The former Health and Human Services secretary joined the Johns Hopkins Health Policy Forum for a discussion of her decades of leadership in health care policy
Police would not confirm additional details about the incident Friday, but Johns Hopkins Hospital spokeswoman Kim Hoppe said Dr. Madhu Subramanian was treated for a gunshot wound and released.
Police would not confirm additional details about the incident Friday, but Johns Hopkins Hospital spokeswoman Kim Hoppe said Dr. Madhu Subramanian was treated for a gunshot wound and released.
Cambridge Police Commissioner Branville G. Bard, Jr. is leaving the department for Johns Hopkins University, where he will lead the schoolâs security department as its new vice president for public safety.
Bard will step into his new role at JHU beginning Aug. 30. According to spokesperson Jeremy C. Warnick, CPD Superintendents Leonard DiPietro and Christine Elow will lead the department until an acting police commissioner is chosen.
Bard announced his departure to employees at the Cambridge Police Department on Tuesday in an email later published on the City of Cambridge website.
Bard wrote he was âgratefulâ for the âlifetime relationshipsâ he built at CPD and the departmentâs accomplishments during his four year tenure as commissioner.