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   <title>National News : Drug Suspectīs Wife Charged in FBI Agentīs Death</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39286&amp;PID=61412#61412</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Drug Suspectīs Wife Charged in FBI Agentīs Death<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Drug Suspect's Wife Charged in FBI Agent's Death</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 09:39 AM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>By DAN NEPHIN</strong><br /><em>Associated Press Writer</em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>     GLENSHAW, Pa.     -- </p><p>An FBI agent trying to arrest a cocaine-dealing suspect at a home near Pittsburgh was killed Wednesday by the man's wife, who might have thought she was shooting an intruder, authorities said.</p><p>Agent Samuel Hicks was shot about 6 a.m. in the middle-class community of Indiana Township. The 33-year-old was taking part in a drug-ring roundup at the home of Robert Korbe, who was taken into custody on the drug charge.</p><p>Christina Korbe, 40, was charged with homicide. Her attorney, Sumner Parker, said his client was with her 10-year-old daughter and 5-year-old son when agents arrived and might have feared for their safety.</p><p>Korbe "ultimately called 911 to get local police to her house based on what she thought was happening," said Parker, adding that he is representing his client on state charges.</p><p>According to the criminal complaint for Christina Korbe, law enforcers arrived shortly after 6 a.m., announced themselves as police and saw a man running inside. Officers rammed the door and broke a window to enter.</p><p>Hicks entered first and turned left. A shot was fired, he yelled "I'm hit," and police dragged him outside and called 911.</p><p>Christina Korbe later told police she was standing at the top of the stairs and thought she shot an intruder. She called 911 and was arrested while on the phone. Korbe said she never heard police identify themselves.</p><p>Robert Korbe said he told his wife to stay upstairs while he went to the door. When he realized it was the police, he ran to the basement, dumped cocaine into a washtub, dressed and ran out the back door before he was arrested, the complaint said.</p><p>Christina Korbe was at Allegheny County police headquarters until Wednesday evening, when she was taken away on a stretcher crying with a white blanket over her head. She was put into an ambulance and taken to a hospital because she was feeling ill.</p><p>Her husband was one of 35 people charged in the 27-count indictment that accuses the defendants of conspiring to traffic cocaine and crack from October 2007 through September. Christina Korbe was not named in the indictment.</p><p>Robert Korbe appeared briefly in federal court Wednesday and was represented by a public defender but told the judge he planned to hire his own attorney.</p><p>He had told reporters at his home as he was being led into a police car that "they shot their own guy."</p><p>FBI agent William Crowley, an agency spokesman, said, "Based on the information we have right now, every indication is that no shot was fired by law enforcement at the crime scene."</p><p>Hicks had been with the FBI since March 2007. He was a former Baltimore police officer and school teacher with a wife and 3-year-old son.</p><p>"Special Agent Hicks made the ultimate sacrifice that any law enforcement officer makes for his country," Michael Rodriguez, agent in charge of the Pittsburgh FBI office, said in a statement read to reporters.</p><p>"He served with honor and bravery and will be greatly missed by his colleagues here in Pittsburgh and throughout the FBI," he said.</p><p>FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III said: "The loss of Sam Hicks is a tragedy. Our hearts and prayers go out to Sam's family and the members of the Pittsburgh field office."</p><p>The last FBI special agent killed in the line of duty was Barry Lee Bush, who was accidentally shot and killed by a fellow agent outside a bank on April 5, 2007, in Readington, N.J., according to the FBI.</p><p>Bush, 52, of Forks Township, Pa., and other agents were in pursuit of three bank robbers who were armed but did not fire their weapons, authorities said.</p><p>___</p><p>Associated Press writer Joe Mandak in Pittsburgh contributed to this report.</p><p><hr /><p><img style="float:left; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_ap.gif" /><div style="font:9px;">Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</div></p></p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p><P><strong>Related Stories</strong></P><ul><li> <a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Officer-Down-News/FBI-Agent-Fatally-Shot-While-Serving-Warrant-in-Pennsylvania/2$44210">FBI Agent Fatally Shot While Serving Warrant in Pennsylvania</a></li></ul></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Drug-Suspects-Wife-Charged-in-FBI-Agents-Death/1$44240" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Drug-Suspects-Wife-Charged-in-FBI-Agents-Death/1$44240</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 13:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : States Disagree Greatly on Amber Alert Criteria</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39285&amp;PID=61411#61411</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> States Disagree Greatly on Amber Alert Criteria<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>States Disagree Greatly on Amber Alert Criteria  </h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 11:06 AM EDT</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>By DORIE TURNER</strong><br /><em>Associated Press Writer</em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>     ATLANTA     -- </p><p>Authorities count hundreds of Amber Alert cases across the country as success stories when they start explaining why the media-friendly and politically popular bulletins are so important.</p><p>Yet despite a federal law meant to create a uniform system, an Associated Press review shows wide variations in what triggers an Amber Alert from one state to the next, which can heighten the tension when a suspect crosses state lines.</p><p>The AP examined Amber Alert records from all 50 states and found that some barely keep track of the alerts they've issued, let alone whether they worked. A few states don't have anyone designated to oversee their programs.</p><p>That poor record-keeping makes it difficult to tell whether investigators have ever missed a chance to safely recover an abducted child because of differences in the state laws and their application.</p><p>Twelve states refuse to put out an alert when a parent calls police amid a custody fight, while others see that as a legitimate reason to enlist help from the public. Twelve states issue Amber Alerts for adults with mental or physical disabilities, while other states save their bulletins solely for abducted children.</p><p>Among the disparities those different interpretations create: New Jersey has issued just four alerts since 2005, while Michigan - with an only slightly larger population - has issued 100.</p><p>All that despite a 5-year-old federal law requiring that every state have a child abduction alert system in place. The law also requires that those systems be uniform to help coordination and that the U.S. Department of Justice appoint someone to get the states on the same page.</p><p>Critics question the basic premise of Amber Alerts - that they help find and save abducted children. Kidnappers who kill children usually do so in the first six hours after they take their victims, experts say. Often it takes nearly that long just to get an alert issued.</p><p>A few days after she disappeared in April 2006, 10-year-old Jamie Rose Bolin of Purcell, Okla., was found dead in a neighbor's apartment, the victim of what investigators said was a cannibalistic fantasy. Police did not initially put out an Amber Alert because they suspected she had run away and had no reports of an abduction.</p><p>An alert was eventually issued, but police said the girl probably was killed the day she was taken.</p><p>"There's nothing wrong with making people feel better in the security of children - it does exactly that," said Jack Levin, a criminology professor at Northeastern University in Boston. "When you're actually talking about preventing homicides, you have to look elsewhere for a solution."</p><p>Law enforcement officials insist the alerts can be crucial to recovering endangered children, even when multiple states are involved.</p><p>Take the case of Jerry Jones, who killed his infant daughter and his ex-girlfriend's parents and sister in a small north Georgia town before kidnapping the couple's other three kids. Motorists saw an alert on a highway sign and spotted the Ford Explorer driven by Jones, who was caught just across the Tennessee line and given a death sentence earlier this year.</p><p>The three children were found safe, and the Levi's Call, as Amber Alerts are known in Georgia, "was the key to the whole thing," said John Bankhead, a spokesman for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.</p><p>Amber Alerts started in 1996 after the murder of 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, who was kidnapped while riding her bicycle in Arlington, Texas. The city developed a system where police work with broadcasters to put out bulletins on abducted children, similar to severe weather warnings.</p><p>Soon, states began creating their own Amber Alert systems, and Congress established its own law in 2003.</p><p>The federal law doesn't have any teeth to it, though. It sets basic standards for issuing an alert but doesn't penalize states that don't follow them.</p><p>The law set aside $20 million to help establish and shore up state highway alert systems, a token sum that the states - many of which already had programs in place - have been slow to go after. About $4 million remains unclaimed, and 10 states haven't applied for any of that money.</p><p>Not that they really need it. Every state has an alert system, and many had them before the federal law was passed. And federal authorities have no intention of asserting control of the state systems, regardless of the law's establishment of a national point person to do just that.</p><p>"There will never be a federal Amber czar," said Jeffrey L. Sedgwick, an assistant attorney general at the Justice Department who nevertheless spends part of his time as national coordinator for the Amber Alert network. He's the third person to fill that role since the position was created five years ago.</p><p>The loose federal legislation befits a weak alliance of states that pay little attention to their alert programs and sometimes squabble over when to issue the bulletins.</p><p>In California, authorities will issue an alert in cases involving a custody dispute. Not so in neighboring Nevada, which claims to have the most stringent criteria in the country for sounding the alarm. Also, California will issue an alert in the case of an abducted adult with a mental or physical disability, while Nevada will not.</p><p>"A state that issues alerts more liberally may be miffed when a neighboring state is more conservative and won't do it," said Victor Schulze, senior deputy attorney general in Nevada. "But we're concerned that an overuse of the system will numb people to the emergency characteristic of it."</p><p>Schulze said Nevada has turned down a number of requests from neighboring states because of criteria differences, but could not identify a specific case.</p><p>California Highway Patrol Lt. LD Maples, who runs the state's Amber Alert system, said he is always worried that it could become overused, but noted that even the smallest bit of information can help the public identify an abducted child.</p><p>"If you have information that can be released that can help - if they want to call it liberal let them call it liberal - if it helps, I'm almost compelled to put that information out there," Maples said.</p><p>Despite their differences, California has issued 66 alerts since 2005, better than one a month, while Nevada has put out seven, roughly the same rate per capita.</p><p>Record-keeping also varies drastically among the states - in Utah, detailed records of each alert that has been issued are available on the Internet, including a narrative of each case, while Mississippi state police have only handwritten files on the three alerts they've issued since 2005. That makes it tough to tell whether an Amber Alert makes a child any more likely to be saved. Advocates, including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, say it can't hurt.</p><p>Sedgwick, whose main job is head of the Office of Justice Programs, acknowledged it's not a perfect system but insisted the program thrives because states are in control rather than simply complying with federal mandates.</p><p>"This came from a grass-roots level," he said recently. "So for federal legislators to step in and say, 'Gee, thanks for designing that and now we're going to snatch it from you,' that would not be terribly productive."</p><p>___</p><p>Associated Press writers Rasha Madkour in Miami and Jason Dearen in San Francisco contributed to this report.</p><p>___</p><p>On the Net:</p><p>Justice Department's Amber Alert page: <a target="_new" href="http://www.amberalert.gov">http://www.amberalert.gov</a></p><p>National Center for Missing and Exploited Children: <a target="_new" href="http://www.missingkids.com">http://www.missingkids.com</a></p><p><hr /><p><img style="float:left; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_ap.gif" /><div style="font:9px;">Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</div></p></p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44249" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44249</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 13:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : IN Officer Struck As Drug Suspect Flees Undercover</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39284&amp;PID=61410#61410</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> IN Officer Struck As Drug Suspect Flees Undercover<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Indiana Officer Struck As Drug Suspect Flees Undercover Buy</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 11:08 AM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>Story by <a target=_new href=http://www.wlwt.com/>wlwt.com</a></strong><br /><em></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>  LAWRENCEBURG, Ind.   -- </p> <p> A police officer was injured Wednesday when a suspected drug dealer struck him with his car. </p><p> Officers from the Dearborn County Special Crimes Unit said they were attempting to make an undercover drug buy from Douglas Wilson, of West Harrison. </p><p> Wilson fled in his car and struck the officer, authorities said, before leading officers on a high-speed chase. </p><p> Police later arrested a second man, 27-year-old Gregory Smith, of Harrison, in connection with the incident, but Wilson remains at large. </p><p> No additional information was available about the officer or his injuries. </p><p>Copyright 2008 by WLWT.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44250" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44250</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 13:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : MI Officer Injured After Bank Robbery Attempt</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39283&amp;PID=61409#61409</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> MI Officer Injured After Bank Robbery Attempt<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Michigan Officer Injured After Bank Robbery Attempt</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 11:08 AM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>Story by <a target=_new href=http://www.clickondetroit.com/>clickondetroit.com</a></strong><br /><em></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>  BINGHAM FARMS, Mich.   -- </p> <p> The search continued Wednesday night for a bank robber who escaped after a wild and dangerous police chase that ended in a crash. </p><p> A Southfield police officer and two innocent drivers were hurt Wednesday in the accident that happened in Southfield along the Southfield service drive. The bank robbery took place a few miles away at the Bank of America at 13 Mile and Telegraph roads in Bingham Farms Wednesday. </p><p> According to police, the alleged get-away car was driven by a woman who slammed head-on into a Southfield police squad car and then hit two other vehicles. </p><p> "My car is destroyed," said Danielle Draper. "It hit my car from the front and made me spin." </p><p> The second driver, John Whitby, said the suspect's car seemed to come out of nowhere. "I looked in the rearview mirror and this little black car was flying down behind us," Whitby said. </p><p> "It sounded like something had... like a bomb or something," added Jim Sheridon, who also witnessed the accident. </p><p> Police believe that before the crash, the female driver helped a male friend rob the Bank Of America in Bingham Farms. Police said she then dropped the male friend off in the area of Telegraph and 12 Mile roads. </p><p> The chase and crash, according to police, took place minutes later when an officer spotted a vehicle matching the robber's description and gave pursuit. </p><p> "I saw her (the female get-away driver) coming but there was nothing you could do," said Sheridon. "I couldn't get away." </p><p> Sheridon was not seriously hurt. The police officer suffered a minor injury to his arm, and Draper is also expected to be ok. </p><p> "It could have been worse," Draper said. "Yes, yes. (looking at all the damage) I thank the Lord I'm still here." </p><p> The female suspect was treated at the scene in an ambulance before being taken into custody. </p><p> Police believe the bank robber may still be armed because shots were fired during the robbery.  </p><p>Copyright 2008 by ClickOnDetroit.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44251" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44251</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 13:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : TN Officer Accused of Transgender Beating</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39282&amp;PID=61408#61408</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> TN Officer Accused of Transgender Beating<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Tennessee Officer Accused of Transgender Beating</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 11:37 AM EDT</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>The Associated Press</strong><br /><em></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>     MEMPHIS, Tenn.     -- </p><p>A former Memphis police officer pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to civil rights charges in the jailhouse beating of a transgender prostitution suspect that was captured on video.</p><p>An indictment unsealed Wednesday accuses Bridges McRae, 28, of using unreasonable force by repeatedly striking Duanna Johnson with his fist and handcuffs in the intake area of the Shelby County Jail in February.</p><p>Johnson, a biological male who lived as a woman, was being booked on a prostitution charge when the incident happened. A videotape of the beating was broadcast on Memphis TV stations and online in June, leading to McRae's firing. His former partner, James Swain, 25, was also fired.</p><p>McRae pleaded not guilty at a brief hearing on Wednesday before a federal magistrate and was released without bond. No trial date was set.</p><p>He is charged with violating Johnson's civil rights while in a position of authority, an offense that carries a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.</p><p>Johnson, 43, who had a long history of prostitution arrests, was shot to death on a Memphis street by an unknown assailant earlier this month. The killing is still under investigation and no arrests have been made.</p><p>McRae declined comment as he left the federal courthouse. His lawyer, Ted Hansom, said McRae was "in a scuffle" with Johnson, who stood 6-foot-5, and was doing what he had to do to defend himself. Johnson was knocked bleeding to the jailhouse floor but was not seriously hurt.</p><p>The beating and Johnson's murder have drawn the attention of advocates for gay and transgender rights, including the Human Rights Campaign, a national group that has called on the Memphis Police Department for a "commitment to treating transgender people with respect and fairness."</p><p><hr /><p><img style="float:left; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_ap.gif" /><div style="font:9px;">Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</div></p></p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p><P><strong>Related Stories</strong></P><ul><li> <a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Memphis-Officer-Fired-for-Beating-Transgendered-Suspect-/1$41922">Memphis Officer Fired for Beating Transgendered Suspect </a></li></ul></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Tennessee-Officer-Accused-of-Transgender-Beating/1$44241" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Tennessee-Officer-Accused-of-Transgender-Beating/1$44241</a>]]>
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   <title>National News : Los Angeles Officer Awarded $2.25 Million in Discr</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39281&amp;PID=61407#61407</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Los Angeles Officer Awarded $2.25 Million in Discr<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Los Angeles Officer Awarded $2.25 Million in Discrimination Suit</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 11:44 AM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>Joanna Lin, Lin is a Times staff writer.</strong><br /><em>Los Angeles Times</em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p><img style="float:right; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_lexis.gif" /></p>  <p>The Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday awarded $2.25 million to a police officer who said she was discriminated against and sexually harassed by her male colleagues and supervisors, and then retaliated against when she complained.</p>    <p>Officer Patricia Fuller said she was repeatedly cautioned that the LAPD's canine bomb unit at Los Angeles International Airport, where she was the only female canine handler for six years, was an "ol' boys club" and not "female friendly," according to court documents filed in 2006. When hired in 1999, she was the squad's second female canine handler in Los Angeles Police Department history.</p> <p>Fuller alleged in her lawsuit that men in the unit took items from her desk and the women's locker room, used her shower and hygiene products, exposed their genitalia, made offensive and sexually explicit remarks, and excluded her from training exercises and other opportunities.</p> <p>Some offenses Fuller described in court documents included an office bulletin board on which colleagues posted sexually explicit cartoons and images, racial epithets and derogatory images that her supervisor said "built camaraderie." Male colleagues also barred her from "cigar meetings" they held to discuss training issues and practices, and would then blow cigar smoke in her face.</p> <p>Additionally, Fuller said a colleague once told her that another officer had rubbed his penis on her phone. Although she did not report the incident, Fuller said that when she made other complaints, she was told she was too "anal" and to "stay out of the guys' business."</p> <p>Fuller said complaining to colleagues and supervisors only intensified their harassment of her. She was falsely accused of misconduct, denied a promotion and paired with a "substandard" partner, according to court documents.</p> <p>Fuller's attorney, Matthew McNicholas, said he had no comment on the settlement, which was unanimously approved in closed session.</p> <p>The settlement is the third multimillion-dollar verdict against the LAPD in the last three months involving retaliation claims.</p> <p>The retaliation suits were "a very troubling, serious matter," said Councilman Dennis Zine, a former LAPD sergeant and member of the council's Public Safety Committee. "The financial hit on the taxpayers and on the budget is significant."</p> <p>Last week, a Los Angeles County Superior Court jury awarded $3.6 million to an officer who said he was demoted and suffered retaliation when he defended Fuller. In September, a jury awarded $3.1 million to an officer who said he was penalized for reporting a superior's racial epithets and possible embezzlement.</p> <p>--</p> <p> <a target="_new" href="mailto:joanna.lin@latimes.com">joanna.lin@latimes.com</a> </p><p><HR /><div style="font:9px;"><p align="center"><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/lncc/about/copyrt.html" target="_new">Copyright 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</a><br /><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/general" target="_new">Terms and Conditions</a> | <a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/privacy" target="_new">Privacy Policy</a></p></div></p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Los-Angeles-Officer-Awarded-225-Million-in-Discrimination-Suit/1$44246" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Los-Angeles-Officer-Awarded-225-Million-in-Discrimination-Suit/1$44246</a>]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 13:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>National News : MD Bank Robbery Leads to Chase, Shooting</title>
   <link>http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=39280&amp;PID=61406#61406</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> MD Bank Robbery Leads to Chase, Shooting<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Maryland Bank Robbery Leads to Chase, Shooting</h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 12:53 PM EDT</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>										     
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							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong></strong><br /><em>Courtesy <a target=_new href=http://www.wjla.com/>WJLA-TV</a></em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">		<p>BURTONSVILLE, Md. - Police officers from Howard County and Prince George's County opened fire on a bank robbery suspect during a running gun battle Thursday, fatally wounding the man, police said Thursday. Officers from serveral jurisdictions were still searching for two other bank robbery suspects.  </p><p>The shooting happened in Burtonsville, where three bank robbery suspects bailed out after a chase that stretched across Howard, Prince George's and Montgomery counties.</p><p>Hovering overhead, NewsChopper 7 captured pictures of first responders performing CPR on someone and loading the person into an ambulance. Investigators confirmed just before noon one of the bank robbery suspects had died.</p><p>Police have set up a perimeter in Burtonsville and are searching for two other bank robbery suspects.  </p><p>  Heavily armed officers stopped every vehicle along Greencastle Road in Burtonsville, opening doors and searching the vehicles -- sometimes with weapons drawn -- as they looked for two remaining bank robbery suspects.</p><p>Canine officers, escorted by tactical officers armed with assault rifles, searched apartment complexes and wooded areas, looking for the suspects.</p><p>The chase began after bank robbery in Clarksville, Howard County. Three gunmen robbed the Bank of America branch located in the 6300 block of Ten Oaks Road about 9:15 a.m. Wednesday, an eyewitness told ABC 7/NewsChannel 8.</p><p>In the course of the robbery, police say that a bank employee was wounded in the hand. She was taken to a hospital and is expected to recover.</p><p>A witness to the robbery followed the suspects' vehicle and called 911, Howard County police said. Officers located the vehicle and gave chase, passing through "multiple jurisdictions", whose officers also joined the pursuit. </p><p><em>Republished with permission from WJLA-TV</em></p>		</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Maryland-Bank-Robbery-Leads-to-Chase--Shooting/1$44252" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/web/online/Top-News-Stories/Maryland-Bank-Robbery-Leads-to-Chase--Shooting/1$44252</a>]]>
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   <title>National News : Police Close Probe in AR Democratīs Slaying</title>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=122" rel="nofollow">Cop_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> Police Close Probe in AR Democratīs Slaying<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 1:45pm<br /><br /><h1>Police Close Probe in Arkansas Democrat's Slaying    </h1>		<h2></h2>	<br class="space12" />	<div align="right">	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: Thursday, November 20, 2008</div>	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: November 20th, 2008 01:23 PM GMT-05:00</div>	<br class="space5" />		</div>	<br class="space12" />	>					
							PT>                            					<div class="deck11"><strong>By ANDREW DeMILLO</strong><br /><em>Associated Press Writer</em></div>			<BR />			<div id="intelliTXT">													<p>     LITTLE ROCK, Ark.     -- </p><p>City and state police have closed their investigations into last summer's shooting of Arkansas' Democratic Party chairman without offering an explanation of why the attack occurred.</p><p>Bill Gwatney died Aug. 13 after being shot three times by a man who had been fired from his job at a Target store that morning. Timothy Dale Johnson was chased into Grant County, where he was shot and killed after threatening officers.</p><p>A city police report said Johnson was on an antidepressant and that the drug may have played a part in his "irrational and violent behavior."</p><p>Autopsy results said Gwatney died from a shot to the head. Johnson was shot six times.</p><p>"I wish there was a conclusion, but there wasn't," said Lt. Terry Hastings, a spokesman for the Little Rock Police Department.</p><p>Authorities discovered a note with a telephone number and the word "Gwatney" on it in Johnson's home, but the report found that it was a telephone number for Gwatney Towing Company in Jacksonville, which is no longer in business.</p><p>The FBI also reviewed the history on Johnson's computer, and found that he visited Wikipedia, Yahoo and news sites the day before the shooting. Johnson also visited the Web site of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms that day, the report said.</p><p>The 986-page report says police searched through electronic and paper files at Gwatney's businesses for Johnson's name, but that it never turned up.</p><p>"There's really no answer as to why he did it," Hastings said.</p><p><hr /><p><img style="float:left; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_ap.gif" /><div style="font:9px;">Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.</div></p></p>												</div>	                		<BR />				<p></p>	<div cla<br><br><a href="http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44253" target="_blank">http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44253</a>]]>
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   <title>News : TX Firefighters Rescue Two from  Gas Poisoning</title>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> TX Firefighters Rescue Two from  Gas Poisoning<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 6:31am<br /><br /><h1>Texas Firefighters Rescue Two from  Gas Poisoning </h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 11-18-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 11-19-2008 10:02:07 AM</div>
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       <strong>Leslie Wilber</strong><br />
    
<em>Victoria Advocate (Texas)</em><br />

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											<p><img style="float:right; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_lexis.gif" /></p>  <p>Nov. 18--Firefighters carried a pregnant woman and her aunt from a house Monday after carbon monoxide from a faulty heater made them ill.</p> <p>Homeowner Connie Guevara came home from work and found her daughter, Onillia Cano, 20, and sister, Mary Orta, 51, incoherent.</p>    <p>Cano, who is four months pregnant, was throwing up, Guevara said, and Orta was unable to clearly say what happened.</p> <p>"They were just out of it," Guevara said.</p> <p>Her husband, John Guevara, planned to check the home's gas-powered heater before turning it on this season, he said. He had not done so yet.</p> <p>Carbon monoxide can be deadly. Homeowners can prevent carbon monoxide poisoning by taking the following steps, Fire Chief Vance Riley said:</p> <p>Have a professional check all gas-powered appliances annually.</p> <p>Install a carbon monoxide detector if you have such appliances</p> <p>Cano switched on the heater because she was cold and didn't realize doing so would be dangerous, her mother said.</p> <p>"They'd been here all day long in the house," Connie Guevara said.</p> <p>Firefighters rescued Cano and Orta from the house shortly after 3 p.m. Both women were taken to Citizens Medical Center.</p> <p>Staff there told Connie Guevara her daughter and sister were responding to treatment within minutes of arriving.</p> <p>Firefighters detected readings of 144 parts per million of carbon monoxide inside the home, Riley said. Thirty parts per million is a dangerous reading.</p> <p>As they pumped fresh air into the house, firefighters also looked for Chewbacca the dachshund, who remained inside.</p> <p>Four firefighters cornered him before scooping him up, John Guevara said.</p> <p>"He's very protective of his house," Guevara said. "That's what he gets paid to do."</p> <p>Charlie, the family's other dog, was also safely rescued from the home.</p> <p>The family was able to return home after the fire department aired out the house.</p> <p>GET A DETECTOR</p> <p>If you're not sure how or where to install a carbon monoxide detector, call the Victoria Fire Department at 361-485-3450.</p> <p>SIGNS OF CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING</p> <p>The following are common symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning:</p> <p>Extreme lethargy</p> <p>Severe headache</p> <p>Inability to think clearly</p> <p>Red, blotchy skin</p> <p>To see more of Victoria Advocate, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to <a target="_new" href="http://www.thevictoriaadvocate.com">http://www.thevictoriaadvocate.com</a>. Copyright (c) 2008, Victoria Advocate, Texas Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. For reprints, email <a target="_new" href="mailto:tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com">tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com</a>, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.</p><p><HR /><div style="font:9px;"><p align="center"><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/lncc/about/copyrt.html" target="_new">Copyright 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</a><br /><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/general" target="_new">Terms and Conditions</a> | <a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/privacy" target="_new">Privacy Policy</a></p></div></p>										



   

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   <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2008 06:31:29 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title>News : CO Chief Speaks About Sprinklers in Apartments</title>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="http://www.illinoiscops.net/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=1407" rel="nofollow">Fire_Bot</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> CO Chief Speaks About Sprinklers in Apartments<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> November 20 2008 at 6:31am<br /><br /><h1>Colorado Chief Speaks About Sprinklers in Apartments</h1>
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	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Posted</strong>: 11-19-2008</div>
	<div class="deck10a"><strong>Updated</strong>: 11-19-2008 10:05:03 AM</div>
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       <strong>Ryan Morgan Camera Staff Writer</strong><br />
    
<em>Daily Camera (Boulder, Colorado)</em><br />

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											<p><img style="float:right; margin-right:5px;" src="http://images.cygnusinteractive.com/buttons/logo_lexis.gif" /></p>    <p> Boulder's fire chief said a blaze that consumed an apartment building Saturday night wouldn't have been nearly as severe if the structure was equipped with sprinklers, as the city started requiring for new construction in 1988.</p>    <p> Boulder Fire Chief Larry Donner said the Fairways Apartments at 5620 Arapahoe Ave. were built in the mid-1980s, at a time when alarms and sprinklers weren't required.</p> <p> Saturday's fire was at least the third blaze in two years in which an apartment building without sprinklers suffered heavy fire damage. The Gold Run apartment complex suffered two major fires, one in January 2006 and one in October 2007.</p> <p> But Donner said it wouldn't necessarily make sense for the city to require older buildings to add sprinklers because it's expensive to install them.</p> <p> "It's something that can be done, but I'm not sure that we're ready to go ahead and make a recommendation like that," he said. "Because of the expense involved, if you're looking at affordable housing options for people, there's another factor to be considered. Yes, they'd be safer with the sprinkler systems ... but if it would mean the rent goes up to the point where we have people living in the streets, it changes the equation."</p> <p> As fire department investigators returned to the building Tuesday to begin their search for what caused the fire, Donner said they'll be looking for a "point of origin" where the fire began. From there, they'll try to decide whether something like an appliance was at fault -- which could result in product recalls -- or if human error led to the blaze.</p> <p> "If it's a behavioral issue, if it's a cooking fire or something like that, we'll look at it that way," he said.</p> <p> Donner said they'll also be looking into how people responded to the fire -- whether people evacuated when they heard fire alarms, for example -- to figure out how best to educate residents in the future.</p> <p> Some residents who live in other buildings in the apartment complex, which is owned by the nonprofit Thistle Community Housing, said they were spooked by the fire.</p> <p> Susan Butterfield, who lives in an adjacent building, said she'd feel safer with sprinklers.</p> <p> "God, yes, they should install them," she said.</p> <p> Butterfield said the staff members who manage the apartment complex are vigilant about testing the individual smoke detectors inside resi</p> <p> dents' apartments.</p> <p> "They do check that," she said. "They're very good about it ... probably because they know these (buildings) could all go up."</p> <p> Thistle's CEO, Mary Roosevelt, declined to comment Tuesday.</p> <p> Thomas Lofstrom, who lives in the complex, said he thinks the apartments generally are safe. But the fire still makes him worry, he said.</p> <p> "You have to be concerned about it happening," he said. "Where the hell else would you go in Boulder?</p> <p> Some residents also said that it seemed like the fire department had taken too much time after arriving to start spraying the building.</p> <p> Fire department spokeswoman Sarah Huntley said it wouldn't be unusual for fire</p> <p> fighters to take a few minutes to start spraying water, because it takes time to hook up hoses to hydrants, which is necessary because fires that large can't be doused using just the water supply in the truck. "It's unlikely that it took longer than 15 minutes," she said of the delay to get water on the fire. "But it is true that we would not have arrived and immediately put water on it."</p> <p> Firefighters also have to suit up with additional protective gear for blazes as hot and fast as Saturday's fire.</p> <p> "And we have to be able to check in and account for everyone as they're going into the building," she said. "You don't just come in and start putting water on a fire that size."</p> <p> Contact Camera Staff Writer</p> <p> Ryan Morgan at 303-473-1333</p> <p> or <a target="_new" href="mailto:morganr@dailycamera.com">morganr@dailycamera.com</a> </p><p><HR /><div style="font:9px;"><p align="center"><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/lncc/about/copyrt.html" target="_new">Copyright 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</a><br /><a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/general" target="_new">Terms and Conditions</a> | <a href="http://www.lexis-nexis.com/terms/privacy" target="_new">Privacy Policy</a></p></div></p>										



   

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