Baltimore Politics Examiner
Showing entries for Category: 4AM-Last-Call
Liquor News And Ideas
POSTED May 1, 5:27 PM
Linden Bar and Liquors remains open for now.

The owner's lawyer tries to make it appear that the owner is a poor everyday store owner who will be in a horrible financial situation if he has to sell his liquor license.  The truth is a lot different.  The poor people of the area who have flocked to his store for the last few years have helped the owner live a lifestyle they could only dream of.   In 2005 he paid over $800,000 for his almost 6000 square foot house in northern Baltimore County.  If you can spend $800,000 on a house one would think you could invest a little money in a security guard for your drug infested liquor store.

Since liquor and liquor laws seem to be in the news lately I thought I would bring up an idea of mine that I have tried to promote in the past.  I believe the state should grant the right to sell 4AM liquor licenses to Baltimore.  There are quite a few locations that are not near anything residential and thus later hours would not disturb the peace.  Places like Sonar, Powerplant Live, the Bar formerly known as Hammerjacks, and others around that area could purchase this new license.   Establishments in residential areas would not be eligible for these licenses.  The money generated from these license sales and yearly renewal fees would go directly toward lowering our property taxes.   Baltimore would have a unique feature that few other cities offer.  This could increase potential convention revenue and definitely would increase liquor sales (and taxes generated from them).  Hotel and cab revenue would also go up because of responsible people drinking too much to drive.  The bottom line is Baltimore could be a lot more fun and it could help contribute to lowering our property taxes.
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Who Killed Ronnie White?It's been a rather disturbing week in Prince George's County following the death of suspected copkiller Ronnie White in his jail cell. Given that he was in solitary confinement, it's almost certain that he was strangled by one of the prison guards or other prison officials. Even more disturbing are the guards' attempts to stonewall the investigation into White's death. I think Marc Fisher, in his column this week, aptly described the corrosive effect of such behavior on respect for law and order:So why should bad guys and ordinary citizens pay heed when police and prosecutors lecture them about how it's their civic duty to come forward with information about crimes? If law enforcement officers won't think of themselves as righteous whistle-blowers rather than as rats or snitches, how can a system that depends on witness testimony possibly function? Compunding this problem, moreover, is Prince George's reputation for police brutality. Ta-Nehisi Coates, whose blog you should be reading, has noted that Prince George's County has paid out about $20 million in brutality lawsuits in the last eight years. This latest incident will likely result in a few more million the County will be on the hook for.Now, none of this should obscure the death of Cpl. Richard Findley, the officer who White is alleged to have killed. Indeed, the fact that someone in the County jail decided to go vigilante does Findley's memory a disservice -- by turning his death from a matter of justice into one of revenge, Ronnie White's killer has helped undermine the law that he, and Findley, swore to uphold.
2 hrs 58 mins ago (Free State Politics)

 
 

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