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David Simon tries to do more with less

David Simon tries to do more with less
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In yesterday's Washington Post, "The Wire" creator David Simon recalled the good old days when he was still the crime reporter for the Baltimore Sun:

In response to such flummery, I had in my wallet, next to my Baltimore Sun press pass, a business card for Chief Judge Robert F. Sweeney of the Maryland District Court, with his home phone number on the back. When confronted with a desk sergeant or police spokesman convinced that the public had no right to know who had shot whom in the 1400 block of North Bentalou Street, I would dial the judge.

And then I would stand, secretly delighted, as yet another police officer learned not only the fundamentals of Maryland's public information law, but the fact that as custodian of public records, he needed to kick out the face sheet of any incident report and open his arrest log to immediate inspection. There are civil penalties for refusing to do so, the judge would assure him. And as chief judge of the District Court, he would declare, I may well invoke said penalties if you go further down this path.

As you know if you watched season five of "The Wire," or if you read Romenesko, or have in any way followed the current state of the American newspaper, you'd know the crime beat, like every newspaper beat, has suffered in these trying economic times. And so when Simon felt that a police-involved shooting in his beloved Baltimore was being underreported, he decided to saddle up and look into the matter himself.

Hat tip to Chris Littmann.