Home News Former Baltimore Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s Request to Modify Home Detention Denied Again by Federal Court

Former Baltimore Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s Request to Modify Home Detention Denied Again by Federal Court

Former Baltimore Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s Request to Modify Home Detention Denied Again by Federal Court

In a continuous struggle to alter her home confinement terms, former Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby has been denied her request, once again, to replace home detention with a curfew. According to court documents cited by

WMAR-2 News

, Federal Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby ruled against the motion, pointing to unanswered questions about Mosby’s new job and a lack of proof concerning her income from the position.

Marilyn Mosby, whose legal tribulations have taken a turn from courtroom battles to personal confinements, claimed she was hired as the Director of Global Strategic Planning at a California-based company — a role that purportedly would have required her to travel extensively throughout Maryland, yet despite Mosby’s insistence and her defense’s arguments, Judge Griggsby remained unpersuaded and remarked in the court filings that Mosby’s employment does not meet the conditions of her supervision, echoing the concerns of the U.S. Probation Office which referenced an inability to confirm the job’s legitimacy.

The Judge’s decision was rooted in concerns that Mosby may have violated the terms of her release, as outlined by a 12A Report presented by Mosby’s probation agent. The report indicated that Mosby failed to notify her agent “of a change in her schedule and to request an adjustment in her travel schedule during business hours,” an infraction Mosby’s defense explained was due to a change in her daughter’s soccer game schedule, details of which were highlighted in a

FOX Baltimore

report.

Judge Griggsby has suggested that if Mosby improves her compliance with supervision and provides more job-related details, her sentence modification may be reconsidered. For now, Mosby must complete over six months of home detention, showing the court’s firm stance on the terms of her supervised release, which court records indicate she’s struggled with since her sentencing.

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