Showing posts with label police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

First aid kits for SA police dog handlers

SA police patrol dog Koda and his handler, Simon Rosenhahn SA police dog handlers are to carry compact first aid kits after the stabbing of a patrol dog. Source: AAP

SOUTH Australia's police dog handlers are to carry compact first aid kits for their canines following the recent stabbing of patrol dog Koda.

The German shepherd was rested for about five weeks after being stabbed in August as police chased and arrested a man over a spate of break-ins in Adelaide's northern suburbs.

The Animal Welfare League, In Wingfield, has now put together the kit so handlers will be able to provide initial first aid.

Each kit includes vet wrap bandage, dressings, saline solution, antiseptic, scissors, forceps and a shock blanket, all contained in a pouch small enough to fit into a handler's pocket.

Koda's handler, Senior Constable Simon Rosenhahn, praised the initiative.

"We work solo the vast majority of the time and sometimes in the middle of the scrub, a long, long way from help," he said on Wednesday.

"When Koda was stabbed, we were a long way from the police vehicle so it was hard to act quickly to ensure he didn't lose too much blood."

The stabbing prompted the SA to propose new laws and tougher penalties for attacks on police animals.

South Australian police currently use 25 dogs and 36 horses.


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Friday, 20 September 2013

Navy Yard gunman, Aaron Alexis, told police he was hearing voices

WASHINGTON -

A month before he went on the rampage that left 13 dead, Washington Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis complained to police in Rhode Island that people were talking to him through the walls and ceilings of his hotel rooms and sending microwave vibrations into his body to deprive him of sleep.

The account, contained in an Aug. 7 report from Newport, R.I., police, adds to the picture that has emerged of an agitated and erratic figure whose behavior and mental state had repeatedly come to authorities' attention but didn't seem to affect his security clearance.

Alexis, a 34-year-old information technology employee at a defense-related computer company, used a valid pass Monday to get into the Navy Yard and killed 12 people before he was slain by police in a shootout that lasted more than a half-hour.

A day after the assault, the motive was still a mystery. U.S. law enforcement officials told The Associated Press that investigators had found no manifesto or other writings suggesting a political or religious motivation.

Alexis, a former Navy reservist, had been undergoing mental health treatment from Veterans Affairs since August but was not stripped of his security clearance, according to the law enforcement officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the criminal investigation was still going on.

He had been suffering a host of serious mental problems, including paranoia and a sleep disorder, and had been hearing voices in his head, the officials said.

The assault is raising more questions about the adequacy of the background checks done on contract employees who hold security clearances — an issue that came up recently with National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden.

Navy Secretary Ray Mabus ordered two security reviews Tuesday of how well the Navy protects its bases and how accurately it screens its workers.

Similarly, President Barack Obama has ordered the White House budget office to examine security standards for government contractors and employees across federal agencies.

In addition, the House and Senate Veterans' Affairs Committees asked the VA for details about any treatment provided to Alexis.

At the U.S. Navy Memorial, in church and on the baseball field, the nation's capital paused to mourn the victims. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel laid a wreath at the memorial's "Lone Sailor" statue as taps played.

Just a few blocks from the Navy Yard, the Washington Nationals were back to playing baseball after their Monday night game with the Atlanta Braves was postponed because of the shooting. The Nationals wore blue and gold Navy caps during warm-ups, and a moment of silence was held before the first pitch.

Those killed included: Michael Arnold, 59, a Navy veteran and avid pilot who was building a light airplane at home; Sylvia Frasier, 53, who worked in computer security; Frank Kohler, 50, a former Rotary Club president in Lexington Park, Md., who proudly reigned as "King Oyster" at the annual seafood festival; and marine engineer and naval architect Vishnu Pandit, 61, an Indian immigrant.

In the Newport, R.I., incident, Alexis told police he got into an argument with someone as he was getting on a flight from Virginia to Rhode Island, where he was working as a naval contractor, and he said the person sent three people to follow and harass him.

He said he heard voices talking to him through a wall while at one hotel, so he changed hotels twice, but the voices followed him, according to the report. He said he feared they might harm him.

He also "stated that the individuals are using 'some sort of microwave machine' to send vibrations through the ceiling, penetrating his body so he cannot fall asleep."

Later that day, Newport police alerted the Rhode Island naval station and sent a copy of the police report, Newport police Lt. William Fitzgerald said Thursday.

A spokeswoman for the station had no comment Tuesday.

Alexis came to the Washington area about two weeks later and had been staying at hotels. On Saturday, two days before the attack, he went to a Virginia gun store about 15 miles from the Navy Yard.

He rented a rifle, bought bullets and took target practice at Sharpshooters Small Arms Range, the store's attorney Michael Slocum said. Alexis then bought a shotgun and 24 shells, according to Slocum.

The FBI said during Monday's attack Alexis was armed with a shotgun. Officials said he also took a handgun from a law officer.

Alexis had run-ins with the law in 2004 and 2010 in Texas and Seattle after he was accused of firing a gun in anger. He was not prosecuted in either case.

And his bouts of insubordination, disorderly conduct and being absent from work without authorization prompted the Navy to grant him an early — but honorable — discharge in 2011 after nearly four years as a full-time reservist, authorities said.

Alexis joined the Florida-based IT consulting firm The Experts in September 2012, leaving a few months later to return to school. He came back in June to do part-time work at the Washington Navy Yard as a subcontractor, helping the military update computer systems.

The Experts' CEO, Thomas Hoshko, said that Alexis had "no personal issues," and he confirmed that Alexis had been granted a "secret" clearance by the Defense Security Service five years ago.

Alexis' clearance — lower than "top secret" — doesn't need to be renewed for 10 years. Still, the company said it hired outside vendors twice to check Alexis' criminal history.

Alexis' background check "came back clear," Hoshko said.

___

By ERIC TUCKER, JACK GILLUM and LOLITA C. BALDOR Associated Press

Associated Press writers Pauline Jelinek, Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Jesse Holland, Stacy A. Anderson, Brian Witte and Ben Nuckols in Washington contributed to this report.


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Town plans to fire foul-mouthed Pa. police chief

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM
Associated Press

GILBERTON, Pa. (AP) - A small-town Pennsylvania police chief's profanity-laced Internet tirades about the Second Amendment and liberals have earned him a measure of notoriety - and now, his bosses intend, a pink slip.

Gilberton Borough Council members said Thursday night they plan to fire Mark Kessler, nearly two months after voting to suspend the only full-time member of the town's police force.

Kessler, who's active in gun rights circles and started an armed group that critics call a private militia, posted videos of himself shooting borough-owned automatic weapons and cursing liberals and others who he said want to erode the constitutional right to bear arms.

Kessler said the council's decision was "no surprise" in light of the incendiary videos.

"We knew it was coming," he said.

A closed-door disciplinary hearing earlier in the day had dwelled on unrelated allegations, including that Kessler improperly used a state-administered program to buy discounted tires for his personal vehicle, failed to submit required crime data and made derogatory comments about borough officials.

Kessler's attorney, Joseph Nahas, said the charges were trumped up to conceal the town's intent to fire Kessler over the videos. He said after the vote he'll request a public hearing at which both sides can call witnesses, as is Kessler's right under due process rules. The council would then have to vote a second time to fire Kessler.

Kessler told reporters that he had been an excellent police chief and had nothing to apologize for. He said he'd broken no laws: "None. I'd be in handcuffs."

"My message was to wake up the people who are independents," he said, "to say, 'We've had enough and something needs to change, because we're in bad shape all around. Not only here in this little town but across the nation. It's a mess.'"

Kessler's pro-gun videos have garnered hundreds of thousands of views online. He acknowledges they are inflammatory but says they're designed to draw attention to the erosion of Second Amendment and other constitutional rights.

Mayor Mary Lou Hannon had said she found the police chief's language offensive.

Council members declined to comment after Thursday night's vote.

Kessler, a former coal miner, has spoken at gun-rights rallies and created a website on which he seeks recruits for the Constitution Security Force, whose stated mission is to defend the constitution and the country from tyranny.

Gun rights activists had traveled to the community of about 800 people, in Schuylkill County in eastern Pennsylvania's anthracite coal country, to show support for Kessler, and most of them displayed weapons.

Constitution Security Force member Bob Gardner traveled from Philadelphia.

"Mark has gotten railroaded," said Gardner, who carried a semi-automatic AK-47. "He was exercising his First Amendment rights by backing it up with his Second Amendment rights."

In January, Kessler drafted a resolution the borough adopted that calls for nullifying any federal, state or local regulations that infringe on the Second Amendment.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Police seek author of note that led to beaten teen

By DAN JOLING
Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A typed, anonymous note left with police at the University of Alaska Anchorage said a teenager had been severely beaten and left to die at an abandoned downtown building. The note said the writer felt compelled to tell someone.

"''They said they couldn't live with themselves, that they had to tell, they had to say something," Anchorage Police Department spokeswoman Anita Shell said.

Officers acting on the tip Monday night found 18-year-old James Clinton in a home scheduled to be demolished two days later.

He was unconscious and in critical condition. Police found an identity card in his pocket but were unsure of his name because of severe injuries to Clinton's face.

"It's my understanding he was beaten around the head and the face, the whole body," Shell said.

He was rushed to an Anchorage hospital and on Thursday remained unconscious and in critical condition.

"We have not yet spoken to the young man because of his medical state," Shell said.

Police have appealed to the note writer to come forward so they can learn why Clinton was beaten.

Two University Police Department officers were on duty at their desks in a squad room at about 8:30 p.m. Monday when the note appeared, University Police Chief Rick Shell said.

"One of them got up to do something and noticed a note on the floor," he said. "He picked it up, read it, let the other officer read it. The other officer saw content that led him to believe that the Anchorage Police Department should be involved."

The campus is more than two miles from the abandoned home in downtown Anchorage.

Anchorage police found Clinton in the basement. Police initially said he was being held against his will, but spokeswoman Anita Shell said his injuries prevented him from leaving.

The home was owned by Covenant House, which operates a shelter across the street for homeless teenagers. Director Alison Kear said the home was to be demolished to expand a parking lot.

Wrought iron mesh had covered the windows and doors were locked, Kear said. A security company had patrolled outside. The only access she could guess was a second-floor window not much bigger than a dog door.

"How they were able to enter there is perplexing to me," she said.

Shell did not know if a weapon was used. She could not say Thursday whether the crime scene was the abandoned home or elsewhere.

"We gathered evidence from that scene," Shell said. "I don't have specifics on whether that's where the assault took place."

Investigators allowed the scheduled demolition to move forward and a wrecking crew used heavy machinery to knock the building down Thursday morning.

University Police Chief Shell praised the quick response by both departments.

"This was just an absolutely outstanding case of two officers taking something that could have been fairly innocuous and taking it seriously," Shell said. "It ended up saving the young man's life."

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Monday, 16 September 2013

Police: Surveillance video shows man taking 'upskirt' photos

GUN BARREL CITY (KLTV) -

An East Texas man was arrested after a woman reported him to police for attempting to take pictures up her dress while she shopped at Walmart.

According to a report from the Gun Barrel City Police Department, 37-year-old Christopher Lee Pomroy of Gun Barrel City has been jailed on charges of possession of child pornography and improper photography or visual recording.

In the Walmart surveillance video, you see a woman in a long dress making her way up the grocery aisle. Right behind her is a man reaching for his cell phone. According to Gun Barrel City police, that man is Christopher Pomroy.

The video shows the man following her to the end of the aisle while messing with his phone. Then, you see the man crouch down by her feet. That's when police say he started recording.

"After it happened, she saw a flash coming from down below her, and he apparently was right up next to her kneeled down there on the floor acting like he was trying to get something off of the shelf," says Gun Barrel City Police Department Investigator Monte Mansfield.

The victim, who did not want to go on camera or be identified, says this wasn't her first encounter with the man at the Gun Barrel City Walmart. She says earlier this month when she was shopping like she normally does, she saw him doing the same thing. That's why the second time she was prepared.

"Shortly after this happened, she backed away from where she was at and turned around with her phone and took a picture of him and turned that picture over to us," says Mansfield.

Police say they used that photo to identify and arrest Pomroy. Gun Barrel City Police add, that a search of his cell phone revealed photographs related to child pornography.

The victim in this case says she wants people to learn from what happened to her and to pay attention to their surroundings. She says, "When out shopping, women get caught up in what they're doing and some people prey on distractions. He had the opportunity to get closer to me than he normally would in another environment."

The incident at Walmart was not Pomroy's first offense. According to Denton County judicial records, he was scheduled to plea in another improper photography case Wednesday, but he didn't make it to that hearing because he was in jail in East Texas.

Copyright 2013 KLTV. All rights reserved.


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Saturday, 29 June 2013

Dubai police bolster crime-fighting fleet with a Ferrari

As if adding a Lamborghini Aventador wasn't enough to scare speeding drivers, police in Dubai can now also count on a brand new Ferrari FF to patrol the city's popular tourist areas.

The car, which sports the green and white of Dubai law enforcement, will be driven by female cops only.

Similar to the Lamborghini, however, the Ferrari will essentially do promotional work and won't actually chase down offenders; that job still belongs to a fleet of Camaro SS coupes.

Police in Dubai also have the support of powerful German sedans and Japanese-branded 4x4s -- a sign of the city's luxurious and prosperous living.

Source:?libération

June 15, 2013

by Guillaume Rivard

May 09, 2013

by Auto123.com

March 08, 2013

by Auto123.com

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