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Your Defensive Line- A Five Part Series www.privateofficer.com
Your Defensive Line A 5 Part Series www.privateofficer.com
Man confesses to murder, 17 years later www.privateofficer.com
Man confesses to murder, 17 years later www.privateofficer.com
David Lee Patterson faces a charge of murder. He was booked into the Dallas County jail on Tuesday and was being held without bond, according to jail records.
“He just walked into our lobby and said he had something to tell somebody,” said Sgt. Kevin Perlich of the Richardson Police Department. “He just said he had some stuff on his mind that had been bothering him, and that was the reason he thought he might be having a rough time.”
Detectives said Eric Lamon, 21, was walking home with two friends from a nightclub when in May 1991 when he got into a fight with a transient. Lamon was shot in the back and died after surgery.
Patterson told Richardson police last week that he was sleeping on a sidewalk when three white men approached and began kicking him while yelling racial epithets. Patterson, who is black, said he drew a gun and killed one man.
Patterson told investigators he had confessed before, in unsigned notes to The Oregonian. Police did a search and discovered that someone had sent the newspaper three unsigned postcards months after the killings.
The writer said he was a black man who had been attacked by three white men while he slept in the doorway of a funeral home.
They were “kicking me about the head and shoulder and shouting racial names,” stated the Feb. 29, 1992, article about the anonymous confession.
“I jumped up, fired one round in there direction I heard later he died I feel sorry for him But my life was in danger,” the letter said. “I wasn’t doing anything to them. I’m a Vietnam vet I didn’t need that to happen to me but I pray his family will forgive me, and I hope your city will too.”
Patterson has waived extradition and should arrive in Oregon later this week, authorities said. It was unclear whether he had an attorney.
“We alerted Portland police Thursday night because everything was matching up pretty closely,” Perlich said.
Rod Underhill, a chief deputy district attorney in Multnomah County, said the homicide probably would have gone unsolved were it not for the confession.
“You never know when something’s going to fall out of the sky,” Underhill said. “He just wanted to get it off his shoulders. It just weighed on him. That’s what we were told. It’s as simple at that.”
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Off-duty cop becomes woman’s angel www.privateofficer.com
Off-duty cop becomes woman’s angel www.privateofficer.com
Brenda Davis is a 57-year-old paraplegic and registered nurse from North Little Rock who has to use a wheelchair to get around.
Davis said in an interview Tuesday that her condition forces her to lead an unusual but active life, and it was completely normal for her on March 9 to be at the McCain Mall by herself to buy a baby gift.
She’s used to travelling around in a wheelchair on her own, Davis said, though she isn’t used to being robbed of her purse in broad daylight; nor did she expect to find the grown-up version of a boy she knew from church decades ago, now just a few feet away in the mall parking lot after the incident.
“Ben Majors must be my angel, or the work of God in some way,” Davis said of the man who is now a full-time senior police officer with the University of Central Arkansas Police Department.
Majors, who according to Davis was dropping his wife off at the mall, told witnesses to call 9-1-1, and his actions that day helped officers with North Little Rock Police Department catch the two alleged robbers.
Davis had gotten out of her van and put up her handicap ramp, and as she started toward the mall entrance she realized she’d left her cell phone inside her van.
“I did NOT see anyone but a couple pulling in to park one car down from me,” Davis wrote in an appreciation letter to UCAPD. “I went to the back of my van to wait for them to get out so I could ask them to get my phone out of the car. I turned my wheelchair around to check to see if I had my passenger door unlocked so one of them could get my phone.
“As I turned my wheelchair around, an arm came over my right shoulder and grabbed my purse. A struggle ensued and I was pulled out of my chair and fell face-first on the pavement.”
Within 45 seconds of the purse-snatching, Majors appeared in street clothes, and he recognized the woman whose family has known his from decades at Sylvan Hills Church of Christ, as well as numerous haircuts and sporting events, Davis said:
“Ben said, ‘Mrs. Brenda, it’s Benji Majors. I’m here and you are going to be OK,’” before telling a bystander to call 9-1-1.
“I told him that I knew there were witnesses,” Davis wrote in her letter to UCAPD Chief Larry James. “Some were going to just go on into the mall and not get involved. (Majors) instructed everyone that he was a police officer and he was ordering them to stay and give their statements to the NLRPD. He called my husband and notified him as the mall security leaned up against my van and gawked. By the time NLRPD got there, Ben identified himself and the witnesses, and a ‘BOLO’ was immediately issued.”
Davis said Tuesday that the witnesses Majors helped retain for NLRPD remembered the license plate numbers on a vehicle allegedly carrying Frederick Johnson and Harold Covert, who are both charged in Pulaski County with robbery and theft by receiving Davis’ purse and its contents.
Majors, though off-duty before the incident, was empowered by Ark. Code Annotated 25-17-305, a law passed in 2007 which allows “institutional law enforcement officers” such as campus police statewide jurisdiction when traveling with athletic teams, investigating crimes or in Majors’ case, when assisting other law enforcement agencies.
Lieutenant Rhonda Swindle of UCAPD said Tuesday that UCA officers aren’t normally encouraged to exercise the powers of A.C.A. 25-17-305 while off-duty, though in Majors’ circumstance on March 9, “I think most people would’ve at least helped as a citizen in the case he was put in. Don’t you?”
Swindle said Majors didn’t witness the crime or investigate in any way other than giving his orders to actual witnesses to tell NLRPD officers what they saw.
“But had it happened in front of him, he could have (stepped in),” Swindle said.
“We try not to step out of our jurisdiction unless it’s something unusual like that,” Swindle added. “If it’s in Conway, say, and we make an arrest in Conway (off campus), we’re going to immediately call the Conway Police Department and say, ‘Hey, we have this going on. Would you like to assist?’”
Though police were successful in apprehending the alleged robbers, unfortunately for Davis the incident of March 9 left her with a torn rotator cuff, a fractured nose and several sprains. Majors, however, never left her side during the ordeal.
“Ben drove my son’s car to the (emergency room) so my son could drive my van to the ER,” Davis said. “I could go on and on as to what all Ben did for me … and I would love to honor him in some way, or let others know what all he has done.”
Majors said Tuesday the robbery “was probably one of the most disheartening incidents” he’s ever experienced, and that when he thinks about it, tears come to his eyes.
“Every time I think about this, man: To know that people actually were walking away till I got out to help her,” said Majors, who was at the parking lot with his 2-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter.
“The good Lord put me there at the perfect time,” Majors said. “It’s so unfortunate that it happened, but if it had’ve happened three seconds earlier than it did, we would’ve caught (the alleged robbers) in the act and my kids would’ve had to see something go down that could’ve been bad for me or the guys that did it, or it could’ve put my kids in danger also.”
Majors said, “I would’ve done this for anybody though, and I mean for anybody. It wouldn’t have mattered who it was, handicapped or not. That’s what you do as a human being. Not because you’re a police officer, but you just do that as a person.”
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Beware of online bogus ads, scams and predators www.privateofficer.com
Beware of bogus online ads, scams and predators www.privateofficer.com
Executive Director
National Association of
Private Officers
As a Security Consultant and Public Safety professional I have often warned people in my writings and in the security seminars that I do, about the dangers and darkside of the internet. While there is obviously a lot of benefits to such a powerful tool, there are many areas of the web that can be anyone’s nightmare.
The constant phising of personal information to be used later for identification theft, credit fraud and worse, personal assaults. The deception, promises unfilled, deceit and outright abuse along with the newwest wave of online bullying has left millions to wonder if the internet is safe at all.
This week, comes two more such concerns that triggered emotional abuse when someone posted a crank ad on the popular Craigslist that said that the woman in Lebanon Oregon was selling her baby for $1,000! The ad, spotted by a local TV station and ran locally and national in headline news said that the parents of the child were drug addicts and were out “tweaking” and were not coming back. An email attached to the ad included the name Birdie Avery but the woman who lives in that city with the same name has no baby and doesn’t even own a computer!
“I don’t know if this is somebody’s really sick April fools joke,” she said.
Avery and her husband said they have raised children and grandchildren and would never do such a thing.
“When we find out who did this and who is using my name, I will make sure they get prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” Avery said. “This is not funny, it’s malicious and it’s not me.”
Avery said she learned of the ad Tuesday afternoon when a detective contacted her.
The couple is working with Salem and Lebanon police to track down the person responsible for the ad, which has been taken off craigslist.
Another scam showed up in the Nashville Tennessee suburb of Nolensville where a resident said she wants the public to be aware of a rental scam that is showing up on Craigslist.com.
The resident said scammers are reposting legitimate properties that were previously placed on Craigslist and directing users to send them their personal data.
The thieves will often ask users to fill out an online application and provide their credit and bank account numbers.
A recent bogus posting on the Web site said they wanted to rent out an upscale home for $750 a month. However, the property was already occupied and being rented out at a cost of nearly $2,000 a month.
The renter said she became suspicious when people started showing up to her home and were asking about a posting on Craigslist.
Craigslist’s representatives said users of their site should scroll down the page for previous listings because often fake postings are posted multiple times on their site.
They also advise users to deal locally with people that they can meet in person. According to Craigslist, if users follow this one simple rule, they can avoid 99 percent of the scam attempts on Craigslist.
Again, the sirens are sounding and We’re screaming to be cautious because you have netered the waters with sharks and those sharks will bump into you from time to time until they have you right where they want you and you become the next victim. Don’t give out personal information on the web, don’t post identifying pictures that show your kids school names, city name or address, work location or even pet info and don’t go into uncharted waters on the web where you’ve never been, and listen to your sith sense because there is danger out there on the web! When on the web have fun, think smart and choose your keystrokes wisely!
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Death of police officer might be suicide www.privateofficer.com
Death of police officer might be suicide www.privateofficer.com
NORWALK VA. March 28 2008 – Police officers rarely kill themselves while on duty, as city Police Officer Matthew Morelli apparently did. But experts said yesterday that his age, time on the force and broken marriage are common in cops who take their own lives.
Morelli, 38, was found shot to death in a church parking lot early Friday, minutes after radioing dispatchers that he was checking on something suspicious.
A citywide manhunt initially ensued for a possible killer of the 11-year veteran, but investigators yesterday acknowledged a “high degree of probability” that Morelli had taken his own life.
“If it is a suicide, it is rare to have that staged a suicide,” said Dr. Audrie Honig, chief psychologist for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and head of psychological services for the International Association of Chiefs of Police. “Suicide is a very impulsive act. You don’t typically get something planned and staged.”
Robert Douglas, a former police officer in Florida and Maryland who runs the National Police Suicide Foundation, agreed. He said 94 percent of suicides that have occurred since 1997 are at home.
Honig speculated Morelli wanted his suicide to look as if he were gunned down in the line of duty because of the stigma associated with police officers who take their own lives.
“There’s the whole sociological response to suicide, versus (being killed) in the line of duty, from both family and colleagues,” Honig said. “Society looks down upon suicide. In law enforcement, it’s even less acceptable because you’re supposed to be ‘strong’ all the time.”
Douglas said Morelli’s personal code as a police officer and former Marine could have played into the decision.
“Being a ‘warrior,’ he did it while on duty, just like over in Vietnam we had soldiers who killed themselves over there,” said Douglas, who served as a Marine in the 1960s.
Morelli was found lying over an AK-47, which sources said he may have brought back from the first gulf war.
That also fit, Douglas said.
“The weapon was one he felt comfortable using,” Douglas said. “The weapon takes on an identity. It seems crazy, but it’s the truth. When I was in the Marine Corps, that M-14 was my life.”
Douglas said Morelli’s profile fits the general description of police officers who take their own lives.
“The average officer who kills themselves has been on for 13 years, is usually about 35, a white male and kills themselves over a relationship. It’s so consistent,” Douglas said. “Most of these officers, when the foundation at home gives away, then everything falls apart.”
Morelli’s colleagues said he was depressed after his ex-wife returned about a year ago to her native Australia with their 6-year-old daughter, Sydney Anne.
Experts said solid relationships can help police cope with daily job pressures.
“It is a stressful job. It carries enormous power, and they see people at their worst,” Honig said. “We really need to provide these folks with preventative intervention.”
Honig said although most police departments nationwide try to take proactive steps against suicides, it is rare to find a comprehensive program even in a large police department like Los Angeles.
Honig said the International Association of Chiefs of Police is developing a suicide prevention clearinghouse, where departments can turn for resources.
Three years ago, Norwalk, at Chief Harry Rilling’s urging, joined a statewide Employee Assistance Program, an organization that provides 24-hour assistance for emergency first responders.
“We always find ourselves looking back and saying ‘What could have happened differently?’ ” Rilling said yesterday. “We do a lot. Could we do more? We’ll have to see.”
Dr. Jay Berkowitz, a psychiatrist who has worked with the state Department of Correction and counseled police officers in his private practice, said the Employee Assistance Program works.
But he said police should not be afraid to use it.
“Sometimes police officers are too embarrassed to use them,” Berkowitz said. “I think the police department should say, ‘Look, if you need to go for help, it’s there.’ Make it clear it’s all right to go for help.”
Rilling acknowledged police officers are reluctant to get help, and the program is trained to overcome those barriers.
He said the program will be running “stress debriefings” immediately after tomorrow’s funeral for Morelli.
“One thing police officers ask themselves is could they have seen this coming? Could they have prevented this?” Berkowitz said.
Honig said it is difficult for police departments to come to terms with an officer’s suicide versus a duty-related death.
“The line-of-duty death is something they memorialize. They have a process for it and a protocol. There’s a lot of tradition and that’s sort of a healing process in and of itself,” Honig said.
She said some departments wrestle with how to bury an officer who took his or her own life, and she has been trying to persuade law enforcement authorities to treat suicides as other active-duty deaths.
“This is just somebody who felt so blocked in and so at their last ends and in an impulsive movement did something they couldn’t take back,” she said.
Rilling said Morelli will be buried with full honors in recognition of his service to Norwalk and to his country.
“The (possible suicide) will probably have some impact on how far people travel to attend, but we expect a big turnout,” Rilling said. “I know the law enforcement community stands beside us and supports us no matter what the situation. A person killed in the line-of-duty is one level, but an officer dying an untimely death is something they sympathize and empathize with.”
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Vanderbilt Police Chief named President of IACLEA www.privateofficer.com
Vanderbilt police chief named President of IACLEA www.privateofficer.com
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Internet crimes are up, so are arrests www.privateofficer.com
Internet crimes are up, so are arrests www.privateofficer.com
By: Rick McCann MA. CPO CSO
Executive Director
National Association of
Private Officers
Local, state and university police departments frequently scan the popular websites of MySpace and Facebook looking for photos of criminal activity, wanted persons and sometimes covertly monitor a person’s online activity and it’s all legal.
Investigators also search the web when they are trying to solve a specific crime that has occurred at a local high school or university or pinpoint a criminal activity, trend or pattern.
Two years ago, campus police ticketed a junior at an Illinois university after they used his Facebook profile to prove he lied about knowing another student’s name.
“If someone threatens you across MySpace or Facebook, don’t delete it and call us right away,” Davis said. “It’s still a threat, and we take it very seriously.”
More local police agencies are getting involved in online bullying, sexual predators, Internet fraud and many have set up task force and dedicated units to fight such crime as has the FBI. If the case is strong enough, may offenders can find themselves federally prosecuted said an FBI agent.
Even smaller police departments with limited resources have applied for and received special federal money to combat the growing, sometimes forgotten criminal element that is operating almost untouched.
But hopefully, as federal money becomes available and awareness of this growing crime wave is taken serious by Washington politicians, more law enforcement presence will be felt on the Internet and the criminals will be forced to go elsewhere or get an honest job.
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Woman ordered to jail for biting security officer www.privateofficer.com
Woman ordered to jail for biting security officer www.privateofficer.com
Mary Lee Brown, 33, claimed self-defense during a two-day trial in Grand Rapids District Court, but a jury ruled she was the aggressor in an Oct. 9 dust-up at the high school.
Brown went to the school about 11:15 a.m. after her daughter was involved in a fight earlier that morning. Security Officer James Stokes tried to stop her in a common area and an altercation ensued, drawing as many as 100 students and forcing more than a dozen Grand Rapids police officers to disperse the crowd.
School leaders say the conviction is a sign parents cannot charge into schools and disrupt operations without the act going unpunished.
An attorney for Brown claims the woman is the scapegoat for the disturbance, and that the district failed to produce a videotape of the fight that would have exonerated Brown.
“The tape would have established the fact of why she bit the security officer, because she had to defend herself against him,” said Steve Savickas, who defended Brown during the trial. “A bite mark is a tell-tale sign of self-defense and not an intent to do anything else than have a large man release her.
“But to have it, lo-and-behold, disappear, that played right into the hands of the prosecution.”
Larry Johnson, the school district’s security director, denied the assertion there was a recording of the incident and scoffed at the implication the district intentionally did not produce a videotape.
Johnson said the area where the fight occurred does not have cameras trained on it.
“I wish there were a tape, and then we wouldn’t be having this conversation,” Johnson said. “Bottom line, this was a very unfortunate situation to have occurred in the first place. We wish Ms. Brown the best, but we want parents and people in this community to understand that they cannot come into our schools and cause problems.”
Brown was ordered to the Kent County Jail after the jury rendered its decision. She faces up to a year behind bars at sentencing, which has not been scheduled.
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Man talks himself into longer prison term www.privateofficer.com
Man talks himself into longer prison term www.privateofficer.com
Joshua Beadle has been held in contempt and sentenced to 10 days per word after a judge ordered him to stop the threatening comments.
Judge Lee Coffee stopped counting at 70 words and sentenced Beadle to 700 days in jail.
Beadle was shackled and outfitted in a special hooded spit mask during the hearing Monday after spitting at the judge at a hearing in January. Beadle missed the judge and instead hit a clerk’s computer.
Through his nylon-and-mesh spit mask, he apologized to the clerk on Monday and assured her that his intended target was the judge.
Beadle was appearing in court on burglary and rape charges.
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Canadian security officers strike www.privateofficer.com
Canadian security officers strike www.privateofficer.com
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Carjacking, crash leaves one dead www.privateofficer.com
Carjacking, crash leaves one dead www.privateofficer.com
By: Rick McCann
A robbery and car-jacking in Shelby County led to a high-speed chase that ended in Childersburg early Tuesday morning, leaving one suspect dead and the other hospitalized.
Shelby County Sheriff’s Department Capt. Ken Burchfield said according to initial reports, the Shelby County 911 received a report of a robbery at 12:09 a.m. Tuesday. A vehicle was stolen in the parking lot of an apartment complex on Inverness Lane off Valleydale Road.
The victim received minor injuries to her hand when two black males took her 2002 Nissan Altima Burchfield said.
According to a press release from the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department, deputies observed the victim’s vehicle being driven by the suspects eastbound on U.S. 280 and attempted a traffic stop.
“The suspects refused to stop and a pursuit was initiated,” the release said. The suspects continued driving eastbound on Highway 280 passing through Harpersville and into Childersburg.
“Sheriff’s deputies deployed spike strips in an effort to get the vehicle stopped, but the suspects avoided them. The pursuit entered Talladega County and the city of Childersburg. Shortly after entering Childersburg, the driver lost control of the vehicle and struck a tree.”
Childersburg Fire and Rescue responded to the scene and treated the two black male suspects for injuries.
Burchfield said the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department will continue investigating the robbery that led to the pursuit.
Dorris Teague, spokeswoman for the Alabama Department of Public Safety, said State Troopers are investigating the accident.
The Childersburg Police Department, Harpersville Police Department and the Talladega County Sheriff’s Department assisted in the incident.
Anyone with information that would help identify the remaining suspect is asked to contact the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department at 205-669-4181.
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Sheriff unit adds new technology to track criminals www.privateofficer.com
Sheriff unit adds new technology to track criminals www.privateofficer.com
March 28 2008
ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. — When a shoplifting suspect beat Orange County Deputy Sheriff Gayle Cadiz unconscious outside an east Orlando Office Depot on Feb. 2, investigators knew only his race, his gender and that he was a passenger in a late-model, white Mitsubishi Galant.
Detectives were forced to begin canvassing more than 250 Galant owners in Central Florida during the next six days until they got a tip eventually leading to career criminal Malik G. Stephenson.
In the future, someone such as Stephenson may go immediately to the top of the suspect list.
That’s the idea behind a new intelligence-led policing program being set up at the Orange County Sheriff’s Office. Analysts will link and search an array of databases — arrests, towed vehicles, parking tickets, CrimeLine tips and suspect-interview reports — to better identify violent and repeat offenders, their associates and vehicles.
Stephenson, 34, of east Orange County, was known to deputies, Orlando police and other Central Florida officers who arrested him two dozen times on shoplifting, auto theft, drug and fleeing-arrest cases during the past decade. He is being held without bail on 14 attempted murder charges. They stem from the Cadiz attack and shots fired at deputies before Stephenson surrendered following a two-hour standoff a SWAT team.
He was jailed for a year and placed on three years probation after nearly running down an Altamonte Springs police officer with his car while fleeing a traffic stop in January 2006. And he was questioned in October 2006 when deputies were trying to locate his brother, who was accused of trying to run over a Florida Highway Patrol trooper.
“When we met him 11/2 years ago [on the trooper case], there was no doubt in our mind that he was violent and did not like law enforcement based on his statements,” said sheriff’s Felony Squad Sgt. Bruce Vail, one of the officers fired upon before Stephenson’s arrest Feb 7.
While working on the FHP case, Vail interviewed Stephenson at a home in the Stoneybrook East subdivision. A white Galant was there. Deputies also had information that Stephenson was involved in retail thefts, Vail said.
It turned out to be the same home deputies searched hours before Stephenson’s arrest — and where they found a note he wrote confessing to the attack on Cadiz, detectives said.
Had all the known information on Stephenson — buried deep in various police-agency records — been more accessible to deputies, the Cadiz case could have been solved sooner, said sheriff’s Capt. Lee Massie.
New police strategy
Intelligence-based policing was pioneered in England in the 1990s. It spread among federal, state and local agencies combating terrorism in new intelligence “fusion centers” nationwide since Sept. 11, 2001. Now the concept is taking root for use against street crime.
The sheriff’s office is training frontline deputies to capture more details about the people and vehicles they stop, re-designing its computer databases and teaming up crime and intelligence analysts to search for violent-crime trends. Officials think it will better alert patrol deputies and detectives to serious criminals.
Intelligence-led policing “says capture the data today because he may be a suspect another day — just like Malik,” said Massie, one of the department’s point men on the project who also oversees Central Florida’s multiagency fusion center that opened last summer.
Sheriff Kevin Beary said the intelligence-based policing also will produce more detailed bulletins to warn residents about criminals and gang members in their neighborhoods.
The New Jersey State Police has been using the policing strategy since 2005, said Frank Rodgers, who retired last year as the agency’s No. 2 man and is now a policing consultant.
“We’ve had tremendous success with it and the gang threat in New Jersey,” Rodgers said. “We have reduced violent crime in big cities . . . and we’re being more intelligent about our [policing] decisions. The public sees a reduction in crime and you do it cheaper.”
A crime career such as Stephenson’s — with more 50 arrests, several jail and prison stints, and a history of shoplifting, resisting arrest and fleeing police — can provide investigators with important clues once they are aware of it.
Criminal history
Stephenson first went to prison in North Carolina at age 19 in 1993 for assault with a deadly weapon. He also served time for possession with intent to sell drugs, obstruction of justice and resisting an officer, North Carolina prison records show.
After he was released in April 1997, Stephenson moved to the Orlando area and was arrested two dozen times during the next 10 years, mostly in Orange and Seminole counties.
But despite short jail stints and probation, his crimes continued.
In March 2001 in Orange County, Stephenson was sentenced to 21/2 years in prison for battery on an officer, resisting arrest with violence, and vehicle theft.
A month later in Seminole County, he received a four-year prison term for fleeing police and leaving the scene of a vehicle crash with injuries. And in May 2001, he received three years in prison for a stolen property charge.
Since he again left prison in October 2004, Stephenson’s arrests continued.
Deputies hope the new data-mining and information-sharing system will make it harder for repeat criminals to do business.
“You can run,” Beary said, “but it’s going to be a whole lot harder to hide.”
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25 Students suspended for fighting www.privateofficer.com
25 Students suspended for fighting www.privateofficer.com
By: Rick McCann
Security News Magazine
School officials are investigating and have suspended 25 middle school students in Columbus, Ga. after they were caught on camera slap boxing.
Authorities said the new, disturbing trend is a form of open-fist fighting. Fights are then posted on the Internet.
School officials began looking into this activity recently after they had found some footage of it on a student’s cellphone.
Twenty-five students at Midland Middle School were suspended after a fight in a school restroom was posted on the Internet.
“Basically eighth grade students — girls and boys — at different periods of time and the slap boxing is more or less arranged fighting events that were staged for bathrooms,” said Valerie Fuller, spokesperson for the Muscogee County School Board.
According to the school’s principal, Richard Green, clips of slap boxing were found on a student’s cell phone dating back two weeks. From those clips, the administration identified the 25 students who were involved in the fights.
Green did not comment on whether or not any criminal charges would be forthcoming or if any of the students who had taken part in the slap boxing have been injured or complained to school officials.
The school’s principal did say that all restrooms will now be more closely regulated by faculty and that they are watching for other outbreaks of the fighting.
A check of the popular MySpace and Facebook websites did not reveal that this was a widespread trend in other areas of the country although it may be.
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Feds arrest illegals working at TN. National Guard site www.privateofficer.com
Feds arrest illegals working on major National guard project www.privateofficer.com
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents said on Tuesday that the workers, all identified as Mexican men, were employed by various contractors and subcontractors.
Authorities said the arrests came after a tip from Air Force investigators that believed illegal immigrants were working at the site.
Federal officials said the men likely face deportation. Authorities have not said which company employed the workers or if there would be any criminal prosecution of the companies for employing the workers.
The project to build a 118-acre, $215 million base for the Tennessee 164th Airlift Wing near the airport is the largest single construction effort in the Air National Guard’s history.
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