Sunday, September 17, 2017

Citizens' Academy VI: Traffic stops and room clearing

Editor's Note: Citizens' Academy is a six-week program within the Corsicana Police Department designed to educate citizens of Corsicana how our police operates through class lessons and simulations. Daily Sun reporter Patrick Sparks has enrolled in Citizen's Academy and attends the lessons each week to write about them so that everyone may also learn:
The class drove out to the former Corsicana State Home found at the south end of Second Avenue for our next hands-on lesson, led by Officers Sean Eggleston, Sean Fraiser and Ron Kludy. Tuesday we were to learn about how the police conduct their traffic stops as well as SWAT tactics when it comes to sweeping and clearing rooms while searching for a suspect.
We began with a quick study of the tactical gear that police use during hostile confrontations, with Eggleston passing around a ballistic vest and helmet. Police vests look like they're militarized, but are actually lighter than what the army uses; the ballistic plates used are a lighter grade than military, and offers less upper chest protection – certain military vests have neck protection.
The vests are still modifiable, allowing their users to customize the pouches they may use, either for spare magazines, a first aid pouch or a loose accessory pouch.
However, lighter does not mean lightweight: Eggleston passed around a bare vest with only the plates inserted and it was still fairly heavy, close to lugging around a full high school book-bag (my classes in high school required a lot of books back then). It's important to note that if a plate ever receives impact of any form – be it from a bullet or melee weapon – the plate needs to be discarded and replaced; officers cannot afford trusting a ballistic plate with any wear or tear. For cop safety, they're a one and done deal.
After the vest, Eggleston passed around a tactical helmet, showcasing how much a helmet has changed over the years. They're now much more lightweight and aren't as bulky as their predecessors. The ears are left open for communication gear to be worn, and includes rails for different tech on the sides and front. A photo of the helmet can be seen online.
After the quick show and tell, we moved on to the procedure of a routine traffic stop, but the varying elements and situations make them anything but routine. A person might be pulled over for many reasons: busted headlight or tail light, running a stop sign or red light, speeding, expired registration, or no license plate light. The person inside may be compliant and agreeable, or annoyed and irritable. They might even possibly be hostile and possess a gun.
Certain procedures that have to stay the same deal with positioning the cop car and approaching a person's vehicle. Officers try to make a habit out of parking their vehicle at an angle on the side of the road, cutting their wheels to point in the street, and there are two reasons for this:
The first reason is that should an officer find himself in a federal traffic stop – a stop with the intent to arrest a potentially dangerous suspect, the angle of the vehicle's parking will allow the officer to use the engine as a shield and cover. The spotlight helps with cover as well; looking at the photos online, you can see the difference from the officer's perspective and the suspect's.
The officer has clear sight of who he's aiming at, but from the other side, that spotlight can blind a suspect and make it difficult to aim back.
The second reason is to help prevent further damage should someone driving by accidentally smack right into the cop car from behind. If they parked normally and that were to happen, there's a good chance that the officer's car would roll right into the back of the person they stopped. So with the vehicle angled and the wheel turned into the road, the car will roll into the open street instead.
When officers approach a vehicle, they use that time walking up to check for other factors: Are people moving around inside the vehicle? Is someone hiding in the backseat? Does the car smell of drugs? After that initial assessment, now comes the part where an officer will approach your window to talk with you.
They'll actually normally stay a foot or so back behind your window, and the reason for this is in case whoever they pull over has a gun they're willing to use. If an officer were to stand directly in front of the window, a suspect could easily shoot from inside the vehicle. With the officer standing a little behind the window, the suspect would have to stick their body outside the window to aim properly, making it harder to aim quickly.
Everyone got to take turns pretending to pull someone over and acting out a traffic stop, asking for license and registration, informing the person the reasons for pulling them over and making judgement calls whether to pass a citation or not. For most of us, not much happened, but one student was surprised as Fraiser (acting as the suspect being pulled over) suddenly jumped out of his vehicle while she approached, scaring her.
To her credit, she did exactly what she was supposed to, which was move behind the vehicle for cover and draw her weapon; key word is draw, not fire, as there is a difference. Turns out Fraiser was acting as an irritated suspect that might step out of their vehicle to greet the officer instead of waiting inside the vehicle. In that situation, it is best for the officer to ask that person to step toward the sidewalk and get out of the street.
When it grew dark enough, we moved to the shutdown cafeteria of the Corsicana State Home for Eggleston, Fraiser and Kludy to demonstrate how SWAT officers clear a building with flashlights and partners. The lights attached to pistols and rifles are as bright as the spotlights on their vehicles and help with disorienting a suspect.
Time for more movie myth debunking: You usually watch shows where officers sweep through dark rooms with their lights on, slowly panning over as they try to find the bad guy. This is a bad move as it not only gives away where you are, but the direction you're looking. What is supposed to happen is that officers use their flashlights in short bursts.
I got to experience firsthand why this is effective when asked to hide in a dark bathroom for the officers to search me in. When passing by, Eggleston and Kludy would short flash their light into the bathroom to light it up for a split second before turning the light back off as they passed by.
As I was on the receiving end, I was heavily disoriented by the light as it reflected off the wall tiles, the brightness bright and brief enough to leave spots in my vision and disrupting my night vision (when your eyes eventually adjust to low light) when I was back in darkness. No matter how many times they did this, I could not determine how close they were to me or accurately figure out their position.
The brief quick flashes does no harm to the officers performing them, as they're behind the light and have control and know when it's coming, which I got to see when they asked me to step out and try the light for myself.
Along with controlled light bursts, when clearing a room officers always go in pairs or groups, taking larger groups for bigger buildings. They move in a way where someone is always watching one direction, leaving no blind spots for an ambush. Even when clearing rooms, the officer outside cannot turn to check on their partner; they have to trust that their partner knows what they're doing.
The students got to practice this as they were given pistol lights and were made to sweep the cafeteria and search for Kludy, who hid in the building.
Afterwards, we had a little fun with the exercise with the students getting a turn to hide, only this time we were armed with airsoft pellet pistols as cops came looking for us, looking to target and clear us out. For safety reasons, the students were given paintball masks to protect our eyes and faces, and went in groups of three while Kludy and Fraiser came looking for us with airsoft rifles.
It was a tense experience, trying to get into the mindset of someone trying to ambush a cop. I was crouched down behind a pillar, sitting in the dark with bated breath, pistol trained at the door I felt they would come through. I was listening for footsteps, looking for shadows on the floor or walls, anything to help me predict where they were coming from. I had a flashlight on my pistol; would I use the strobe effect to blind them, or make an annoying distraction should I need to move for cover?
I could already hear gunfire coming from the room in front of me as the two others that hid with me were found and engaging the officers, and that did not last long as things grew silent again. I knew I was the last one in the building to find, and there were two trained officers looking for me.
I felt so exposed and unsafe where I was, quietly moving further back into the building to bide my time; I wasn't looking to actively fight with them, I wanted to get the drop on them at an opportune moment.
Apparently I was getting a bit too creative with my hiding, as Kludy and Fraiser weren't really expecting anyone to hide as far into the building as I was doing. Plus with me moving around, it was making their search that much longer, and it got to the point where we ran out of time to continue. I was told afterwards I wasn't doing anything wrong; most criminals would move in the same fashion I was, trying to get behind the cops.
Normally with a building that size I was hiding in, they wouldn't have just two officers searching; they'd send a team of 12 to come looking for me. And I thought it was scary with just two of them trying to pick me out in the dark

Military surplus gear made available to law enforcement

Military surplus gear made available to law enforcement

Calaveras officials ponder options


The Angels Camp Police Department, Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office and the District Attorney’s Office are once again able to access to military surplus items, but they don’t plan to at this time.
Office and safety equipment, weapons, helmets, flashlights, riot vests and more could be obtained by law enforcement agencies, after President Donald Trump in late August reversed the previous restrictions put in place in 2015 by former President Barack Obama to restrict Pentagon distribution of surplus military equipment. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the program would “restore law and order.”
The 1033 Program came as a result of the National Defense Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 1997, which allowed transfer of military property that might otherwise have been destroyed to law enforcement agencies across the United States. It allows the transfer, without charge, of excess military property including small arms, night-vision devices, Humvees, mine-resistant and ambush-protected vehicles, aircraft, helmets, fatigues, bomb suits, snowshoes, flashlights and more. Only 5 percent of the total $6 billion in military surplus equipment distributed to law enforcement agencies across the U.S. are weapons.

Angels Camp Chief Todd Fordahl has utilized the program in the past and is “glad to see that common sense has prevailed.”
While the department acquired some weaponry through the 1033 Program, most recently the department used disposable protective suits during the service of a search warrant in which the residence was infested with bedbugs.
Calaveras County Sheriff Rick DiBasilio also said he believes it is a great program. While he has no plan to take advantage of it right now, “If equipment becomes available that we could utilize, we will use the program to our benefit.”
Sheriff’s Capt. Jim Macedo agreed that the surplus system “is an incredibly valuable program that we have used to our benefit,” indicating the program is especially valuable to agencies on tight budgets.
The Pentagon’s Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services reports that the Sheriff’s Office first received surplus equipment through the program in December 2006, and most recently received items in February of 2016. The items include but are not limited to rifles, night-vision wear, helmets, a robot lift track, a tactical vehicle, bomb disposal equipment (a robot) and a bomb suit. While the total value of the items is just shy of $500,000, Macedo claims the value in community and officer protection is much more valuable than that.
“We utilize nearly all of the equipment,” Macedo said. “Some of the equipment is used daily, yet the frequency of use depends on the call.”
For instance, he said the rescue/tactical vehicle is used not only as a rescue vehicle, but also “during high-risk search warrants to protect our deputies or if we enter a situation where we feel there is a propensity for violence against staff.” It is also used to shield staff if there is probable cause to believe that an explosive device might be on scene, and it is used as a SWAT vehicle.
In July 2012, the department acquired a piece of equipment with one of the highest original monetary values, the MK3MOD0, a remote ordnance neutralization system or robot. This system is used to complement and augment the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team or technicians, allowing standoff capability to perform EOD missions such as reconnaissance, access to sites, remote render-safe procedures, to pick up and carry away items, and to perform disposal tasks in high-risk situations.
According to Macedo, the MK3MOD0 robot is only used during specific calls such as bomb threats or suspicious packages or devices

Saturday, September 9, 2017

QUADRUPLE AMPUTEE NEEDS HELP

Hello everyone, well, we have a start, but we need more to get this done. Thank you for continuing prayers and shares, and thank you for all those who have helped so far.....But we still have a wayyyy to go. Please get this out there and share ,so Twoby can get the things in life he NEEDS and he can help out his grandparents with getting thing they NEED. Food, pay bills , run errands for them. Thank you and God Bless all.    https://www.gofundme.com/jerrygatlin-twoby
Help spread the word!
 

Friday, September 8, 2017

Sacramento to Pay Thugs $1K Per Month Not to Commit Gun-Related Crimes

Last December we reported that a groundbreaking new program had reduced firearm-related homicides in Richmond, Ca., by 76 percent since 2007, all without restricting Second Amendment rights. Other cities have noticed the program’s effectiveness, and this month the Sacramento City Council approved a $1.5 million investment in the same strategy.
The program will be directed by an organization known as Advance Peace, whose founder, DeVone Boggan, spearheaded the model that saw so much success in Richmond.
The program targets the small percentage of city residents that commit the majority of gun-related crimes and offers them the chance to turn their lives around.
“We’re trying to get them to dream, to hope, to go from a place of ‘I don’t give a fuck’ to a place where ‘Maybe I do,’” DeVone Boggan told FastCoexist.com last year. “Because the moment you start to give a damn, you start to make decisions that are healthier about how you handle the conflicts you’re negotiating every day.”

In Sacramento, only about 50 young men commit the majority of shootings, according to Khaalid Muttaqi, director of the city’s Gang Prevention and Intervention Task Force.
Advance Peace will reach out to these individuals and offer them help with education, career development, anger management, parenting, medical health, and spirituality.
There’s also a monetary incentive: if participants stay in the system and complete the required tasks, they will receive $1,000 per month for 9 months of the 18-month program. This strategy is sometimes described as “paying people not to commit crimes,” and Sacramento residents have wondered why 1.5 million taxpayer dollars will be handed out to these individuals.ut the program has proven to be effective, and according to Muttaqi, the estimated government cost of every homicide is more than $1 million, which includes the cost of investigation, prosecution and years of incarceration.
Sacramento has also seen a rise in gun-related violence over the last several years, and its leadership is looking for a solution.
“The need is there, the program has shown results and our community can’t wait.  The time is now for action to address gun violence,” said Vice Mayor Rick Jennings who also chairs the task force.
The problem is “bigger than we would like it to be and it’s going in the wrong direction,” added Muttaqi. “We’ve had an uptick of about 38 percent in the last couple of years in gun-related violence.”
Other cities including Washington, D.C., San Jose, Oakland, and Toledo, Ohio, have adopted Advance Peace’s model. Baltimore and Gary, Indiana, have plans to do the same.

Virgin Island Gov. Signs Confiscation Order Ahead of Hurricane Irma

The governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands signed an order Monday instructing law enforcement personnel to confiscate firearms and ammunition from residents before the arrival of Hurricane Irma, a Category 5tempest.
Under the order, Gov. Kenneth Mapp activated the National Guard and gave authorities the green light to “restore public order, and to guarantee the safety of life and property.”
That also includes the seizure of “arms ammunition, explosives, incendiary material, and any other property that may be required by the military forces for the performance of this emergency mission,” as approved by the territory’s Department of Justice, The Hill Reports.
Confiscation by the state during a time of crisis should sound familiar. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin issued a similar decree calling on police to round up guns from law-abiding folk.
However, this extra-constitutional abuse of power by the government did not go unchecked.  The National Rifle Association stepped in, filed a lawsuit, and won.  The immediate result of this effort was a cessation of confiscation in The Big Easy, and down the road it led to a federal bill, signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2006, prohibiting the seizure of firearms during states of emergency.

SEE ALSO: KORWIN: The Police-Would-Never-Confiscate-Guns Myth

A screen shot of the order, courtesy of The Daily Caller.
To that end, the NRA promised Tuesday to fight Gov. Mapp on this front just as it did Gov. Nagin during Katrina.
“People need the ability to protect themselves during times of natural disaster,” said Chris W. Cox, executive director, NRA-ILA, in a press release. “This dangerous order violates the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens and puts their lives at risk.”
“When 911 is non-existent and law enforcement personnel are overwhelmed with search-and-rescue missions and other emergency duties, law-abiding American citizens must be able to protect their families and loved ones. The NRA is prepared to pursue legal action to halt Gov. Mapp’s dangerous and unconstitutional order,” continued Cox.
The number one reason people own firearms is for self-defense. Stripping that right away from citizens when they are the most vulnerable is not only unconstitutional, it’s downright diabolical.

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Rats are bad news

There have been some quite nasty disease outbreaks over the years – pandemics, epidemics, plagues, epizootics…
Fortunately, despite the terrible horror and mad despair these biologic catastrophes leave in their wake, they also provide human beings with the opportunity to adapt and to learn. The opportunity to hone our survival capabilities.
Last time, we discussed the Plague of Justinian, 1,475 years ago, the first ever recorded disease outbreak. You'll recognize the next major one in history, the Black Death.
Oh yes, the Black Death… perhaps the most infamous instance of disease outbreaks humans ever experienced. This pandemic influenced generations of art, and is still referenced today as one of the darkest, most horrific chapters of our past.
Understandably. It ravaged the populations of India,
Mesopotamia, Tartary, Syria and Armenia before it even reached Europe – where it [arguably] did the most damage.
Dead bodies were everywhere. Everyone was sick. Everyone seemed to be dying. Plague doctors moved eerily from house to house, visiting the infected and declaring the dead…
Strange and horrible times abounded.
Well, the takeaway I’m going to focus on here is a simple one, but an important one: The Black Death started in 1346, but unlike the Plague of Justinian, it came back and came back, and came back again. In fact, this lethal disease was sweeping back and forth across history so persistently that it was present in Europe every year from 1346-1671.
Could you imagine? America is only 250 years old – the Black Death was massacring Europe for 325 years! Our entire national history could fit inside that of the Black Death, plus an extra 75 years. Never underestimate the tenacity of a disease outbreak – when you think it’s finally gone for good, subdued, contained, vanquished, it may come back to stub out you and your family and all your friends. Never let your guard down.
And, once again, ground rodents (i.e. rats) are attributed with facilitating the spread of the Black Death, acting as carriers.
Rats are bad news when it comes to diseases. Making sure they stay out of your food, and your home, and your life in general is important to sustaining a healthy, uninfected life.

Remember, we're all in this together,

Derek Paulson
Prepared Patriot

'No-Go Zones' growing in USA as Muslim population increases




'No-Go Zones' growing in USA as Muslim population increases warns authorRaheem Kassam warns the problems of Sharia in Europe are coming to America

Entire neighborhoods in Sweden, Belgium, Germany or the United Kingdom have ceased to be part of the West. Ruled by Shariah law, a horrifying combination of inner-city drug culture and barbarous Islamic bigotry, the once great cities of Europe are falling one by one to a demographic conquest by Muslims. Europeans, even government officials and police officers, can no longer even safely enter what are being openly called “no-go zones.”

And America is next.

Raheem Kassam, editor of Breitbart London, has been reporting on the slow-motion takeover of the West for years. And he brings a terrifying warning to the United States in his shocking new book "No Go Zones: How Sharia Law is Coming to a Neighborhood Near You.”


The book is based on his travels to 14 cities with notorious no-go zones. Places like the Molenbeek area of Brussels and the Rosengard section in Malmo, Sweden, where outsiders, including police, dare not tread. What Kassam found in every one of his destinations was poverty, crime and extreme ghettoization, often not far from a wealthy area of the city.

As Kassam shows, such zones are now being built up in the United States. Already in places like the Cedar Riverside area of Minneapolis, Shariah cops make house checks to make sure Somali refugees are not becoming too Westernized, and in Hamtramck, Michigan, the call to prayer is blasted over loudspeakers in Arabic.

If you want to know the troubling future in store for America, you can’t miss "No Go Zones: How Sharia Law is Coming to a Neighborhood Near You.”

Europe is being conquered by Islam. Freedom is being exterminated. And the media don’t want you to know what’s happening. Learn about the mortal threat to America and Western Civilization in "No Go Zones" by Breitbart London editor Raheem Kassam. This book is sure to dominate the headlines – get yours now from the WND Superstore!
Of course, the region such zones are growing is largely because of Muslim immigration. But this mass movement of supposed “refugees” isn’t an organic process. An international network of mostly Muslim Brotherhood-linked activists has been building its ranks within the United States for more than three decades, aided by a U.S. immigration system seemingly obsessed with welcoming as many unassimilable migrants with anti-Western values as possible. As a result, largely secret plans for major population changes in hundreds of U.S. cities and towns are already being implemented.

Investigative reporter Leo Hohmann exposes the terrifying truth in “Stealth Invasion,” a shocking exposé which reveals how America is being deliberately undermined – and how the traitors doing it are personally profiting from our country’s destruction.

In the long run, if left unchecked, the result of this massive demographic invasion of the West will be the establishment of an Islamic government. And this isn’t just a theory – we have the smoking gun from the very people trying to replace the Constitution with Shariah law.

As a result of a six-month undercover penetration of the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations, we now have thousands of pages of smoking-gun documents from this terror-linked front group for the dangerous, mob-like Muslim Brotherhood. The Islamic conspiracy to destroy America is all too real. Find out the terrifying truth in “Muslim Mafia: Inside The Secret Underworld That’s Conspiring To Islamize America.”