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Police identify man killed in ATV collision in Prince George’s County Fire on Metro tracks shuts down Glenmont station for an hour
(about 2 hours later)
A man was found stabbed to death in a recreational area of an elementary school in Seabrook on Monday afternoon, Prince George’s County police said. The Glenmont Metro station was shut down for a time Monday night after fire broke out on tracks between the station and a rail yard.
Around 4 p.m., a caller contacted authorities about a man in a park in the 6700 block of 97th Avenue, said Officer Michael Owen, a department spokesman. Officers who went to the area, in the vicinity of Gaywood Elementary School and a neighborhood park, found that the man had been stabbed to death. He was pronounced dead at the scene, Owen said. The school was closed for vacation. Smoke was reported in the station shortly before 9 p.m. and firefighters searched for the source, according to Montgomery County fire spokesman Pete Piringer. A train in the station was being evacuated, he said. No injuries were reported.
Owen said that police are investigating the death as a homicide. By about 9:30, Piringer said the smoke had been cleared. Metro spokesman Dan Stessel said the shutdown lasted for about an hour.
There was no indication that there would be any ill effect on the tracks in the Glenmont Metro area on Tuesday.
The Baltimore trial for the second of six officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray will begin with jury selection Jan. 11, five days later than scheduled, according to a statement from the Maryland court system.
Proceedings in the case against Officer Caesar Goodson, who faces a charge of second-degree murder, among others, will include a Jan. 6 hearing to consider pretrial motions. Those could include a bid by his attorneys to move the high-profile case out of Baltimore.
The same judge denied a similar attempt by the first defendant to be tried.
Gray died April 19, a week after he was chased down and arrested in West Baltimore.
A man was found dead in a recreational area of an elementary school in Seabrook on Monday afternoon, Prince George’s County police said.
About 4 p.m., a caller contacted authorities about a man in a park in the 6700 block of 97th Avenue, said Officer Michael Owen, a department spokesman.
Officers who went to the area, in the vicinity of Gaywood Elementary School and a neighborhood park, found that the man had been stabbed to death. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The school was closed for vacation.
Police identified the man who died in an ATV collision in Prince George’s County as Jerome Odom, 29, of Capitol Heights.Police identified the man who died in an ATV collision in Prince George’s County as Jerome Odom, 29, of Capitol Heights.
Odom and a teenage passenger were riding the vehicle, which is not legal on county roads, about 5:45 p.m. Sunday.Odom and a teenage passenger were riding the vehicle, which is not legal on county roads, about 5:45 p.m. Sunday.
Police think that Odom was trying to turn left from Walker Mill Road onto Waterford Drive in Capitol Heights when an SUV going in the opposite direction on Walker Mill Road hit his vehicle.Police think that Odom was trying to turn left from Walker Mill Road onto Waterford Drive in Capitol Heights when an SUV going in the opposite direction on Walker Mill Road hit his vehicle.
Police said Odom and the teenager, who suffered serious injuries, were not wearing helmets.
The SUV driver was not hurt, police said.
The Baltimore trial for the second of six officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray will begin with jury selection Jan. 11, five days later than scheduled, according to a statement from the Maryland court system.
Proceedings in the case against Officer Caesar Goodson, who faces a charge of second-degree murder, among others, will include a Jan. 6 hearing to consider pretrial motions.
Those could include a bid by his attorneys to move the high-profile case out of Baltimore. The same judge denied a similar attempt by the first defendant to be tried.
Gray died April 19, a week after he was chased down and arrested in West Baltimore’s Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood.
The medical examiner ruled his death a homicide from a spine injury that authorities said occurred while he was being transported in the back of a police van.
His death sparked days of protests and a riot that put Baltimore under curfew for nearly a week.
The trial for the officer tried first, William G. Porter, ended in a mistrial. The most serious charge Porter faced was manslaughter.