
Baltimore County detectives are again turning up the volume on an 11-year-old cold case, renewing their appeal today for help finding a man they want to question in the 2015 shooting death of Dundalk resident Tiesha Rogers. The killing has lingered unsolved for more than a decade, and Rogers' relatives say they are clinging to the hope that this latest push finally shakes loose new leads.
According to Dundalk Eagle, the department issued its renewed request on March 9, 2026, along with a description of a man detectives want to interview about the case. Officers have gone back to neighbors and are urging anyone with information to speak up, even if what they know seems minor.
Case file: What happened that night
On March 9, 2015, at about 9:45 p.m., Rogers and a friend were walking back to the 7200 block of Conley Street when at least two men approached and opened fire, according to WBALTV. Rogers, 23, was pronounced dead at the scene. Her companion survived and was taken to a local hospital.
Sketch release and renewed push
Detectives released a composite sketch of a man they would like to question on April 9, 2025, and investigators said the image was posted to Facebook to help generate tips, per WMAR-2 News. “Detectives are seeking information from witnesses or anyone with knowledge of this case,” a department spokesperson told WMAR-2.
How to help investigators
Anyone with information is asked to contact the Baltimore County Police Department's Homicide and Missing Persons Unit at 410-887-3943, text 443-862-9426, or email [email protected], according to the county's website. Anonymous tips can also be submitted to Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7-LOCKUP or through the group's online tip form, the county notes.
Rogers' family has been pleading for answers since 2015, and relatives say they hope the renewed focus on her case will finally spark movement. Her grandmother, Charlene Alexander's anguished question from that year, “Why would they do this to her? I'm not understanding that,” has been repeated in local coverage as a stark reminder of the family's long wait for justice, according to WMAR-2 News.









