This is wjz tv, baltimore. From the city to the counties to your neighborhood, now its complete coverage. Its wjz, marylands news station. Military under fire. A new push in washington to overhaul how the military handles sex assault victims. When i reported the assault, my commander responded with retaliation. Heres what people are talking about tonight. Taking a stuff stand against Sexual Assaults in the military. Demanding the department of defense do something about the way those cases are dealt with. We are live and we have more on the new push. Reporter some lawmakers say military prosecutors, not commanders, should be making the decisions about whether Sexual Assault cases move forward. A graduate of the naval academy, she left the marines after she says she was gang raped by fellow officers. The incident allegedly happened in 2009 at the Marine Barracks in washington, d. C. Where clay says the commander fostered a hostile environment. He decided in writing that calling officers
Fredericksburg officials invited state lawmakers and representatives from CSX Transportation to Railroad Avenue in the Mayfield neighborhood Friday afternoon. The aim was to provide a visual of how closely the tanker cars that CSX uses to transport propane to a customer in Caroline County sits to the homes of Mayfield residents.
But there was just one problem: For one of the few times in the past two months, there were no tanker cars in the railyard.
Still, Fredericksburg City Manager Tim Baroody provided lawmakers and CSX officials with a breakdown of the 56 tankers he counted in the neighborhood from Feb. 24 through March 4. All but three of the tankers contained liquefied petroleum gas; two had unidentifiable contents and one contained chlorine.
Fredericksburg officials invited state lawmakers and representatives from CSX Transportation to Railroad Avenue in the Mayfield neighborhood Friday afternoon. The aim was to provide a visual of how closely the tanker cars that CSX uses to transport propane to a customer in Caroline County sits to the homes of Mayfield residents.
But there was just one problem: For one of the few times in the past two months, there were no tanker cars in the railyard.
Still, Fredericksburg City Manager Tim Baroody provided lawmakers and CSX officials with a breakdown of the 56 tankers he counted in the neighborhood from Feb. 24 through March 4. All but three of the tankers contained liquefied petroleum gas; two had unidentifiable contents and one contained chlorine.