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Man shot, killed in Prince George's County parking garage, police say
Man shot, killed in Prince George's County parking garage, police say

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Man shot, killed in Prince George's County parking garage, police say

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, Md. () — Police in Prince George's County said they are investigating a fatal shooting that happened in a parking garage early Saturday morning. In a social media post, the Prince George's County Police Department (PGPD) said officers responded to a shooting in the 400 block of Warfield Drive at around 4:40 a.m. Police investigate overnight shooting that left man hurt in Southeast DC There, they found a man outside in a parking garage, suffering from a gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Detectives encourage anyone with information to contact Crime Solvers online or to submit a tip using the P3 Tips app. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Man dead after mid-morning shooting in Prince George's County
Man dead after mid-morning shooting in Prince George's County

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Man dead after mid-morning shooting in Prince George's County

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, Md. () — Police in Prince George's County are at the scene of a deadly shooting that happened in the middle of the morning on Friday. Details remain limited, however, in a social media post made just before 11 a.m., the Prince George's County Police Department (PGPD) said officers were at the scene in the 7000 block of Allentown Road. Gov. Moore welcomes new facility to Hagerstown, bringing over 100 jobs PGPD had responded an hour earlier — at around 10 a.m. — to the report of a shooting. There, they found a man outside on the ground suffering from gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Detectives were working to establish a potential motive and identify suspects into the late morning and early afternoon. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Prince George's County Crime Solvers. Check for updates. To keep up with the latest news and weather updates, download our Mobile App on iPhone or Android. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining The Atlantic as Staff Writers
Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining The Atlantic as Staff Writers

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining The Atlantic as Staff Writers

As The Atlantic continues a major expansion of its editorial staff, today editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg is announcing that award-winning journalists Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel will both become staff writers. Jamie has been a contributing writer for The Atlantic and will join the staff next week. She won this year's National Magazine Award for reporting for the March 2024 cover story, 'To Stop a Shooter,' about the Parkland shooting and the systemic failure by America's police forces to properly train their officers to confront mass shooters––and a society in denial about what it would really take to stop such tragedies. Ahead of joining staff in a few months, Josh had his first piece for The Atlantic published this morning: a romping profile of Anthony Weiner's attempted political comeback as he runs for New York's city council. From the lead: 'The last time we saw him, we saw all of him. Our subject is Anthony Weiner, whose surname was a burden long before it became a curse—so fused with his disgrace that you can't say it without triggering an avalanche of cringe.' Below is Jeffrey's note to staff announcing these hires: Dear everyone, I'm writing this morning with excellent news. Two of journalism's most esteemed talents are joining The Atlantic as staff writers: Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel. It should go without saying, but I'll say it anyway: This is a big day for our magazine and our ambitions. I'll introduce them in alphabetical order, though for most of you, Jamie, who is already a contributing writer, needs no introduction: Her brilliant cover story for us, 'To Stop a Shooter,' was the recipient of this year's National Magazine Award for Reporting. (In her second article for us, an equally ambitious and accomplished piece of reporting, Jamie embedded with the Prince George's County Police Department's carjacking unit.) Jamie's brave, adventurous, and savvy reporting, her embrace of society's deepest complexities, and her ability to write about the most challenging characters and morally vexing issues with depth and fairness make her a perfect fit for the staff of The Atlantic. Even before winning one of the prestigious prizes in journalism, Jamie was already known as one of the best writers on criminal justice issues in America. She is the author of Standoff: Race, Policing, and a Deadly Assault That Gripped a Nation, which grew out of a story she wrote for The Dallas Morning News, which won the Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Writing. Jamie began her career as a newspaper reporter in South Carolina and Florida (where she was part of a legendary crew at The Tampa Bay Times), before transitioning to writing magazine features; in addition to her work for us, she has written for, among other places, Texas Monthly, D Magazine, Politico, The Washington Post, and The New York Times Magazine. She has also been an associate professor of journalism at the University of Dallas. She will be working out of the Wharf, and her first day on staff with us is May 5. Now, onto Josh, who is new to The Atlantic (his first piece for us, about the return of Anthony Weiner, is up on the site this morning), but he is certainly among the most esteemed and well-known journalists in our country. Josh is a person of immense talent and range, and across his legendary career, he has led extraordinary journalism organizations through extraordinary times. Josh is joining us to write mainly at the intersection of technology, AI, and government policy, though (as you will see in the Weiner piece) he can write fluidly, and wittily, about most anything. Josh is the former editor of Bloomberg Businessweek and served as the chief content officer for Bloomberg Media, where he oversaw media operations across five continents. He is widely, and appropriately, credited for reinventing Businessweek. He created Vice News Tonight on HBO and has produced feature-length documentaries for HBO, Netflix, and Apple TV+. He served as executive producer (alongside Oprah Winfrey) of ABC's AI and the Future of Us, and he has won 12 Emmys and Peabody Awards for his work. Josh began his career at Vibe magazine, and then went on to fruitful employment at Time magazine. Most recently, Josh wrote a regular column for The Washington Post focused on AI. He continues to produce documentaries and is currently writing a book for Simon & Schuster about ways in which AI can be used for the common good. He will be based at Prince Street, and he will start on our staff this summer. This is a good day for The Atlantic. Please join me in welcoming Jamie and Josh to our team. Best wishes, Jeff The Atlantic has announced a number of new hires since the start of the year, including managing editor Griff Witte; staff writers Tyler Austin Harper, Isaac Stanley-Becker, Nick Miroff, Ashley Parker, Missy Ryan, Michael Scherer, and Caity Weaver; senior editors Jenna Johnson and Dan Zak; and contributing writers Jonathan Lemire and Alex Reisner. Please reach out with any questions or requests. Press Contact: Anna Bross, The Atlantic | press@ Article originally published at The Atlantic

Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining
Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining

Atlantic

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Atlantic

Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel Joining

As The Atlantic continues a major expansion of its editorial staff, today editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg is announcing that award-winning journalists Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel will both become staff writers. Jamie has been a contributing writer for The Atlantic and will join the staff next week. She won this year's National Magazine Award for reporting for the March 2024 cover story, ' To Stop a Shooter,' about the Parkland shooting and the systemic failure by America's police forces to properly train their officers to confront mass shooters––and a society in denial about what it would really take to stop such tragedies. Ahead of joining staff in a few months, Josh had his first piece for The Atlantic published this morning: a romping profile of Anthony Weiner's attempted political comeback as he runs for New York's city council. From the lead: 'The last time we saw him, we saw all of him. Our subject is Anthony Weiner, whose surname was a burden long before it became a curse—so fused with his disgrace that you can't say it without triggering an avalanche of cringe.' Below is Jeffrey's note to staff announcing these hires: Dear everyone, I'm writing this morning with excellent news. Two of journalism's most esteemed talents are joining The Atlantic as staff writers: Jamie Thompson and Josh Tyrangiel. It should go without saying, but I'll say it anyway: This is a big day for our magazine and our ambitions. I'll introduce them in alphabetical order, though for most of you, Jamie, who is already a contributing writer, needs no introduction: Her brilliant cover story for us, ' To Stop a Shooter,' was the recipient of this year's National Magazine Award for Reporting. (In her second article for us, an equally ambitious and accomplished piece of reporting, Jamie embedded with the Prince George's County Police Department's carjacking unit.) Jamie's brave, adventurous, and savvy reporting, her embrace of society's deepest complexities, and her ability to write about the most challenging characters and morally vexing issues with depth and fairness make her a perfect fit for the staff of The Atlantic. Even before winning one of the prestigious prizes in journalism, Jamie was already known as one of the best writers on criminal justice issues in America. She is the author of Standoff: Race, Policing, and a Deadly Assault That Gripped a Nation, which grew out of a story she wrote for The Dallas Morning News, which won the Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Writing. Jamie began her career as a newspaper reporter in South Carolina and Florida (where she was part of a legendary crew at The Tampa Bay Times), before transitioning to writing magazine features; in addition to her work for us, she has written for, among other places, Texas Monthly, D Magazine, Politico, The Washington Post, and The New York Times Magazine. She has also been an associate professor of journalism at the University of Dallas. She will be working out of the Wharf, and her first day on staff with us is May 5. Now, onto Josh, who is new to The Atlantic (his first piece for us, about the return of Anthony Weiner, is up on the site this morning), but he is certainly among the most esteemed and well-known journalists in our country. Josh is a person of immense talent and range, and across his legendary career, he has led extraordinary journalism organizations through extraordinary times. Josh is joining us to write mainly at the intersection of technology, AI, and government policy, though (as you will see in the Weiner piece) he can write fluidly, and wittily, about most anything. Josh is the former editor of Bloomberg Businessweek and served as the chief content officer for Bloomberg Media, where he oversaw media operations across five continents. He is widely, and appropriately, credited for reinventing Businessweek. He created Vice News Tonight on HBO and has produced feature-length documentaries for HBO, Netflix, and Apple TV+. He served as executive producer (alongside Oprah Winfrey) of ABC's AI and the Future of Us, and he has won 12 Emmys and Peabody Awards for his work. Josh began his career at Vibe magazine, and then went on to fruitful employment at Time magazine. Most recently, Josh wrote a regular column for The Washington Post focused on AI. He continues to produce documentaries and is currently writing a book for Simon & Schuster about ways in which AI can be used for the common good. He will be based at Prince Street, and he will start on our staff this summer. This is a good day for The Atlantic. Please join me in welcoming Jamie and Josh to our team. Best wishes, Jeff

How a defunct gang registry helped deliver Kilmar Abrego García to a Salvadoran prison
How a defunct gang registry helped deliver Kilmar Abrego García to a Salvadoran prison

Boston Globe

time20-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

How a defunct gang registry helped deliver Kilmar Abrego García to a Salvadoran prison

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Yet federal officials are bucking a Maryland District Court judge's orders to facilitate Abrego García's return — and have launched a full-throated effort outside of court to label him a gang member, a 'terrorist' and a 'human trafficker.' Advertisement 'Abrego García is an illegal alien MS-13 gang member and foreign terrorist,' Trump said during a White House news briefing Friday, citing a dossier on Abrego García his administration has widely circulated during the past week. 'This is the man that the Democrats are wanting us to fly back from El Salvador to be a happily ensconced member of the USA family.' Advertisement To date, the only evidence federal authorities have produced in court to support such allegations is the Maryland police detective's 2019 gang sheet. But a Washington Post review of court documents and other public records found that attorneys and judges have questioned the integrity of the allegations in that document since it was written. The detective who filled out the gang sheet — Ivan Mendez — was suspended from the Prince George's County Police Department days after detaining Abrego García because he'd been accused of tipping off a sex worker he had hired about an ongoing investigation into a brothel she ran. He was later criminally indicted and fired after pleading guilty to misconduct in office, one of several members of the gang unit who were criminally prosecuted. Mendez did not respond to messages seeking comment. A rally takes place April 15 outside the US District Court for the District of Maryland in Greenbelt, Maryland, in support of Abrego García. Maansi Srivastava/for the Washington Post The gang unit in Prince George's County, whose residents are majority Black and Latino, stopped using the Gang Field Interview Sheet as a source of intelligence gathering about three years ago, amid a civil lawsuit that alleged young men of color were disproportionately represented in it. And in January, federal officials in the Washington region decommissioned GangNET, a database of alleged gang members that those field sheets fed into, because participation drastically tapered as its credibility came into question. Lucia Curiel, an attorney who represented Abrego García after the 2019 encounter, said he fled gang threats in El Salvador as a teenager and had no contact with police before the Home Depot arrest. If not for Mendez's allegations, she said, Abrego García would not have been on ICE's radar. 'It's the direct through line to what's happening today,' Curiel said. 'All the evidence, or lack thereof, suggests this is the single source of the allegation, and the allegation is the single reason he was deported and sent to CECOT. The two agencies to blame are the Trump administration and the Prince George's County Police Department.' Advertisement The gang unit The Prince George's County Police Department has long faced allegations that the agency's tactics targeted Black and Latino people. From 2004 to 2009, the department was placed under federal oversight after the agency was investigated for canine unit brutality and shooting more people than any other police department in the country. A group of Black and Latino officers sued the department in 2018, alleging police leaders discriminated against officers of color and enabled racist behaviors that harmed residents. Last year, the department was sued again over the gang unit and its use of the GangNET database after community members repeatedly complained that officers were racially profiling young Latino men and incorrectly labeling them as gang members. The department began participating in the database in 2012, after receiving a multimillion-dollar federal grant from the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, known as HIDTA, which hosted and maintained it. The county had developed a Gang Field Interview Sheet to collect information on suspected gang affiliates, said a former member of the gang unit who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. Related : Officials from HIDTA, which coordinates task forces between local and federal law enforcement to combat drug trafficking, trained county officers on the federal codes and regulations guiding the database. The gang unit detectives did not have the power to directly enter data into GangNET, the former gang unit member said, but the information came directly from their field reports with no built-in vetting. Advertisement The gang unit was incentivized to fill the database, said the former member, because intelligence gathering was a core function of the grant funding. When the gang unit's leadership changed in the mid-2010s, the officer said, standards fell. Expectations shifted to 'you better be submitting names, or you won't last in the gang unit,' the officer said, citing conversations with other gang unit members. 'If you're not submitting names, then your career, your time in that unit is very limited.' Some officers in the gang unit lacked cultural understanding, the officer said, and Latino residents were 'looked at a certain way.' If someone wore 'a certain type of clothing' or had a 'certain type of tattoo,' he said, 'they were going to get … stopped and then interviewed and then put in the system.' Attorneys representing those apprehended by the gang unit saw those patterns. Curiel said she and her colleagues at Amica Center for Immigrant Rights - who were representing people in deportation proceedings — realized nearly a dozen cases started the same way. Young men, some of them teenagers, were stopped by police but rarely charged with a crime. A member of the Prince George's County gang unit — often Mendez — would fill out a Gang Interview Field Sheet, she said. Then, local officers would notify ICE. A Prince George's County police cruiser in 2022. Eric Lee/For The Washington Post Curiel flagged her observations to the immigration advocacy group CASA, which notified the county council's only Latino member at the time, Deni Taveras. Together, they began campaigning for transparency around the database, an effort that Curiel took to court when she was asked in the spring of 2019 to represent a man named Kilmar Abrego García. Advertisement The gang sheet On March 28, 2019, Abrego García drove to a Home Depot in Hyattsville, Maryland, and stood outside the day laborer's entrance looking for work. Three other Latino men in their 20s were already there, according to police records. Abrego García did not know them well, his attorneys said. A Hyattsville Police Department detective approached the others in the group. Within minutes, members of the Prince George's County police gang unit arrived — and put all of them, including Abrego García, in handcuffs. An incident report from Hyattsville police names the other three men, but not Abrego García, and says the detective approached them because he saw members of the group 'stashing something underneath a car' in the parking lot — which Mendez later said were small plastic bottles containing marijuana. The Hyattsville report makes no mention of suspected gang activity. The field interview sheet — the only record Prince George's police claims it has from that day — offers a different narrative. Mendez wrote that the Hyattsville detective had recognized a man in the group as a member of the MS-13 Sailors clique. That man, court records show, was on probation at the time after being convicted of misdemeanor assault and participating in gang activity, charges that had stemmed from a fight at a shopping mall. Another man was labeled a high-ranking gang member because of a tattoo featuring horns, and Mendez called a third man a potential recruit because he was standing nearby. Abrego García, Mendez wrote, had been identified by an unnamed confidential informant as an 'active member' of MS-13's Western clique in Upstate New York — a place he has never lived. Mendez cited Abrego García's clothes as further proof, including a hooded sweatshirt that featured green bands covering the eyes, ears and mouth of Benjamin Franklin's face as printed on the $100 bill. His wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, would later say she bought him the sweatshirt — for sale on FashionNova — because she liked the design. Advertisement While all four men were detained and questioned, none were ever charged with a crime, according to court documents. During hours of questioning, Abrego García repeatedly denied gang membership, according to court documents. Prince George's police officers told Abrego García that he would be released if he provided information about other gang members, according to his attorney, but he could not because he did not have any. Then police handed Abrego García over to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, who arrested him for being in the country illegally. Related : A month later, at Abrego García's bond hearing before Immigration Judge Elizabeth Kessler, a Justice Department attorney argued that he was a flight risk and public safety threat — citing solely the allegations in Mendez's report. The government attorney also submitted a federal form claiming Abrego García and one of the other men at Home Depot had been 'detained in connection to a murder investigation.' The Post could find no mention of a murder investigation in any other public records, and Prince George's County police did not respond to questions about other investigations involving Abrego García or the agency's Gang Unit. At the hearing, Kessler noted that discrepancy - expressing reservations about the strength of the evidence linking Abrego García to gang activity. 'I am not particularly concerned about the conclusions that there may be an indicia of gang membership from clothing,' she said, according to a transcript of the hearing. 'The respondent can certainly wear whatever he wants in this country and I will be reluctant to place any weight on that.' Still, Kessler said she was 'very seriously concerned' by the sheet filled out by Mendez and ultimately denied Abrego García bond. For the next three months, Abrego García sat in ICE detention. At his August 2019 deportation hearing, Abrego García and Vasquez Sura — who had married through a glass partition at the ICE detention center — testified for two days before Judge David M. Jones, a Trump administration appointee. Abrego García told the judge that as a teen in El Salvador, the Barrio 18 gang attempted to extort his mother's pupusa business, then recruit him and his brother into their ranks - threatening to kill them if they didn't join. When given the chance to make their case regarding Abrego García's alleged gang ties, the federal government produced just one piece of evidence: the Prince George's County gang field interview sheet. Curiel's own attempts to question the gang unit officers were thwarted. The county police department's inspector general told her Mendez wasn't available because, just days after Abrego García's detention, he had been suspended regarding the sex worker investigation. Other gang unit officers declined to discuss Abrego García's case unless compelled by a judge. The Hyattsville detective, Curiel said in court papers, never returned her calls. In his Oct. 10 ruling, Jones granted Abrego García withholding of removal, a protection available to migrants who face likely persecution or harm if returned to their country. Jones did not comment on the government's allegations that Abrego García was a gang member but said his testimony about safety fears was credible. The ruling was rare for the former military judge, who has an above average denial rate for asylum cases, according to court data. Federal officials under the first Trump administration did not appeal. On Oct. 23, 2019, Abrego García was released from custody and ordered to check in with ICE annually. Records reviewed by The Post show he fully complied. Shortly after his release, the Prince George's County Council voted unanimously to bar all county agencies from engaging in immigration enforcement. Jennifer Vasquez Sura, wife of Abrego García, weeps as Sen. Van Hollen holds a news conference April 18. Pete Kiehart/For The Washington Post A two-fronted battle Five years later, Abrego García was driving in Prince George's with his 5-year-old autistic son when he was pulled over by ICE officers. Abrego García called his wife on speakerphone, she said, and agents told Vasquez Sura she had 10 minutes to pick up their son or he would be turned over to Child Protective Services. When she arrived, ICE officers said his immigration status had changed and asked if she wanted to say goodbye. Abrego García was crying. The next day, on March 13, he called her from detention in Louisiana and said ICE agents had showed him photos they'd secretly taken of him at a restaurant and basketball court, asking him to identify people in the background. But Abrego García said he didn't know them. On March 15, from a Texas detention center, Abrego García called his wife again in a panic. He was being deported to El Salvador. Vasquez Sura hired two new attorneys: one in El Salvador, who could find no criminal charges pending there, and one in Maryland, who filed a lawsuit in US District Court. The judge overseeing that case, Paula Xinis, has repeatedly ordered the Trump administration to facilitate Abrego García's return — a ruling largely affirmed by a federal appeals court and the US Supreme Court. The government's gang allegations, Xinis said in one ruling, are unsubstantiated. The Trump administration has turned to the court of public opinion. This week, Attorney General Pam Bondi released what she described as evidence of Abrego García's MS-13 ties, all of it based on the Prince George's Gang Field Interview Sheet. The Department of Homeland Security unearthed and posted to social media a court petition Vasquez Sura filed against Abrego García in 2021 that stated he struck her during an argument, saying it proved he was violent. Vasquez Sura, who never followed up on the petition, said the altercation stemmed from the emotional and psychological trauma her husband experienced during the 2019 ICE detention. 'Kilmar has always been a loving partner and father,' she said, 'and I will continue to stand by him and demand justice for him.' As proof of their allegations that Abrego García is a 'human trafficker,' Trump officials also released a DHS investigative report regarding a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee — which also cites the Prince George's gang allegations. It wasn't immediately clear when the report, which has no date but appears to have been printed on Thursday, was produced. It alleges that Abrego García was pulled over for speeding by a Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper, according to the report. He told the trooper that the seven other men in the van, owned by his boss, were fellow construction workers he was driving from Texas back to Maryland. The trooper, according to the DHS investigative report, said a lack of luggage in the van made him suspect potential labor trafficking. The trooper ran his name and saw an instruction to notify federal authorities, according to the Tennessee Highway Patrol. But federal officials who were contacted said there was no need to detain him, the agency said, and Abrego García was issued a warning for driving with an expired driver's license and released. No other charges were filed. On Thursday, the US Court of Appeals excoriated the Trump administration. 'The government is asserting a right to stash away residents of this country in foreign prisons without the semblance of due process that is the foundation of our constitutional order,' the appeals court wrote. 'The government asserts that Abrego Garcia is a terrorist and a member of MS-13. Perhaps, but perhaps not. Regardless, he is still entitled to due process.' Steve Thompson, Maria Sacchetti and Jeremy Roebuck contributed to this report.

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