New campaign finance filings in the race for Baltimore mayor show a flood of high-dollar donations to two candidates in particular.

The reports show two families in the Baltimore area are spending a lot of money on the race. One is related to the late H&S Bakery king John Paterakis and the other to the owners of Sinclair Broadcast Group.

No one comes close to candidate Thiru Vignarajah's ability to draw big donations in his run for mayor. New campaign filings show that from August 2018 to January 2020, Vignarajah's campaign got 94 contributions from donors who paid $6,000, which is the maximum under Maryland law. That amounts to $564,000 that flowed into Vignarajah's campaign -- more than half the total amount he raised.

Three big contributions that total $18,000 came from owners and supporters of the controversial aerial surveillance system, which is part of Vignarajah's crime plan.

The reports show $36,000 in big checks were written by people related to the owners of Sinclair Broadcast Group, which owns WBFF-TV.

Four big checks were written by attorney Charles Scheeler and his family. Scheeler is retired from DLA Piper, Vignaragh's law firm.

Incumbent Mayor Jack Young relied on far fewer top-dollar donors. His campaign drew 14 donors who contributed $6,000, totaling $84,000 of the full amount the campaign raised. Of that amount, $24,000 came from four members of the Paterakis family. Another $24,000 came from people connected to the Atlas Restaurant Group, which owns The Choptank in Fells Point, among others.

City Council President Brandon Scott's campaign raised $132,000 from 22 donors who contributed the maximum amount. Scott also got a big boost -- $62,000 -- from the campaign account he shared with businessman Jim Shea. Scott ran as Shea's running mate in the 2018 governor's race.

Former Mayor Sheila Dixon had just one $6,000 donor.

The 11 News I-Team found no campaign in the past 15 years in Baltimore has had as many big donors as Vignarajah.

Campaign finance reports: