35 Burst results for "Training Officer"

"training officer" Discussed on Liberty Station

Liberty Station

05:23 min | Last month

"training officer" Discussed on Liberty Station

"Do things better? And that's really my field of focus. And I made many observations while on the streets of Los Angeles, working some of the most dangerous assignments and areas. And my job was to work with people out of the police academy as a training officer at the FTO field training officer program. And it's really there's no job like it because everyone that's ever been a police officer in municipal and uniform county sheriffs and whatnot. They've all had a field training officer. And they can usually tell you after decades who their first field training officer was or one that they had a significant impact on and, you know, I feel very special today because I get a lot of text messages calls from people that I've trained over the three decades. I was a police officer and they'll confirm, hey, you know, I was in this tactical situation and I utilized the training guard and folded the way that you said it would. And I took the actions that I needed to and I'm here today or just career survival, you know? And. The street level was a great teacher, but I think it's also important to. Study wider nationally and that goes directly to the points that we're going to talk today because how can a Los Angeles Police officer academic opine on something that happened in Memphis? Well, I think that when we study wide and with depth that we can look at trends within law enforcement, especially here in the United States and even trends overseas, it's very important to look at how other people police and put those all together. Yeah, because I think it needs to be obviously talked about. There's something that is ailing law enforcement here in the United States today. There's, I think, several things that are wrong, some of its cultural issues and things like that. First, you know, I also want to level set because there's a trend on social media right now. If you criticize the police for certain things in the conservative space, it's like, oh, I thought you guys backed the blue. And this funny little disconnect there. And I want to clarify, you know, the idea of back the blue is that conservatives and people who come from kind of my thought process or ideology, we believe that there needs to be firm and outstanding Law & Order in our communities. You know, to protect, to keep us safe, to keep us peaceful, all that stuff, and there are men and women that volunteer to do that job and go through that training and are a part of that Law & Order law and justice kind of process.

FTO Los Angeles United States Memphis
"training officer" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

04:29 min | 2 months ago

"training officer" Discussed on WGN Radio

"At the CTA station, officers riding the trains officers right in the planet. How do you fix that? The CTA says that it's a police problem. It seems like the police say that's a CTA problem, but I will certainly support anybody who can make us feel safer and in fact make the L safer. Is it? Well, and by the way, the CTA will tell you that it's you can't put a police officer on every train car. That's just, that's not going to happen. It's too expensive. What do we do to make the CTA safer? Well, right now, there are the city is trying is taking steps to return the number of officers to the transit patrol so to speak. They have they had prior to coming into office, they had actually reduced the number of positions. But the CTA is paying a $100 million on private security unarmed private security making $15 a year, no power of arrest, and for a $100 million. And I think it comes about it's like a three year two and a half year budget. It comes to about 40 to $43 million a year. For that amount of money, you could hire a mother 300 police officers and you could significantly increase the transit police unit to about 500 officers. And with 500 officers, you could be covering every station. You could be covering every platform and you could be having officers, not ride every train, but in effect sporadically writing trains going from platform to platform. Would you ask the city to do that or the metroid to do that? What I will do besides restoring the police ranks to put the ram Emanuel years, 13,300 cops at 1700 police positions of what I would also do is I would use the privatized money and I would hire an additional 300 police officers to bring the CTA transit police unit Chicago officer strong to 500 and that would provide you with the cover that you would need because you would now have safety and security and I police officers riding the trains on the platforms at the stations who could actually make arrests. We have just a couple of minutes left Paul. What else would you like our listeners to know about your candidacy? Well, look, the greatest crisis that the city is facing right now is leadership in absence of leadership. Every problem necessity is facing from the degrading of the police department, the just a terrible public safety strategy, the incompetent leadership that the mayor selected to the keeping schools closed for 15 months in KB to the teachers union three times, which had infinitely devastating consequences. And this cycle of continuing property tax increases, so much for the property, ask your voters out there, ask residents out there whether or not the city really held the line on property taxes. Probably takes us have grown by almost $900 million over the last four years. I mean, every single problem that the city is experiencing is a product of bad leadership and the greatest, the greatest remedy, the greatest and adult for bad news. This is good leadership. I've been I've come into crisis situations in the past as city budget director and school chief in the 90s and obviously working in other cities to transform family districts. I mean, prices management is what I do. So at the end of the day, the city needs a strong leader. Somebody who can come in, somebody who can restore the police department, somebody who will be willing to take on the teachers union so that we can return our campuses to the community. So those campuses can be open and through the dinner are on weekends or summer, so we have a safe secure place for the kids to go. And somebody who can end this is ever increasing property tax fee and fine cycle that is drive people out of the city. I'm out of time, Paul, but we saw the ads. I know we're going to be hearing more from them. About 7 more weeks to go. Thanks for some of your time and let's visit again soon. Thank you for having me. Have a great day. Let's Paul valis running for mayor of Chicago

CTA CTA station Emanuel Chicago Paul Paul valis
"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

05:52 min | 4 months ago

"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"On a daily basis or did they keep you there during the week? Monday through Friday. And yeah, I would go home in the evening. It was 8 to four Monday through Friday. So I had to be up at O dark 30 to make sure there was no traffic problems. Then I'd get home probably around 6 o'clock at night. And then on top of that, what about studying and you had to do it? Had all that stuff, huh? Oh, yeah, it sucked. That part I did not like, then I wound up sleeping on a friend's couch. I wound up couch surfing, and yeah, the small attic apartment. And I'm on this couch, and he literally went out boozing every night. You know, and I would get up at 6 o'clock in the morning, and he was getting home at two 30 in the morning. Every morning, he was up. And then it was a small apartment. He would always make a pizza or a microwave something, so he'd wake me up. And I'm like, okay, this is miserable. This is beyond misery. I'm too old for this shit. So thankfully, we found a house in Milwaukee, you know, when I was about halfway through the academy, I'm like, yeah, I think I'm going to graduate. Even though they threaten you all the time, that you're not going to, but I was old enough to kind of see the games that they were playing. And I'm like, yeah, we need to move. So we moved and then life was a lot better once I had my own house and commute was a half an hour. So how long has your academy? 6 months, okay. And then when you got done, so what's the process of getting you out onto the main streets of Milwaukee? What happens is you get assigned to a district station, you go to patrol. And you do 6 weeks of field training with field training officer. And then you do another 6 weeks with a different field training officer and they try to change the shifts, the people, but you're in the same district. I started out working midnight to 8 and graveyards. And then I went to early power, which was 11 in the morning till 7 in the evening. So what was your favorite shift? Oh, favorite shift. I liked late shift because of the people, there were some really good cops, very high speed, just hard chargers. And there were just, you could learn a ton from them. And you guys know, it's like the front row seat to the craziest shit on Planet Earth. And when you were working at 11 in the morning till 7 p.m., I mean, you'd still have homicides and crazy stuff going on, but just not at the volume that you do at night. So I enjoyed

Milwaukee chargers
"training officer" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

01:43 min | 9 months ago

"training officer" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

"But the navy is now training its members to create a safe space by using proper gender pronouns and a new instructional video modeled after a children's show, and the video begins with some schmuck in a rainbow colored shirt saying hi. My name is Johnny. And I use king him pronouns. By the way, this is our naval undersea warfare center engineer, Johnny Roseanne talking. The navy says this official training video was meant to emphasize the importance of using correct pronouns, as well as polite etiquette when you may not be sure of someone's pronouns. The video is the latest bullshit by the military to foster a more sensitive environment for its members and staff. An earlier this month, the army did the same thing. Offering similar gender identity training and it now trains officers on when to offer subordinates gender transition surgery. So they're actively telling, listen, maybe it's time you get the surgery. All of this shit is part of a larger push by the goddamn Biden administration to make the military more welcoming to transgender individuals. This video is about four minutes long. And it emphasizes how members can create a safe space by using inclusive language that signals their allies who accept everybody. And service members must take these steps to ensure that they not misgender someone God

Christa Allen David Spade George Chris Allen Lake como George Clooney Clooney jolly Christa David Dana Carvey SNL Bob Odenkirk Saul
The Navy Has Started Gender Sensitivity Training

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

01:43 min | 9 months ago

The Navy Has Started Gender Sensitivity Training

"But the navy is now training its members to create a safe space by using proper gender pronouns and a new instructional video modeled after a children's show, and the video begins with some schmuck in a rainbow colored shirt saying hi. My name is Johnny. And I use king him pronouns. By the way, this is our naval undersea warfare center engineer, Johnny Roseanne talking. The navy says this official training video was meant to emphasize the importance of using correct pronouns, as well as polite etiquette when you may not be sure of someone's pronouns. The video is the latest bullshit by the military to foster a more sensitive environment for its members and staff. An earlier this month, the army did the same thing. Offering similar gender identity training and it now trains officers on when to offer subordinates gender transition surgery. So they're actively telling, listen, maybe it's time you get the surgery. All of this shit is part of a larger push by the goddamn Biden administration to make the military more welcoming to transgender individuals. This video is about four minutes long. And it emphasizes how members can create a safe space by using inclusive language that signals their allies who accept everybody. And service members must take these steps to ensure that they not misgender someone God

Johnny Roseanne Navy Johnny Biden Administration Army
"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

04:12 min | 9 months ago

"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"My shift. And his training officer was the current superintendent, Herman Jones. Yeah. So Jeff trained and Herman worked for me and so he trained on my shift and the captain at that time, once you got out from underneath your training officer, he wanted you put on another shift. So I'm back in Maryland that he had so Jeff had just got put on this other shift. And I'm back in Maryland, visiting my folks on by myself, me and my dad are out. My dad had a 42 foot boat. And we were out close to the naval academy up there somewhere, and this was back before cell phones and he gets a call on the marine band, you know, basically to get me to shore that they needed to call me. And all they told him was that one of my troopers had been shot. And so I got this going through my head of all my guys and I have no clue. That's all they told us on the marine band. And I'm scared to death. That took us a half an hour to get back to shore. And then it turns out it was Jeff, who wasn't even mine anymore, so I didn't even think of him. But Jeff had stopped some guys that had just robbed a bank in Nebraska or something. And they shot him 8 times Jeff lived, he tried to come back on the patrol. And didn't, but Jeff has been very successful in life. He ended up being a principal in at the Goddard school district. Yeah, that was, again, May 24th was Conroy O'Brien shooting May 24th, 1990, was Jeff hirsch's shooting. But anyway, but yeah, I remember that too. Because that was the first. I was saying harsh, yes. You're right. But that was the beginning of the change from the pro policy to go from revolvers to some automatics. And they carry semi-automatic today, but I think that was one of the incidents that did that. So a lot of things happened at that time. So hey Mark, so you finish up as captain of the turnpike. But during that time, there was a lot of stuff that happened on the turnpike right between shootings and car chases and lots of felony arrests and I mean, I don't want to say it's a different world, but it seemed like it became a different world when you started looking at how much more violent people became and how much more dangerous it became for the troops out there. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely..

Jeff Herman Jones Maryland Herman Goddard school district Jeff hirsch Brien Conroy Nebraska Mark
"training officer" Discussed on Gun Talk

Gun Talk

05:40 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on Gun Talk

"So I know that there was and I don't know the exact journey, but then at some point you were an air marshal, how'd that come about? Well, while I was when I was a cop, 9 11 happened. So I was a S.W.A.T. guy and a firearms instructor and a field training officer, and I was running defensive tactics training and doing all that stuff for the agency. And I mean, I really had it made. I mean, I was working a great shift in doing things and one of our guys had gone to the air Marshals because he was the fellow that kind of mentored me in training and kept sending me the classes and making me better and better and better. And he said, he went over there, so he was working in artesia, New Mexico, as a trainer. And he had applied to be an air marshal and I guess he was getting hired I guess like 6, I don't know, 6 million people applied for that. Wow. Yeah, and they only they only hired so many. Yeah. I can't tell you how many they hired because that's I'm probably still liable for saying anything. You gotta be careful what you say. Well, that was kind of a program that I think it's a program that people seem. They know it exists. They don't know the extent of it. You know, is it like? And it's probably stuff that you can. I'm not asking you to do this right show people all the time. I say, well, there's like over 30,000 flights a day. How many air Marshals would you have to have the cover that? Wow. Yeah. So you'd have to mean and there's just no way you can cover everything, but there had to be some specialized training for that. Really specific to being on a plane, being an air marshal. Well, that's when I started getting really good with a gun is because to be an air marshal in the beginning, you really had to shoot well. I went there. I called off sick. I went through the interview process. They found out I was there, and I wasn't sick. And nobody, nobody was too upset with me, but they were upset that I was going to potentially leave, and I did get offered a job. And I took it and I ended up being in Cleveland field office, which was where I lived. And so they put me on the flight schedule when I got hired there, but the training was an artesia New Mexico. So we did a lot of we did a lot of fighting, a lot of hand to hand. We shot every day and I was, I mean, it was every day my range, I think my range session was like from one till three. So every day, our group was an artesia New Mexico in the summer. It was like a 115 every day. And my hands were sweaty and were shooting at three 57 sig, two two 9 and I was just like, I mean, I was scared to death because I just wanted to do well. And again, again, I was just the best of the bad lot. I started learning to know what made me better. But it wasn't, it wasn't until later in the air marshal times that I learned why I was good or how to be good. But I was on the flight schedule for a while, and then they said, hey, you're pretty good. Do you want to be a trainer? Okay. So they took me off the flight schedule, put me in the field office for as a trainer. And that's when I really started getting good with a handgun and learning how to shoot and kind of understanding what it took to shoot. Yeah. What kind of stuff did you guys do as an air marshal? I mean, is that something that you can talk about like the type of, I mean, you think about, well, you ride on a plane and in case something happens, you're there. But there's gotta be more specific things than that. Maybe some, well, every month you had a week of training. So like every month and then it kind of ended up being like every quarter because the government wants their slice out of you. I mean, initially, we trained a lot. I mean, we trained all the time. We shot like a thousand rounds every month. And we had a week of training, and then we flew the rest of the time. But it kind of got cut back from there. And everything just kind of, it got, it's definitely, you're like a fire extinguisher, okay? The people certain people know you're there. And they know not to call on you unless you're absolutely needed. I was on the special missions group, SMG. Sounds cool, doesn't it? I was on the essence. Of course, for that or some say, you know, it's like, hey, you're pretty good. You got your head on straight. You want to be on the special missions group. Yeah, why wouldn't you? Hell yeah. I don't know what they do, but it's in the hazing for that. That was a long bunch of training. Oh yeah, we were up for days and doing all kinds of stuff and crazy things. And that was young. I mean, I was 35. I was, I think I went to the air Marshals when I was like 33 to 36. And I was in, I'm literally in a prime of my life. I could run faster and farther. I could fight. I could do 20 pull ups. Yeah. I could bench two 25, like 27 times I did. I mean, and it was all we did. And then we shot. And we shot. So then the special missions group like president Argentina comes in and he's got his security force and they detail you on them and you're going to watch them and follow them and follow them until they get to a certain point and then you pass them off to another family that's going to pick them up and take them to the rest of the way on their journey or something. Interesting. Or they get Intel that this guy with salt and pepper gray hair, he's a young white male wearing a green shirt. He's meets some kind of profile..

air Marshals New Mexico artesia special missions group Cleveland SMG government Argentina Intel
"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

07:59 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"Because of retired, the older ones say, go get them. Yeah, the senior guy sitting at the courtroom he's like, go get them, go get them more like sick them. And then you just go run chase and he's just going to sit there and do his thing. But I mean, that was an awesome thing because just learning from those guys, you know? They're off the street and just how things, you know, it's funny to listen to their stories because back when they were policemen fleeing felon was a thing down here in Florida and they were they were shooting at everybody. You steal a car you're getting shot at it. So listen to some of their crazy stories and just, you know, but it is what it is. And now it's funny because nowadays, people are like, I don't know how I could be the police now. Guys, my age, I'm like, bro, we heard that when we were in the courthouse from older, it's just like, yeah, I get that I don't probably couldn't wear a camera and all that because I'd probably curse or say something silly on it. But that's all the younger officers know so that you just adapt to the environment that you know. You know what it reminds me of is the same thing they said about music. Oh, that rock music. You can't listen to it. And then the next generation, all that music, you know, and it's just, it's like you say, I think it's generational. Never had cameras. I mean, when I first started, it first started just getting the in car cameras, you know? And then things like that. And now it's like, but you know the other thing too, it's set this false expectation is that there will always be a camera and that there will always be DNA. And it affects the credibility officer because they don't believe you unless you've got the camera unless you've got the DNA. And so the only change I've seen that I kind of thought was disheartening is that it's no longer about your credibility and officer. I mean, hey, raise my right hand, swore to tell the truth. You know, this is what I did, but now they're going, okay, but where's the video? Where's the body cam? You know, where's the DNA? Well, that's what I hate about it is it takes away all the hard work and have you not being a dirtbag. You not being you going through background checks. You're doing everything and then you devote your life to civil service and you're working and you're in your words is the same thing as some drug dealer sitting there saying, well, I didn't do that. I mean, that's not that's not how the world works, but that's how they wanted to work in law enforcement. But that's not even how it works in anything. People have to earn trust and have loyalty and live by a code and things like that and a camera. I mean, a lot of that started changing when you had shows like CSI come out and they thought, oh, we can get DNA and but they also taught them how to bleach crime scenes and get rid of DNA. So it's always kind of had a bad effect. But you did about a year and a half. So what's the process then for getting out of the courthouse onto the road? Do you just have to wait till a slot comes up and do you apply interview? How's that work to go from one to the other? Well, I mean, you've already applied for the position of going to the streets. They're just like you're holding spot is just so you have a job. I mean, it pays well. You get insurance. So then you just whenever they're running like a hired class, it's almost like seniority, it just kind of like how long you're at the courthouse, just depends on when they're running hired classes, you know? And then if you do a good job in the courthouse, you just get like you can almost say like all right, these people were ahead of me when I got here. You can almost predict when you are going. And then you just get selected and then you would go to an 8 week course on so like the academy just taught you state laws and state and then that 8 week will set you up for like the Jacksonville sheriff's office SOPs and their operational orders and things like that. So then you got to go learn what Jacksonville shares office does. Yeah, look county ordinances or now did you guys have so when you guys wrote tickets where was it under a city ordinance, a county ordinance? I mean, how did that work? You can do it under both. Okay. Wow. You get the best of both worlds. Do I want to be a prick and charge you as a deputy or do I want to cut you a break and charge you as an officer? I don't know. But I mean, everything was pretty much a state statute. Everything that you've done. Very few county and city ordinances. That I used to deal with except for like curfews and stuff like that. Yeah, well that's an interesting too because curfews, those things have been proven to shown to be effective. You're like, there's no reason for a 16 year old kid to be out at midnight or 1 o'clock in the morning. Except for they're usually involved in some. I guess, but it's still America. America. Yeah, but wait, but they've shown it in places too. Where you've got these youngsters in those areas. You've got higher incidence of property crime, auto burglaries and stuff like that. I'm sure it works. They got the statistics down, but then you got some chiefs and, you know, your lieutenant is like, how many you could have busted four kilos of cocaine, but I didn't hit my curfew violators that month. I'm getting I'm getting a counsel. Do you know what I mean? Yeah, we had guys we used to call captain curfew. That's all they did. It's like, you know, you might want to mix it up a little bit and actually go after some felons and stuff. But they were held at high regards because they got all those curfews. They got the stats, maybe it's a step. So now when you got when you got selected to, Jacksonville has at that time you get on or when you went to the road did they have a take home car policy at that point? Not at that point. They do once you make it out of FTO and you make it out on your own, you'll get assigned a patrol car. That's your police car. You take it home, you take care of it. That's the Indianapolis effect, I think or something they call it. Yeah, I think that's what Indianapolis PD was one of the first ones that did the take home cars. Yeah. Did that whole study on it? Yeah. And the FTO being the field training officer program. Yeah, it's still training off. I get bitched at all time for using acronyms. I'm just saying if you're going to catch up here, he said SOP earlier too, but I thought everybody knows that standard operating procedure. But what was the 8 weeks like? Was that just more of a classwork, you know, show up or was it more academy like? Did you have to do physical stuff and shooting? Yeah, they're shooting, so now you've passed your state call, but then Jackson will share his office pistol call was more than just was more rigid, more rigid. So you had to pass it. He had to pass the driving standards and you'll get to learn the state doesn't do like pit certified. But the sheriff's office will certify. That's where you're going to get some of your little things, like becoming a critical incident training, like your CIT. That's where they're going to plug those things in. So when you make it out of FTO, you're good to go. Now, would you guys define pit as pursuit intervention technique or did do you call it another name? Pursuit intervention technique. Yeah, and that's just that's where you tap the back of the car. But you drive through it. You don't have it when you tap it. It doesn't work. You got to get it, press it, drive through. See, here's the training is kicking in, see the trading, I was a test. I wanted to see if you'd actually the training had stuck with you. You did well. You passed the first test. What that translates to is take that son of a bitch out. Yeah, but never ram it or anything like that. Because people come in too hot and you actually mess up the pit more than help it out. It's no longer a pit. It's a crash at that point. Yeah, and then you put your vehicle out and you're like, well, that was awesome. Yeah. And there have been some wild YouTube videos. You see if some people doing pit maneuvers and they kind of do it wrong but a guy goes down in a ditch and then he launches it looks like he just comes off of a launching ramp and that car just flips and over in, but so you get out so you get out of that academy and then you head to your field training program..

Jacksonville sheriff's office Jacksonville Florida America Indianapolis FTO CIT Jackson YouTube
"training officer" Discussed on Hidden Brain

Hidden Brain

02:49 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on Hidden Brain

"Let's look at another case that shows a different facet of the problem Philip, in Brooklyn center, Minnesota, police stopped Dante Wright for having expired, car registration tags. Now, many listeners will be familiar with the story since the police officer involved was recently found guilty of manslaughter, but tell us what happened when the police pulled Dante over. So the senior officer who was also a training officer is trying to restrain Dante writers down to writers trying to get away. And that senior officer then calls out taser taser taser. That's what you're supposed to do when you grab the taser, let everybody know there's an energy controlled weapon, let them get clear. She does not, in fact, grab the taser. She grabs her firearm, shoots and kills Dante Wright. So I feel in the aftermath of these incidents, there are often multiple claims and counterclaims, Dante Wright's mother said he called her during the incident and said he'd been pulled over because he had air fresheners hanging from his rearview mirror. Now, that sounds like a trivial infraction, and many people concluded, it showed the police had malicious intent. But I want to play you a clip from Brooklyn center police chief Tim gannon at a news conference shortly after the shooting. It is my belief that the officer had the intention to deploy their taser, but instead shot mister Wright with a single bullet. This appears to me from what I viewed in the officer's reaction in distress immediately after that this was an accidental discharge. That resulted in a tragic death of mister Wright. So the family saying, look, who pulls over someone for hanging air fresheners in their car, its racist cops, of course, the police say, no, no, no, the cop was distressed after the shooting. This proves she could not have been racist, and almost instantly, we start arguing about what's happening inside the police officer's mind. That's exactly it. And I think one of the ways that it's important to understand the way that we do race in the United States, we've got scripts, if I tell you a story, and there is an attractive woman walking her dog, the dog pulls on the leash and she falls down and then a very attractive gentleman who probably has a British accent, goes to help her up and she's embarrassed. Where are we? We're clearly in the middle of a romantic comedy, and that was a meet cute. But we don't just have genres for movies. We have genres for the stories that play out in our society. And the story, the tragic awful killing of Dante Wright and the killing of tamir rice and the killing of Adam Toledo, we quickly put that inside of genres, where the relative question is, how sinister is the officer? How deserving of death was the victim. And those are terrible genres to help us write the narratives that get us out of here, which is why the definition of racism is so much part of the.

Dante Wright mister Wright Dante Brooklyn center Brooklyn center police Tim gannon Philip Minnesota tamir rice Adam Toledo United States
"training officer" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:53 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"Christina Karoly Taylor multicultural competency trainer Multicultural competency trainer in a diversity training video for KE NS 5 San Antonio CBS affiliate Hat tip project veritas kawan go What we're going to talk about today is going to center around the main code of ethics of journalism In a couple of things during this workshop and throughout your day I challenge you to stop thinking in terms of objective journalism because and discuss why that's not really feasible anymore But in terms of accuracy fairness and transparency are always striving for objectivity is not feasible If you read unfreedom of the press man that I nail this This is now the culture for the media Now we have Grady trip diversity inclusive training officer at tegna tegna owns KMS 5 San Antonio cut to go This kind of sorry not sorry for the statement that I'm making there At this point if you're not listening to a podcast or looking at a video or reading any of the information that's out as far as equality and social justice and race you don't care Now I don't know how to say it because it's there We're going to be organizations accountable because we know it's important to the organization KPIs are going to change right KPIs are going to reflect diversity and inclusion from a representation standpoint at various levels from an inclusion standpoint So here you have the media critical race theory Intersecting This is the forced brainwashing The forced acceptance of the racist ideology

Christina Karaoli Taylor and Grady Tripp Prove the Intersection of Media and CRT

Mark Levin

01:53 min | 1 year ago

Christina Karaoli Taylor and Grady Tripp Prove the Intersection of Media and CRT

"Christina Karoly Taylor multicultural competency trainer Multicultural competency trainer in a diversity training video for KE NS 5 San Antonio CBS affiliate Hat tip project veritas kawan go What we're going to talk about today is going to center around the main code of ethics of journalism In a couple of things during this workshop and throughout your day I challenge you to stop thinking in terms of objective journalism because and discuss why that's not really feasible anymore But in terms of accuracy fairness and transparency are always striving for objectivity is not feasible If you read unfreedom of the press man that I nail this This is now the culture for the media Now we have Grady trip diversity inclusive training officer at tegna tegna owns KMS 5 San Antonio cut to go This kind of sorry not sorry for the statement that I'm making there At this point if you're not listening to a podcast or looking at a video or reading any of the information that's out as far as equality and social justice and race you don't care Now I don't know how to say it because it's there We're going to be organizations accountable because we know it's important to the organization KPIs are going to change right KPIs are going to reflect diversity and inclusion from a representation standpoint at various levels from an inclusion standpoint So here you have the media critical race theory Intersecting This is the forced brainwashing The forced acceptance of the racist ideology

Christina Karoly Taylor San Antonio Tegna Tegna CBS Grady
"training officer" Discussed on All Things - Unexplained

All Things - Unexplained

01:30 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on All Things - Unexplained

"Taken pull. The wool of is smarter than you hours. One of the things. I told i always told my rookies. Whenever they started there is always somebody smarter than you. There's always somebody faster than you. There's always a car that can outrun you. There's always something better around the corner so Don't take nothing for granted. I'm glad for that smithian tim. There's always somebody better sure. Well it's like. I said you. You don't have to be the fastest person and get away from the bear chase you just faster than scott. I'm glad you said that. Because i was actually wondering what was the best piece of advice that someone gave you as a rookie. That's a very good question Maybe that was it realistically. I started as a patrol officer or l. Cops do you start out patrol officer and i think. Wd wurley officer wd. wurley who was Was training officer. I got to ride with him He showed me how to write speeding tickets. He wants toll may and it's very very good advice and probably something that almost any profession can take under advisement. Never pass.

smithian tim wurley scott
"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

07:54 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"Murph and you see where it's got us okay. But like i think all of us. By the time. I got ready to graduate. I was like. There's no way. I can go back to being a real civilian and working in office pot or something like that you know. So why did you want to become a cop though in the first place. Was it just a job. That was opener is. Did you think that would be an exciting way to get you through college because chicks dig guys in uniform. I get that. Paul was it kind of came up. One of my friends went and applied and and told me about it. And i thought it sounds interesting and it was the hiring process. They were really hiring significantly back then. It was during the whole crack cocaine explosion of you know crack cocaine decimating inner cities and just destroying the way of life and huge spikes crime. And so i mean the. The hiring process was very easy and then went to the police academy and came out. And how long has your dad. Helen was that academy four months and came out. And you know kinda got dropped right in the middle of many wars zones and had no idea what i was doing and you know went on from there yeah. It was a rough time ended landed during that time. I mean when you for you said you're in the academy for four months so sixteen weeks straight through you guys had your own academy then. You went out with a field training officer. Yes and then from there. I you know i was patrolman for about three years. Three and a half years. And then i got promoted to detective and was a detective on a joint task force like a state and local task force in atlanta. What drugs or a crime or a game. It was actually. It was actually drugs and vice at the time and so most of what we did was drugs but we had to do some vice work depending upon what was happening but from there i how i found out about. Da or new da was Several of the cases that we would work. I would work with dea agents in atlanta from one of the groups there and just over the time of working with them they started talking to me and said hey. Why don't you come join the edd world and from the navy. They stole that fast. Navy recruiting poster plus. I don't know. I don't know if you know. But we have the coolest looking badge out of any agency and in the world so then they show me the badge like okay. Because if you've ever seen the fbi bad just like two inches yet and so You know that so. I applied and right when i applied there was a hiring freeze and so it was like two years until i got hired at where where this is interesting abe. I career intersecting even way back when i started the da academy in january of nineteen ninety. And then abe abe class came in while i was still there so we were at two kademi for at least the kind of thing so you had about nine years in them before you got on it. Sounds like you guys almost had a similar trajectory where you one of the oldest guys in your class. Then at that time paul. Yes yes you had to think about that as age catching up with you as we all know. If if i'd known then i would have taken a labrador care myself that you stay out of jail barbara so well. Hey real quick before we get into the whole. Da thing what was one of the You know things you got into atlanta that you look back on and you go man. I'm lucky i survived this or it was a a major incident that you were either involved in her helped investigate. I think the first experience i had was where i really kind of changed. My whole perspective was shortly after. I got out of field training. Probably a couple of weeks after I was involved in an incident where you know. I was pretty naive as far as you know. Dealing with the law enforcement world. And you know being a police officer and wearing the uniform and Didn't realize like that that for a lot of people that means you're the enemy. You're not not there to help people that you're the enemy and i was called to this one of the marta station. Parking lots the rapid transit parking lots there needs to atlanta and this guy had been threatening people verbally outside of the station. And when you not very naively. I walked up very close to him and he was leaning against a light pole and with his hand up in the air and i walked up thome and was talking to him and said hey look where you threat and people and obviously he was under the influence i could tell by the kanana's as is and then as i looked up and i'm standing because i'm i'm there's young police officer i'm going to save the world right. They're doing the la. And i look up. And he's in his hand that he has leaning against the poll. He has a huge kitchen butcher knife in his hand and so again he could have easily just stuck it through my heart and i wouldn't have known you know anything before it happened. And so as i jumped back and i drew my gun and telling them to put the knife down quickly. A large crowd gathered. And you know so. I wasn't just dealing with him. I was all of a sudden you know. Dealing with people coming out of the crowd behind me and you know. I'm sure all of you all of us who've had the thought parts times in our career of wow. I didn't see this coming or expect this to develop like this. And so you know i put out a help call over the radio and that's one of the things in law enforcement you know especially when something like that happens and you hear hundreds of sirens across the city. Turn on at once and the cavalry's coming and you know probably within i remember. The first officer to arrive was a motorcycle officer. He was going so fast that he had to be doing at least seventy miles an hour and this.

atlanta Murph da academy abe abe navy Helen dea Paul fbi kanana barbara thome paul la
"training officer" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

John and Ken on Demand

06:48 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

"That's the body. Can't what you just heard was the body cam footage of the officer. Who's standing there at the back of the patrol vehicle. I think it's one of those houses the suv's and they ran the test. The training officer says tested positive for phenomenal. You're too close to it. You got to back off. That stuff's no joke. Dude and this deputy. I never seen anything like it by the way. I don't have any experience with hard drugs. So i for those of you. That know a little more about this. Please excuse my naievety. I've no experience whatsoever for better for worse. The deputy the rookie. Deputy is standing there at the back of the of the suv. The the tailgate of the suv is up. You know the hat. I guess is a hat right. So the hatches up. And he standing there and all of a sudden he just sort of goes statuesque and then fall straight over not stumble doesn't as put an arm down to brace himself just boom on the ground and you hear listen just him collapsing fran over and i and he was. This training officer stayed so calm through the whole thing and moved so quickly and methodically. He really deserves a lot of praise. He he saved this other deputies life. Hand trump also came out film one nasal spray in one nostril. Open the other one another nasal spray and the other one. So i'm watching this video. And i see the the the officer go down. The training officer running grabbed the narcan. Which happens in just seconds. I am telling you this guy went from. that's phenomenal. be careful to the deputy falling over to within. I'm going to say five seconds. The training officer had the narcan out of his vehicle had opened was administering probably wasn't quite five seconds. But we've very fast remember. And then i thought okay. He gave him the narcan. That's the antidote. Right yeah in my mind. Giving somebody who's overdosed on sentinel. Narcan is like watching. Remember pulp fiction when uma thurman is overdosed and they give her the adrenaline shot in the heart and soon as that plunger goes down she she sits right up so in my mind. I'm expecting okay. They administered narcan. You know got into the nasal passages this you take just a couple of seconds and this deputy should be fine. That was not the reality of it. Remember not feeling ryan. I fall back. remember. I don't remember anything after that. When you look at the body cam footage you can see exactly why he doesn't remember anything. After that he's just totally spaced. I'm use catatonic users go on number focus breeding because all you can't breathe. It was in an instant liking my launch slot by getting breathe. I was trying to casper breath. But i can agree that and as you watch the video. There's no evidence that he's gasping for breath. I'm not discounting a story. i'm. I'm trying to add some credibility to the story. I had an incident where i had a surgery. Go bad a few years back. And i woke up in The icu and had been intimated. Before i got into radio. I took emergency medicine. I plan a a lot of my friends were paramedics and i thought let seems like a pretty good gig so one of the things i knew was that you don't inc debate a conscious person. Unless it's an absolute emergency ca. So when i woke up and i had a tube down my throat you know. I went to sleep saying surgery. I'll be. I'll wake up and recover. I'll be fine. I woke up. And i had this tube down my throat and there were doctors and nurses all around me And i couldn't say anything because tube in my throat and evidently while i was unconscious i kept trying to pull it out so late a time. He down so. I was horrified as i woke up. They're not looking at my face. I'm trying to blink at them and it was terrifying. I couldn't gasp for breath. I was not breathing. They were breathing for me. And that is a strange feeling. Anybody that's had cova d- ventilators will tell you that. It's a very strange feeling. And when they pulled that To about it knocked the wind on me. I was gasping for breath. But i wasn't moving so when the officer says he was gasping for breath. And then you look at the video. And he's not moving at all. I know was going on in his head. What was going on was he was telling. His body to gasp in his body wasn't doing it. I know that what was going on. Because i've been there. He regains consciousness and starts apologizing to the training officer. I'm sorry sorry. Sorry i got you okay. I'm not gonna let you die. Gusty other deputies show up and training officer says. I need narcan because he sees that. This deputy the the rookie deputy is still odeen and he say i'm sorry. I'm sorry i'm going to get choked up as talked about us. The deputy who oh deed while he was trying to clear the regains consciousness while he's still overdosing trying to breathe. His mind is saying gasp for air. And it's not happening in the first words he says i'm sorry that is a self selfless individual china's not let him go like i'm just want him to know the other deputies administer more.

fran uma thurman ryan odeen china
"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

05:52 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"It was action man haunting criminals as you guys both know it's great work and it's minimal paperwork which held on you just hit the key thing right there. It's work it's like i remember. This is a story from long ago. And i will not mention the training officer. This was in a different day time but it was like right near the end of our shift. I was training with this guy and we stopped a guy who was obviously drunk and he looked at me. He says this is not the way it's supposed to be done but it's five minutes till eleven and we're headed to the station and if i arrest this guy. It's going to be three o'clock in the morning and most of the time the people beat you out of the jail before your paperwork. Stunned paperwork if you know. That's a great thing about marshall's right. It's board here's your warrant. Write a quick you know. Put them into what was called jabs right to join the jazz systems right. Put them into jobs. It's like saul saul saul criminal arrested. Same i'm out of here. Nothing to report. Yeah we use the term arrested without incident. That was that was return as your one-sentence arrest report right. Yep it was. It was fun But you know. I finally Then in ninety ninety seven atf. Finally because you know. Atf were so hampered by a lack of funding. Because hey hold on a second date. If i want to ask you one question about marshall so we kind of keep the which which the stupidest criminal you came across during the marshalls probably somebody from kansas. You're funny sorry. Almost kansas friends. There was always the guys who you know when you came in the house would hide under a pile of those guys always got me right. That was their best hiding. Spot was under a pile of clothes in the closet. And i was like you couldn't do any better than that right. Mean you think you're gonna open cops are gonna open a closet and not look under a big pair of underwear guys hands off. Can't look under here right. Nothing to see here move on. I you know. I think there was a guy in puerto rico who who.

saul saul saul atf marshall kansas puerto rico
"training officer" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

02:02 min | 1 year ago

"training officer" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"Police carries. Hold on. It's so used like too tired to go home you that when their freshman when the doughnut saying goes on a crispy cream might be like Let's go. We are. Let's come onto. Rue can't do that. Can I speak? I have a I have got friends and I made fun of one of my conference because we were At an event and he parked like a jack hole. And he wasn't even in between the lines and he was taking up two spots and then go. What's what's your deal? I mean, guys, I'm sorry I got I got cop parking. And I go. What happened? He goes. Yeah, I just forget when I'm driving my own car. Sometimes he goes because when you're in a police car, you know where you park I go where he goes anywhere. You doing? No sidewalk. Come on, you one, and he says he when he was a training officer, he goes. I, uh we he goes. I was I was writing in the passenger seat. This is in Phoenix. And he said, uh, My training officer. We pulled somebody over and we were kind of out in the middle of the street and he goes, I I made a mention to them. Maybe we should move, Move the car and he goes. I'll deal with you later and he said, he said after we finish that stop, he goes. Let's talk about where we park and we drove into the middle of an intersection. No turned the lights on and he said, Get out of the car. And in Hawaii. He goes because we're parked. No. Where do cops park anywhere they want. You know, my family calls it Greek parking. You see our church picnic? Whoa! No primary name. Do you have weird food substitution? I'm this might come as a shock to some of you as the person who admittedly is my three favorite types of food. Chicken nuggets, chicken strips and boneless chicken wings. So those are my three. That's the food pyramid as far as I'm concerned, right, awful, but I like Kali noodles. Get out. Wait like the columnar. What? Cauliflower, Pasta noodles? No talk about weird food substitution coming up Next on a 90. W.

Phoenix Hawaii three two spots three favorite types Greek 90 one
Capitol Police Watchdog Says Force Needs A "Culture Change"

AP News Radio

00:56 sec | 2 years ago

Capitol Police Watchdog Says Force Needs A "Culture Change"

"The U. S. capitol police's watchdog is detail in broad failures in the force's response to the January riot and calling for big change inspector general Michael Bolton spent three months studying what went wrong everything from misty intelligence to old weapons to a lack of training it short he tells a house panel the department needs a culture change to see itself as more of a protective agency and not a traditional police department the police department is geared to being reactive for the most part whereas a protective agency is postured in her training and plans to be proactive to prevent events such as January six the department itself says it'll need more money and staff for improvements the houses looking at legislation to provide money for hiring and training officers and for hardening the capital itself Sager AMAG ani Washington

U. S. Capitol Police Michael Bolton Police Department Sager Amag Ani Washington
"training officer" Discussed on MYfm 104.3

MYfm 104.3

02:28 min | 2 years ago

"training officer" Discussed on MYfm 104.3

"The weather today cloudy cool temps. Mid upper sixties 50. Burbank, 53 Garden Grove. Jill's Got the Hollywood headlines Coming up. Britney Spears has acknowledged the support from her fans after watching the new documentary. I'll Tell you what she said at 7 50. I'm excited to hear that everybody should watch the documentary. By the way, Yes, back to some of these texts. 31 of 43 is the text line. What's the latest thing you get excited about? So where did the way started this conversation? Because it's something with you. I'm going to get the mail. Was that what it was the mail my bi weekly trip to the mail. Oh, yeah weekly tripped the mailbox. Not even every day. Do not get enough mail that you don't go every day or something. I don't usually get a lot of mail and I have a tiny little mailbox over there. So Don't get much, right. Okay, um this tech says new office supplies at work. The TC. Actually, we had a few text for this, but the tissue is one of them. Police chases on TV. Yeah, Those are kind of addicting, aren't they? Yeah. I still think there should be some sort of like, show. They're like, shows you the whole like, you know, something that happened years ago shows police chase and then the follow up whatever happened to the person? Yeah. You know, it's funny. I had a field training officer. When I was a police officer in Connecticut. His name was Rust. Weiner. I'm pure is still on the job. Probably. Or he might have retired. Mr. But Russ Serena was my fto. And he had to sing What we run Radar who used to run a raid on route 32. I know exactly where I'm such a small town cop. In this respect. We parked right by the old cemetery. He would run radar right there and read 32. And anybody came blasting past. He's like I give everybody a quick chance to run. But if you don't pull over right after that could be mad so he would give you like the first like 5 10 seconds 30 seconds to Take a left to take a right and get away. But after that, if you don't pull over, he was mad. I'm like what you give people a chance to get away cause I give me a quick chance. You know, maybe they turn left Turn right or something. But after that their mind Oh, Officer Russell. Um, sticks is going to Costco. I love my long walks down the aisles and finding new items. Putting clean sheets on the bed. There's nothing better. That is nice. This one says. Especially right. No. Sorry, Joe. Go ahead. Especially right after. What if you don't shave your leg? Yeah, Don't we all know that girl previous that's feeling right After we shave. Our legs kept right. Yeah, it really is the little things this Tech says. I get excited when they open a new checker.

Russ Serena Britney Spears Weiner Burbank Garden Grove Jill Costco training officer Officer Russell old cemetery officer Joe Connecticut
Atlanta cops fired over students' arrests win jobs back

Atlanta's Morning News

00:35 sec | 2 years ago

Atlanta cops fired over students' arrests win jobs back

"Their jobs after video shows them tasing. Two college kids caught in the middle of street protests last summer, Attorney Lance LaRussa tells me Atlanta police investigators Mark Gardner and Ivory Streeter feel vindicated after the Civil Service board agreed their due process was violated when they were fired without an investigation on whether they used excessive force, arresting two college students because lawful force will never look good on a video instead of saying it looks bad, so we need to do something. There should have been a presumption that these were highly trained officers and maybe what they did was approach. Criminal charges are still pending. The Russo says The officers who were ousted June 1st are expected to get back pay Veronica Waters.

Attorney Lance Larussa Ivory Streeter Civil Service Board Mark Gardner Atlanta Russo Veronica Waters
"training officer" Discussed on Talk 1260 KTRC

Talk 1260 KTRC

05:20 min | 2 years ago

"training officer" Discussed on Talk 1260 KTRC

"You like horses? Training officer, Equine Life coach, Academic life coach anyway. Lots and chemical dependency. Coach Chemical dependency tech Life coach therapist that you have a whole bunch of positions open. You can either go to their website, which is white horse ranch dot org or go to the Department of Workforce Connections. And look for the link to these positions of the whole bunch of them, And this is fresh If you're looking for a good opportunity I would check that out now about the time. That The head of the crime family. Was flying down to Florida. I'm not Alluding or hinting that somehow China is a wonderful nation and their friends and everything is great with country China. It is not But it makes me laugh about the time that Trump was headed down Amar Lago, the Chinese were slapping sanctions on his administration. I don't think directly on Trump and his family, which would have been hilarious. But they did slap sanctions on Mike Pompeo. China Post sanctions and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other Trump administration officials. Even as Joe Biden was being inaugurated. Saying they trump team had made quote. Crazy moves. Unquote, the harm US China ties. Also on the list were Let's see Trump's national security adviser Robert O'Brien, his deputy Mike Pottenger, trade advisor. This guy's horrible Peter Navarro. Talk about One of the line ist of the liars Peter Navarro. Oh, my God. They say they saw they slapped Sanctions on him. U. S. M. Batted ambassador to the U. N. Kelly Craft. A Zwelling as John Bolton. Former national security adviser, John Bolton, He of the mustache and Mr unkempt himself. And just pardoned. Steve Bannon. Steve Bannon, one of those pardoned by President Trump last night, last minute Pardon? As expected, but to China today slapped sanctions on these people, 28 of them and their family. John Bolton. Steve Bannon, Mike Pompeo, not going to be able to do business or Even get into China. For the foreseeable future. I don't know. We will see if China decides to slap sanctions on Ivanka. As you know. Vocal as, UM Trump was about the pills and the evils of the Chinese and, of course, One side of his mouth, the other side of his mouth turn around and you know his family's especially even conjecture, doing all kinds of all kinds of business with the Chinese. I guess, as was Donald, right? Anyway. China Donald's out. China's like out we don't like you guys anymore. We don't want you in our country. We do not want you doing business with the Chinese. All right, if you know a local attorney, and I mean, when I say troublemaker, I mean, this guy is a serious trouble maker. Local attorney Jeffrey House. Geoffrey wrote a great book and the updated it fairly recently updated edition called the Session assassination off Fred Hampton. The FBI and Chicago police murdered a Black Panther. Jeffrey has troublemaker Turn here in Santa Fe was Fred Hampton's attorney. As a really cool book. Well, the reason I bright bring it up is because today just having a bump into on truth out, tooth out dot com. A story that was posted yesterday by troublemaker Attorney Santa Fe attorney Jeffrey has called new documents suggest J. Edgar Hoover was involved in Fred Hampton's Murder. And Jeffrey is not only troublemaker bees, a hell of an attorney. Fun guy to listen to yourselves. Southern, Um But also a really good writer and impassioned Especially about this case of the death of Fred Hampton. Black Panther murdered. So if you want to go read something cool, Truth out. Dot work and just look for New documents suggest. Jed Ger Hoover News Analysis, Prisons and police. Take a time out. Talk with Sally Markets, executive director New Mexico Activities Association..

China President Trump Mike Pompeo Fred Hampton Steve Bannon John Bolton attorney Jeffrey House China Post Trump Peter Navarro China Donald Department of Workforce Connec Jed Ger Hoover Joe Biden Training officer Amar Lago Dot Florida Santa Fe
"training officer" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

07:27 min | 2 years ago

"training officer" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Up later this morning. Among our special guest for the holiday. Today, we're going to have the Reverend William Barber, who has kind of picked up where Dr King left off running a modern day poor people's campaign. The very thing Dr King was doing when he was killed. I was very honored to interview Reverend Barber. For the national MLK special that the takeaway is sending out today. Some of you might have heard that short excerpt in the nine o'clock hour on do they used what fit in for their format was so many guests. That we had all together for that special. We will air my full 30 minute interview with Dr Barber later in the show, So that's coming up. I know we have many Reverend William Barber fans out there, so I thought you'd like to know that coming up around the top of the hour. Right now on this Martin Luther King Day as we honor him for what would have been his 92nd birthday on January 15th, the New Jersey attorney, general, Gerbier Gray Wall. He has recently unveiled an overhaul of use of force guidelines. For the 38,000 police officers in the state serving in the 500, Plus police departments. And, yes, it is that many New Jersey despite being geographically small, is divided up. Into 500 or so separate local governments. So we'll talk about that. And more now with Kirby or Great Wall Attorney General Great to have you on this of all days. Welcome back to WN. My C Good morning, Brian. And thank you for having me back. I see that one of the organizing principle is in your use of force guidelines is that four should only be used as a last resort. Was that already not a standard of behavior for police forces in the state, at least on paper. You know, I think aspects of this policy Warren place, but what we were trying to do in New Jersey is really re imagine the relationship between law enforcement and the public and we were demanding different and better outcomes for police interactions. So if you look at what we've done, it's more than a policy. It's a framework and it's a framework that starts With the basic premise that every police interaction we want to value the sanctity of human life, the dignity of the person with whom were interacting. And then we're giving our law enforcement officers, duties and tools to avoid the use of force to de escalate to find other means to resolve an interaction. And then, if force is to be used it as an absolute last resort. It has to be used in a proportional and reason bull way and importantly and relevant to things that we saw on our TV screens from this past summer or last summer. Rather, we have an affirmative duty to intervene for law enforcement officers. And we are teaching our 38,000 cops the skills they need to intervene when they see a fellow officer. Using force in an unlawful or improper way, And I think that's important to emphasize here. What do you mean by teaching them the skills to intervene? As we saw on our television screens with the murder of George Floyd. We had officers standing by as another officer. Squeeze the life out of Mr Floyd. Those were junior officers and Derrick Show van was the training officer that day, so it's difficult for law enforcement officers to know how to step in, so we're equipping them, not just with a framework of policy. Rather, we're going to retrain all 30,000 cops on how to be active bystanders on how to step in and give them techniques of we're borrowing from other professions to quote them with these important tools, so we don't see those Images that we saw on our TV screens replay based on an interaction that happens in New Jersey, so it's a complete rethinking of police citizen interactions, and it's It's the policy that you mentioned. It's this retraining of 38,000 officers. Which will be underway this year. And importantly, there's another ass back to this, which is we are tracking every use of force in real time with an online portal so we could see a path. Patterns. We could see anomalies, disparities and we're going to share a portion of this publicly so the public sees how we're doing because transparency is important for accountability as well. This nurse. We can't take phone calls for a New Jersey attorney General Gerbier Great wall on his new use of force guidelines for police officers all over the state of New Jersey. Any garden Staters want to call in any garden staters who've had encounters with the police that you think are instructive to talk about any police officers from any of the 500 Plus Police departments across the state Anyone welcome to call 646435 70 to 86 46435 70 to 80. Or tweet a question or comment at Brian Lehrer. I saw your op ed in the hill about your reforms and that you mentioned specifically new limits on police dogs. And also on high speed chases. Can you talk briefly about each of those? Sure, you know this is part of what we're doing here. We're rethinking how forces used and when we talk about police Canine's canines have a long history in this state in this country, rather on Bajoran thick history relevant to the civil rights movement, which were remembering today. With Dr King. We know from those images from civil rights protest how dogs were used to terrorize black communities and black residents and how they were used to intimidate. Black residents. And we also know from recent experiences how violent that dog bite can be and how dangerous it can be. So we have put an immediate stop to the use of police canines against resistors, whether they're actively resisting or passively resisting. We've stopped them from being used a protest, intimidate protesters or for other purposes. We're undertaking a three month review of how they should be used in the future. There is a role for police K nights for detecting contraband and things of that nature or conducting police sweeps. For bombs and explosives, and that's a valid function. But we're going to look into this because we understand their horrific history in particular to the civil rights movement is we're talking about today. And then with vehicle pursuits, So many vehicle pursuits end up in dangerous situations for both law enforcement and citizens, And so we're putting strong limitations on when you could Pursuing individuals and we're limiting it for the most serious offenses not for traffic violations. And with the technology we have. We could arrest that person. Another day. As we're seeing from the events of the capital, we could find you and we could do it safely. And so these are just different ways in which we want to promote. Safer interactions for law enforcement and for our residents. Do you think that was handled well at the Capitol, then letting those people walk away when arguably the police were too overwhelmed to make a million arrests. But of course, they've gotten so much criticism for that, including the racial double standard. Well, I mean the racial double standard. I think highlights of the importance of the work we're doing here in New Jersey. We've realized from day one that we do our work here in New Jersey and across the country and law enforcement against the backdrop of four centuries of horrific History, the history of slavery Jim Crow, the war on drugs, mass incarceration. All that has lead to systemic racism, which I acknowledge exists on like our former attorney general at the federal level, and I acknowledge that that systemic racism has led to disparities..

New Jersey attorney Reverend Barber Dr King Brian Lehrer William Barber George Floyd officer Gerbier Gray Wall Kirby murder training officer Martin Luther Bajoran thick Jim Crow
Los Angeles Deputy Saved Partner's Life After Ambush Shooting While Injured

The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer

03:22 min | 2 years ago

Los Angeles Deputy Saved Partner's Life After Ambush Shooting While Injured

"Tonight. We're learning new details about the shooting ambush that left to Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies severely wounded. Let's bring. Sarah, she's on the scene for a Sarah one of the deputies actually saved your partners life while she was bleeding from face wound. Tell us what happened. It was absolutely incredible. Both of the deputies are still alive partly because of the reaction by thirty one year old mother of a six-year-old, both deputies still here in critical but stable condition. And incredible show of bravery, a thirty, one year old La, a sheriff's deputy profusely bleeding from a bullet to the face is seen helping save her twenty four year old partner. She applies a tourniquet to his bloodied arm and helps him move behind a pillar to avoid taking on more fire. Both have already been shot multiple times. Surveillance video shows the ambush a shooter fires into. Their car while they sit in their vehicle outside a stop and calm ten female deputy after getting shot both of them four five times her with a broken jaw in the face stepped out gave a tourniquet to her fellow deputy who had been shot in the head is well, probably saved his life while calling for help she and her partner had just become deputies fourteen months ago. I'll pointer the mother of a six-year-old is seen here. She proudly graduated from the Police Academy and Twenty One thousand nine hundred as they are recovering from their injuries at the hospital a callous call for their death by a gathering of about I people outside the hospital. The leader of the group that calls itself L. as Africa town coalition says he hopes the shooting is in retaliation for the shooting of black and Brown people by the. The most recent shooting sparked protests in Compton when deputies shot Dijon, Kizzie for an alleged bicycle. The family says Kizzie was shot in the back and investigation is still underway visit star of retribution. Very. Good start. The Ell ast has faced serious controversy over the years. It's sheriff convicted of lying in twenty sixteen was fired and jailed. There has also been a lawsuit brought accusing deputies of forming a gang inside the department. The most recent accusation and a complaint by a deputy whistle blower said in a deposition deputies formed a gang called the executioners incompetent. He says, they supported the same tattoos and used excessive force on suspects me being a field training officer. Supervisor and I have to. report this this behavior, this sheriff Deputies Union responded to those claims, the accusations of there being criminal gangs within the sheriff's department. That's ridiculous. But Union Representative Hernandez and some longtime content residents say the idea of retaliation like this is sickening to the to the people the group that came out here and and screamed we hope you die that in itself is also pathetic maybe not. As bad as the guy that actually pulled the trigger, but it's just as bad. We don't want those police officers to die. You know we don't want that. That's a tragedy and our prayers go out for those officers and their families. Yes. As the issue you know we, we believe that there should be some kind of reform police department. You know what to make it better for everybody.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Sarah Kizzie Training Officer Partner Dijon Police Academy Africa LA Union Representative Hernandez ELL Compton Supervisor
Seattle council divided over proposals to defund police department

News and Perspective with Tom Hutyler

01:08 min | 2 years ago

Seattle council divided over proposals to defund police department

"Of opponents like this woman told the council what they'd lose some of the most highly trained officers in the nation's officers who were at the forefront of police reform and accountability. I urge you to slow down and consider the consequences. Other amendments include cutting money from patrol operations, imposing a cap of $150,000 on Officerssalaries. And transferring 9 11 service to the Department of Finance and Administrative Services. The committee could take its first votes at today's meeting, in a measure could get a full council vote as soon as next Monday, Seattle's police chief, urging the city Council to stop protesters from visiting the homes of elected officials. During emotional debates over reducing the funding for police chief Carmen Best, wrote a letter to the council after protesters shut up in her home Saturday night bests. Neighbors were shocked to see about 200 people walking down there street chanting this woman confronted them. It's not OK to come to a neighborhood. There's Children here. There's families Best said council members need to forcefully called the end of the tactics. Protesters recently appeared outside the homes of marriage Any Durkin and some other council members. Ahh, 78 year old man has been charged with killing his wife, Pierce County Sheriff's deputies say the murder happened in university place. They found the 74 year old

Carmen Best City Council Department Of Finance And Admi Pierce County Durkin Seattle Officerssalaries Murder
Technology Helps Train Police Officers

WSJ The Future of Everything

07:52 min | 2 years ago

Technology Helps Train Police Officers

"Around the country for the past few weeks, protests have erupted over the killing of George Floyd. The arrests kindle renewed outrage over the deaths of black Americans like Brianna Taylor Eric Garner Michael Brown among many others and the mistreatment of people of Color by police. The protests have also sparked and national reckoning for many police departments. They've been trying to reduce the use of lethal force and improve accountability among other things through training. From The Wall Street Journal this is the future of everything I'm Janet Baben. Today on the show we'll consider the future of police training with virtual reality technology. What's most powerful about the are? You're able to create worlds and circumstances and experiences that you wouldn't be able to create in the real world that can help you shift your perspective, which is really different than a training. We'll speak with researchers about how the brain perceives are and whether it can address bias. Notwithstanding or conscious beliefs or conscious convictions, and we'll talk about why a future developments in Vr police training may fall short. Tell me why you shot. Shot because he was within that zone, you know I felt there was leased departments have long used actors playing and instructional videos to train officers to deal with real life scenarios, but this can be. Pricey and not very realistic. People who make and sell virtual reality say the technology can improve training. If you play video games. You're probably familiar with VR. It's been around for a while, but we asked Wall Street Journal attack video game reporter Sara Needham, in to explain virtual reality is all encompassing. It's a matter of hardware so when you put on APR headset. Everything you see up down left right turnaround. Everything is in there virtual world one hundred percent. You cannot see anything else, so you feel very immersed the main difference between VR other video simulations you can actually interact with this computer generated three D world. It's so. That Sarah says you can get sucked in and lose yourself. I experienced this myself. playing a racing game where I was sitting down very low, and we felt like a cockpit of a vehicle, and as we went around the turns, I literally felt like we were going to crash into the wall, because I wasn't driving very well, and it scared me. For Police. It's not about the thrill or fear of race track. It's about learning how to lean into the fear and still be able to deal with it calmly. If you feel like you've done something before been in a situation before. You're better at knowing how to react. You can practice your actions in these potentially life, threatening situations and hopefully resolve altercations peacefully. We'll talk more about this in just a bit. It's one of the reasons that some of the biggest law enforcement groups in the country like the Los Angeles. Police Department are turning to Vr. The LAPD has a history connected to police, misconduct and misuse force. In Nineteen ninety-one. Were caught on tape brutally beating motorist Rodney. King a black, man. The officers acquitted of criminal charges sparking riots in Los Angeles. In the early two thousands. The department was put under Federal Investigation for. Engaging in a pattern or practice of excessive force, false arrests and unreasonable searches and seizures, the government came in with what's known as a consent decree to change the culture in the LAPD. Dr. Lou Pinella joined the department in the middle of all that in two thousand five. The Rodney King incident put a laser focus on LAPD, tactics and training as well. I believe that we have continued to expand on that every year, both by how we work with our community and the training that we offer. She's the director of Police Training and education at the LAPD and she revamped its training. Process Department currently trains officers with something called a forced option simulator. It's often referred to as first generation. VR says it trains police in real life scenarios you walk into a room and one walls, completely blank and on their, we will project a scenario that an officer has to handle. Handle, it could be anything from a person in a park to a bank robbery to an office scenario, workplace violence scenario, something like that and officers will get a call, and they'll come into the room and and try to respond to what is in front of them. In the meantime, there's a instructor at the back of the room who be on a computer. Computer and as the scenario unfolding, they are able to branch in different directions, where either the officers are calming, the situation down, or it becomes more difficult to handle

Police Department Officer Lapd Rodney King George Floyd Janet Baben Los Angeles The Wall Street Journal Brianna Taylor Dr. Lou Pinella Sarah Process Department Michael Brown Eric Garner Instructor Sara Needham Robbery
President Trump's executive order criticized for not addressing racial bias

ABC Perspective

04:21 min | 2 years ago

President Trump's executive order criticized for not addressing racial bias

"A series of executive actions introduced this week in the rose garden by the president were aimed at curbing the use of deadly force by police encouraging a ban on chokeholds and setting up a database for police departments to share information on officers with the history of misconduct and excessive use of force so they aren't we hired elsewhere Jon Cohn is an ABC news contributor with an extensive background in law enforcement he told me the president's executive order could have done more I thought it was a missed opportunity you know I've worked in law enforcement and homeland security for thirty four plus years I've worked with police departments around the country I've been involved both the national level the local level present really had an opportunity to come out and make a strong statement saying basically police are vital to our society they protect our communities from violence and the need the people of this country will not tolerate individuals or police organizations allowing racial bias to influence the decision making officers aware these organizations and you know we're we're seeing a very strong statement being made by the people of this country through these protests as somebody who's very proud of that a police officer and who has worked closely with law enforcement officials you know across the country for years hi I really urge them and our elected leaders in Washington to listen Johns a former police officer and he worked with the department of homeland security knows a lot about law enforcement one of the questions that people I know ask about constantly as wide a police officers have to shoot to kill why can't we train people to shoot for the leg yes you might not be as is as accurate every time but white we you wouldn't have a person die I mean that's an interesting question I can just say that the way you're trained is if you're going to use lethal force if you're gonna use your firearm it's you're shooting to stop you're shooting to make the person who is a threat I'm incapable of taking those actions what you want but when shooting somebody in the legs do the same thing when that stopped that person if that was the goal positive it's really hard I mean I've been involved in shootings and you teach an officer to eighteen center mass because that is where you're going to have the highest likelihood of not only striking the individual but striking him in a way that stops them from doing whatever action is that Yasser deem to be a threat it's not easy particularly when you're in those situations to a team you know to hit a hand that may be carrying an item or or lack and that's why they train officers to essentially aim and nationally for the percent of mass I know when I've heard that over over again but in the case of of of ray sharp drops in in Atlanta if he had been shot in the foot he would have stopped it would have been as easy I understand that and I get that and then you would have done that but when they're talking about changing police training in police tactics is what I'm suggesting just completely out of there not something it would even be considered yeah I think I would be difficult I my belief is that where we have to focus our training is in the area of teaching officers how to at the initial point of a call I set the tone in that call so it doesn't escalate you you hear a lot of people talk about the idea of de escalation de escalating something that has already gotten ratchet up is very difficult so the key is making sure that an officer approaches a situation whether it's J. responding to a call for service or an interaction with somebody on the street at the an officer initiates that you handle that call in such a way so that it doesn't escalate to a situation requiring the use of force if you've lost control of the situation there's a high likelihood that the result is going to be something that isn't good so if you're drawing a gun in your firing you were in a life or death situation but a lot of these calls the officers approach the situation correlate they allow you to get under competitiveness role and then they use deadly force with deadly force wasn't necessary with someone's running away from you it doesn't matter where you you know it and you're shooting a gun at them it doesn't matter whether you're shooting game for their leg or their back you shouldn't be shooting your gun

President Trump Executive
Democrats pledge transformative change with police reform bill

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:45 sec | 3 years ago

Democrats pledge transformative change with police reform bill

"Chen now we've got more on that legislation for sweeping law enforcement reform that's been introduced in Congress more tonight from WTOP's Mitchell Miller today on the hill the killing must stop the carnage must end house Majority Leader Steny Hoyer one of the Democrats who unveiled the legislation including the chair of the congressional black caucus Karen bass a profession where you have the power to kill should be a profession that requires highly trained officers who are accountable to the public the legislation would create a national registry to track abuses by police band police chokehold and step up police training bass as more than two hundred lawmakers in the house and Senate are supporting the legislation it's still unclear whether it will get enough support in the Republican controlled Senate to

Chen Congress Mitchell Miller Majority Leader Steny Hoyer Karen Bass Senate
Demonstrators Demand Police Reform in Minneapolis

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:35 sec | 3 years ago

Demonstrators Demand Police Reform in Minneapolis

"The city of Minneapolis is now promising changes within its police department demonstrators demands for change speaking city policy the Minneapolis city council approved a ban on all police chokehold and is now required to report in on authorize use of force by fellow officers Minneapolis city council president Lisa Bender we tried for many years to revise our use of force policies it hasn't been enough and there's no going back California banned state police from training officers to use

Minneapolis Minneapolis City Council Lisa Bender California President Trump
Miami Beach commissioners to review use-of-force policy

Rush Limbaugh

00:40 sec | 3 years ago

Miami Beach commissioners to review use-of-force policy

"Of of force force of of force force policies policies force force policies policies policies policies under under policies policies the the under under microscope microscope under under the the microscope microscope the the under under microscope microscope the the microscope microscope at at police police at at police police at at precincts precincts police police at at precincts precincts police police precincts precincts across across precincts precincts across across across across South South across across South South Florida Florida South South Florida Florida South South following Florida Florida following Florida Florida George following George following Floyd's George Floyd's George death Floyd's death Floyd's Miami death Miami death beach Miami beach Miami commissioners beach commissioners beach commissioners want commissioners to want hear want to from hear to want hear police from to from hear police chief police from chief Richard police chief Richard chief Clements Richard Clements Richard Clements at Clements their at June their at June their twenty at June their twenty fourth June twenty fourth meeting twenty fourth meeting fourth to meeting take to meeting an take to in take an depth to in an take depth in look an depth in look at depth look their use at look their at use of their force use at of their force use policy of force policy of force policy to policy see to how see to see how involved to how see involved how involved it is involved it is and it is and if it is anything and if anything and if needs anything if needs anything to be needs to changed be needs to changed be to changed be eliminated changed eliminated eliminated or eliminated or added or added or added to added ensure to ensure to best ensure to best ensure practices best practices best practices practices one of the one disciplinary of one the disciplinary of the one disciplinary of the process disciplinary process process sees process sees and how sees and transparent how sees and transparent how and transparent how transparent are they are are they they so are they so that so that if so that something if that if something were something if to were something happen were to happen to were happen to we happen can we reassure we can reassure can we the reassure can public the reassure public the public the public that that that things that were things procreating things were procreating were things procreating were procreating it's not it's not it's that not it's there's that not that a there's remedy there's that a remedy a there's remedy for a remedy for it for it for commissioner it commissioner it commissioner Ricky commissioner Ricky Arriola Ricky Arriola Ricky Arriola Arriola says says they says also they says also they want also to they take want also to want a take look to take want a at look to a the take look at six a the at look six the at six pillars the six pillars of pillars policing of pillars policing of policing of policing building building trust building trust building trust policy trust policy policy and oversight policy and oversight and oversight and technology oversight technology technology and technology social and social and media social and media social media community media community community relations community relations relations relations training training training an training officer an officer an officer wellness an officer wellness wellness wellness

Chicago: At least 4 challengers seek to unseat Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx

Dave Plier

00:50 sec | 3 years ago

Chicago: At least 4 challengers seek to unseat Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx

"The four candidates who want to replace Kim Foxx's cook county state's attorney squared off in a debate Saturday Bob Fioretti says something that would help is a better trained police force we need to improve relationships with it by having better trained officers just like we need here in the states very better hiring better practice better discipline incumbent state's attorney Kim Foxx says maybe it's time for some changes not exactly in the police department but the fraternal order of police the leadership of the F. O. P. who has been an endorser of president trump and the status quo as choosing in these times of violence in our communities to focus their attention on petty squabbles the other two candidates who want fox's jobber both former prosecutors bill Conway and Donna more

Kim Foxx Bob Fioretti FOX Donna Cook County Attorney F. O. President Trump Bill Conway
New Rules Will Govern Investigations of Police Shootings in Washington

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt

01:12 min | 3 years ago

New Rules Will Govern Investigations of Police Shootings in Washington

"Police officers in our state are being trained in the art of threat management in hopes of reducing incidents in which they must use deadly force while that training takes hold the new rules will govern deadly force investigations more on that from call most Corwin Hey hundred changes mandated by voter approved I nine forty the state will seek to ensure an independent panel of detectives investigates any case in which an officer use of deadly force such a panel would operate separately from an agency's own internal investigation former king county sheriff's two RAR is executive director of the Washington criminal justice training commission she says the effort really starts with training officers to manage any threats to their safety or others when you're driving down the freeway you do all your own little threat management with other cars on the freeway and so for a police officer in the field they have to just be constantly thinking about what might be what might be happening around me that I I don't want to lose track of the training also emphasizes de escalation and mental health awareness when a deadly force investigation is called for the model will be Snohomish county's multiple agency response team or smart the training commission proposes up to fifteen such regional investigative

Executive Director Officer Snohomish County Corwin King County Washington
Police Shootings: The Data and the Damage Done

Science Vs

04:53 min | 3 years ago

Police Shootings: The Data and the Damage Done

"It's been five years since the high profile shootings of several unarmed black teenagers and men which launched the black lives matter movement. Thousands of people protested saying cops a using unnecessary force. The death sparked national debate. About what exactly was going on in in police departments with some saying this is a systemic problem and other saying no that's not right. A recent Pew survey found that around around forty percent of the public and about two-thirds of offices interviewed thought that these deaths were just quote isolated incidents this whole anti-police rhetoric is based on a lie. There is no data. There's no research that proves any of that nonsense none but despite this police departments have been doing all kinds of things to respond to the deaths and the protests police departments are employing. A new tactic body mounted video camera. Sacramento Police Department has been doing implicit bias. Training officers and recruits are required to attend an eight hour implicit bias. Course course meanwhile it feels like we're still seeing a lot of black people being killed at the hands of police like just a few weeks ago. Brad Attach Yana. Jefferson was shot in her home in Texas. Jefferson had been playing video games with her eight year old nephew. She was gunned down right in front of him so today on the show. What can you research tell us about police shootings in the US? And what can police departments be doing to save. Lives do implicit bias. Training Body Cams actually help when it comes to police shootings there are a lot of opinions. But then there's science okay so when you want to know the science of what is happening with all these police shootings you have to know that. We don't have good data here as no official database that tallies all the people in the US who was shot and killed by police so without officials stats media organizations like The Washington Post have started counting. And here's what they found about a thousand people in the US a killed by police each year. Roughly half of those don't have a gun and while all white people do get killed by cops your two to three times more likely to be killed by police in the US. If you're black an every researcher that we spoke told us that this wasn't just on the cops so for example is difference is partly explained by the fact that because of the history of this country black people are more likely to live in places with gun violence and cops a more likely to be assigned to these neighborhoods. So when idea is that if a lot of cops are interacting and with more black people than white people in the rare times that cops do draw their weapons. There's a greater chance that the person on the other end of the barrel will be black eh but lots of people in the. US think that something else is going on here to racial bias or racism among cops ups. So how widespread is that what feels like a messy and politically charged. Question can actually be answered with science. Hi My name is Jennifer Eberhardt and I work at Stanford. University Jennifer is a professor of social psychology. The and in two thousand fourteen. She started working with the Oakland police. Department to analyze their data on stops and searches and she was basically asking the question. But when you look at the data cops stopping and searching more black people. She looked at more than twenty thousand stops from five hundred police officers and she said there was a clear pattern. They stopped way. More African Americans in the same was true for the searches and when they when when they did the searches like what did they find. Were black people like more likely to have weapons or drugs no no. They weren't in Oakland Oakland. Black men was searched four times more often than white men despite the fact they would know more likely to have weapons or drugs. The white guys a similar trend was found for Latinos. And this isn't just Oakland. One big study published just the analyzed. Almost a hundred million police stops from twenty eight different states all across the the US and they found similar patents and these differences. They often stuck around. Even after you control for the crime rate

United States Sacramento Police Department Jennifer Eberhardt Oakland Jefferson Texas Brad Researcher Stanford Official Professor The Washington Post Forty Percent Eight Hour Eight Year Five Years
Florida teachers can now carry guns inside the classroom

AM Tampa Bay

00:38 sec | 3 years ago

Florida teachers can now carry guns inside the classroom

"Today teachers in Florida are allowed to bring guns into the classroom governor Rhonda Santa signed the bill into law in may it comes less than two years after the deadly high school shooting in parkland we're seventeen people were killed the log builds on a guardian program adopted by school districts after the massacre permitting teachers who volunteer to be armed to carry those guns on school grounds many of the state's districts have backed away from participating in the pro. Graham in favor of having trained officers on campus that includes several of the state's largest districts any teacher that does carry a weapon must be trained by law

Rhonda Santa Graham Florida Two Years
Some Florida teachers can now carry guns inside the classroom

AM Tampa Bay

00:38 sec | 3 years ago

Some Florida teachers can now carry guns inside the classroom

"Today teachers in Florida are allowed to bring guns into the classroom governor Rhonda Santa signed the bill into law in may it comes less than two years after the deadly high school shooting in parkland we're seventeen people were killed the log builds on a guardian program adopted by school districts after the massacre permitting teachers who volunteer to be armed to carry those guns on school grounds many of the state's districts have backed away from participating in the program in favor of having trained officers on campus that includes several of the state's largest districts in. a teacher that does carry a weapon must be trained by law

Florida Rhonda Santa Two Years
Officer, Training Officer And Tara Sullivan discussed on Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro

00:19 sec | 4 years ago

Officer, Training Officer And Tara Sullivan discussed on Ben Shapiro

"A northern California rookie police officer was killed during a domestic violence, call twenty six year old Sacramento police officer Tara Sullivan, graduated from the academy less than seven months ago, she responded with our training officer Wednesday night to help woman, escape and alleged domestic violence situation. What enter the home began firing

Officer Training Officer Tara Sullivan Sacramento California Twenty Six Year Seven Months
Eric Garner, Officer Daniel Pantaleo and NYPD discussed on Sean Hannity

Sean Hannity

02:57 min | 5 years ago

Eric Garner, Officer Daniel Pantaleo and NYPD discussed on Sean Hannity

"Evening I'm Lisa g while must've you love Facebook or at least your kids do, but Wall Street didn't give it a like today the company had the worst. Day in Wall Street history, plummeting nineteen percent racing. More than one hundred billion dollars in value this report is being brought to you by. BMW of freehold dot com where customers are for, their friends and families they NYPD has finally, begun disciplinary proceedings against. Officer Daniel Pantaleo some four years. After the death of Eric garner on Staten Island and mayor de Blasio says that he. Told Eric Garner's mother that her, son did not die in vain Wednesday. Night the mayor was. Confronted by Gwen, car at a. Town hall meeting on Staten Island. Asking if he'd agree to hold all the officers responsible for her son's death. I said to her straightforward there's two officers involved that's a determination NYPD made early on and I respect that there will. Be due process. There will be a public trial de Blasios. Says the incident led. To changes in training officers four interactions with civilians he. Did not die in vain Is a tragedy that also opened, up a lot of is led, to a lot of change garner died while being. Arrested in two thousand fourteen officer Daniel Pantaleo and sergeant. Kizzie donnas facing the hearings James flippin for seven ten w. o.. R. UFC fighter Conor McGregor is avoiding jail time for the bra last spring at Brooklyn's Barclays center he accepted a. Plea deal cops Long Island or looking for clues. In the fatal shooting of a female college student and her boyfriend police say twenty one year old Livia Degray goalie west Islip, discovered shot dead in the driver's seat of her car. Outside a. House on Lakeway drive her twenty two year old boyfriend Anthony Saint Hilaire had been, shot nearby and died at a hospital police say he lived near the scene. And according to Facebook Degray, goalie was a student. At Suffolk County community college police searching, for answers where you're encouraging and asking the public. For any information on this case I'm Jennifer Sony, for seven ten w. o. r. a. New, Jersey restaurant owner was. Fatally shot in front of his As the two delivered food early this morning and. Patterson cops are investigating New Jersey transit is asking the, public near the tracks to work with them to solve crimes nj transit. Is partnering with the social media next door it connects community members Joe Pacelli with the app says anyone who lives. Within a mile of train tracks, can sign up for transit's group the goals to reduce accidents suicides and deter crime nj transit police chief Chris Zillow says officers will be posting tips, on the, app regarding theft and trespassing we're going to do our best to supply them with information about tips on what to look. For information with had a report suspicious behavior at Newark Penn station I'm Scott Pringle for seven ten w. o. r. a new, investigation from USA today says the US is the most dangerous place to give birth into develop world citing maternal mortality rates in the. Rate at which, mothers get injured during or. After childbirth the study says much of it boils down to hospitals not following long known.

Eric Garner Officer Daniel Pantaleo Nypd Facebook Staten Island New Jersey Livia Degray Anthony Saint Hilaire Lisa G Conor Mcgregor BMW Long Island W. O. USA De Blasio Officer James Flippin Gwen UFC