NEWS
December 30, 2004
On December 20, 2004 GREGORY ALLEN devoted son of Jean M. and the late Frank H. Hogan; devoted father of Patrick Gregory Hogan; devoted brother of Sandy Abbott, Thomas A. "Tom" Hogan, Kathy Lain and the late Frank "Butch" Hogan, all of Pasadena. Family will receive friends at the family owned and operated Mc Cully-Polyniak Funeral Home, P.A., 3204 Mountain Road (Pasadena) on Sunday, January 2 from 3 to 5 p.m. where memorial service will be held at 4 p.m. Interment will be private. Those desiring may make contributions to the Hogan Family, c/o Mrs. Jean A. Hogan.
NEWS
November 7, 2004
Eleanor Margaret Hogan (nee Helsel); devoted father of Rona Lee Howe and her husband James, Roxanne G. Gump and her husband the late Fred, and Thurman S. Hogan Jr. and his wife Nancy; loving brother of Lavelle Streeter, Grace Burchfild, Margaret Croswell, Lon Boone Hogan, Allen C. Hogan, and the late Jule Hogan and the late L.L. "Babe" Hogan; loving grandfather of Timothy M. Van Scoyoc, the late Jennifer Gump Cobert, Robert C. Van Scoyoc, Robert W....
NEWS
By NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE | October 8, 2004
WASHINGTON -- A federal judge held a reporter for The New York Times in contempt of court yesterday for refusing to name her sources to prosecutors investigating the disclosure of the identity of a covert CIA agent. The reporter, Judith Miller, published no articles about the agent, Valerie Plame. Nonetheless, the judge, Thomas F. Hogan, ordered her jailed for as long as 18 months, noting that she had contemplated writing such an article and had conducted interviews for it. Hogan suspended the sanction until a planned appeal is concluded, and he released Miller on her own recognizance.
NEWS
By Harry Berkowitz and Harry Berkowitz,NEWSDAY | October 8, 2004
A federal judge yesterday ordered New York Times reporter Judith Miller to be jailed for refusing to testify about confidential sources in a special prosecutor's probe of the disclosure of a covert CIA officer's identity. U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan in Washington said Miller could remain free while she appeals. Hogan's contempt-of-court ruling grew out of an investigation into whether a crime was committed by any government official when the identity of Valerie Plame was disclosed in print in July 2003 by columnist Robert Novak and other journalists, although Miller ended up not writing about Plame.
NEWS
By NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE | September 17, 2004
A federal district judge in Washington has ordered a reporter for The New York Times to testify before a grand jury investigating the disclosure of the identity of a covert CIA officer. In a decision dated Sept. 9 and released yesterday, the judge, Thomas F. Hogan, said the reporter, Judith Miller, must describe any conversations she had with "a specified executive branch official" as "part of the ongoing investigation of the potentially illegal disclosure of the identity of CIA official Valerie Plame."
NEWS
By NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE | August 10, 2004
WASHINGTON - A federal judge held a reporter for Time magazine in contempt of court yesterday for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating the leak of the identity of a covert CIA officer. In an order issued July 20 but not made public until yesterday, U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan ruled that Matthew Cooper of Time and Meet the Press host Tim Russert were required to testify "regarding alleged conversations they had with a specified executive branch official." NBC News issued a statement saying that Russert already had been interviewed under oath by prosecutors on Saturday under an agreement to avoid a protracted court fight.
NEWS
May 20, 2004
On May 18, 2004, KATHERINE M. HOGAN (nee Feiler); beloved wife of the late Ray M. Hogan; devoted mother of Kathy M. Vaeth, and her husband Roland; loving grandmother of Michael P. and Patrick R. Vaeth, and his fiancee Deanna; and dear sister of the late Anna Manley, Mary Link, Elizabeth Hupfer, Anna F. Herbert, and Michael Feiler. Relatives and friends are invited to call at the Schimunek Funeral Home of Bel Air, Inc., 610 West Mac Phail Road (at route 24), on Thursday, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m., with a Vigil Service at 7:30 p.m. A Funeral Mass will be held at St. Stephen Catholic Church (Bradshaw)
NEWS
By Frederick N. Rasmussen and Frederick N. Rasmussen,SUN STAFF | May 8, 2004
The Rev. Peter E. Hogan, a member of the Josephite Fathers who was the order's archivist and an acknowledged expert on African-American Catholicism, died Wednesday at Mercy Medical Center of heart failure. He was 83. "He was as delightful a character as he was scholarly," said the Rev. Michael Roach, pastor of St. Bartholomew Roman Catholic Church in Manchester and a longtime friend. "He knew the history of blacks and the Catholic church and was without peer." Father Hogan was born and raised in Natick, Mass.
NEWS
May 7, 2004
On May 5, 2004, REVEREND PETER E. HOGAN, S.S.J.; beloved son of the late Mary C. (nee O'Regan) and Edward A. Hogan; dear brother of the late Edward Hogan, Mary C. Hogan, Margaret Brasted and Helen Curley; dear uncle of Edward Curley and Ann Ackerson; cousin of James O'Regan. A Mass of Christ the High Priest will be held at St. Joseph Manor, 911 W. Lake Avenue, on Friday at 7 P.M., where a Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Saturday at 11 A.M. Interment New Cathedral Cemetery. Friends may call on Friday from 3 to 7 P.M. In lieu of flowers, contributions to the Josephite Society, 1130 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202.