryland State Board of Elections website and searching your address.
Voters can also find their voting districts and local board of elections.
If you requested a mail-in ballot and now want to vote in person, you will need to cancel your mail-in ballot via Maryland’s Online Voter Registration System.
Does your polling place change automatically if you move?
If you’ve already changed your address on your driver’s license or state ID, your polling place will be changed automatically. If you haven’t officially changed your address, you’ll need to make sure you’re registered at your current address to vote.
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Where do I drop off mail-in ballots in Maryland?
Marylanders can use a ballot drop box to return their mail-in ballot. Click here to find the General Elections ballot drop box locations.
Christian Olaniran
Christian Olaniran is a digital producer for CBS Baltimore, where he writes stories on diverse topics including politics, arts and culture. With a passion for storytelling and content creation, he produces engaging visual content for social media, and other platforms.
The combine kicked up a cloud of dust as it rolled past, snatching soybeans out of Eastern Shore dirt. Across the road, another combine did the same. It’s a familiar harvest season scene in Kent County, where more than half the acreage is considered prime farmland.
Albert Nickerson leaned on the back of his Ford pickup and watched his brother-in-law pilot the giant harvester. Nickerson doesn’t work the land, but his wife is a sixth-generation farmer. His oldest son is seventh. Nickerson is a contractor and Republican county commissioner. His blue eyes welled with tears when he talked abouthow much this place means to him.
“Short of my kids, my wife, God, I mean this is just right up there with the next thing to be important for me,” he said.
With 19,188 residents, Kent County is Maryland’s smallest by population. Grain sales are an $89.5 million industry, second-highest in Maryland. Geographically isolated, the county’s sprawling farms and multigenerational farmers give it a frozen-in-time feel.
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But a pandemic influx of wealthy outsiders, remote workers and early retirees from liberal enclaves like Washington, D.C., Baltimore and Philadelphia —native Kent Countians might call them “chicken-neckers” or “come-heres” —is nudging the county’s electorate to the left.
Gov. Wes Moore won the county in 2022, the first time since 1986 that a Democrat in the governor’s race prevailed, and President Joe Biden won the county in 2020, after residents had picked Republicans in the previous two elections.
As this Election Day nears, the presidential race pits former President Donald Trump and his “Make America Great Again” against Vice President Kamala Harris’s “A New Way Forward.” In places like Kent County, those aren’t just campaign slogans. These communities are trying to balance tradition and progress without a clear roadmap for the future.
Kent County’s newcomers are mostly moving to Chestertown, the county seat nestled on the banks of the Chester River. With slightly more than 5,500 residents and a bustling downtown with shops, restaurants and a glut of 18th century homes to rival Annapolis, Chestertown might as well be the poster child for the small-town America that moneyed city dwellers sought out during the heights of COVID-19.
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They own second homes, or they commute back to their urban centers for work. One woman, a real estate agent named Kat Conley, said she has split time between Chestertown and D.C. for more than a decade.
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It does not take many people to swing an election here (Biden won the county by 134 votes), and the population is so small it doesn’t muchfactor into statewide or national contests. But the blue shift could have wide-ranging implications for local matters.
“I think that Kent County is a microcosm of the entire country,” Nickersonsaid. “I’ve been fortunate enough to be able to travel to some places. I was in Colorado a few years ago, and I was talking to a ranch manager, and we were talking about the same exact thing going on out there.”
The ranch manager spoke of billionaires flooding in and trying to change the area’s way of life.
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Fewer people work on farms in Kent County than in years past as automation increases. And most everything that’s grown isn’t even for human consumption — it’s used for chicken feed.
Kent County is surrounded on three sides by water, and people used to make a living off the Chesapeake Bay. The number of watermen is dwindling, too. The most reliable employers are the Dixon Valve & Coupling Company, which makes hose fittings, and the LaMotte Company, which makes water-test kits.
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The public school system has seen declining enrollment, and in 2020, the county recorded a population loss for the first time since the 1940 Census. The county’s median age is nearly a decade older than Maryland’s, and fewer people have college degrees than the state average.
The county’s overall changes can seem at odds with the scene in Chestertown. On a recent October weekend, there were packed restaurants, crowded sidewalks, a classic car meet and a farmers market that shut down the town’s main street. It’s also a liberal bubble.
Pride flags hang from storefronts, and placards that proclaim all races, genders and sexual orientations are welcome hang in windows. Where Trump signs dominate the countryside, it’s not uncommon to see downtown homes displaying yard signs supporting Harris.
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One such home belongs to Michael McDowell, an Irishman who arrived in Chestertown by way of D.C. A former journalist who had a second career working in international relations, McDowell moved to town in 2017 when he and his wife purchased an 18th century home that was first owned by a member of the Continental Army who had slaves.
Seated in an armchair in his meticulously preserved, wood-paneled living room, McDowell — amid plenty of asides about national politics and his views of the Republican county commission (the three deplorables, he called them) — described a sort of intellectual elite that make up many of Chestertown’s historic homeowners.
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“It’s a fascinating community,” he said. “We have law partners, surgeons, psychiatrists, State Department people, USAID [United States Agency for International Development]. Oh, we’ve got six CIA people.”
A self-described social democrat, McDowell saidthe appeal of Chestertown for these older elites is its unique blend of an urban environment and tight-knit community. But their presence has a drawback for the non-elites: The cost of housing has skyrocketed in recent years. McDowell and his wife bought their home for $368,000. A Zillow estimate suggests the house would sell for twice that now.
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Kent County has the sixth-highest property tax rate of any county in Maryland. Chestertown levies an additional tax and, combined with the county’s, the property tax rate for town residents is greater than that for Annapolis residents. McDowell said he and his wife have an annual tax bill of $8,000.
High property values and relative population density have given the town an outsized importance in the county’s economic picture.
Owen Bailey, a town native and director of policy and land use at the Eastern Shore Land Conservancy, said Chestertown makes up 1% of Kent County’s land but accounts for more than one-quarter of the population and one-fifth of its wealth based on property values alone.
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Scarcity plus increased demand has left many younger, longtime residents largely priced out.
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Bailey lives in a three-bedroom home outside of the downtown neighborhood with his wife and two children. They would like to purchase a bigger home, Bailey said, but realistically cannot afford it given the market. The conveniences of living in town outweigh the desire for greater space out in the county,meaning he’s planning to stay put and make do.
Many others in that spot might leave the area altogether.
Kim Penny is in a similar squeeze. She’s a math teacher at the county’s only middle school, and works a second job as a server at The Retriever, a restaurant that sells both its version of a Big Mac and high-end liquor. She lives with her mom a few miles out of town in order to save money, and hopes to purchase a place of her own.
“Everything’s so expensive,” she said. Millennials like Penny who work in town tend to share the older, wealthier homeowners’ liberal politics. But they question whether they have a future in Kent County.
Tess Jones, a manager at an independent bookstore called The Bookplate on the town’s main drag, had until recently been living with her partner and their children in a rental her parents own. She and her partner scraped and just bought a house. At 35, Jones said her day-to-day finances and Chestertown’s cost of living doesn’t leave her with much of a cushion to build retirement savings.
She said Kent County’s younger residents who stay are doing so in spite of financial reasons to leave.
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“You live here because you love it, you’re invested in the community. And then there are a lot of very, very wealthy older people who, honestly, pay the taxes,” Jones said. “It’s a hard balance.”
Like everywhere, Kent County’s politics don’t neatly break down asurban versus rural or wealthy versus working-class.
The county has voted fairly erratically in local races. The entire county commission is Republican — although commission President Ronald Fithian was a Democrat until 2020, when he felt the party had gone too far left and “left me behind” — and so is the sheriff. But the clerk of court and state’s attorney are both Democrats.
That has more to do with the intimate nature of a small place than a citizenry’s desire to have a bipartisan government at the local level, said Pat Nugent, a professor of history and politics at Washington College, a private liberal arts school in Chestertown that helps give the town its buzzy feel.
He said the “manufactured divisions” in state and national politics do not hold up at the hyperlocal level. At least not when a voter and an elected official are liable to run into each other at the post office or the grocery store with some regularity.
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“It kind of forces people to be decent to one another, or it encourages people to be decent, generally speaking,” Nugent said.
Examples of the civility Nugent pointed to abound. Kent County Democratic Club President Bill Flooksaid the former Republican sheriff, now also a county commissioner, was one of the “more enlightened” sheriffs on the Eastern Shore, and that his replacement, another Republican namedDennis Hickman, is a “great guy.”
Not everyone is singing “Kumbaya.”
Paul Tue III is co-founder of the Black-led nonprofit Minary’s Dream Alliance, which plays a vital role for people of color in a county that is more than 80% white. Tue, who is Black, has lived in Kent County for 17 years and said local politics can be “very much good old boyish.”
“I don’t want to throw the politicians under the bus,” he said. “If you know how to access them, they’re more than accessible. But if you don’t, then I think it would be impossible for you to feel heard or represented.”
Working-class Black residents might not be able to name a single local official, Tue said, because it’s hard to get too involved in electoral politics when they’re “catching hell” trying to put food on the table or trying to make rent.
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There has been some sense of progress, Tue said, at least compared to other Eastern Shore counties. Colleagues from across the Chester River have told Tue that they think Chestertown is the most progressive place east of the Bay.
“I didn’t feel this place was very progressive when I first got here, but you have people on the outside [of the county] looking in saying, ‘I wish I could do that in my community,” he said of Minary’s Dream Alliance.
Tue attributed the progressive turn in part to the wealthy people who move to town and want to get involved in local politics.
“They’ve gone out intentionally to form relationships with people who are not in their tax bracket,” he said. But he also feels the squeeze caused by their presence.
Political progressiveness does no good if people cannot find a way to balance the desire to preserve the charming small-town feel with a need for economic development and growth. This is often where Nickerson’s thoughts land.
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On a drive through the countryside, he pointed to some of the county’s markers from his 55 years of living there. It was a nostalgia tour.
There’s the former dairy farm wherehe worked as a high school student. There’s the former general store in the town of Still Pond, which stopped being an actual town a long time ago. There’s the old country church, Still Pond United Methodist, where he and his wife got married, and there’s the graveyard where his ancestors’ headstones are the oldest in it.
Eventually, he turned onto Still Pond Neck Road, a short-ish country lane that dead-ends at the Chesapeake Bay. He and his wife own almost all the land to the left. He drove up a gravel path, toward his house, which dates to the 1700s and sits on a knoll. Follow the path farther and you come down to the backside of his property, through a stand of trees and into a clearing with a dilapidated cottage and a pier that juts into Still Pond Creek.
This is a place that won’t change, at least not for a while. With the help of the Eastern Shore Land Conservancy, Nickerson obtained an easement that essentially preserves his farm as open space in perpetuity.
“If I have anything to do with it, for the next 1,000 years you will be able to come down here and see Still Pond Creek,” he said, beaming.
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Nickerson can control that. For as long as he is in office — he’s in his second year of his first term — he also has a say in what happens to Kent County.
But how do you balance change and progress against the desire to hold onto what used to be? It’s a question that keeps him awake at night.
“I wish you had the answer for me,” Nickerson said. “I really do.”
A new lawsuit from Maryland accuses the WWE and its founders of fostering a culture of sexual abuse within the organization and looking the other way while a longtime ringside announcer preyed on young men he hired as “ring boys.”
BALTIMORE (AP) — A new lawsuit accuses the WWE and its founders of fostering a culture of sexual abuse within the organization and looking the other way while a longtime ringside announcer preyed on young men he hired as “ring boys.”
The suit was filed Wednesday in Maryland, where a recent law change eliminated the state’s statute of limitations for child sex abuse claims, opening the doors for victims to sue regardless of their age or how much time has passed.
The complaint alleges that Melvin Phillips, who died in 2012, would target young men from disadvantaged backgrounds and hire them as “ring boys” to help with the preparations for wrestling matches. Phillips would then assault them in his dressing room, hotels and even in the wrestlers’ locker room, according to the complaint, which was filed on behalf of five men.
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The abuse detailed in the lawsuit occurred over several years during Phillips’ long tenure with the organization, which spanned from the 1970s to the early 1990s. Because of his death, Phillips is not among the named defendants.
Instead, the complaint targets World Wrestling Entertainment founders Vince and Linda McMahon, the husband and wife team who grew the organization into the powerhouse it is today. The couple was well aware of Phillips’ brazen misconduct but did little to stop him, according to the complaint.
“This wasn’t an isolated instance,” said attorney Greg Gutzler, who represents the five unnamed plaintiffs. “There was a culture of abuse and it started at the top.”
According to the lawsuit, which was filed in Baltimore County Circuit Court, the abuse occurred in several states, including Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania. The plaintiffs were all between 13 and 15 when they met Phillips.
Gutzler said the plaintiffs finally found the strength to come forward and sue after Vince McMahon resigned from WWE’s parent company TKO Group Holdings earlier this year amid his own sexual misconduct scandal. He resigned in January after a woman who previously worked for WWE filed a federal lawsuit accusing him of serious misconduct, including offering her to a star wrestler for sex and distributing pornographic pictures and videos of her. McMahon had already stepped down as WWE’s CEO in 2022 during an investigation into allegations that match those in the federal lawsuit.
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An attorney representing McMahon, Jessica Rosenberg, denied the latest abuse allegations contained in Wednesday’s complaint. In a written statement, she referenced New York Post reporting from the early ’90s, saying the recent lawsuit asserts “these same false claims.”
“We will vigorously defend Mr. McMahon and are confident the court will find that these claims are untrue and unfounded,” the statement read.
Emails were sent to Linda McMahon and her organization seeking comment.
Attorneys for the other defendants aren’t yet listed in online court records. Emails seeking comment were sent to WWE and TKO Group Holdings.
McMahon was the leader and most recognizable face at WWE for decades. When he purchased what was then the World Wrestling Federation from his father in 1982, wrestling matches took place at small venues and appeared on local cable channels. WWE matches are now held in professional sports stadiums, and the organization has a sizable overseas following.
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WWE merged last April with the company that runs Ultimate Fighting Championship to create the $21.4 billion sports entertainment company TKO Group Holdings.
The lawsuit alleges that WWE leaders “gave Phillips free rein to use his highly public WWE personality and image to entice local kids,” allowing them to meet famous wrestlers and attend the popular events.
It alleges the McMahons fired Phillips in 1988 because of abuse allegations surfacing around that time, but they rehired him six weeks later.
Linda McMahon, who stepped down as the company’s chief executive in 2009, later led the Small Business Administration under former President Donald Trump.
The lawsuit was filed under a Maryland law that went into effect last year after state lawmakers voted to eliminate the statute of limitations for such cases. Before the change, people in Maryland who were sexually abused as children could bring lawsuits up until they turned 38.
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Lawmakers approved the change with the Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal in mind after a scathing investigative report revealed the scope of the problem within the Archdiocese of Baltimore. But it opened the door for legal action against a range of other entities, including the state’s juvenile justice agency.
However, the future of these claims is uncertain because the constitutionality of the law is currently being decided by the Supreme Court of Maryland.