Ellicott City, MD|News|
Supreme Court: Maryland DNA Ruling Conflicts With Other States
Four-page opinion hints that justices will likely overturn Maryland ruling involving the collection of samples from people charged with felonies.

I'm a child of the eastside of Baltimore County and have lived here most of my life — first in Middle River then in Perry Hall, where I graduated from high school. I now live in Towson.
I'm a county history junkie and have a fondness for all the places that make my "hometown" special. You'll frequently find me hiking around Oregon Ridge with my dog or grabbing a slice at Pizza Johns in Middle River.
Over the years I've worked for a number of area publications including The Times in Perry Hall, The Avenue and The Journal Northeast as well as writing for Reuters news service.
For much of the last decade I was a reporter for Patuxent Publishing Co.'s community papers in Baltimore County as it's senior politics and government reporter.
I've won numerous state, regional and national awards for coverage of stories such as the Joseph Palczynski spree killings and hostage standoff in 2000, coverage of Hurricane Katrina, as well as state and local government coverage.
I've also been honored for my investigative work which includes stories involving the Community College of Baltimore County, the hiring of a health officer who was not licensed to practice medicine in Maryland and an investigation that led to the indictment of a sitting county councilman for theft from his campaign finance account.
While at Patuxent, my political blog was honored as the best in the Maryland-Delaware-DC region. I continue to blog about politics for Patch.
I appear each Thursday morning in the 7 o'clock hour where I talk about local politics on WBAL 1090 AM. I've appeared regularly on a number of that station's programs and have made guest appearances on Midday with Dan Rodricks on WYPR 88.1 FM.
I also co-hosted the "All Politics is Local" radio show on WCBM 680 AM.
You can find me on Facebook and on Twitter.
Four-page opinion hints that justices will likely overturn Maryland ruling involving the collection of samples from people charged with felonies.

Baltimore County police say devices are not linked to red light or speed cameras "nor are they used for intelligence gathering."
Civil liberties group says it supports the technology but has privacy concerns about how long the collected information is stored.
Civil liberties group says it supports the technology but has privacy concerns about how long the collected information is stored.
Four-page opinion hints that justices will likely overturn Maryland ruling preventing collection of samples from people charged with felonies.
Civil liberties group says it supports the technology but has privacy concerns about how the long the collected information is stored.
Four-page opinion hints that justices will likely overturn Maryland ruling involving the collection of samples from people charged with felonies.
Civil liberties group says it supports the technology but has privacy concerns about how long the collected information is stored.
O'Malley says session, which begins on August 9, will be about job creation and funding for schools.
Group calls for expanded background checks and bans on high-capacity ammunition magazines.
The state had a sought delay in implementing a ruling that declared Maryland's gun permitting laws unconstitutional.
State sought delay in implementing ruling that declared Maryland's "good and substantial reason" requirement for a gun permit was unconstitutional.
Spokeswoman says department is monitoring the Colorado shooting but "have no information to indicate that theater-goers in Baltimore County are at any risk."
Collection resumed at 6 p.m., just one day after Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts stayed a Maryland Court of Appeals ruling.
The Dream Act, which provides in-state tuition rates for undocumented immigrants, will go to referendum in November.
Supporters say law gives students who are illegal immigrants "a level playing field."
Chief Justice John Roberts stays Maryland Court of Appeals ruling striking down the collection of DNA samples from people arrested for felonies.
Supporters say law gives students who are illegal immigrants "a level playing field."
The county tree planting program is expected to provide $2 million in environmental benefits over the next 30 years.
Discovery remains under investigation by county homicide detectives.