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A man who killed five employees of Maryland's Capital Gazette newspaper in 2018 was sentenced Tuesday to spend the rest of his life in jail, prosecutors say. Jarrod Ramos was sentenced to five life sentences without parole, plus one life sentence, plus 345 years, according to Anne Arundel County State's Attorney spokesperson Tia Lewis.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
This Episode is sponsored by Better Help Get 10% off your first month with betterhelp.com/morningcup June 28th: Capital Gazette Shooting (2018) You never know what will make a person snap. What is the final straw that turns a mild mannered loner into an unhinged bully. On June 28th 2018 a man on the verge, one who many knew was dangerous, walked into a building of 11 people and walked out with 5 lying dead behind him. BRAND NEW MERCH IS OUT NOW! https://www.bonfire.com/store/morningcupofmurder/ Designed in collaboration with: https://www.etsy.com/shop/LetsMakeSomeMagic Become a supporter of this podcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/morningcupofmurder Follow Morning Cup of Murder on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cupofmurder @cupofmurder Follow MCOM on Instagram: @morningcupofmurder Have a Murder or strange local true crime story you want to share, or you just want to say hi? Email the show here: morningcupofmurder@gmail.com Morning Cup of Murder is researched, written and performed by Korina Biemesderfer. Follow Korina on Instagram: @kbiemesderfer Morning Cup of Murder is Edited and Produced by Dillon Biemesderfer Follow Dillon on instagram: @dungeonsanddillons Information for this episode collected from: Wikipedia, capitalgazette.com, baltimoresun.com, wtop.com, baltimore.cbslocal.com
"The X-Files" star David Duchovny talks about his new novel "Truly Like Lightning," which had its origins in an episode that Duchovny wrote for the show. NPR's Chris Benderev spent two years getting to know survivors of the Capital Gazette shooting. And he tells their stories in a new podcast from NPR's Embedded team.
Tom's guest for today is Maria Hiaasen. Maria’s husband, Rob Hiaasen, was an experienced reporter, columnist and editor at the Capital Gazette who was recently recognized with an award for the mentoring he did with scores of young journalists. Maria has overseen the posthumous publication of a novel by Rob Hiaasen called ----Float Plan----, as well as a collection of his columns called ----Love Punch----. Today, we mark the one year anniversary of the deadliest day in the history of American journalism. It was on this day last year that five members of the staff of the Capital Gazette were murdered in their office in Annapolis. Two others were injured.
Episode #17 Notes: Don't try to name the podcast, ok, I see you. Recorded: 6/28/18 Episode Length: 41:09 This week we discussed Childish Gambino's copyright allegations, Victory Day, why people still make up excuses for R. Kelly, and after the Capital Gazette Shooting, what are the pros and cons of Independent Media? Support Explain to Me by donating to the tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/explain-to-me Find out more on the Explain to Me website. This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
TRIGGER WARNING: this episode has a frank discussion about suicide. If you are needing help, please call 1-800-273-8255. Depression is hard to cope with and it lies to you claiming you aren't wanted when you ARE. Season Five starts with a sputter as the Humorless Trio try to grapple with the week of very negative news involving everything from Kennedy skipping town, the Capital Gazette Shooting to the utter nonsense of Manafort trying to get out of jail. Campaign Spotlight: https://www.almaforarizona.org/
This is going to be a big week for tariffs in the US. Some of our allies and biggest trading partners have slapped the US with retaliatory tariffs on some of the biggest agricultural products we export such as beef, pork, and soybeans. Ginger Gibson, political reporter for Reuters joins us for a breakdown of these tariffs, the news that North Korea may be deceiving us about denuclearization, and the ongoing anger over the president's immigration policies. Next, we will get you all the details about the Capital Gazette shooting. Who were the 5 victims that had their lives taken prematurely and why the shooter's grudge over a negative article about him in the paper motivated him to carry out this attack? Brianna Sacks, Buzzfeed news reporter joins us for that and also why anyone who's ever worked at a newspaper has a Jarrod Ramos story to tell. Finally, confusion over how the shooter was identified swirled in the hours after the attack. Police used facial recognition technology to confirm his identity. As more police departments use this tech in increasing ways, it was a win for the Anne Arundel police and for the technology. Tech reporter for USA Today, Marco Della Cava joins us to discuss how the process works and why some civil liberty groups fear facial recognition technology. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
The Ombudsman Press Show: stimulating talk, live-callers, cutting edge interviews, in depth coverage of the most paramount topics in local, state and national news to keep we the taxpayers informed and in the know on the latest, hottest, and must know current events in politics, religion, headline news, and entertainment. With Host, Bishop L.J. Guillory, you can depend on honest and uncensored perspective, insightful, thoughtful, wise commentary, unforgettable guest interviews every time you tune in to The Ombudsman Press Show! Tonight: Mass Shootings, as American as Apple Pie!
Today, several perspectives on the murders at the Capital Gazette Newspaper. On Thursday afternoon, a 38 year-old man from Laurel shot five people dead and injured two others at the offices of the Gazette on Bestgate Avenue in Annapolis. A little later in the program, WYPR’s Dominique Maria Bonessi will join Tom on the phone with the latest on the investigation into the shooting. Tom also speaks with security expert Dr. Keith Williams, vice-president of Support Services at Admiral Security, a company that guards buildings like the one in which the Gazette is located. We’ll hear from Jamie Costello, an anchor at WMAR 2 News whose own newsroom was attacked a few years ago; from Dr. Paul Nestadt, a clinical psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine who studies gun violence; and from Joel Simon of the Committee to Protect Journalists.But Tom's first guest is Indira Lakshmanan, a columnist for The Boston Globe, who holds the Newmark Chair in Journalism Ethics at the Poynter Institute, an organization that provides training and resources for journalists around the world.,,,,,,,,,,__Officials say that all of the victims in the Annapolis shooting were employees of the Capital Gazette. Their names are:Rebecca Smith, 34 - Sales Assistant. Smith was recently hired as a Sales and Advertising Coordinator for the Capital Gazette.Wendi Winters, 65 - Special Publications. Winters won various journalism and public relations awards for her work in the public relations field. She was the founder and organizer of the annual P.R. Bazaar, and wrote for an array of magazines, newspapers, and online sites aside from her work at the Capital Gazette. She covered news as the community reporter and was a columnist.John McNamara, age 56 - Editor/Reporter. McNamara worked for the Capital Gazette for 20 years. He was the editor of the Bowie Blade-News and the Crofton-West County Gazette.Gerald Fischman, 61 - Editor/Writer. Fischman is a Pasadena resident. He wrote Capital Gazette's editorials and edited the editorial page and handled editing for The Sunday Capital.Rob Hiaasen, 59 -Columnist/Writer. Hiaasen started his career as a staff reporter for the Baltimore Sun before beginning his career as an assistant editor for the Capital Gazette in 2010.A vigil to remember the victims will be held tonight at the Annapolis City Dock at 8:00pm.
Is it safe to be a journalist anymore? From death threats to shootings, journalists now have to consider the dangers of reporting the news. Former CNN White House correspondent Dan Lothian and co-host Jimmy Young react to the senseless shooting in Annapolis, MD when a man targeted newsroom employees killing five. It still didn't stop that paper The Capital Gazette from printing a special daily edition. Behind The Media is available on iTunes, Stitcher, and the CLNS Media Mobile App. You can follow the show on Twitter @LittleParkMedia using the hashtag #BehindTheMedia
Alain discusses the Capital Gazette Shooting and a couple lessons inspired by people’s comments.
"media animus" --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app