Monday, November 27, 2017

Collision has Sangamore Rd. down to one lane at Walhonding Rd. in Bethesda

A collision has seriously damaged two vehicles, and reduced Sangamore Road to a single lane near Walhonding Road in Bethesda. Two vehicles collided at that intersection around 9:00 AM. A Mercedes Benz suffered major front-end damage, and a Toyota Highlander needs to be towed away with a broken axle, according to a police officer at the scene. Avoid the area by taking Fort Sumner Drive, or Goldsboro Road to MacArthur Boulevard, among many other options.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

#NotReadyForGoogleNews

Roald said...

A lot of news across the Network this morning.

Roald said...

By news I of course mean nothing of interest.

Anonymous said...

reeeeeeeeeeeeetaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrd

Anonymous said...

Dyer broke several big stories in the past 48 hours. They range from tragedy in Bethesda to major redevelopment news in Wheaton.

The Network Effect is in full force!

Anonymous said...

The Beat published a report on the "Bethesda tragedy" that had much more useful information than Dyer's report, several hours ago.

The report on Lindsay Ford moving to the Vitro site was very useful. But most of the articles lately on his East County and Rockville blogs have been sponsored content for Federal Realty, or racist speculation about recent crimes involving minorities, or else just duplicates of articles that have appeared on his other blogs.

Anonymous said...

11:18 is giving out consolation trophies for the other sites that were late with reporting news today

Robert Dyer said...

11:18: You're providing good laughs, if nothing else. I broke the story, the complete story, this morning. I was covering it on-the-ground since it happened after 8 PM last night. Their story had about one-tenth of the information, and before being edited, was highly-insensitive in referring to various rumors going around. You just sound like a fool giving them an attaboy.

As far as the Wheaton and Rockville crime coverage: Factual reports about crimes, citing police-provided information and court documents, is not "racist speculation." It's called news.