Skip to content

‘Nothing is being done’: Residents question why open-air drug markets persist in Baltimore

Olympia Pakis moved from Arkansas to Yorkewood Apartments in April. The mother of two children said she has witnessed drug dealing, and her car was recently stolen. (Zackary Lang/Spotlight on Maryland)
Olympia Pakis moved from Arkansas to Yorkewood Apartments in April. The mother of two children said she has witnessed drug dealing, and her car was recently stolen. (Zackary Lang/Spotlight on Maryland)
Author
PUBLISHED:
Despite City Hall touting public-health strategies and police reporting thousands of foot patrols, Baltimore residents describe daily drug dealing in plain view and little enforcement.

Subscribe to continue reading this article.

Already subscribed? To log in, click here.

RevContent Feed