Police Press Release - February 27, 2023

Southern District
Shooting (Non-contact) - Davidsonville
 
23-707059
 
On February 25, 2023, at approximately 11:00 a.m., officers responded for a report of a shooting that just occurred in the 3300 block of Riva Road in Davidsonville. During their investigation, officers learned that a 71-year-old female intentionally drove onto the victim's property and struck two parked vehicles. The victim stated that he exited his residence with a rifle and fired several rounds at the suspect vehicle as it continued to crash into unoccupied vehicles on his property. The suspect vehicle and driver subsequently fled the residence. A short time later, officers received information that a vehicle matching the suspect vehicle description was involved in a hit-and-run motor vehicle collision, where an injury was reported, in the area of Solomons Island Road and Colony Crossing. The suspect vehicle was observed by officers in the area of Solomons Island Road and Mitchells Chance Road in Edgewater. Officers were able to conduct a traffic stop on the vehicle and took the driver into custody without further incident. Upon inspection of the suspect vehicle, there appeared to be three impacts to the windshield from the rounds fired by the victim on Riva Road. The AR-15 rifle was recovered by the officers at the original shooting scene. There were no physical injuries reported as a result of the shooting. The resident (original victim) of the Riva Road address was arrested and charged accordingly. The driver of the suspect vehicle was arrested and charged accordingly.
 
Arrested:
Marlene Montes Terwilliger (Driver)
71-year-old
Annapolis, Maryland
 
Hugh Christopher Haythorne (Homeowner)
42-year-old
Davidsonville, Maryland
 
Southern District
Disorderly Conduct/Assault on Police - Edgewater
 
23-707113
 
On February 25, 2023, at approximately 9:15 p.m., officers responded to the Green Turtle at 3213 Solomons Island Road in Edgewater for a fight. Officers arrived and located the disorderly male refusing to leave the establishment. Officers again instructed the male to leave, but he refused. As officers attempted to escort the male out of the building, he began struggling with the officers, causing him and one of the officers to fall to the floor. During the struggle on the floor, the male placed the officer in a chokehold. The officer was able to break free and disengage the male. The officer then withdrew his taser, causing the male to comply. He was arrested and charged accordingly. The officer sustained a minor injury to an extremity and was treated at an area hospital.
 
Arrested:
Gabriel James Tyler
25-year-old
Edgewater, Maryland

 

Anne Arundel County
Animal Care & Control
ALL DOGS FREE
 
Anne Arundel County Animal Care & Control (AACACC) in Millersville is waiving its adoption fees for all its available dogs, effective immediately, because it has reached the limit of its ability to house and care for the dogs it already has, even as more continue to arrive every day, Administrator Robin Catlett announced today.
 
"Throughout the United States, many public, open-access shelters like ours that must accept all pets brought to them from their jurisdictions are experiencing capacity issues," Catlett said.. “Our own shelter is now over its capacity for care.”
 
A shelter’s “capacity for care” includes both the space it has to house animals and its staff’s ability to provide adequate, humane care for those animals, Catlett explained. AACACC is now at the limit of its abilities to provide care to the dogs it already has, yet additional dogs are arriving daily as strays or are being given up by their owners. The shelter’s existing foster families have taken many adoptable dogs into their homes, but they too are reaching their limit.
 
“Our shelter has not had to euthanize adoptable animals due to exceeding its capacity for care in many years, but we are currently on the brink of being forced to make those awful decisions for dogs,” Catlett said. “We hope that with the support of our community, we can avoid this, but we believe in transparency and we want Anne Arundel County citizens to know what we might be forced to do if we cannot find homes for more of our dogs.”
 
Adoptable dogs at AACACC are spayed or neutered, vaccinated and microchipped. All available dogs have undergone staff observations to see how they behave with people and other dogs under a variety of situations, and all information the shelter has on each dog is available to adopters. Approved potential adopters can meet with individual dogs at the shelter and also arrange for their current dogs to meet a potential new family addition.
 
Although AACACC is waiving its usual $17 dog adoption fee, potential adopters still must meet the shelter's regular adoption requirements, which are outlined under the "adopt a pet" tab on its website, aacounty.org/pets, Potential adopters do not have to live in Anne Arundel County; in fact, the shelter often has adopters come from out of state.
 
Photos of available dogs are on the "animals at our shelter" page of the shelter’s website. That page also includes an interactive slideshow of all the available dogs that can be accessed by clicking on the blue "dog gallery" tab.
 
Anne Arundel County citizens who cannot adopt a dog should consider fostering one for the shelter to open up kennel space for the additional dogs that are arriving. (Citizens of other jurisdictions may be able to help by fostering for one of the shelter’s rescue partners so they can take dogs.) Anne Arundel County residents should send foster applications and required additional documentation to ACCFoster@aacounty.org. Applications are located online at here or may be picked up at the shelter.
 
AACACC also has a popular live Facebook video that showcases its available pets on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays.. The live video begins about 9:30 a.m. and also is posted on its Facebook page for the public's later review.
 
AACACC, 411 Maxwell Frye Rd., Millersville, MD, is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Wednesdays. It also is open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on one Sunday a month, including Feb. 26.
 
Although the shelter also has many cats and kittens, their situation is not as dire as it is for dogs, Catlett said. Cats and kittens younger than 9 years of age continue to be $14 each. Older cats and smaller pets such as rabbits and Guinea pigs always are free to qualified adopters..
 
"National studies have found that there is not a strong correlation between how much a person pays for a pet and how loved and well-cared-for that pet will be," Catlett said. "Our own experience and that of other shelters who sometimes offer their pets for free bears that out. You just can't put a price on love."