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4 Md. students charged with hate crimes over graffiti at their school

WASHINGTON 鈥 Four high school students in Howard County, Maryland, have been accused of spray-painting hate-based graffiti at their high school Thursday morning.

The four teenagers 鈥 Seth Taylor, of Ellicott City; Tyler Curtiss, of Brookeville; Joshua Shaffer, of Mt. Airy, and Mathew Lipp, of Woodbine 鈥 are students at Glenelg High School. They鈥檙e all 18 years old. Lipp was taken into custody at home; the other three, at the school.

The Howard County police said in a statement that school officials 鈥渇ound racial, anti-[Semitic] and anti-LGBTQ slurs spray-painted at the school鈥 Thursday morning. They added that one of the slurs was directed at principal David Burton, but did not specify what the graffiti said.

The police said in the statement that workers at the school found the graffiti and got in touch with the school resource officer, who recognized the four from security video that showed them spray-painting 鈥渁t various locations.鈥

At a Thursday news conference attended by county officials and representatives of many faiths, Dr. Michael Martirano, the superintendent of the Howard County Public Schools, said the graffiti was widespread, on sidewalks, trash cans, bricks and out-buildings. As for the graffiti鈥檚 content, he said, 鈥淣o groups seemed to be spared.鈥

The four students have been charged with multiple counts of 鈥渄estruction of property based on race, color, religious belief, sexual orientation, or national origin,鈥 the police said. The maximum penalty is three years in prison.

Burton said in a statement, 鈥淚 am so proud to be the principal of Glenelg High School and the despicable acts of a few do not change my feelings about the great things our students and staff accomplish on a daily basis.鈥 He thanked the workers who erased the graffiti, reminded parents that counselors were available if their children needed them and noted that the school held its senior awards ceremony Thursday morning and senior picnic this afternoon, as scheduled.

Martirano said that in addition to the criminal charges, he would 鈥渉old people accountable 鈥 up to the level of expulsion. And those cases will be directly given to me.鈥

Rev. Dr. Robert Turner, the senior pastor at St. John Baptist Church said at the news conference, 鈥淭his is not the first time our county has experience hate crimes 鈥 but our coming together today is an illustration that there鈥檚 work to do.鈥 He added, however, that leaders from all races and faiths would 鈥渃ome together.鈥

County Executive Alan Kittleman, whose daughter teaches at Glenelg, said, 鈥淚鈥檓 angry. This is our school. All four of our daughters went there. 鈥 That鈥檚 where I live. I could walk to this school. We can鈥檛 have this happen in Howard County.鈥

Rick Massimo

Rick Massimo came to 草莓传媒, and to Washington, in 2013 after having lived in Providence, R.I., since he was a child.聽He's the author of "A Walking Tour of the Georgetown Set" and "I Got a Song: A History of the Newport Folk Festival."

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