Couple Arrested For Asking For Directions

Lumi

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Couple Arrested For Asking For Directions

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BALTIMORE --
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Baltimore City police arrested a Virginia couple over the weekend after they asked an officer for directions.

WBAL-TV 11 News I-Team reporter David Collins said Joshua Kelly and Llara Brook, of Chantilly, Va., got lost leaving an Orioles game on Saturday. Collins reported a city officer arrested them for trespassing on a public street while they were asking for directions .

"In jail for eight hours -- sleeping on a concrete floor next to a toilet," Kelly said.

"It was a nightmare," Brook said. "I was in there thinking I was just dreaming and waiting to wake up."

Collins reported it was a nightmare ending to a nearly perfect day. He said the couple went to a company picnic and watched the Orioles beat Kansas City. It was their first trip to Camden Yards and asked two people for directions to Interstate 95 South when they left.

Collins said somehow they ended up in the Cherry Hill section of south Baltimore. Hopelessly lost, relief melted away concerns after they spotted a police vehicle.

"I said, 'Thank goodness, could you please get us to 95?" Kelly said.

"The first thing that she said to us was no -- you just ran that stop sign, pull over," Brook said. "It wasn't a big deal. We'll pay the stop sign violation, but can we have directions?"

"What she said was 'You found your own way in here, you can find your own way out.'" Kelly said.

Collins said the couple spotted another police vehicle and flagged that officer down for directions. But Officer Natalie Preston, a six-year veteran of the force, intervened.

"That really threw us for a loop when she stepped in between our cars," Kelly said. "(She) said my partner is not going to step in front of me and tell you directions if I'm not."

Collins reported the circumstances got worse. Kelly pulled 40 feet forward parking next to a curb and put his flashers on while Brook was on the phone to her father hoping he could help her with directions. Both her parents are police officers in the Harrisburg, Pa., area.

"(Brook's father) was in the middle of giving us directions when the officer screeched up behind us and got out of the car and asked me to step out. I obeyed," Kelly said. "I obeyed everything -- stepped out of the car, put my hands behind my back, and the next thing I know, I was getting arrested for trespassing."

"By this time, I was completely in tears," Brook said. "I said, 'Ma'am, you know, we just need your help. We are not trying to cause you any trouble. I'm not leaving him here.' What she did was walk over to my side of the car and said, 'Ok, we are taking you downtown, too.'"

Collins said the couple was released from jail without being charged with anything. Brook is now concerned the arrest may complicate a criminal background check she's going through in her job as a child care worker.

Collins said police left Kelly's car unlocked and the windows down at the impound lot. He reported a cell phone charger, pair of sunglasses and 20 CDs were stolen.

Baltimore City police said they are looking into the incident. <!--stopindex-->
 

Lumi

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No excuse for it. People should feel comfortable speaking to Law Enforcement officers, not this garbage.
 

MadJack

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Cop may have saved their lives. Cherry Hill is a BAD, BAD area to be lost in :nono:
 

gardenweasel

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doesn't really matter when it happened does it?

Just shows punk cops abusing their power

o.k....o.k....sorry...:D

i live in b`more...pretty sure this was a black housing cop...not a city cop..and this is what happens when you`re "driving while white" in cherry hill...

the racial door swings both ways in "charm city"....

they didn`t know it,but they were safer in jail...:lol:
 

Nolsfan

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Seems as though this happened awhile ago..

Seems as though this happened awhile ago..

From Wikipedia:


Cherry Hill is one of the southernmost neighborhoods in Baltimore, Maryland. It is a relatively isolated enclave within the city, bounded by the Middle Branch of the Patapsco River to the north, the river's main channel to the east, and railroad tracks, including the tracks of the Baltimore Light Rail system, to the west and south. The only roads leading in or out of the neighborhood are Hanover Street, Potee Street, and Waterview Avenue; there's also a Light Rail stop at the northwest edge of the neighborhood.

The Cherry Hill neighborhood was developed fairly recently in Baltimore's history. The community was founded as a home for African-American veterans returning from World War II. Cherry Hill made national news when in 2005, a Virginian couple, Joshua Kelly and Llara Brook, were coming from a Baltimore Orioles game at Camden Yards on their way to Interstate 95 when they suddenly became lost in Cherry Hill. They flagged down police officers, asked them for directions and were then detained at a local jail center after attempting to cellphone for directions after the police officers refused to help them. The police officers involved were investigated but no action was taken against them. Cherry Hill is known for being one of the most dangerous and crime-ridden areas of South Baltimore with dozens of street post crime watch cameras standing at nearly every corner of nearly every street. More than half of its 8,000 residents live in poverty.[1]
 

MadJack

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More than half of its 8,000 residents live in poverty

I guess 100% is more than half :mj07: :mj07:
 

gardenweasel

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humorous cherry hill anecdote #1...

""I got lost in Cherry Hill shortly after I moved to Baltimore. Pulled over and looking at my map, I was asked by a group of four kids if i was the pizza man (white guy in a little red car stopped in the middle of a black housing project, seemed a reasonable assessment). When I told them no, they started throwing rocks.""
 

Cie

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humorous cherry hill anecdote #1...

""I got lost in Cherry Hill shortly after I moved to Baltimore. Pulled over and looking at my map, I was asked by a group of four kids if i was the pizza man (white guy in a little red car stopped in the middle of a black housing project, seemed a reasonable assessment). When I told them no, they started throwing rocks.""

:mj07:
 

gardenweasel

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humorous anecdote #2...

""I understand that when General Ross set off to lead the ground assault on Baltimore (while the British fleet was shelling Fort McHenry) he said, "I shall be in Baltimore tonight, or hell!"

Now I've only driven through on I-95 a few times but everything I've ever heard about Baltimore makes me wonder if there was any way for him to know the difference.""

:mj07:
 
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