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Five hurt, one critically, in Pr. George’s park shooting, police say

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Five hurt, one critically, in Pr. George’s park shooting, police say


Five teens were shot and injured, one of them critically, Friday afternoon in a Prince George’s County park where hundreds of students from multiple high schools had gathered on “senior skip day,” according to authorities.

Greenbelt Police Department spokesman Rico Dennis said between 500 and 600 young people were in Schrom Hills Park on Hanover Parkway, just outside the Capital Beltway.

Prince George’s County, Maryland state, Berwyn Heights and Greenbelt police all responded for traffic and crowd control when, shortly before 3 p.m., officers walking in the park heard multiple gunshots through the crowd, authorities said.

Greenbelt Police Chief Richard Bowers said eight to 10 gunshots went off near a pavilion inside the park. Police said the teenagers had been engaged in a water gun fight.

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“The students at the park began to flee in mass out of the park onto Hanover Parkway and we believe the suspect was able to escape with the crowd,” Greenbelt police said in a news release.

Bowers said the five victims were all males between 16 to 18 years old. The Prince George’s Fire Department said the victims were taken to hospitals. No arrests had been made as of late Friday afternoon, but Bowers said police are looking for one shooter believed to be the same age as others at the park.

Eleanor Roosevelt High School nearby was placed on lockdown because of the shooting, and afternoon activities were canceled.

“It’s really concerning that you have a group of kids in a park and it turns violent like this for no apparent reason,” Bowers said.

Bowers said police will work through the weekend to investigate, work that will include scrubbing police body-camera video and cellphone videos from people at the park.

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“We did not know that [the skip day] was going to occur,” he said. “We do everything we can to monitor that park,” which sits across the street from the police station.

Prince George’s is one of many jurisdictions in the region trying to stem increasing youth violence. More adolescents than adults have been arrested on carjacking charges in the county in the past three years. And last year, 92 juveniles were arrested on suspicion of possessing a gun, according to county police department data.

To address youth violence, school officials have approved metal detectors on campuses and required clear backpacks. Youth in recent years were subject to a countywide juvenile curfew. And the county launched a program where adult volunteers monitor certain streets that students use to get to school to discourage bullying, fighting and other misbehavior.

Though crime overall is down in Prince George’s County compared to the same time last year, as of Thursday, violent crime is up by about 9 percent. Police data shows that assaults investigated by Prince George’s police are up 17 percent, with 511 cases reported this year compared to 436 for the same time last year. As of Thursday, county police have investigated 71 nonfatal shootings in Prince George’s, down from 76 the same time last year.

The shooting in Greenbelt occurred about 2½ hours after three men and a 16-year-old were wounded in a shooting while gathered in a parking lot in the Trinidad neighborhood of Northeast Washington. A D.C. police spokesman said investigators do not believe the shootings in the District and in Maryland are related.

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The shooting in D.C. occurred about 12:20 p.m. in the 1200 block of Mount Olivet Road NE when one or more occupants of a four-door sedan shot at people in the parking lot.

Darnell Robinson, an assistant D.C. police chief, told reporters that the sedan never came to a stop as the shots were fired. He said the victims scattered after the shooting. The wounded men were taken to a hospital in ambulances, and the male teenager showed up at a hospital a short time later.

Robinson said police found the vehicle in the District but had not made an arrest as of Friday afternoon. In March, Mount Olivet Road was included in one of the District’s Drug Free Zones, temporary areas allowing police more authority to confront people suspected of illegal drug activity.

D.C. police said they do not know of a motive in Friday’s shooting, which occurred on a street singled out by an advisory neighborhood commissioner as a problem area. The commissioner said in March that people gather along Mount Olivet Road and that sometimes they have firearms.

“That is what we want police to focus on,” the neighborhood commissioner said.

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Crime overall in D.C. is down, with violent crime down 22 percent compared to the same time last year, according to police data.

Nicole Asbury contributed to this report.



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Thousands turn out – again – as third 'No Kings' rallies take over Maryland streets

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Thousands turn out – again – as third 'No Kings' rallies take over Maryland streets


Thousands turned out at the dozens of No Kings rallies scattered across Maryland, part of the millions expected across the country for the third such event. In Maryland, turnout was particularly heavy in Hagerstown, near a proposed ICE detention facility.



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WATCH LIVE: No Kings march and rally in DC

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WATCH LIVE: No Kings march and rally in DC


Thousands are expected gather in Washington, D.C. for a “No Kings” march and rally. 

Here’s everything you need to know:

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What is the No Kings protest?

What we know:

Organized locally by area chapters of Indivisible and allied grassroots groups, the event aims to draw protesters to downtown Washington and surrounding counties to oppose policies of the Trump administration and to voice broader concerns about civil rights and democratic norms.

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No Kings protest details

Timeline:

The march will kick off at 10 a.m., with participants gathering at Memorial Circle near Arlington Cemetery, with additional access from the Blue Line or nearby parking at the Fashion Centre at Pentagon City, according to the event organizers. There is no public parking in the immediate area, but participants can be dropped off at the circle.

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From there, the procession will head across the Memorial Bridge into Washington, D.C., passing the Lincoln Memorial and continuing on to the Washington Monument.

At the conclusion of the march, participants can walk to a downtown rally, from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Other ‘No Kings’ rallies in the DMV

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Dig deeper:

In addition to the main rally in downtown D.C., several other demonstrations tied to “No Kings 3” are scheduled around the DMV this Saturday.

In Arlington, Virginia, activists are organizing a march across the Memorial Bridge beginning at 10 a.m., with protesters expected to continue into West Potomac Park before joining larger crowds in the District proper, for example. 

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There are hundreds of “No Kings” events scheduled to take place this Saturday throughout the DMV. You can click here to find a list of all of them. 

How to watch No Kings march and rally in DC

What you can do:

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FOX 5 DC will be covering No Kings in D.C. all day on FOX LOCAL and in the liveplayer at the top of this story. 

FOX 5 DC is available to watch for free on Roku, Amazon FireTV, Apple TV, Google Android TV and Vizio with the FOX LOCAL app. Here’s how to download FOX LOCAL on your mobile phone. 

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‘Strong smell’ shuts down flights at major DC-area airports for the second time this month

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‘Strong smell’ shuts down flights at major DC-area airports for the second time this month


A reported “strong smell” at a key air traffic control center disrupted flights Friday evening at major airports across the Washington, D.C., region for the second time in two weeks.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) temporarily halted flights at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD), Baltimore/Washington International Airport (BWI), Charlottesville–Albemarle Airport (CHO) and Richmond International Airport (RIC), the agency told FOX Business in an email.

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The FAA said the disruptions were due to a “strong smell” at the Potomac Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) center, which manages airspace in the region.

GROUND STOP LIFTED AT MAJOR DC-AREA AIRPORTS AFTER CHEMICAL ODOR DISRUPTS AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL

An FAA air traffic control tower at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Va. (Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

It was not immediately clear what caused the smell.

Ground stops at Dulles, Reagan National and BWI remained in effect until around 8 p.m. ET before being lifted, according to the FAA’s website.

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NEWARK AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS LOST RADAR, RADIO COMMUNICATIONS WITH PLANES FOR OVER A MINUTE, SPARKING CHAOS

The FAA said the disruption was due to a “strong smell” at the Potomac Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) center. (Flightradar24)

As of 8:30 p.m., Reagan National was experiencing ground delays, while BWI continued to see departure delays.

Earlier this month, a ground stop was similarly issued at several airports in the Washington, D.C., region after a chemical odor was detected at the TRACON center.

FATAL LAGUARDIA COLLISION RENEWS FOCUS ON RUNWAY INCURSION RISKS ACROSS US

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Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy speaks at a news conference at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. (Heather Diehl/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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The temporary ground stop March 13 similarly affected DCA, IAD, BWI and RIC, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said at the time.

Duffy said the smell came from an overheated circuit board, which has since been replaced.



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