NEWS
By Michael Scarcella and Michael Scarcella,SUN STAFF | October 14, 2001
A Baltimore woman, one of 70 members of the Salisbury-based 115th Military Police Battalion scheduled to leave yesterday morning, never arrived at Parkville Armory. Four hours before she was to depart for Fort Stewart, Ga., Telayia T. Marshall, 25, was killed in a car crash that occurred during a dispute with her husband, police said. Marshall, of the 5900 block of Daywalt Ave., was arguing with her husband, Leroy, 26, inside a car near Charles and Mulberry streets about 2:30 a.m., according to reports.
NEWS
By Glenn Small and Glenn Small,Staff Writer | November 25, 1993
A 30-year-old Rosedale woman was held without bail last night on charges of first-degree murder and arson after police said she doused her sleeping husband with charcoal fluid and set him on fire.Police said Patricia Ann Hawkins told them she was the victim of spousal abuse and wanted to kill her husband before he killed her."I did it," Mrs. Hawkins, the mother of two, allegedly told officers who arrived at her home about 4:35 a.m. yesterday in the 6100 block of Marquette Road.Milton Hawkins, 32, suffered third-degree burns over 60 percent of his body, mostly his face, head and upper torso, said Capt.
NEWS
By Leonard Pitts Jr | November 14, 2000
MIAMI -- Maybe you remember the cookie controversy. Happened during the 1992 presidential campaign. Questioned about the propriety of working for a law firm that received contracts from a state where her husband was governor, Hillary Clinton responded peevishly: "I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas." While many observers denounced the remark -- and rightly so -- as an affront to stay-at-home moms, others seemed less concerned with the insult than with the threat to the status quo they perceived in it. This first lady, they realized, would do more than gaze adoringly at her husband.
EXPLORE
April 25, 2012
From The Aegis dated April 30, 1987: A Harford woman was sentenced 25 years ago to five years in prison, which equated to "one year for each bullet she fired into her husband's body. " The woman never denied shooting her unemployed husband, but said she did it because she feared the man she had lived with for 19 years and feared for her children. Not only did her husband abuse his step-daughter, he also fought with his two sons with the woman. She pleaded guilty to manslaughter.
NEWS
By Leonard Pitts Jr | May 23, 2004
WASHINGTON - A few words on behalf of Dixie Shanahan. Granted, some might consider her a less-than-sympathetic figure. After all, two years ago, Mrs. Shanahan, a 36-year-old from Defiance, Iowa, killed her husband with a shotgun blast to the head. She left his body decomposing on the bed for a year. But there is, as you might expect, more to the story. Mrs. Shanahan, backed up by friends, police reports and photographs of her own blackened eyes, testified that her husband, Scott, beat her repeatedly for years.
NEWS
April 6, 1994
A 32-year-old Laurel woman pleaded guilty yesterday in Anne Arundel Circuit Court to shooting at her husband after an argument at a neighbor's house in December.Marilyn K. Martin of the 800 block of Eighth St. pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment before Judge Raymond G. Thieme Jr.An argument between Mrs. Martin and her husband, Joe E. Martin, 30, began at a neighbor's house on Dec. 4 and escalated when they got home. Mrs. Martin grabbed her husband's .30-06 Winchester rifle and began chasing him around the outside their house.
NEWS
July 25, 2003
Evelyn M. Schabb, a former vice president and partner in her husband's development company, died of multiple myeloma Wednesday at Gilchrist Center for Hospice Care. The Northwest Baltimore resident was 76. Evelyn Chattel was born in Watertown, N.Y., and raised in Detroit and Los Angeles. She attended Los Angeles City College. She met her husband, Baltimorean Oscar T. Schabb, during World War II while he was serving with the Navy in San Diego. They married in 1945. They established Oscar T. Schabb Co., residential builders and developers, in Baltimore in the early 1960s.
NEWS
By Michael Scarcella and Michael Scarcella,SUN STAFF | October 14, 2001
A 25-year-old Baltimore woman, one of the 70 members of the Salisbury-based 115th Military Police Battalion scheduled to leave yesterday morning, never arrived at the Parkville Armory. Four hours before she was to depart for Fort Stewart, Ga., Telayia Marshall, 25, was killed in a car crash during a domestic dispute with her husband, police said. Marshall, who lived with her husband, Leroy, 26, in the 5900 block of Daywalt Ave., was arguing with him inside a car near Charles and Mulberry streets about 2:30 a.m., according to reports.
NEWS
By Sheridan Lyons and Sheridan Lyons,Staff Writer | August 20, 1992
A 28-year-old Woodmoor woman pleaded guilty yesterday in the fatal Valentine's Day stabbing of her husband, who had kept her up all night playing cards with friends and arguing loudly about various brands of malt liquor and beer.The murder charge against Cynthia Selina Anderson was reduced to manslaughter, and the prosecution will recommend a two- to seven-year sentence, said Susan H. Hazlett, a Baltimore County assistant state's attorney handling the case.Police had arrived at the couple's apartment in the 3400 block of Aurora Lane at 4:30 a.m. Feb. 14 to find 33-year-old Derek Anderson bleeding from a single stab wound in the chest.