


Police: Anne Arundel schools employee sexually abused 13-year-old student
An Anne Arundel County schools employee surrendered to police Tuesday to face charges that he sexually abused a 13-year-old student for months in an Annapolis apartment where the two were living together. Annapolis police obtained a warrant Sept. 24 after a lengthy investigation, charging Mark Thoms, 38, of Severna Park with sexual abuse of a minor and other offenses. Thoms, who worked as a behavioral assistant, was ordered held without bail. An Anne Arundel County Public Schools official said Thoms has been on administrative leave since June. The attorney representing Thoms did not return a call for comment. Thoms was assigned to Mary Moss at J. Albert Adams Academy in Annapolis, where the child at the center of the allegations went to school, according to charging documents. After the student’s father spoke with Thoms about the child’s behavior in November, police said in charging documents, Thoms offered to let the student move into his Annapolis apartment. The minor also transferred to another school as part of the arrangement. After staying with Thoms for five months, the minor told his father of multiple incidents at the house in which Thoms assaulted him and, on one occasion, jumped on top of him. Charging documents show that Thoms told the minor multiple times that he wanted “to sleep with” him and that he touched his upper thighs to the protest of the minor.
Man arrested in Gambrills with marijuana, fake labels
A Gambrills man was found with 27 pounds of marijuana and fake medical cannabis prescription labels at a residence within 1,000 feet of Arundel High School, police said. Anne Arundel police said they executed a search warrant at a house in the 900 block of Annapolis Road at 5:32 a.m. Tuesday. Officers found 27 pounds of marijuana, about 13 pounds of marijuana wax, about 3 pounds of marijuana oil and 27.8 grams of psilocybin mushrooms, police said. A resident of the home, 31-year-old Kevin Paul Goetz, was arrested and police said he will be charged with a host of drugs and weapons charges as well as falsifying prescription labels and drug distribution within 1,000 feet of a school. The department said officers also recovered stickers that resembled prescription labels found at medical cannabis dispensaries. A loaded 12-gauge shotgun was also found, police said.
Howard jury convicts teen of murdering Laurel youth
A Hyattsville teen who is said to have shot a Laurel teen during a drug deal last October was found guilty of first-degree murder and other charges by a county jury late Friday, county prosecutors announced. Melvin A. Jacome, 16, was convicted of first-degree murder, first-degree assault, conspiracy to commit armed robbery, possession of a regulated firearm by someone under 21, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony and reckless endangerment from a motor vehicle. Howard County Circuit Court jurors deliberated four hours after a five-day trial, prosecutors said in a summary of the case released Tuesday. Xavier Cole Young, 14, of Laurel, was found unconscious with a “critical gunshot wound to the head,” in the 9000 block of North Laurel Road around 11 p.m. on Oct. 28, 2017, according to prosecutors. He died two days later in a Baltimore hospital. Jacome, Francisco Rodriguez, 16, of Laurel, and Luis Gerardo Ordonez, 19, of Laurel, were arrested within a week, prosecutors said. Rodriguez testified that Jacome was the one who fired a 9mm pistol on Oct. 28. The gun was never recovered. Initially charged with murder, Rodriguez took a plea deal in exchange for his testimony. He faced a lesser charge of conspiracy to commit armed robbery. His sentencing is scheduled for Wednesday. Ordonez pleaded guilty to a firearm charge and conspiracy to commit armed robbery on May 7. Sentencing is set for Oct. 18. During the trial, police and eyewitnesses testified that “a one-on-one illegal drug transaction went awry” after the seller planned to short the buyer of marijuana, while the buyer conspired to rob the seller, according to a statement from prosecutors. Ivan Mark Waldman, Jacome’s attorney, was out of the office Tuesday and could not be reached for comment. During closing arguments, Waldman characterized the case as “smoke and mirrors,” and “hit hard” at the character and veracity of the eyewitnesses and participants, according to a summary of the case provided by prosecutors. Jacome’s sentencing is set for Dec. 6. He is being held without bond at the Baltimore County Detention Center.