Md. joins suit against EPA over methane emissions

Maryland and 13 other states — plus D.C. and Chicago — have filed suit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, alleging it has failed its responsibility to issue guidelines to control methane emissions from oil and natural gas sources. The suit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, said the agency is violating its “mandatory” duty under the Clean Air Act. It said the inaction is delaying the date by which states must submit their own methane control plans “and the date by which existing sources must comply with approved pollution control standards.” Asked about the suit, an EPA spokesperson said Friday: “We don’t comment on pending litigation.” Methane is a greenhouse gas. The suit alleges that methane emissions “harm plaintiffs and their citizens by significantly contributing to air pollution that causes climate change.” Maryland is represented in the suit by Attorney General Brian E. Frosh. The other plaintiffs are New York, California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Vermont, Iowa, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, Rhode Island, Oregon and Washington, as well as the District of Columbia and the city of Chicago.

— Jeff Barker

Anderson stays on as head of city delegation

Veteran Democratic state lawmaker Del. Curt Anderson will remain the leader of the influential Baltimore delegation even after telling all of his colleagues he wanted to step down. On Friday morning, the city’s delegation voted against holding an election to replace the 68-year-old lawmaker. The action means he will stay in the role until the regularly scheduled leadership election in September, unless he resigns his post. Anderson, who represents Northeast Baltimore’s 43rd District, has led the city’s 16 House lawmakers for a dozen years. He plans to seek an eighth term representing the district. He said Wednesday that he had been planning a transition to a replacement for six months. He had hoped that Del. Cheryl Glenn, an East Baltimore Democrat, would succeed him. Not all members of the delegation were willing to go along with that plan. Del. Nick Mosby, a Democrat, was also lining up votes to run for chair of the delegation. But on Friday, Del. Mary Washington called the out-of-season election process “highly irregular,” particularly because Anderson had not resigned his post. The delegation voted on whether to suspend its rules to hold an election, but the measure did not get the two-thirds majority needed to pass.

— Erin Cox

Fifth member of heroin ring gets prison sentence

With the women of his family crying in the gallery, Antoine Washington was sentenced Friday to 22 years in prison for selling the heroin that killed a young Bel Air woman known in court documents as J.L. Washington, 28, asked for leniency. “Please,” he said to the judge, “I’m sorry for what happened to J.L.” But he received a 22-year sentence in U.S. District Court in Baltimore. A federal jury convicted him in October of selling the heroin to J.L. and Kenneth Diggins six years ago. She overdosed three days after Christmas in 2011. Washington becomes the fifth man sent to federal prison for running an extensive heroin ring in Northeast Baltimore. Called the Shropshire drug crew, the men sold dope with impunity under the protection of a corrupt Baltimore police detective, Momodu Gondo. The detective admitted in court to protecting the drug dealers from honest police who would arrest them and crooked cops who would rob them. When FBI agents wiretapped Gondo’s phone and bugged his car, they uncovered crimes by the rest of his police squad, the Gun Trace Task Force.

— Tim Prudente