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Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray
Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray
Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray
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Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray

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The main characters in our story, Jay Allan Scripps and Rowena Moore, have connected after many years after a mysterious accident. He is hiding from his past, while she leads a reclusive existence. They are motivated by a perhaps misguided need to improve their world. Their unique use of guns forms helps save lives in a neglected area of the city.
“Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray” is a work of fiction set in Baltimore during the eventful time of the demonstrations and riots after the funeral of Freddie Gray in April, 2015. The riots destroyed stores and buildings and other economic disasters affected tax revenues, increasing the pressure on the already strapped city budget.
Not surprisingly, the national and international coverage also affected the housing market in Baltimore, and perhaps more importantly, the city’s reputation. Earlier that month, I had a conversation with a clerk in a shop in Belgrade, Serbia where he asked me where I was from and asked me about crime and violence in Baltimore. All he knew about Baltimore he learned from the television shows, Homicide and The Wire. Wonder what our conversation might be like if it took place now.
The riots also caused the downfall of a rising political star, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, who later announced that she would not run for re-election. She was head of the national Council of Mayors and clearly headed for higher office.
The book also contains an account of the fascinating legal issues raised by the trials of six police officers and whether they can be forced to testify in each other’s trials. Stay tuned for updates as the six interconnected trials progress.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 14, 2016
ISBN9781311891860
Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray
Author

Ronald J. Leach

About the Author I recently retired from being a professor of computer science at Howard University for over 25 years, with 9 of those years as a department chair.  (I was a math professor for 16 years before that.)  While I was department chair, we sent more students to work at Microsoft in the 2004-5 academic year than any other college or university in the United States.  We also established a graduate certificate program in computer security, which became the largest certificate program at the university.  I had major responsibility for working with technical personnel to keep our department’s hundreds of computers functional and virus-free, while providing email service to several hundred users.  We had to withstand constant hacker attacks and we learned how to reduce the vulnerability of our computer systems. As a scholar/researcher, I studied complex computer systems and their behavior when attacked or faced with heavy, unexpected loads.  I wrote five books on computing, from particular programming languages, to the internal structure of sophisticated operating systems, to the development and efficient creation of highly complex applications.  My long-term experience with computers (I had my first computer programming course in 1964) has helped me understand the nature of many of the computer attacks by potential identity thieves and, I hope, be able to explain them and how to defend against them, to a general audience of non-specialists.  More than 5,000 people have attended my lectures on identity theft; many others have seen them on closed-circuit television. I have written more than twenty books, and more than 120 technical articles, most of which are in technical areas. My interests in data storage and access meshed well with my genealogical interests when I wrote the Genealogy Technology column of the Maryland Genealogical Society Journal for several years.   I was the editor or co-editor of that society’s journal for many years.

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    Baltimore Blue and Freddie Gray - Ronald J. Leach

    Disclaimer

    This is a work of fiction. It is set primarily within a time period ranging from a few days before the well-publicized protests and looting in Baltimore, Maryland during the funeral of Freddie Gray until a few days after.

    The following are real persons: Freddie Gray, Fredericka Gray (Freddie Gray’s twin sister), Gloria Darden (Freddie Gray’s mother), Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, Baltimore City States Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby, Baltimore City Councilman Nick Mosby, Baltimore City Council Chair Bernard C. (Jack) Young, former Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts, Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, Reverend Jamal Bryant, Maryland State Police Colonel William Pallozzi, Stan Stovall, long-time Baltimore television news anchor

    Everyone else in the story is purely fictional and any similarity to any person is purely coincidental. All locations mentioned herein, except the homes of Jay and June Avadon, Jay Allan Scripps and Rowena Moore, and the warehouse on Pulaski Highway in Baltimore County are real.

    Cast of Characters

    Freddie Gray

    Fredericka Gray (Freddie Gray’s twin sister)

    Gloria Darden (Freddie Gray’s mother)

    Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake

    Maryland Governor Lawrence J. Hogan

    Baltimore City States Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby

    Baltimore City Councilman Nick Mosby

    Baltimore City Council Chair Bernard C. (Jack) Young

    Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts

    Reverend Jamal Bryant

    Maryland State Police Colonel William Pallozzi

    Stan Stovall, long-time Baltimore television news anchor

    Jay Avadon, Hard-to-find super programmer, multimillionaire, former Head Start teacher, adjunct professor

    Jay Allan Scripps, alias of Jay Avadon

    Rowena Moore, hard-to-find billionaire entrepreneur, genius chemist

    Andorra la Vella, mysterious aide to Rowena Moore

    Reverend Bob, social worker, assistant to Rowena Moore

    Author’s Note

    Early in the morning April 27, 2015, I left my home in the Federal Hill area of Baltimore, Maryland and walked three blocks to Camden Station where I caught a MARC Camden line train (the local passenger line) to Union Station in Washington, DC. I willingly paid the one-way senior rate of $3.50. I caught the DC Metro Red Line train from Union Station to the Dupont Circle stop, then walked a few blocks to the Washington Hilton where I attended the exhibitor’s showcase at the Computers in Libraries conference. I left the exhibits a little before noon, had an early lunch in a Connecticut Avenue deli, just beating the crowd. I had to wait a few minutes for the next Red Line train to Union Station to arrive and had to wait even longer behind a few people trying to figure out the ticket machine before I could purchase my return ticket for the next MARC train. This train would go to Penn Station in Baltimore, still at the bargain $3.50 price, even though it would be a nearly two mile walk if I didn’t want to take the free Baltimore City Charm City Circulator bus.

    Because the train was at the far end of the tracks, I just missed the 1:20 MARC Penn Station train. I thought it was no big deal, I would just wait for the 2:20 train, which would get me into Baltimore at 3:06, much faster than waiting for the 4:13 train to Camden Station that was scheduled to arrive at 5:25. Taking the 2:20 train may have saved my life, or at the very least, saved me from an extremely scary experience.

    I got off the train at 3:06 and by the time I reached the St. Paul Street side of Penn Station, the free Charm City Circulator bus was there, waiting for passengers to board. I boarded this Purple Route bus, thanked the driver, and took an open seat near the front. I was sitting next to a young woman who started sneezing and offered her my small pocket package of Kleenex. She nodded thanks. I wanted to divert my attention from the woman and her allergies or cold and started to pay more attention to the passengers around me, a somewhat somber group.

    The driver was talking to someone who had just gotten on and they were talking about an angry crowd somewhere and some looting. I wondered if the new passenger was an employee of Baltimore City or of Veolia Transportation, which runs the circulators under contract with the city. I listened more carefully, but, having not listened to the entire conversation, could not tell the part of the city where the problems were.

    I got off at my stop and was home by about 3:30. I did something I almost never did: watch the local television stations’ early news broadcast.

    My original plan was to walk the few blocks from my home to Camden Yards to see the Orioles game that night. As I watched the television news, and saw the wave of people coming through the Baltimore inner harbor area around Harbor Place, I was just happy to be home and was really glad that I had not arrived at 5:25. You certainly know what happened in Baltimore that day. Coverage in the local and national media was almost universal.

    The first draft of this book was written in January, 2015, but there was a major problem with it that I had been unable to fix. About a month after the protests and riots, I got the idea to set my original story against the well-publicized events of those scary days in late April and early May of 2015. The various parts all worked together and I was able to complete the story, weaving

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