LATEST NEWS
WANTED: Sheriff Seeks The Whereabouts Of Devone Articis Hall
LEONARDTOWN, Md. – The St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the whereabouts of Devone Articis Hall, 33, no fixed address, in connection with an assault that happened on April 3, 2024, in Lexington Park, MD. The suspect is approximately 5’ 6” tall with a thin build.
MISSING TEEN: Lavonte Draven Solomon, Age 17; Last Seen In Lexington Park On April 16
LEXINGTON PARK, Md. – St Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office seeks your help in locating a missing child: Lavonte Draven Solomon, 17, Male, Black, 5-10, 135Lbs, Rose Tattoo on Left forearm. Last seen: 21564 Gordon Court Lexington Park, 04/16/24 @ 7:46 am. If you have information that can...
St. Mary's planning board examines Stewart's Grant roads
The old saying is that two are better than one, but in the case of the proposed Stewart’s Grant development, it appears two are also better than more, at least where lanes are concerned. The St. Mary’s County Panning Commission met Monday night to discuss the entrance into the Great Mills development, which will be at George Washington Carver Boulevard and Bayside Road. It was suggested that a 0.7-mile section...
Mosquito Control Operations Underway on Parts of Maryland’s Eastern Shore
EASTERN SHORE, MD - The Maryland Department of Agriculture’s Mosquito Control Section has announced larvicide operations on freshwater woodland areas in Dorchester, Somerset, and Worcester Counties beginning today. The Department of Agriculture says neighbors can expect to see a twin engine white plane with red and blue stripes flying...
UPDATE: Suspected Meteor Lights the Sky, Possibly Crashed on Delmarva
DELMARVA - Continuing a week chock-full of fantastic phenomena, including an earthquake and a solar eclipse, Delmarva has now also experienced an apparent dazzling meteor streaking across our skies. Now, researchers believe the object that streaked through our skies may have landed on Delmarva. In the early hours of April...
Will the cicadas be in Maryland this year? Here's where you'll see the 2024 brood
BALTIMORE -- This year, trillions of cicadas will appear in the U.S., including in Maryland. We don't see cicadas every year, but when they emerge, they're loud and never alone. Peter Bieneman is general manager of Green Fields Nursery in Baltimore, so he knows a few things about plants, trees, and the cicadas that love them. "As they are laying their eggs in their life cycle, they'll damage the stem of a tree and that will cause that stem to eventually die and what we call flagging," Bieneman said.Not as many cicadas as we thought Professor Michael Raupp is known as...
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