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Monday, July 22, 2013

Sanford, Fla. Police Chief Cecil Smith Has Been a Calming Influence

Sanford, Fla. Police Chief Cecil Smith Has Been a Calming Influence

Sanford Police Chief Cecil Smith was hired to lead the central Florida department just as it was thrust into the national spotlight by the George Zimmerman case.
And last week, after a jury acquitted Zimmerman, sparking a new round of national protests, it fell to Smith to keep the peace in town.
The previous chief had been fired by city commissioners for failing to arrest Zimmerman for the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed teenager, in February 2012. Soon after, protesters rallied online and in streets across the country for Zimmerman's arrest. The governor appointed a special prosecutor, who charged the neighborhood watch volunteer with second-degree murder, laying the groundwork for the high-profile trial.
Smith's first months felt like triage, he said -- coping with perceptions of racial bias among the black community as well as low morale within the department of 128 officers.
Smith, 52, who is African American and was raised on Chicago's west side, where he had seen riots in 1968, knew what lay ahead if the city didn't address unrest before the verdict.
So he began taking to the streets each Thursday for what he calls "walk and talk." He and about a dozen officers walk around different neighborhoods, doubling back to revisit certain areas, including Goldsboro, the historically black part of town.
As the trial wound down, Smith met with the Seminole County sheriff and other local law enforcement officials to create contingency plans for the verdict. When the acquittal was handed down, Smith activated the local emergency operations center, doubling the number of police in the streets to about 50 at a time.
Some demonstrations across the country were marred by violence, including melees in Los Angeles and Oakland. But Sanford, a city of 54,000 about 25 miles north of Orlando, remained peaceful.
The streets stayed clear, the protests small and peaceful, with no arrests or clashes with police -- a credit to the new chief, many said, including city commissioners.
Still, Smith said that the Police Department needed to keep improving its community relations.
"We can choose to stay where we were, or we can say we don't like what's happened. But we need to come together and move on," Smith told about 70 people, mostly black Sanford residents, who gathered for an interfaith service at a local church Monday.
Smith looked more like a minister than a police chief in his glasses and sharp suit, pacing before the altar, exhorting the crowd. He told them he knew many were unhappy with the department and the verdict.
A few residents lobbed questions about an arrest during a protest at a lakefront park. Smith said the arrest took place in Goldsboro and was unrelated to the verdict.
"What we have to do is have people stop thinking every time police arrest somebody it's racist," he said. "We're trying to be as transparent as we can."
One woman told him that as news spread of the verdict, she saw police line young black men up on the boulevard that runs through Goldsboro, searching them without cause, even well-behaved youths who attend college.
"You can't feel our pain," she said.
Smith said he heard that a lot.

"People tell me you're not from around here, you can't understand," he said, asking them to work with him.
After talking for a few minutes, the woman decided to give Smith the benefit of the doubt.
"He walked into the lion's den," Rose Casey said. "We have to give him a chance to straighten things out."
Copyright 2013 - Los Angeles Times
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Five years ago first Okaloosa deputy was killed in line of duty - Local - Northwest Florida Daily News

Five years ago first Okaloosa deputy was killed in line of duty - Local - Northwest Florida Daily News

Five years ago Monday, Joey Forgione knocked on his mother’s door to tell her that his brother, his best friend, would not be coming home again.
Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Deputy Anthony Forgione had been shot and killed by an escaped mental patient that morning.
“It was a nightmare,” said Joey Forgione, who was a Niceville police officer at the time. “It was a long day, hard to process. You never think you’d have to do notification on a family member.”
On July 22, 2008, Anthony Forgione and other members of the Sheriff’s Office’s Special Response Team were called to a home on Plymouth Avenue in the Ocean City area of Fort Walton Beach where Mark Rohlman had barricaded himself.
Rohlman’s family had told officials he likely was armed and had escaped from Fort Walton Beach Medical Center twice in the previous 24 hours.
Deputies had tried to persuade Rohlman to come out of the house, but after three hours they decided to enter before he hurt himself.
As SRT members walked into a bedroom, Rohlman fired a shotgun. Forgione was hit in the upper chest and was killed.
Rohlman then shot himself in the head and died.
Forgione was the first Okaloosa County sheriff’s deputy to be killed in the line of duty.
In the aftermath, people struggled to figure out just what had happened and how to prevent it from happening again.
Change came both locally and statewide.
Since 2008, sheriff’s deputies have attended crisis intervention training to prepare them for worst-case scenarios involving mentally unstable people. The training helps them identify the signs and symptoms of mental illness and offers advice on how to deal with those people.
Sheriff Larry Ashley said protocol on how law officers approach scenarios similar to Forgione’s also has changed. Deputies now have more equipment and technology to protect them.
“It was so sobering,” Ashley said. “This is certainly a dangerous job and we’ve had our share of close calls, assaults battery. Those come with the territory.
“But to lose a friend, co-worker, a life, it was a surreal ordeal.”
One year after Forgione’s death, the Florida Legislature passed the Forgione Act. It outlines the duties of law enforcement officers and mental health facilities when they deal with patients who have been detained involuntarily under the state’s Baker Act.
Forgione, who was 33, was just shy of his three-year anniversary with the Sheriff’s Office when he was killed. He was with the Fort Walton Beach Police Department before that.
“He helped everyone he could. He was such a hard worker,” said his mother, Charlene Forgione Dietz. “He had such a good personality. He was so fun to be with and he loved being a police officer.”
Forgione left a wife, two children who were 10 and 5 years old, and other family and friends in the local area where he grew up.
 “Even five years later it’s hard,” Joey Forgione said. “You’re still learning to deal with it. It’s like losing your right arm. You never get that back, but you get used to it.”
“Sometimes I think the time between it is worse than when we first learned about Tony,” Forgione Dietz said. “I go to the gravesite and put flowers down for my son and think, ‘I have to do this for the rest of my life.’
“It’s a struggle.”
 
Contact Daily News Staff Writer Angel McCurdy at 850-315-4432or amccurdy@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @AngelMnwfdn.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Jackson police officer Bruce Jacob hit, killed on I-55 | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com

Jackson police officer Bruce Jacob hit, killed on I-55 | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com

A Jackson police officer was struck and killed Saturday while removing debris from I-55.
Jackson police spokeswoman Colendula Green identified the deceased officer as Bruce Jacob of Precinct 4, a five-year veteran of the department.
Chief Lindsey Horton said Jacob received a call at approximately 1:30 p.m. about debris on I-55 South near Northside Drive.
Horton said Jacob found a barbecue grill that had fallen onto the roadway.
WJTV-TV reported that Jacob had retrieved the grill from the interstate and was placing it into his trunk when a motorist hit the officer and his vehicle from behind.
Jacob was transported to the University of Mississippi Medical Center, where he died of his injuries, Horton said.
“It’s always tough to lose anyone, and not just the death of an officer but even an injury,” Horton told WAPT-TV.
“We knew and we know that this job is very dangerous. He was a public servant doing what we do when we receive calls for service.”
In the statement Mayor Lumumba said, "Our police officers put their lives on the line every minute of everyday day. Today, we suffered another tragic and senseless loss of one of Jackson's chosen.  I acknowledge and appreciate the commitment and service of Officer Bruce Jacob. May God bless his loving wife and family and may God bless our officers."
Assistant Chief Lee Vance said the driver of the vehicle that hit Jacob was injured and also transported to UMC and still was undergoing treatment late Saturday afternoon. The driver’s name, condition nor any information on possible charges were released.
Horton said an investigation is continuing.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Texas executes Quintanilla for shooting death of retired sheriff's deputy during 2002 holdup

Texas executes Quintanilla for shooting death of retired sheriff's deputy during 2002 holdup

HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A Texas man convicted of fatally shooting a retired sheriff's deputy during the robbery of an amusement center more than a decade ago was put to death Tuesday.

John Manuel Quintanilla received lethal injection for gunning down 60-year-old Victor Billings at a game room in Victoria, about 125 miles southwest of Houston. The 2002 slaying came just a few months after Quintanilla had been released from prison after serving a sentence for several burglary convictions.
Asked to make a final statement before his execution, Quintanilla told his wife he loved her.

"Thank you for all the years of happiness," he said.

He never acknowledged his victim's friends or relatives, including two daughters, who watched through a window.

As the lethal drug began taking effect, he snored about a half dozen times, then stopped breathing. At 7:32 p.m. CDT — 15 minutes after being given the drug — he was pronounced dead.

Quintanilla's wife, a German national who married him by proxy while he was in prison, watched through an adjacent window and sobbed.

Quintanilla, 36, became the ninth Texas inmate to receive lethal injection this year and the 501st since the state resumed carrying out capital punishment in 1982. His was the first of two executions set for this week; the other is planned for Thursday.

Quintanilla's punishment was carried out after the U.S. Supreme Court refused two last-day appeals.

His lawyers contended his confession was coerced by authorities threatening to also charge one of his sisters and that the statement improperly was allowed into evidence at his trial in 2004. The lawyers obtained affidavits from two jurors who said the confession was a key to their decision to convict him.
"It is clear that Quintanilla would not have been convicted of capital murder if his confession had not been admitted — a fact confirmed by two of his jurors," appeals lawyer David Dow told the high court.

The appeal also argued Quintanilla had deficient legal help during his trial and in earlier stages of his appeals, and that his case would give justices the opportunity to define filing rules in light of recent death penalty rulings from the court.

The Texas attorney general's office said the appeal was without merit and improperly filed, and that the juror affidavits also were improper.
"There wasn't any coercion whatsoever," Dexter Eaves, the former Victoria County district attorney who was lead prosecutor at the trial, recalled last week. He also said that while the robbers, who fled with about $2,000, were masked, witnesses were able to "describe very clearly who the triggerman was."

Court records show Billings, a retired chief deputy from nearby Edna in adjacent Jackson County, was at the game center with his wife on the Sunday before Thanksgiving in 2002 when the gunmen came in through a back door. Billings approached one of them and grabbed the barrel of the gunman's rifle "so no one else was going to be hurt and paid for it dearly," Eaves said.
He said Billings was shot three times, the last one fired while he was on his knees.

"A very cold killing," Eaves said.
During questioning by detectives for an unrelated robbery some two months later, Quintanilla made references to the still unsolved Billings case, then led authorities to a canal where divers recovered items used in the holdup.

"They had the mask, the guns and his statements saying who did what," Jim Beeler, Quintanilla's lead trial lawyer, said. "He told them everything."

Beeler said the trial judge overruled his objections and ruled the statements proper and admissible into evidence. He also said Quintanilla signed affidavits ordering that his defense team present no mitigating evidence during the punishment phase of his trial, where jurors deciding his sentence could have considered he had virtually no parental supervision while growing up.

"You want to argue your case, completely and totally," Beeler said. "In that situation, we're not being allowed to present our case, based on our client.
"It's extremely frustrating."

Prosecutors bolstered their case for Quintanilla's future dangerousness by presenting evidence he attacked a jailer with a homemade weapon while awaiting trial.

"He did not do himself any favors," Eaves said.

Quintanilla's accomplice, Jeffrey Bibb, 33, is serving 60 years for murder and 50 years for aggravated robbery.

On Thursday, another Texas inmate is set for lethal injection. Vaughn Ross, 41, is to be executed for a double slaying in Lubbock in 2001.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

North Shore police officers to honor life of MIT officer killed by Marathon bombing suspect in upcoming bike ride

North Shore police officers to honor life of MIT officer killed by Marathon bombing suspect in upcoming bike ride 

Police officers from the North Shore are set to participate in an upcoming bike ride honoring fallen MIT officer Sean Collier.

Collier was was killed in the line of duty on April 18, in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings.
Local officers will join cyclists from the Tour de Force, a 9/11 memorial bike ride that benefits the families of policemen that were killed in the line of duty, in the last 65-mile leg of the course.

Organizers of the local event have named the last stretch of the race, "Sean's Ride."

"I'm excited about this," said Danvers Police Officer Kevin Wood. "I'm honored to do it. we knew Sean personally because he worked here in town. He was a really nice kid so we're looking forward to doing it."

On September 8, about 250 participants will depart ground zero and cycle through New York City, across Long Island, up the Connecticut coast and into Rhode Island. They will then be joined by Sean's Ride to cycle from Providence to Boston, finishing at the Boston Marathon finish line on September 11, in honor of the victims of the Boston bombings.

Thus far, about 10 officers from the Beverly Police Department and Danvers Police Department have signed up.

Each participant is required to individually raise at least $200 for the ride. In order to do so, officers are hosting a fundraiser on Saturday July 27 at the Hastings House on Oak Street in Beverly from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.

The event will include music, a silent auction, raffle prizes, food and beverages.

"It's going to be a really good time celebrating Sean's life and supporting a good cause," Wood said.
Members of the community are eligible to participate in Sean's Ride should contact Officer Kevin Wood at 978-882-1084 to do so.

Terri Ogan can be reached at oganglobe@gmail.com, or follow her on Twitter.

Monday, July 15, 2013

SWAT Officer Robert Hornsby KPD EOW 7/14/13

SWAT Officer Robert Hornsby KPD EOW 7/14/13

It is with deep regret we report the loss of a fallen Brother from the Killeen Police Department in Texas in the Line of Duty. Officer Robert Hornsby was shot and killed while performing his duties as a SWAT team member. A second Officer was shot and injured during the incident and remains in serious condition at the time of this posting.

Officer Hornsby is survived by his wife, Kimberly, and two children. Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers as they struggle through their loss.

Officer Hornsby, tonight we will shine our blue lights towards the night sky to guide you home. We honor your service and sacrifice in the line of duty by ALWAYS keeping a blue light glowing. Your family and the Killeen Police Department are in our thoughts and prayers. Rest easy Sir... we will take the watch from here.

www.facebook.com/BlueLineAcrossAmerica

A memorial page to honor Officer Hornsby is located below to post memories and sympathy.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/SWAT-Officer-Robert-Hornsby-KPD-EOW-71413/561659373875268

There is also a fundraising page that has been set up and approved by his wife located here.

https://www.wepay.com/donations/1097767873

#BlueLineAcrossAmerica
#HeroesMemorial
#LODD
#Killeen

#NationalBlueAlert

Photo Credit: -Herald/TJ MAXWELL

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Killeen Police officer killed, another wounded in deadly shooting

City of Killeen, Texas - 

Killeen Police officer killed, another wounded in deadly shooting


The Killeen Police Department received a 911 call at 11:40pm on Saturday, July 13, 2013, telling officers there was a man causing a disturbance in the pool area of the Grandon Manor Apartments located at 1611 Grandon Dr.  The caller advised a white male resident came out of his apartment with a weapon and walked to the pool area and threatened the people in the pool; he then walked back into his apartment. 

The officers arrived at the complex to find the male inside apartment #6E holding a long rifle in a threatening manner. The Tactical Response Unit was deployed to 1611 Grandon Dr. at 11:56pm.  The tactical officers were attempting to speak with the armed male when he fired one shot.  The male then came to the door with his hands up but failed to come outside, the officers attempted to take the suspect into custody when he backed into his apartment and armed himself with the AK47 and began shooting at the officers. 

Two Killeen Police Tactical officers were wounded; officers returned fire killing the suspect.  Both officers were transported by ambulance to the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center in critical condition.  One officer was stabilized and subsequently transferred to Scott & White Memorial Hospital; he is undergoing surgery at this time.

It is with a heavy heart that I tell you the second officer succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced deceased by medical personnel at 1:27am.  Justice of the Peace Garland Potvin has ordered an autopsy to be performed at the Southwest Institute of Forensic Sciences in Dallas.

“Early this morning, this community experienced the loss of one of Killeen’s finest.  The days ahead will be challenging, but for now, we are mourning the loss of a great officer.   Our hearts and prayers go out to the officer’s family during this difficult time” said Chief Dennis Baldwin.

The names of the officers will not be released at this time and the families have asked for privacy during their time of grief.  Funeral Services are pending at this time.

Justice Potvin also ordered an autopsy on the suspect to be performed at the Southwest Institute of Forensic Science in Dallas; his name has been withheld pending the notification of his next of kin.

This case continues to be investigated and information will be provided as it becomes available.


Carroll Smith
Public Affairs
Killeen Police Department



Saturday, July 13, 2013

National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund: Latest Memorial Fund Research Bulletin

National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund: Latest Memorial Fund Research Bulletin

According to preliminary data compiled by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, 51 law enforcement officers have been killed in the line of duty during the first half of 2013. This is a nine percent increase over the same period in 2012.

Read the Report




Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Sgt. Leonard Luna of the Hawthorne Police Department Killed In Motorcycle Accident On I-105 Freeway | Hews Media Group-Community News

Sgt. Leonard Luna of the Hawthorne Police Department Killed In Motorcycle Accident On I-105 Freeway | Hews Media Group-Community News

An off-duty Hawthorne police officer who was killed Monday night in an accident on the 105 Freeway has been been identified as Sgt. Leonard Luna.
Several news outlets confirmed Luna’s identify including NBC LA and KTLA.
It is being reported that Luna was a 10-year veteran of the department and commanded the traffic bureau.  It appears that Luna was on his own motorcycle when the crash occurred about 5:30 p.m. on the eastbound 105 Freeway near Long Beach Boulevard.
–Sources NBC LA, KTLA
#HawthornePD
@HawthornePD

Friday, July 5, 2013

SMSO Deputy Killed in Motorcycle Crash | KATC.com | Acadiana-Lafayette, Louisiana

SMSO Deputy Killed in Motorcycle Crash | KATC.com | Acadiana-Lafayette, Louisiana

A St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Deputy was killed when his motorcycle crossed the center line into oncoming traffic and struck an SUV in Morgan City on Sunday.
According to a news release from the Morgan City Police Department, on June 30, 2013, at 8:41 pm the MCPD received a call of vehicle crash on LA Hwy. 182 near Aycock Street. The release states the motorcycle left its lane and crossed the center line into oncoming traffic. The motorbike struck the SUV head on. Deputy Carril J. Cooks, 46, of Houma, was ejected and later pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of the SUV along with three occupants had minor injuries.
The investigation is still ongoing by officers who are attempting to determine what caused the motorcycle to leave its lane and also awaiting toxicology results as is customary in fatality crashes.
Here is a statemnet from the St. Mary Parish Sheriff Mark Hebert:
"This is a sad time for the men and women of the St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Office. On June 30, 2013, Deputy Carril J. Cooks, a 6 year veteran of our agency, was killed in a motorcycle crash while off duty. Anytime we lose a member of our SMPSO family it is difficult. Our deepest condolences and prayers are with the Cooks family. We stand ready to assist them and his many friends in any way we can."
"With three years prior experience in law enforcement, Cooks began his career at the St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Office as a road deputy in 2007. He moved into the St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Office Narcotics Division in 2009. In addition to his position as a narcotics detective, Cooks also served as a member of the St. Mary Parish Sheriff's Office Special Response Team and worked as a training instructor in our academy. His dedication to service and the security of our community will continue on through those he worked with and taught."