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Archive for April 6th, 2008

Prison guard gets 5yrs prison for aiding in escape www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Prison guard gets 5 yrs prison for aiding in escape www.privateofficer.com

Topeka Capital Journal
WICHITA KS. April 6 2008 — A former prison guard romantically involved with one of the two inmates she helped escape pleaded guilty Friday to a federal firearms charge, telling family members she now realizes she was used.
Amber Lynn Goff, 24, pleaded guilty to a federal firearms charge in exchange for reduced charges and a recommendation by prosecutors for a five-year prison term and three years of probation. She also agreed to pay $11,000 in restitution.
As part of the plea deal, three other federal firearms charges would be dropped at the time of sentencing. The state agreed not to prosecute Goff on additional state charges.
District Judge Wesley Brown temporarily sealed a memorandum to the plea agreement, ruling without elaborating that he found “good cause” to do so.
Lyndon Vix, an attorney for The Associated Press and The Wichita Eagle, argued in court that the First Amendment protected access to judicial records and proceedings, and courts have upheld that right except where there is a compelling interest to seal records.
“If this document were sealed, speculation about what it might concern would do more damage than what it might concern,” Vix said.
Goff pleaded guilty to the first count of knowingly disposing of firearms to a previously convicted felon.
Brown deferred a decision to accept or reject the plea until he sees a sentencing report. A sentencing hearing was scheduled for June 20.
Goff was indicted in November on four federal firearms charges related to the Oct. 28, 2007, escape of Jesse Bell, 34, and Steven Ford, 27, from maximum security exercise pens at the El Dorado Correctional Facility. The three were arrested in Grants, N.M., early Oct. 31.
In a written statement filed as part of the plea deal, Goff wrote that she received a cell phone call from Ford on the evening of the escape. She said she used bolt cutters to cut through the padlock securing an outer gate and drove onto the grounds of the facility.
“I approached the outermost wire perimeter fence on foot and used bolt cutters to cut through this fence in order to assist Ford and Bell in their escape from the El Dorado Correctional facility,” Goff said in the statement.
“In addition to the bolt cutters, I had two sets of wire cutters,” she wrote. “I attempted to throw one set of wire cutters over both perimeter fences onto the prison grounds, but this pair of wire cutters hit the top of the outer fence and fell to the ground outside of the fence where I was waiting. I then successfully threw a second set of wire cutters over both the fences.”
U.S. Attorney Eric Melgren said after the plea hearing that federal prosecutors worked closely with Butler County Attorney Jan Satterfield and determined that federal charges were be “more appropriate” for the offense than were obtainable under state law.
Satterfield said it would have been more difficult to get a prison term for Goff under state law because she had no prior criminal record.
“We know Amber Goff was involved. She is being held accountable for her conduct. We think that she is the person who facilitated this escape. She breached the public trust by doing so, and she is being held accountable today,” said Deputy Secretary of Corrections Chuck Simmons.
Goff’s family said she had a romantic relationship with Ford before the escape.
In a lengthy prepared statement, Nutter said the family fully expects Goff to pay a price for her actions — but sharply criticized the investigation of the escape, saying the prison break would not have been possible without the negligence or involvement of many others working at the prison that night.
“There are some who will stand before you and say that today justice was served,” Nutter said. “They will try and convince you that while laws were broken justice has prevailed in this case. They will use many different words all saying the same thing. But I am here today to tell you that justice is the last thing that has been served today.”
The focus on Goff has allowed authorities to avoid answering tough questions about a massive security breach at a maximum security prison that houses such violent offenders as BTK killer Dennis Rader, Nutter said.
“My goal from this day forth is for justice to be sought out against everyone who allowed this to happen, not just one foolish, young, terrified girl, who is now paying her price for all this,” Nutter said.
The family also demanded to know why there hasn’t been an independent investigation by an outside agency, and why no one else has been fired or prosecuted for the escape.
“We pretty well knew what happened and how it happened — that became pretty clear early in the investigation,” Simmons said. “We didn’t need an outside agency to tell us how to respond to this. We took immediate and aggressive action within days to begin some changes.”
Those changes included upgrading perimeter security, making staffing adjustments in terms of assignments and instituting more staff training, and other security changes he declined to specify. He noted that before the incident, the El Dorado prison had not had an escape in its 15 or 16 years.
Nutter said several officers allowed the two maximum security segregated inmates to leave their cells without properly searching them, Nutter said, noting the inmates were wearing four layers of clothing and carrying a cell phone with e-mail capability when they went into the exercise yard.
Simmons said the two inmates were apparently strip searched before they went from their segregation cell to the exercise area, and prison officials do not have an explanation about how they got the cell phone and extra clothing to the exercise area.
The two escaped inmates are awaiting trial in New Mexico, where they face federal charges of being fugitives in possession of firearms and possessing stolen firearms and ammunition.

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Student charged in KKK incident www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Student charged after KKK incident www.privateofficer.com

Simpsonville SC April 6 2008
By: Bryan Hill
Security News Magazine
In this small town just outside of Greenville South Carolina police are worried of possible violence next week when school resumes.
Security has been increased at a Simpsonville Middle School after a student was arrested and suspended for wearing a T-shirt with a noose and a reference to the Ku Klux Klan.
Greenville television station WYFF says some students at Bryson Middle School stayed home Friday, fearing violence after the T-shirt worn by an eighth-grader angered both black and white students the day before.
Police say that the student, whose name was not released lifted another shirt that he had on revealing the racist T-shirt in the lunchroom.
School officials and law enforcement officers were notified and the student has been charged with disturbing school and recommended for expulsion.
Police say rumors are spreading at the school and on the Internet about possible violence over the shirt.
No one in this small community wants to speculate why the student wore the shirt or what would make him display such an inflamatory hate filled message but people are talking amoung themselves and police and school officials are watching for an outbreaks of fighting or racial problems because of the shirt incident.

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Police officer injured during shoplifter arrest www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Police officer injured during shoplifter arrest www.privateofficer.com

SPRINGBORO, Ohio April 6 2008
BY: Bryan Hill
Security News Magazine
www.privateofficer.com
A shoplifter trying to steal one of the hottest theft items right now found himself in jail after he struggled with a police officer and injured him.
A Springboro police officer working a security detail at the Kroger on West Central Avenue was injured in a scuffle with the suspect Friday night.
The officer became aware of two men who were shoplifting razor blades and tried to detain the suspects.
When the officer tried to stop them, one of the men ran off and the officer struggled with the other suspect but was eventually able to take him into custodty.
The officer was taken to an area hospital, where he received stitches in his hand.
Police said two men tried to walk out of the store with $1,000 worth of razor blades.
Authorities did not release the name of the officer involved or the arrested shoplifter.
Police were still searching for the other suspect as of Friday night.
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RETAIL SECURITY ALERT! www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

RETAIL SECURITY ALERT! www.privateofficer.com

Atlanta Georgia April 6 2008
RETAIL SECURITY ALERT!

In the past eighteen days, we have reports from at least a dozen different states and retail stores of large amounts of razor blades being stolen from pharmacies such as CVS and Walgreen as well as department stores such as Walmart and K-Mart.

These thefts involve the replacement tri- blades for all brands and has netted thieves approximately $300,000 in stolen merchandise.

The razor blades, as with most HBA(health, beauty aid) items are fast cash on internet sites such as EBay and other online auctions, Craigslist and on line stores and market places as well as area flea markets and just selling them right out of the trunk of their car like one shoplifter did in New Jersey.

Most stores are reporting that the thefts wipe out entire sections of inventory and add up to thousands of dollars of merchandise in one hit.

Although there have been several arrests in Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee we do not see a connection to these thefts at this time and in most cases the shoplifters are acting independently in their area. This does not mean however that gangs are not working a particular city or state because we are sure that they are.

Some stores have begun locking up these items while others do not want to inconvenience their customers anymore than they have to.

BE AWARE! If you have an HBA area it is advised to spend extra time on surveillance and make you GM’s and store associates aware of this alert!

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US Marshals hunt murder suspect relentlassly www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

US Marshals hunt murder suspect relentlessly www.privateofficer.com

Denver CO. April 6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
via Press Release
On the afternoon of April 03, 2008, the U.S. Marshals Service District of Colorado Fugitive Location Apprehension Group (FLAG), acting on information provided by the U.S. Marshals Service Eastern District of Louisiana Crescent Star Fugitive Task Force (CSFTF), arrested New Orleans Police Department murder suspect, Edward J. Augustine at the condominium of an associate in the 3000 block of S. Ursala Circle Aurora, Colorado.
Augustine was wanted by the New Orleans Police Department on a first degree murder warrant. There were also recent (Feb. 2008 and Dec. 2007) outstanding Orleans Parish warrants for his arrest charging him with illegal carrying of a weapon and narcotics violations.
In addition, Augustine was also wanted by the St. John the Baptist Sheriff’s Office on a January 31, 2008, warrant charging him with attempted second degree murder, armed robbery, aggravated assault, and aggravated damage to property.
Augustine, a 20 year old resident of New Orleans, was developed as a suspect in the Saturday, December 08, 2007, murder of Aaron Williams, 17 years old, in the 5900 block of Tullis Dr. New Orleans, Louisiana.
Williams died at the scene as a result of numerous gun shot wounds to his upper torso and back. A female victim also sustained several superficial gunshot wounds during the incident. Investigators from the New Orleans Police Department believe that the shooting was related to an altercation that Williams was involved in with two other subjects. One of the subjects involved in the altercation was later identified as the younger brother of Augustine.
Since the murder, the New Orleans Police Department has been involved in two vehicle pursuits with Augustine but he managed to elude arrest on each occasion. Augustine was also featured in a November 21, 2006, article in The New York Times entitled, “Rust In The Wheels Of Justice” that discussed evidence lost after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans.
The article mentioned evidence that was lost in the flood related to an Orleans Parish criminal case involving narcotics and weapon possession for which Augustine had been arrested. Augustine was placed on the New Orleans Crime Stoppers wanted fugitives billboards in early 2008 and had been profiled by local media outlets.T
he New Orleans Police Department brought the case to CSFTF in February of 2008.
Through exhaustive efforts by CSFTF, information was developed that he was in Aurora, Colorado and FLAG was asked to assist with arrest efforts.Eastern District of Louisiana U.S. Marshal Michael Credo stated, “I am extremely happy to report the apprehension of this fugitive accused in this senseless cold blooded murder that occurred in the streets of New Orleans.
I would like to complement the tireless efforts of the case agent and the many other law enforcement agencies involved in finally arresting Augustine.” The U.S. Marshals Service EDLA sponsored CSFTF is in its second year with additional support from the U.S. Attorney General and U.S. Department of Justice and plans on continuing its “Operation Debris Removal” efforts. The task force’s primary focus is to locate and arrest violent or sex related offenders.
The group frequently participates in investigations with the New Orleans Police Department Violent Offenders Warrant Squad and also assists Louisiana Probation and Parole with the arrests of probation/parole violators. Current CSFTF members include the New Orleans Police Department, Bogalusa Police Department, the Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff’s Office, St. Charles Parish Sheriff’s Office, Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office, St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office, Louisiana Probation and Parole, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), U.S. Border Patrol, U.S. Coast Guard Investigative Services and Social Security OIG.
Other New Orleans metro area law enforcement agencies also participate on a case by case basis. The U.S. Marshals Service EDLA, with additional support from the U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Assistance, is also engaged in community activities to prevent violent crime through its Gang Resistance Education and Training (G.R.E.A.T.) program (G.R.E.A.T. NOLA). For more information on the U.S. Marshals Service EDLA CSFTF go to www.usmarshals.gov/district/la-e/news/index.html
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Wackenhut buys landmine clearing company www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Wackenhut buys landmine clearing company www.privateofficer.com

Palm Beach Fla. April 6 2008
BY: Bryan Hill
Security News Magazine
www.privateofficer.com
Via Press Release

Wackenhut Services announced Friday the acquisition of RONCO Consulting Corp., an international professional services firm specializing in landmine clearance, security services, environmental remediation and “post-conflict” operations.
Wackenhut President and Chief Executive Officer Dave Foley called RONCO one of the world’s premier mine action, ordnance disposal and security companies.
“The purchase of RONCO affords us immediate expansion into the international market and significantly increases our core capabilities,” he said.
RONCO has completed more than 650 projects involving mine and unexploded ordnance clearance, explosive ordnance disposal and security since 1981, a news release said.
Washington, D.C.-based RONCO operates in Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan, and maintains training centers in Mozambique and Sri Lanka. Clients include the U.S. Department of State, Department of Defense, United Nations, NATO Maintenance & Supply Agency, World Bank, the Canadian and British governments, and numerous commercial clients. Founded in 1974, it employs more than 1,200 people worldwide.
Palm Beach Gardens-based Wackenhut said it is the U.S. government’s largest contractor for professional security services, with 8,000 employees protecting key sites in the U.S. and abroad.

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Police lieutenant quits over sexual misconduct allegations www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Police lieutenant quits over sexual misconduct allegations

ATLANTA GA. April 6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
www.privateofficer.com
A police lieutenant is out of a job today and just barely escaped being prosecuted for sex acts while on duty.
Alanata Police, Internal Affairs investigators say that they received information that an officer was cruising several areas of the city prowling for sex while on duty.
Residents of midtown Atlanta say that they often say Lt. John Oglesby pulling up to prostitutes and cross dressers and it wasn’t for official business they say.

One resident shot a video of Lt. John Oglesby, who is seen with several neighborhood cross dressers and prostitutes. The resident told local CBS 46 he shot the video because he was tired of seeing Oglesby with cross dressers and hookers so often.
IAD investigators say that they were alerted to the situation and began investigating and conducted surveillance on Oglesby while he was suppose to be on duty patrolling the city.
The say that they found Oglesby was routinely out of his assigned zone in Buckhead for hours at a time and even recorded him soliciting for sex acts.
“When are you gonna beat me again?” asked Oglesby on the tape.
Hmmm?” asked the second person.
“When are you gonna beat me again?” Oglesby repeated.

CBS 46 also obtained audio tape of some of the conversations that investigators said Oglesby had while on duty in his patrol car.

“Did you know that if everybody didn’t do anything that was bad for them they wouldn’t get out of bed in the morning? Like for instance smoking a cigarette, chewing gum, sucking (expletive),” Oglesby said.
“I’m a lady,” the other person on the tape said.
“Well, all the ladies I know do it,” Oglesby replied.
CBS 46 reporter Joanna Massee confronted Oglesby on Thursday.
“Did you make any sexual comments to anybody in your car at all?” Massee asked.
“No,” Oglesby replied.
“We heard you ask ‘When are you going to beat me again?’ What did that mean?” Massee asked.
“I never said that,” Oglesby said.
“You made many references to oral sex,” Massee said.
“You said it, not me,” Oglesby answered.

According to police officials, Oglesby retired from the Atlanta Police Department before administrative charges could be filed.
Investigators said that Oglesby’s actions were not criminal because no money had exchanged hands or was discussed during the times that they had him under surveillance.
Maj. C.J. Davis emphasized Thursday how hard the department is working to cut out allegedly corrupt officers
. “We have noticed a pickup in the number of tips we get internally, and we feel that our officers want good officers working alongside them,” Davis said.
Davis said she was disturbed by Oglesby’s sex talk and concerned that a supervisor would leave his watch for such unprofessional pursuits.
Because the lieutenant left the department before any administrative hearings could be conducted, he will be elgible to receive his pension and benefits a police official said.

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Police arrest state inspector after pursuit ww.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Police arrest state inspector after pursuit www.privateofficer.com

TUSCALOOSA AL. April 6 2008 Fayette Police officers used a Taser on a state mobile home inspector who led them on a five-mile chase Thursday, the police chief said.
Officers attempted to stop Jamie Lee Brown, 38, around 11 a.m. Thursday for speeding, but he continued driving, Chief Sam Black said.
The officers chased him through Fayette until he finally stopped on Alabama Highway 159.Once stopped, Brown would not give officers his driver’s license, Black said.“He sat there with his window rolled up.”Brown finally got out of the state-issued Ford Crown Victoria he was driving after sheriff Rodney Ingle and Chief Deputy Barry Corkren arrived to assist, Black said. Authorities say Brown began arguing with officers, Black said, and using profanity before he grabbed one of the police officers.
Another officer used a Taser stun gun to subdue Brown so they could make the arrest.Brown, of 462 Third St. N., Guin, was out of jail on bond Thursday.
He was charged with resisting arrest and failure to obey a lawful order as well as being ticketed for speeding and reckless driving.
A call to the Alabama Manufactured Housing Commission wasn’t immediately returned Friday. It is unclear whether Brown was working at the time of his arrest.
A call to Brown’s home number listed on the arrest report went to a fax machine, and a message left at his work number in Montgomery was not returned.
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Public questions use of force during shoplifter arrest www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Public questions police use of force during shoplifter arrest www.privateofficer.com

Waterford CT. April 6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
www.privateofficer.com
There seems to be some question as to whether or not local police used too much force in arresting a shoplifter at a local Sears on Wednesday. Two people who said they had witnessed the arrest say that there was.
Police were notified by Sears loss prevention team that they were attempting to detain a shoplifter, later identified as Jose Molina-Montalvo and that he was struggling with them.
Waterford Chief of Police Murray Pendleton on Thursday defended tactics used by police in the arrest.
Based on Lt. Brett Mahoney’s report of the incident, Mahoney arrived on the scene, Pendleton said, the man had smashed the case and started to run. Pendleton said Mahoney chased the man through several departments of the store..
At that point, Pendleton said, Officer John Bunce arrived on the scene and attempted to use a Taser to subdue the man. Pendleton said the Taser’s batteries were not properly charged and the gun misfired. At that point, officers on the scene reported that the man refused to be handcuffed and continued resisting officers. In their report, Pendleton said, the officers said that because the Taser didn’t work, they then used their “closed fists” to bring the man under control.
Police charged Jose Molina-Montalvo, 19, of New London with fifth-degree larceny, third-degree criminal mischief, interfering with a police officer and possession of a shoplifting device.
Witnesses to the arrest notified the local newspaper of the incident saying that in their opinion the police overdid it and used too much force to subdue the man and the newspaper contacted Molina-Montalvo, at his home, and he admitted to stealing a digital camera from the store but said Waterford police went too far in the arrest, shoving him to the ground outside the store and repeatedly kicking and punching him in the head and chest.
Molina-Montalvo said that as he walked out of the store and headed for the exit he noticed a police officer. He tried to retreat and ran for a few feet but realized he had nowhere to go, he said.
“I saw a cop point something yellow at me,” Molina-Montalvo said. “I think it was a Taser. I tried to put my arms up and head for the ground. That’s when one cop pushed me to the ground. I think he even used the Taser. I don’t know how we ended up outside, but one cop is on me, one kicked me and someone kept punching my face.”
“I know what I did was wrong,” said Molina-Montalvo, but “the way they handled the situation was wrong. They were beating me up like I really did something bad.” Montalvo sustained minor scratches and bruising during his arrest.
Pendleton said the officers acted appropriately in a situation in which a man was actively resisting arrest.
Molina-Montalvo has other criminal cases pending against him. In February, New London police arrested him when a friend he was with dropped a bag containing a .22-caliber rifle and a pellet rifle, police said. Molina-Montalvo was charged with possession of a dangerous weapon and interfering with police.
The local newspaper The Day, said about a dozen people witnessed the incident, some taking photos with their cell phones.
PrivateOfficer.com and The National Association of Private Officers tried to contact Montalvo but found no listed phone number for him
We did however talk with Anthony Bianco, a regional loss prevention manager for a major retailer and a retired police officer from Florida. We asked him in his current or previous duties if force was ever necessary in the arrest of a suspect and just how much force should be used. He pointed out that the officers were met with a fleeing suspect who after being physically detained still put up a fight to the point that the officers tried to deploy their taser gun which would have been reasonaable force under the circumstances. When the Taser malfunctioned, the officers continued to use force by punching Montalvo to bring him into submission so that he could be handcuffed. To the public, seeing four or five cops piled up on one person especially using physical force may have seemed a bit too much but in reality it was the level of force required to bring the suspect under control. If he had complied with their demands to be handcuffed the shoppers would have just seen a routine arrest and officers escorting a prisoner out the door to their waiting police cruisers.
The public needs to realize that it’s not always as bad as it looks Bianco said. What if he had gotten away from the officers and pulled a knife or a gun and taken one of the shoppers hostage or worse, shot them.

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Casino officers arrest theft suspect www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Casino officers arrest theft suspect www.privateofficer.com

Mashantucket CT April 6 2008
By: Bryan Hill
Security News Magazine
State police responded to the Foxwoods Resort Casino after security officers notified them that they were detaining a theft suspect.
State police arrested a Rhode Island, Cheryl Bates for larceny of a computer.
Police said Bates, 45, of Warwick stole an Apple laptop computer from the Foxwoods Resort Casino Wampum Rewards store about 9 p.m.
Security officers said they were notified of the theft and were dispatched to look for the woman and soon found Bates while she was still in possession of the computer, which was valued at $1,600.
She was charged with third-degree larceny. Bates posted a $500 bond and is scheduled to appear April 15 in New London Superior Court.
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Citizens corral drunk driver for police www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Citizens corral drunk driver for police www.privateofficer.com

MOBILE, Ala. April 6 2008 A 28-year-old Florida man arrested and charged with driving under the influence of drugs and leaving the scene of an accident was captured by two motorists who saw him zigzag through Interstate 10 traffic and bounce off a guardrail.
Alabama State Troopers charged Jack Thornton III of Pensacola, Fla., in the March 27 incident after Tim Dietlein of Irvington and another man tackled Thornton at the end of a chase on I-10 and the Causeway under the I-10 bridge at Mobile.
Before the chase, Thornton was involved in an accident on I-10 at 6:40 p.m. near the Malbis exit in Baldwin County that injured two people, said trooper spokesman Cpl. Joe Piggott.
“In hindsight, I never should have gotten out. He could have had a gun,” Dietlein, a 34-year-old car salesman, told the Press-Register for a story Friday. “All I could think of is, ‘This guy can’t leave here. He’s going to kill someone.’”
Another motorist — Lee Erdmann of Mobile, a 22-year-old volunteer firefighter — saw the same events unfolding and also decided to give chase.
“He was going to keep going until his car wouldn’t go,” Erdmann said.
During the chase, Dietlein remained on the phone with a 911 operator.
Thornton’s E300 Lexus finally stopped on the Causeway when the hood popped up after striking a sport utility vehicle. Dietlein and Erdmann tackled Thornton as he attempted to close the hood and drive away.
“He wasn’t a big guy, but he was going crazy,” Erdmann said.
Thornton was taken to the Baldwin County Corrections Center and released March 28 after posting a $12,500 bond.

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Employee charged with felony thefts www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Employee charged with felony thefts www.privateofficer.com

Naples Fla April 6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl Assoc. Private Officers
Via Press Release

Deputies arrested a 37-year-old Albertsons employee Wednesday on charges she made fake transactions and stole lottery tickets.

Julie Reneus, 3625 Poplar Way, East Naples, was charged with grand theft.The thefts were reported over several days in March at the Albertsons at 3350 U.S. 41 E. East Naples.
Reports say Reneus, who works in the Albertsons liquor department, would run off lottery tickets, charged for them without putting money into the cash register and then would conduct a fake beer keg or tap deposit return for customers, which would balance out the money she was removing from the register or charging the lottery tickets to.
Store surveillance video showed Reneus, who works alone in the liquor department, working on the days when the discrepancies were reported.
There were no customers in the store at the time Reneus made transactions for keg returns, reports said.
A search of Reneus by deputies turned up several lottery tickets in her pants pockets. A subsequent search of her purse turned up more lottery tickets.
Many of the tickets corresponded to specific dates in which keg deposit returns were conducted, reports said.

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Security officers assist in search for felon www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Security officers assist in search for felon www.privateofficer.com

Riverside CA. April 6 2008
On Thursday, April 3, around 11:44 a.m., the Canyon Lake Police Department was notified by members of Canyon Lake’s private security force that they had located a subject that was wanted by the Canyon Lake Police Department. The subject, Randy Calaway, was wanted in connection to numerous burglaries in the area, the most recent of which occurred on Monday, March 31.
Calaway fled from private security before police arrived. A search of the area was conducted by Canyon Lake Police with assistance from sheriff’s deputies from the Perris station. Deputies were unable to locate Calaway.
Around 5:15 p.m., Canyon lake Police received a tip from a citizen volunteer that Calaway was on a pay phone near the intersection of Railroad Canyon and Canyon Hills. Deputies from Canyon Lake Police, Perris station, and Lake Elsinore station converged on the location. Calaway fled into the hills and hid in the brush. The sheriff’s helicopter and Murrieta Police Department’s K9 unit were called in to assist in the search. After 45 minutes of searching, Calaway was located and arrested.
Calaway was charged with two burglaries committed in the area. Deputies from the Canyon Lake Police Department are investigating a number of other thefts that Calaway is suspected to be involved in.
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Fake doctor uses system against police www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Fake doctor uses system against police www.privateofficer.com

MIAMI FLA. April6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
www.privateofficer.com
Michael Weilert claims he’s a doctor, but he’s not. In fact, some call him downright deranged. But he has made everyday life impossible for two hospitals and four police officers and security officers who were in court Friday pleading to stop the madness.
In a bizarre story right out of a suspense novel, police say that Weilert was caught at several area hospitals pretending to be a doctor and was evicted off the premises.
Most would think that this would be the end of the story and Weilert would go on his way knowing that his make believe world had been crushed and that he would come back to reality. Most would think that anyways but not him.
In fact, Miami officers say that things only escalated and he turned the tables on them and ruined more than just their day.
In court Friday the judge asked Weilert if he was represented by an attorney and his reply, one of fiction to nobody’s surprise was that his attorney was Roy Black.
Weilert continued to claim that his lawyer was the famed Roy Black–a delusion. And it’s not the first one.
Photos allegedly exist of Weilert taken at UM Jackson Memorial Hospital, where security found him wandering hallways and offices pretending to be a doctor. He was ordered to leave. It was much the same at Miami Children’s Hospital where Weilert was ordered to leave when he showed up claiming to be a doctor and demanding VIP treatment.
Records show he responded by filing domestic violence restraining orders against those who questioned him–two police officers who were working at Miami Children’s, security consultant Wayne Black, and a top level security official at Jackson. Police say that Weilert went through the channels and obtained restraining orders against the police and security officers who had questioned his credentials and ejected him from the hospitals.
He was able to weave a tall tale to the clerks and judges who processed the restraining orders against the officers and hospital security, after WeIlert claimed they exhibited “homicidal thoughts”, “stalking behavior”, and inflicted “severe injury” on him using “sadistic, terrorist acts.” The “system” issued the restraining orders first and left questions for later, apparently unaware the alleged abusers were lawmen trying to protect hospitals and their patients.
They never investigated his claim and had they researched it a little bit they would have found out that we were cops and that he had a grudge against us one officer said.
The matter is serious because when a restraining order is issued against someone, they must surrender their guns and gun permits. “What it’s done with the police officers it’s taken away their badges and guns,” said Wayne Black, security consultant. “This is a guy who is obviously deranged, he’s stalking the hospitals and he’s turned the tables on them.” “He’s certainly taken a lot of time and energy that could have been used for other things, but the good thing is we’ve been,” said Kimarie Stratos, a lawyer for the hospital. “The system needs to change a little bit, people need to take a closer look.
It’s easy for the clerk’s office to say it’s the judge’s fault or vice versa, but the system needs to change,” said Black. Weilert has a rap sheet of arrests stretching the length of a conference table, including lots of fraud. In Ft. Myers he was charged with perjury, ID theft, and making false claims about who and what he was.
He was ruled mentally incompetent to stand trial.
In court Friday the judge quickly realized what the true situation was and had Weilert taken into custody.Now, maybe the officers can be reinstated and their records cleared of any wrong doing a police official said.

“I’d like to have these handcuffs removed if it’s okay with the state. As I am in excruciating and extreme pain,” he said in court Friday.

The judge did not order the handcuffs removed today, and Weilert–if that is his name–was taken away, under arrest for perjury.

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Woman gets 16yr prison term for assault on officer www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Woman sentenced to 16 years for assault on officer www.privateofficer.com

Athens GA. April 6 2008
By: Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
www.privateofficer.com

In the early hours of January 14, 2008 Athens-Clarke Senior Police officer Charlie Snyder was working an off-duty job as a security officer, dressed in his full police uniform at the Kroger store in West Athens. The same store, where another Athens-Clarke police officer had been stabbed repeatedly and almost died in the middle of the grocery store a month before.
Police say that at around 7PM officer Snyder was notified that a female shopper by the name of Rena Davis was in the store and was wanted on felony charges.

As the officer radioed dispatch for confirmation and approached Davis she bolted and Snyder got into a short foot chase and caught her and she fought with him and continued to resist the officer even after being pepper sprayed. during the fight, officer Snyder released a mechanism that dropped his pistol’s magazine and put him in even greater danger without having his handgun available.

A Clarke County Superior Court judge Thursday sentenced Davis to 16 years in prison after a weeklong trial. A jury on Monday found the 20-year-old Davis guilty of aggravated assault, battery and misdemeanor obstruction of a law enforcement officer for fighting with Officer Snyder when the officer tried to detain her for outstanding arrest warrants.
Judge Steve Jones also sentenced Davis to four years of probation.
As for the officer who had been stabbed in December, Sgt. Courtney Gale, she is on a road to recovery and in time hopes to return to duty.

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Professional hockey players busted for thefts www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Professional hockey players busted for thefts www.privateofficer.com

Indianapolis Ind April 6 2008
By;Rick McCann
Ntl. Assoc. Private Officers
www.privateofficer.com

Two professional Indiana Ice players also were two professional shoplifters according to a local store’s security staff.
The two are now accused of shoplifting hundreds of dollars worth of merchandise from a high end department store and face some serious charges as well as possible team sanctions and other consequences.
Police arrested Timothy TJ Syner of Springfield, Massachusetts for felony theft and Gregory Squires of White Plains, New York also faces the same charge.
.
Loss prevention officers say they were conducting surveillance of the two and caught the Indiana Ice Hockey players red handed.
“They passed up all the areas where they could have paid and of course they chose not to and were stopped by store security,” said Sgt. Matt Mount.

Officers arrested them on April 1st at Von Maur, a high end store located in the Castleton Square Mall.
Security agents say Syner picked up a pair of $95 Burberry shorts along with a $195 Burberry shirt and his teammate, Squires, tried on a $190 pair of Diesel designer jeans.
“They had gone in the dressing room and taken off their clothes, put these on and put their own clothes back on over these clothes,” said Mount.
Von Maur security officers said the teenagers probably didn’t realize from the time they came in the store they had them on camera, especially when they came out of the dressing room.
Mount said, “They were arrested for theft and receiving stolen property.”
“Kids look up to them,” said Gulley. “So they need to take better care.”
Some shoppers who learned of the theft also chimed in saying they should have known better and how shameful it was.
One male shopper said that athletes and singers are supposed to be role models not thieves and dope heads. They are missing their chance at doing something good and making lasting impressions on our young people. But they don’t really care he said, just look at what happened here and just watch the evening news.
The two players face one count of felony theft. There is no word yet if they will face discipline from their team managers.
The Ice headquarters is located at the Indiana State Fairgrounds and they have game highlight videos on Youtube. Those videos feature a few fights.
They’re scheduled to appear in court on Apr. 29 for the felony theft charge. No one at Ice Headquarters could comment on whether they would play in Friday night’s road game

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Teenager charged with robbery after theft www.privateofficer.com

Posted by privateofficernews on April 6, 2008

Teenager charged with robbery after theft www.privateofficer.com

Harlingen TX

An 18-year-old man that police arrested on charges of aggravated robbery was arraigned Thursday by a municipal court judge, who set his bond at $50,000, officials said
Harlingen resident Leroy Cortez was arrested after police said he and his juvenile brother took merchandise from Mervyn’s without paying and threatened a Mervyn’s security officer Monday, according to a police report.
The two brothers and another man went into the store at Valle Vista Mall and a security officer saw the boy hide a T-shirt in his shorts, the report states.
Cortez saw his brother conceal the shirt and didn’t attempt to stop him, the report states.
They then walked out of the store without paying and security officers confronted the group, according to the report.
The boy pulled a knife out of his right front pants pocket and turned on the security officers, and Cortez told the security guards to leave his brother alone, the police report states.
The juvenile put the knife inside his pocket when he saw police arrive, according to the report.
Police arrested the brothers and took them to the Harlingen jail, the report states.
While the juvenile was being transported to the Darrel B. Hester Juvenile Detention Center, he was able to move his cuffed hands toward the front of his body, and police and the boy were involved in a brief struggle when they took him out of the car, the report states.

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