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Baltimore County police brief delegation on mass shooting, juvenile crime, body-worn camera discipline and drone plan
Summary
Chief Robert McCullough told the Baltimore County delegation about a recent Towson mass shooting investigation, a domestic homicide in Rosedale, juvenile-driven crime patterns, reforms to internal affairs and plans to launch a drone first-responder program in February in Towson and Randallstown.
Chief Robert McCullough, Baltimore County Chief of Police, briefed the Baltimore County delegation during its first meeting of the 2025 legislative session on recent violent incidents, internal affairs reforms, staffing and new technology the department plans to deploy.
McCullough told the delegation the department is still investigating a mass shooting in Towson that killed one person and wounded eight others. “I assure you, that our our investigators, our agency, is not only our agency, but we'll work with all our our regional partners to, to to solve that case,” McCullough said during his presentation.
Why it matters: The briefing outlined public-safety priorities the department plans to carry into the legislative session, and it flagged potential statutory and policy changes the department is tracking or seeking help with from state lawmakers.
McCullough said the department also responded to a December domestic homicide in Rosedale in which a man was charged after shooting his girlfriend and two children. He described the emotional strain those cases place on both victims and officers and said the department is providing victim services and officer support.
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