Maryland Man Charged with Killing 70,000 Chickens

(WBAL TV, 8/28/2012)

DELMAR, Md. — The Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office said a 21-year-old man has been charged in connection with the deaths of nearly 70,000 chickens.

Authorities said Joshua Shelton has been charged with burglary, malicious destruction of property and trespassing.

The Sheriff’s Office said the owner of a farm on East Line Road in Delmar told a deputy early Saturday that the power had been turned off in three poultry houses, which deprived the chickens of food, water and cooling fans. As a result, almost the entire flock had died.

Shelton was found lying in the power control shed. Authorities said he was wearing a T-shirt and boxer shorts and smelled of alcohol.

The Sheriff’s Office said the deputy determined that Shelton had turned off the circuit breakers that controlled electricity to the poultry houses.

Shelton told police the last thing he remembered was being on the property after a nearby concert. He said he didn’t know how he ended up in the shed.

It’s believed that the chickens that died were worth about $20,000, officials said. The chickens were to be sent to a local processing plant the next day.

Shelton is currently being detained with bail set at $75,000.

Related:

  • 70,000 chickens found dead in Md.; Man charged — WBAL
  • Subservient Chicken — Burger King

Posted in 2010s, Baltimorons, Crime, Dining | Leave a comment

Goth

Oak Lawn Cemetery, Baltimore, Maryland.

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‘Surrender Dorothy’ Painted On A Beltway Overpass — What’s The Story?

By John Kelly (Washington Post, 6/25/2011)

“As I traveled on the Beltway in the early ’70s near the Mormon Temple in Kensington, I was always amused by one re-occurring sight. On an overpass just as the temple comes into view, someone would always spray paints in big letters “Surrender Dorothy.” The line was from “The Wizard of Oz,” and I’m fairly sure it reflected the graffiti artist’s impression that the temple was reminiscent of the spires that Dorothy and company saw as they approached the Emerald City and their subsequent fear when the witch wrote the phrase in the sky. While I recognize that it was illegal to do that, I marveled at the writer’s ability to write it so boldly as to be seen from the highway. I’ve often wondered if anyone knew the story behind it or knew who the person was.”

— Christine Mulligan, Germantown

Search for ‘Surrender Dorothy’ scrawler pulls back curtain on schoolgirl prank

By John Kelly (Washington Post, 7/23/2011)

If someone confided to you that he was the person responsible for arguably the single most famous graffito in the Washington area — “Surrender Dorothy” painted on a railroad bridge near the Mormon Temple — how would you react? Would you buy him a drink? Would you call the police? Would you tell Answer Man?

Answer Man asks because of the column he wrote last month, in which he recounted what was known about “Surrender Dorothy” and invited its creator to get in touch. No one would admit to painting the message over the Beltway, but three people said they had met the person who did it.

Or who said he did it. In each case it was a different person, and the messages to Answer Man went something like this: “Back in the 1970s/1980s, when I was in college/had a part-time job I had class with/worked with/got drunk with a guy who said he was the person who painted ‘Surrender Dorothy.’ ”

Related:

  • “Surrender Dorothy” — Tracing the origins of a famous graffiti prank — Deceptology
  • Surrender Dorothy — Wikipedia
Posted in 1970s, Pranks, Roadside Attractions | Tagged | 2 Comments

Vintage Paper Doll Drawings of John Waters Superstar Divine

By Judy Berman (Flavorwire, 8/14/2012)

“Come here, child, and listen to our story of magic and wonder. Once upon a time, in an exotic and faraway land — Baltimore in the 1970s, to be exact — there lived a filthy and glamorous drag queen actress named Divine. Her childhood friend John Waters, known to all the land as the Pope of Trash, made her his ingenue, and together they conquered the B-movie world, leaving a trail of scandalized squares in their glittery, shit-stained wake.”

Continue reading “Vintage Paper Doll Drawings of John Waters Superstar Divine” and view the gallery at Flavorwire.


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Posted in 1980s, Art, Divine, Dreamlanders | Leave a comment