Posted inCourts, Politics & Policy

Federal Court Declines to Rehear Marilyn Mosby’s Perjury and Mortgage Fraud Case

Marilyn Mosby won’t get a do-over in her perjury and mortgage fraud case. A federal appeals court has denied a request to rehear the former Baltimore state’s attorney’s appeal. The U.S. Attorney’s Office and Mosby’s attorneys had asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit to take up the case. Yet, no judges […]

Posted inBlack Businesses, Economy, Partner Content

For Black Women, Seeds of Wealth Start With Homeownership

After she moved into her first apartment in 2021, a one-bedroom unit in East Baltimore, Saj Dillard realized her rent wouldn’t have gotten her much once her lease ended. The recent college graduate wanted to grow her capital, build wealth and have the chance to own something.  So, she set a goal for herself — […]

Posted inInfrastructure, Transportation

Baltimore Needs Modern Transit, but a New Project Rehashes Historical Trauma

At a Sept. 10 Baltimore City Council meeting, longtime Reservoir Hill neighborhood resident Angel St. Jean took the podium to tell the story of her community over the past decade. “Step by step, chip by chip, our voice has been taken away,” she said.  For years, residents in the 85% Black neighborhood have worked together […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Partner Content

As Baltimore’s Sewer System Buckles Under Extreme Weather, City Refuses to Help Residents With Cleanup Efforts

This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, independent news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. It is republished with permission. Sign up for their newsletter here. A sewage cleanup program meant to assist Baltimore residents with backups in their homes has been in limbo for more than a year because of […]

Posted inEminent Domain, Infrastructure, Partner Content

Black Women Say An Amtrak Project Threatens Their Baltimore Neighborhood’s Homes — and Children

Originally published by The 19th Angel St. Jean has seen big improvements to the Reservoir Hill neighborhood of Baltimore since she moved there 11 years ago. The historic, now majority-Black community had long been considered “perpetually up and coming,” she said, and parts of it had been underdeveloped for some time. In recent years, however, […]

Posted inCourts

Former Prosecutor Avoids Prison, But How Did She Get Here?

A federal court judge spared Marilyn Mosby from spending a minute behind bars for mortgage fraud and perjury. Throughout the nearly six-hour hearing inside a Greenbelt, Maryland, courthouse were three rooms reserved for the former Baltimore City state’s attorney’s supporters who traveled from across the country. Statements were read by nearly a dozen people, including […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Infrastructure, Transportation

The Port of Baltimore Tore This Community Apart Long Before the Key Bridge Collapse

Around 10 p.m., Eric Johnson left his church service in Turner Station and drove across the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore County. He didn’t know it’d be his last trip across the 47-year-old bridge that had defined much of his adult life, but he was certainly glad it was.  Just over three hours later, […]

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