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Ravens Insider: Repeat guests to Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott’s Orioles, Ravens suites include Nick Mosby, labor leaders


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Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott’s guests to the city’s private suites at M&T Bank Stadium and Camden Yards last year included members of his family, local labor leaders, numerous elected officials and a few donors to his campaign, records released by the city show.

As part of lease agreements with the Maryland Stadium Authority, the Baltimore mayor, as well as the governor, are provided with skyboxes — valued at thousands of dollars per game — at the Ravens and Orioles stadiums. There are no restrictions on who the officials can invite.

Records obtained by The Baltimore Sun via a Public Information Act request show Scott was a frequent attendee at games held at both sports stadiums as was his mother, Donna Scott, and fiancée Hana Pugh.

At Camden Yards, Scott occupied the city’s third base side suite Opening Day and during 12 additional games that season. He attended two late-season games against division rivals the Tampa Bay Rays and Boston Red Sox. In July, he sat in the suite with women’s basketball star Angel Reese. The city’s suite package includes additional tickets to each game located behind home plate. Scott’s spokesman Bryan Doherty said the mayor has used those seats for some games, while he has personally purchased tickets in that area for others. Records provided to The Sun do not indicate how those tickets were allocated.

Scott’s office typically distributes tickets for the entire suite at Camden Yards to an agency or group, while suite tickets for M&T Bank Stadium are handed out individually.

Scott’s top staffers were repeat guests in both suites in 2023. Chief of Staff Marvin James attended seven Ravens games and occupied the Orioles box for three. City Administrator Faith Leach was invited to five Ravens games and had the Orioles suite for three, records showed. State Del. Caylin Young, who works for Scott as the deputy director of the Office of Equity and Civil Rights, received two suite passes each to two Ravens games in September and December. Suite passes require the holder to have a ticket for a seat elsewhere in the stadium, but grant access to the stadium’s suite level. Calvin Young, Caylin Young’s brother and Scott’s campaign treasurer, received suite passes to four Ravens games.

Elected officials were often recipients of tickets for both the Ravens and Orioles suites. Every member of the Baltimore City Council received tickets for the Orioles box for at least one game in 2023 except for Councilman Zeke Cohen. Cohen said he has a policy of not accepting free tickets. Council President Nick Mosby was the most frequent council guest at Camden Yards. He received suite tickets for three games during the 2023 season. Baltimore County Executive John “Johnny O” Olszewski Jr., Baltimore County Councilman Pat Young, state Del. Luke Clippinger and Baltimore State’s Attorney Ivan Bates also used Orioles suite tickets. All are Democrats.

Mosby was also the council’s most frequent attendee at M&T Bank Stadium. The council president received two tickets to 10 football games including one playoff game. Eight other members of the Baltimore City Council went to at least one game in 2023, but most attended more. Councilman Antonio Glover attended four games through a combination of tickets and suite passes. Five members of the council attended the divisional round playoff game on Jan. 20 as did Comptroller Bill Henry, records showed.

Other elected officials who were guests of the mayor at M&T Bank at least once last season included: Bates, state Del. Stephanie Smith, state Sen. Cory McCray, state Sen. Antonio Hayes and state Sen. Arthur Ellis, a representative of Charles County. Former Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, who first hired Scott and has served as a mentor to the mayor, received suite passes to two Ravens games.

City employees were also regular guests, particularly at Orioles games. More than a dozen city offices were given tickets to the box during the 2023 season.

At least one city labor leader was generally in attendance at each Ravens game in 2023. Tickets went to Josh Fannon and Matthew Coster, presidents of the two city fire unions; Antoinette Ryan, president of City Union of Baltimore; Clyde Boatwright, president of the Maryland State Fraternal Order of Police; Diamonté Brown, president of the Baltimore Teachers Union; and Ricarra Jones, political director for SEIU Local 1199 United Healthcare Workers East. Mike Mancuso, president of the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police, received a suite pass to one game.

SEIU Local 1199, the Baltimore Teachers Union and both fire unions have endorsed Scott during his bid for reelection. The primary is May 14.

Several donors to Scott’s campaign were among suite guests at Ravens games. Phillip Stokes, a principal with media company greiBO solutions, attended four games in the city’s Ravens suite in 2023. Stokes gave $1,500 to Scott’s campaign earlier this year. Jeffrey Hargrave, founder and president of commercial construction firm Mahogany Inc., was the recipient of two tickets to the Ravens suite in September. Hargrave gave the Scott campaign $6,000. Mahogany gave $2,500.

Brandon Wylie, co-owner of florist Fleurs D’Ave, was a guest in the Ravens suite for the divisional round playoff game as was Al Wylie, owner of Wylie Funeral Home. Wylie Funeral Home contributed $1,000 to Scott’s campaign in January 2023. Brandon Wylie contributed $10,000 to Scott’s campaign during the current election cycle, above the $6,000 individual maximum. Following a Sun story about the overage, the campaign said it has issued Wylie a refund for $4,000.

Scott’s mother attended nine football games in 2023 including the divisional round playoff game against the Houston Texans. (The Sun’s record request did not include the conference championship game against the Kansas City Chiefs.) Pugh attended six regular season football games and one preseason game. Pugh’s son, Ceron, attended four games.

Other notable guests to Ravens games included:

  • Robyn Murphy, owner of a media consulting company that founded a legal-defense fund to benefit Nick and Marilyn Mosby. Murphy received a ticket to a game in November and three tickets to a game in January;
  • Brittney Verner, a then-reporter for television station WMAR. Verner attended a game in the mayor’s suite on Nov. 16. She has since left the station, but published a story about Scott in December;
  • Ike Carter, an organizer behind 300 Men March, a group co-founded by Scott. Carter received suite passes to 11 Ravens games.

In addition to the better-known guests to the Ravens suite were numerous community members who were also selected to attend. Youth from the city’s Brooklyn Homes neighborhood were invited to a preseason game in August one month after a mass shooting there killed two and injured 28, many young people.

Community groups were frequent recipients of the city’s suite at Camden Yards, too. Church groups and faith leaders received tickets as did the Fund for Educational Excellence, Uproar Care Foundation, Mt. Washington School and College Bound.

Scott said he has made a point to try to get more tickets into the hands of average city residents since he became mayor.

“If you look at my record on how we give out the city’s tickets to sporting events, and you compare them to folks that came before me, a lot more average Baltimoreans are getting those tickets, sometimes much to the chagrin of other elected officials,” he said.

Use of the city’s suites at M&T Bank Stadium and Camden Yards came under a spotlight during the administration of Rawlings-Blake after she rescinded an offer of tickets to then-City Council President Bernard C. “Jack” Young to a playoff game in 2012 after he publicly criticized her. Public records requests filed by The Sun at the time showed Rawlings-Blake was using the box primarily for city employees, prominent business leaders, donors to her campaign and family members.

Henry, the city’s comptroller who had suite tickets for two Orioles games in 2023, said he has seen a shift during the Scott administration to include more non-elected officials and community leaders in the suites than his predecessors.

“It’s a very, very important thing for me,” Scott said. “I try to … help those families, especially families that have been through a lot, people who quite frankly need a little bit of good in their life.”

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