Maryland
Maryland teenager who threatened to shoot up Oxford High School has been arrested
A Maryland teenager who Oakland County detectives linked to threatening to shoot up Oxford High School has been arrested by Maryland State Police.
The 17-year-old boy was arrested Thursday (Aug. 24) and charged in Maryland juvenile court with multiple crimes, including threats of mass harm and improper use of a telephone.
Detectives said they did not believe the threats were prompted by the Nov. 30, 2021, fatal shooting at the high school in which four students were killed, and six other students and a teacher were injured by Ethan Crumbley, who was 15 at the time and a student at the school.
“We will work to hold anyone, anywhere, accountable for threats they make against our community,” said Sheriff Michael Bouchard. “In this case, we partnered with the Maryland State Police to do just that. I thank our team for its swift work and thank the Maryland State Police for their partnership to run this down.”
Police said detectives were alerted to the Maryland threat after they received an OK2Say tip from the Michigan State Police.
Officials said the sheriff’s department interviewed three 14-year-old students and a 39-year-old woman from Oxford Township on Aug. 14 regarding a series of threatening phone calls to their homes.
Police said the 17-year-old told one of the 14-year-old victims that he would shoot up the school before shooting the teen next.
Officials said the suspect made inappropriate sexual comments to at least one of the students and a woman.
Through an investigation, detectives were able to link the phone number in Maryland and ultimately located an address where the 17-year-old lived.
“We run down threats with a sense of urgency and greatly appreciate that they do as well,” Bouchard said. “Whether a threat is intended to be carried out or not, it terrifies people and is a crime.”
During his arrest last Thursday, troopers said the suspect confessed to making the calls. He later wrote an apology letter.
Copyright 2023 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
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Maryland man to be sentenced for killing man with axe, murder of Baltimore cellmate
BALTIMORE — A Harford County man is expected to be sentenced Thursday morning after he was convicted of killing a man with an axe and pled guilty to murdering his cellmate, according to Baltimore City State’s Attorney Ivan Bates.
In September 2022, Gordon Staron was charged with using an axe to kill a 63-year-old man at a bus station in the 1400 block of East Monument Street, police said. The victim – Keith Bell – died at a hospital.
Staron was taken to the Baltimore City Central Booking Intake Facility and charged with first-degree murder, according to police.
In October 2022, the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services said a deaf detainee at the booking facility was found unresponsive.
Javarick Gantt, 34, of Annapolis had been detained in the facility since July 1, 2022, officials said. His death was later ruled a homicide.
In January 2023, State’s Attorney Bates announced he would join the prosecution team in Gantt’s murder trial and said he intended to seek a sentence of life without the possibility of parole. It was the first time a Baltimore City case was prosecuted by a sitting State’s Attorney in nearly a decade, his office said.
“Here, you have a suspect who’s alleged to have committed two separate murders, one on an older adult and one on a vulnerable adult,” Bates said, explaining why he took the case.
Bates has raised questions about the city’s jail system and backlogged courts. After the incident, jail officials refused to answer questions about why Staron was being housed with Gantt, a disabled man who was facing relatively minor charges.
In October, Staron pled guilty to murder. He is expected to be sentenced for both cases on Thursday morning.
“When I campaigned for this office, I promised to be a champion and defender of our older adult and disabled community in Baltimore, and the outcomes of these cases will undoubtedly ensure that Mr. Staron is never back on our streets to commit more malicious acts against vulnerable individuals,” Bates said.
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