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Baltimore County man charged for setting semi-truck on fire along Maryland interstate

Baltimore County man charged for setting semi-truck on fire along Maryland interstate

CBS News06-03-2025
A Baltimore County man is facing charges for setting his semi-truck on fire on I-68 in Allegany County, Maryland, according to the State's Fire Marshal's Office.
Robert Steven Silver, 42, from Cockeysville, was arrested on Tuesday on charges of second-degree arson, malicious burning/fraud, and reckless endangerment. He was released after posting a $10,000 unsecured bond, according to fire officials.
Officials said a tractor-trailer caught fire around 8 p.m. on October 12, 2024, in the area of mile marker 50 in Cumberland. Investigators determined the intentionally set fire caused around $30,000 in damages.
Deputy State Fire Marshals found that Silver left the disabled truck along the interstate, later returned to set the fire, and went back to Baltimore County.
Family Safety Day
On March 1, The Fire Museum of Maryland, located in Lutherville, hosted a Family Safety Day to give families resources and knowledge to stay safe in emergencies.
The museum combined safety education and interactive activities for a day intertwined with fun and learning.
"It's really important to be prepared for things...a fire, a hurricane, a tree that could fall on your roof, a flood, a snowstorm that knocks out your power. There are so many things to think about and here is where we will give you the information you need to be prepared," said Amy Landsman, Media Relations Director at The Fire Museum of Maryland.
The safety day included fire safety tips to interactive activities from experts at Johns Hopkins, The Office of the State Fire Marshal, and the Baltimore County Fire Department,
"It brings so many people into the museum to learn about the history. We believe that safety, and learning about safety, is such an important part of our mission," said Landsman.
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Calgary sees big decline in crime severity, now well below the national average
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Calgary sees big decline in crime severity, now well below the national average

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Are guns the biggest killer of ‘children and teens'?
Are guns the biggest killer of ‘children and teens'?

Washington Post

time18-06-2025

  • Washington Post

Are guns the biggest killer of ‘children and teens'?

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No matter how you slice the data, the United States stands unique among similar large and wealthy nations with so many firearms deaths of people under age 18. None has firearms deaths among the top four causes of death for children, according to a 2023 study by KFF, a health policy organization. The U.S. mortality rate is nearly 10 times that of Canada, which among U.S. peers has the second-highest child and teen firearm death rate. There are so few firearm deaths of children in other countries that it ranks 15th as a cause of death in Japan and Britain, and 13th in Germany and the Netherlands, KFF said. A study published recently in JAMA Pediatrics traces the rise in gun deaths among Americans 17 and under to the 2010 Supreme Court decision, McDonald v. Chicago, that said states could not infringe on the Second Amendment right to possess firearms. The study found a clear distinction in the rise of deaths in states that enacted weaker gun laws. 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(About our rating scale) Send us facts to check by filling out this form Sign up for The Fact Checker weekly newsletter The Fact Checker is a verified signatory to the International Fact-Checking Network code of principles

Silver Airways abruptly shuts down, tells passengers not to go to airport
Silver Airways abruptly shuts down, tells passengers not to go to airport

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

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Silver Airways abruptly shuts down, tells passengers not to go to airport

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