N-word mystery in MTA bus assault case -
Summary from United States, from articles in English
|
On Dec. 4, Kreager and her boyfriend , Troy Ennis, boarded the No. 27 Maryland Transit Administration bus heading toward downtown Baltimore. (article 3)
Kreager claims that when she sat down, some girls from Robert Poole Middle School told her to either move or be moved. (article 3)
Kreager said the girls, along with some boys from the school, attacked her and Ennis, leaving Kreager bleeding from head wounds, her left eye swollen shut and the socket broken in two places. (article 3)
An adjudicatory hearing that began Jan. 31 continued yesterday in Judge David Young's courtroom at the Juvenile Justice Center for the three boys and two girls still charged. (article 3)
The first few weeks of the hearing, defense attorneys for the students made several motions to have evidence taped statements the teens made to Maryland Transit Administration detectives and identifications from photo arrays suppressed. (article 3)
Williams testified that Ennis said no such thing, and then asked Judge David Young to order Thomas to use the term " N-word not the actual word. (article 1)
By the time Unique finished testifying, I had a new appreciation of the Japanese film Rashomon, which tells the story of a crime through the memories of four witnesses who give accounts that conflict on major points. (article 2)
|
Event tracking:
Story keywords
|
Kreager, Ennis, Williams, juvenile, bus |
Source articles
- N-word mystery in MTA bus assault case - (baltimoresun.com, 06/04/2008, 622 words)
- Bus case decision: Whom to believe? - (baltimoresun.com, 06/04/2008, 727 words)
- Joyce King may well have saved Sarah Kreager's lif... (baltimoresun.com, 06/04/2008, 220 words)
- It's 'little dear' justice in city - (baltimoresun.com, 06/04/2008, 625 words)
|
|