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Archive for January 11, 2008

STORE SECURITY SHOOTS SHOPLIFTER www.privateofficer.com

Store security shoots beer run suspect www.privateofficer.com

PHOENIX AZ. JAN 10 2008
A suspect was shot by a security officer in Phoenix during a scuffle over a theft from a store where the security officer was working. It happened around 2 a.m. Thursday at 21st Avenue and Van Buren outside a convenience store. The guard got in a scuffle with the suspect after he says the man tried to steal beer from the store. The suspect was shot in the back and transported to the hospital.
Police are still investigating the shooting and are not releasing the persons anme who was shot or whether or not he was armed.
They say that they will release further details about the incident as it becomes available to them.
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Student With Broken Arm Sues Security, School www.privateofficer.com

Student With Broken Arm Sues Security, School www.privateofficer.com

ELYRIA OH. Jan 10, 2008 — A former Southview High School student, whose right arm was broken in a scuffle with a building security guard, has sued Lorain Schools over the injury.
The lawsuit, filed by Gavin Mohler on Wednesday in county Common Pleas Court, accuses the district of acting with a conscious disregard for Mohler’s safety on Jan. 11, 2007.
Scott Kalish, Mohler’s attorney, said his client was simply running late when the guard intercepted him.
“He fractured his right arm when he was slammed to the ground by a security guard when he was trying to get to the principal’s office for a hall pass,” Kalish said.
School officials claim that Mohler became “verbally belligerent” and “aggressive” with the guard, Marvin Cruz, forcing Cruz to take him to the ground.
Kalish said his client wasn’t a threat to anyone.
“He can’t be over a buck-40 wet, so he’s not intimidating to anyone,” he said.
Kalish said his efforts to get the district’s insurance company to pay for his client’s $2,200 in medical bills failed in large part because the company said the incident didn’t lead to the injury.
Mohler complained his arm hurt the day of the incident, but his mother didn’t take him to a doctor for 10 days because she thought the arm was only bruised.
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CEO Of Wakenhut Looses His Job www.privateofficer.com

CEO At Wackenhut Looses His Job www.privateofficer.com

Palm Beach FLA. January 10, 2008 – The CEO of Wackenhut Corp., which recently lost its job protecting 10 nuclear power plants after guards at one plant were caught napping, has left the company.The Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.-based security provider, a subsidiary of British based security giant G4S PLC, thanked Gary A. Sanders for his service, but did not say why he left in a press release to be issued Thursday.
Grahame Gibson, a board member and G4S’s chief operating officer, now has responsibility for the company’s North American operations.After guards at one plant were found to be sleeping on the job last year, Chicago-based utility Exelon Corp. (NYSE:EXC) last month said that by July it will replace Wackenhut with an in-house security force at its 10 nuclear power plants.Wackenhut officials have said the apparent lapses in attentiveness at the Peach Bottom plant in Pennsylvania were ‘an anomaly.’ Exelon said it took action even though a review of security at its other plants found ‘no significant deficiencies.’Since a videotape arose that showed guards at the Peach Bottom plant nodding off, the U.S Nuclear Regulatory Commission last month asked commercial nuclear power plant operators to provide new information about their security practices.
The agency in October confirmed guards had been sleeping on the job at the plant.Wackenhut also provides security, fire and other services to Department of Defense locations in Iraq.
Shares of G4S fell about 1.4 percent to $425.32 on the London Stock Exchange in afternoon trading.
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Manhunt Ends In Capture Of Kidnapper www.privateofficer.com

Manhunt Ends In Capture Of Kidnapper by; Rick McCann www.privateofficer.com

KINGSLAND, Ga. Janaury 10, 2008 — A fugitive accused of kidnapping two people in South Carolina was arrested in near Kingsland early Thursday after a manhunt that began when he ran from a traffic stop on Interstate 95, according to the Camden County Sheriff’s Office.
Within 30 minutes of the Camden County Sheriff’s Office receiving a notice to be on the lookout for Richard Wayne Faust, 30, driving a stolen Ford Bronco, deputies spotted the suspect vehicle headed southbound at the nine-mile marker. At the time, he was described as a suspect in two homicides.
About 3:30 a.m., Sgt. Nathan McDonald and Deputy Richard Echols said they tried to stop the SUV, but the the driver kept going to Exit 7, where he abandoned the vehicle and ran into the woods east of the interstate. A .20-gauge shotgun was recovered from the vehicle.
Officers from the Kingsland Police Department and the Georgia State Patrol joined the search as a perimeter was established to keep Faust leaving the area. Sheriff’s office bloodhounds were brought in to assist in the search, which ended about 6 a.m. when Faust was arrested not far from where he entered the woods.
Port Wentworth, S.C., police said Faust went to his ex-girlfriend’s house, assaulted her, shot up the house with the shotgun, then forced her into the trunk of her own car. Authorities said Faust then drove to the home of a friend, kidnapped him and stole the friend’s white Bronco, which he drove south into Georgia.
Officials said Faust released his second victim in Georgia, then continued driving south. His girlfriend was later found safe in the truck of her car. With both victims accounted for, police said no homicide occurred.
While Faust was at large in close proximity to Mamie Lou Gross Elementary, the school was locked down. That was lifted just after 6 a.m., before any students arrived for the day.
Faust was treated at Camden Medical Center for minor cuts and scrapes sustained during in the woods, then he was cleared to be booked into jail in Woodbine.
Faust was charged with bringing stolen property into the Georgia, fleeing and attempting to elude and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He also faces numerous additional charges in South Carolina.
The FBI is also joining the investigation.
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Texas Constables Target Truancy by; Rick McCann www.privateofficer.com

Texas Constables Target Truancy www.privateofficer.com

Austin TX Jan 10 2008
Classroom or courtroom — that’s the message that Travis County constables are sending to some parents and students at Johnston High School.
Chief Deputy Willie Madison of the Precinct 1 constable’s office said he drives around and looks for kids on the streets.
“Right now I’m looking for addresses,” Madison said. “We do have a lot of kids out of school today.”
Parents should be advised that if their student does not make it to class, deputies could be knocking at their door. They will be targeting students who have missed 15 days or more. Precinct 4 constable Marial Canchola said the school will provide the constables with a comprehensive list.
“They are going to give us a list of students every day, and either that night or the next day we will pay a visit to those parents,” Canchola said.
It’s all part of a truancy crackdown for Johnston High School. Officials at the school have already been making phone calls and getting out into the neighborhood to stress the importance of school attendance. Just for reinforcement, they now have the help of law enforcement.Madison has a strong warning for kids with excessive absences. “If they don’t contact the school and we go there with the warrant issued out of Precinct 1′s court, we will arrest them,” Madison said.Constable visits used to happen all the time for students who missed too much school, but funding shortages led to termination of the program. In December, Travis County commissioners approved $15,000 to bring the program back for Johnston High.
The dropout prevention specialist at Johnston, Ganzalo Robles, said truancy is a huge problem.
“We are in serious crisis with attendance here,” Robles said. Robles said attendance always matters but this year the stakes are higher than ever. “TAKS is coming up and, you know, there are measures that we have to pass this year,” he said. “If they don’t come to school, they don’t learn.”Johnston faces closure if it does not make the grade on the next round of testing. Robles said about 150 students are on the list to get a visit from the constable. That’s about 22 percent of the student population.Officials at Johnston said they would rather students learn their lesson in classroom and not the hard way.

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Mother Charged With Trying To Kill Her Child www.privateofficer.com

Mother Arrested For Trying To Kill Her Child www.privateofficer.com

Myrtle Beach S.C. Jan 10 2008
Horry County Police charged a Myrtle Beach woman with assault and battery with intent to kill and child neglect after her 5-year-old daughter was taken to the Medical University of South Carolina with servere injuries.
Police arrested Patricia Eudy Wednesday and booked her into the J. Reuben Long Detention Center.
Police said Eudy “inflicted violent injury” to the body of her daughter and did so without cause of provacation.
Investigators said Eudy admitted to beating her daughter when she gave police her statement.
A county magistrate read Eudy’s prior record in court, which includes drug charges, unlawful neglect of a child and ill treatment of a helpless person, all dating back to 2005.
According to Eudy’s arrest record from the State Law Enforcement Divison, Horry County Police charged her with manufacturing, distributing ice or crack cocaine, multiple other drug charges, possession of a stolen pistol, ill treatment of a helpless person, and unlawful child neglect, all from a January 2005 incident.
According to SLED, Eudy was sentenced to jail, but a judge reduced her sentence to two years probation.
In September 2005, Horry County Police again charged Eudy with distribution, selling, and manufacturing drugs.
Eudy told the judge she got those charges because she was selling drugs out of her home with her children present.
The judge denied Eudy bond on the charges, calling her a threat to society and to anyone under the age of 18.
Eudy remains behind bars without bail at the J. Reuben Long Detention Center.
Authorities have not ruled out additional charges or arrests in this case.
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Shoplifters pull gun on store security agent www.privateofficer.com

Shoplifters pull gun on store security agent www.privateofficer.com

Goodyear AZ Jan 10 2008
Shoplifting turned into robbery Tuesday night when a woman racked a handgun and pointed it at a JCPenney security guard, Goodyear police reported.A man tried to walk out of a JCPenney store in the 13300 block of West McDowell Road with two bags of clothing about 9:45 p.m., police said.A security guard and a store employee confronted the shoplifter, and the guard handcuffed him, police said.
The scene moved out to the parking lot, where a woman waiting in a pickup truck racked a cartridge into the chamber and pointed a gun at the guard, police said.The pair fled in a white, early 1990s Chevy pickup with a tan stripe running down the side, police said.The woman is described as Hispanic, 5 feet 8 inches tall, with a “very thin” build and long black hair with red streaks. The man is described as Hispanic, 5 feet 8 inches tall, weighing 180 pounds, with a teardrop tattoo under his left eye. John Rowan, a Goodyear police spokesman, said the use of a gun turned an otherwise minor crime into something dangerous. “It’s a much more serious crime,” he said.Anyone with information is asked to contact Goodyear police at 623-932-1220.
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Irate Woman Assaults Security Officer, Spits, Faces Felony www.privateofficer.com

Irate Woman Assaults, Spits On Security Officer Facing Felony www.privateofficer.com

SHERMAN TX JANUARY 10 2008
A woman assaults an officer at a local hospital. After spitting on a security officer, the woman could face felony charges.
The woman could face felony charges however, there’s been no arrest. Officials say a patient was causing a disturbance in the waiting area at Wilson N Jones on Tuesday night. The patient was angry because, she didn’t feel she was being treated fairly. She also accused the staff of racism. Police say the woman then tried to cause problems with others in the area. When security arrived at the hospital they would not let her stay in the building.
Bruce Dawsey with the Sherman Police Department said, “She was asked to leave after refusing to calm down, and in the process of her leaving the area she spit several times on a security officer.”
The woman was taken out to the parking lot. She then tried to physically assault an officer, but was restrained by a relative. Police also stated that the woman started spitting on the security officer. By the time officers arrived the woman had already left the scene.
The woman now could face serious felony charges for assaulting the security officer with her spit which is a felony in Texas.
Police did take a police report but it is not known if the officer or the hospital will pursue charges against the irate woman.
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Security Officers Struggle To Maintain Insurance www.privateofficer.com

January 11, 2008 1 comment

Security Officers Struggle To Maintain Insurance www.privateofficer.com

MINNEAPOLIS MN. January 10, 2008 – On the heels of recent reports indicating more than 1 million Minnesotans are living without adequate insurance, a new study finds that private security officers in the Twin Cities are almost universally without affordable, employer-sponsored family health care.
Despite record sales and investments for the area’s multi-billion dollar real estate industry, the overwhelming majority of security officers who protect the majority of commercial office space in Minneapolis and St. Paul are living without health insurance and nearly 10 percent have filed for bankruptcy. “Not being able to afford health care has put me in a bad situation,” Billie Edmonds, a security officer for Securitas, said in a conference call with reporters. A single mother, she said she simply cannot afford the $550 monthly premium for health insurance offered by the company.
Alvin Bouye, an officer at the non-union firm, Hannon Security, said he, too, struggles to get health coverage while he deals with diabetes. “Both Billie and Alvin’s stories are examples of the crisis of a falling middle class,” said Javier Morillo, president of Service Employees International Union Local 26. “Ninety-eight percent of security officers report they cannot afford their employer-provided health plan.” Bargaining for health care Health care is a key issue in contract talks currently underway between Local 26 and contractors employing nearly one thousand security officers and window cleaners who work in Twin Cities office buildings. Their contract expired Dec. 31. “It’s not a good sign that we’ve been working without a contract this long,” Morillo said. “We’re back at the table, but it’s too soon to say how it’s going to go.”
The SEIU study found that security firms employing the majority of Twin Cities security officers pay well below the average employer contribution to health care coverage premiums, providing only 43 percent of premiums for single coverage and a stark 18 percent of premiums for family coverage. In contrast, other area employers contribute on average 83 percent of premiums for single coverage and 67 percent of premiums for family coverage. As a result, a security officer making $1,800 a month would have to pay more than half of her take-home income to insure her family, the study found. “The refusal of security contractors to provide health care for all of their employees has a devastating effect on Minnesota’s working families and our communities,” said the Rev. Nancy Anderson of the Workers Interfaith Network, an organization of religious and labor leaders that has been actively supporting the security officers. “We firmly believe it is the responsibility of these building owners to hold their contractors accountable and demand that security officers are fairly compensated for their work.” Officers left out of real estate boom While the real estate industry saw record profits from building sales over the last three years, the men and women guarding those multi-million dollar properties have fared less well. A high percentage of private security officers report having filed for bankruptcy and some security officers have faced evictions and home foreclosures, the report found. A number of other findings indicate area families are being left behind despite an economic boom for Twin Cities real estate corporations: • Commercial building owners have seen their taxes decrease dramatically since 2001, while Minnesota’s working families have seen their incomes decrease. Taxes on downtown office properties were lowered as much as $4,500, despite increased occupancy and profitability, since 2001. In that same time, the median family income in Minnesota has fallen by $3,000. • Commercial building owners are paying less in taxes — even as taxes rise for homeowners. Since 1997, the percent of the Minneapolis property tax burden that commercial/industrial properties pay dropped from 56 percent to 34 percent, while residential homeowners’ share jumped from 32 percent to 57 percent. A similar shift has occurred in St. Paul, the report found. • Twenty-three percent of private security officers report working multiple jobs to make ends meet. “So long as business leaders in the Twin Cities remain on the sidelines and permit — even encourage — the rising tide of dead-end, low-wage jobs without affordable health insurance in our community, it is impossible to imagine a better future for working people in the area.,” said Morillo. “There must be a path to professionalize the work of security officers and transform Twin Cities security jobs into good jobs with health care and a future, for the good of all working Minnesotans.”
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OFFICER DOWN……..KENTUCKY www.privateofficer.com

OFFICER DOWN ………KENTUCKY www.privateofficer.com

PINEVILLE, Ky. — Two teenagers are charged with murder after they led police on a high-speed chase in southeastern Kentucky and hit a parked sheriff’s cruiser, killing the deputy and K-9 dog inside.
The crash killed 31-year-old Deputy Sean Pursifull and his K-9 dog King.The incident began when the car pulled away from a Baxter gas station without paying around 12:30 Thursday morning.State police said two state troopers attempted to stop the speeding driver on the winding highway through the mostly rural, rugged Appalachian coal-mining region.
The 17-year-old driver veered over the center line of U.S. 119 and rammed into a Bell County Sheriff’s car parked beside the road.The driver and his 16-year-old companion have been charged with murder of a police officer and assault on a service animal.
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