‘Healthy Holly’, once lucrative, now bane of Baltimore mayor

This March 2019 photo taken in Baltimore, shows copies of Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh’s self-published “Healthy Holly” illustrated paperbacks for children. Baltimore’s embattled mayor announced Monday, April 1 that she is taking an indefinite leave of absence, just as a political scandal intensifies over what critics call a “self-dealing” book-sales arrangement that threatens her political career. The various officials’ calls came shortly after Kaiser Permanente disclosed that it paid $114,000, between 2015 and 2018, for roughly 20,000 copies of Pugh’s children’s books. And it came about two weeks after news broke that since 2011, Pugh has received $500,000 selling her books to the University of Maryland Medical System, a $4 billion hospital network that’s one of the largest private employers in the state. (Jerry Jackson/The Baltimore Sun via AP)

In this Dec. 6, 2016 file photo, Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh delivers an address during her inauguration ceremony inside the War Memorial Building in Baltimore. Maryland’s chief accountant is calling for Pugh to step down, calling the latest revelations about lucrative deals to sell her self-published children’s books “brazen, cartoonish corruption.” In a Monday, April 1, 2019 tweet, Maryland Comptroller Peter Franchot wrote: “The Mayor has to resign — now.” His comments came on the same day that Kaiser Permanente disclosed that it paid Pugh’s limited liability company about $114,000 for roughly 20,000 copies of her “Healthy Holly” children’s books. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

BALTIMORE — “Healthy Holly” is a polite African American girl with devoted parents and a curious little brother. She loves exercise. She craves fresh fruit and vegetables. And she’s now the bane of Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh’s existence.

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