As Baltimore struggles, latest scandal sucks away attention
Baltimore already faced daunting challenges: soaring violent crime, a thriving drug economy and poverty so intense that some derelict neighbourhoods look like they were hit by a plague. Now, Mayor Catherine Pugh is embroiled in a strange scandal, sucking attention away from those core issues while embarrassing Maryland’s biggest city on a national scale.
The allegations surrounding the first-term mayor conjure up a bizarre world where no-contract financial deals intersect with children’s picture books, of all things. Since 2011, the Democrat has somehow received payments totalling at least $700,000 for tens of thousands of self-published 20-page books with titles like “Healthy Holly: Fruits Come in Colors Like the Rainbow.”
Her main customers for the hard-to-find paperbacks: a $4 billion medical network, on whose board she served, that paid her personal business half-a-million dollars for 100,000 copies; and a health care provider that bought “Healthy Holly” books after she became mayor, as that company was seeking a city contract.


