For
Immediate Release
April 11, 2005 |
Media
Contact:
Kevin Enright
410-576-6357
|
ATTORNEY
GENERAL & SECRETARY PHILBRICK
TO GO “TO THE SCENE” TO TEACH STUDENTS
ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMES
Maryland Attorney
General J. Joseph Curran, Jr. and Maryland Department of the
Environment Secretary Kendl P. Philbrick will enlist future
generations in their ongoing fight against environmental crimes
when they visit with middle school students. Maryland’s top
officials in law enforcement and the environment will be continuing
their battle against environmental crime by teaching two classes
of students about the importance of reporting environmental crimes,
and they will do it from “the scene”.
On Wednesday, April 13, 2005 at 9:00 am, both the Attorney General
and Secretary Philbrick will be at Sudbrook Magnet Middle School
in Baltimore County holding an outdoor class with science students
from the school. At 1:00 p.m. both the Secretary and the Attorney
General will hold a similar outdoor class in Montgomery County
with students from St. Jane de Chantal School. The sixth and seventh
graders have been preparing for this special class by studying
and researching environmental issues.
At both locations
there will be a mock environmental crimes scene staged by the
Maryland Department of the Environment. Students
will work in groups to “process the scene” and look
for clues that help them try to “solve” the crime while
learning how criminal investigators and emergency responders work
together to fight environmental crimes. The “scene” will
be designed to represent a typical hazardous waste dumping site
that criminal investigators and emergency responders regularly
handle.
Secretary Philbrick and the Attorney General will lead the session
and then speak with the children about types of environmental crimes
and what damage they cause to communities and the environment.
This outreach
continues the collaboration between the Maryland Attorney General’s
Office and the Maryland Department of the Environment in the
fight against environmental crime. These
sessions are timed to bring attention to National Environmental
Crimes Awareness Week, which this year is
April 17-23. National Environmental Crimes Week is held each year
to remind the public about the serious threat to our environment
from environmental criminal activity; increase their awareness
of the signs of environmental criminal activity and encourage the
prompt reporting of environmental crimes to the proper authorities.
9:00 a.m. Sudbrook Magnet Middle School, 4300 Bedford Road, Baltimore
County, 21208
1:00 p.m. St. Jane deChantal School, 9525 Old Georgetown Road,
Montgomery County, 20817
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