8 facts about detectives

 

1. Never use weapon-mounted light for routine searching. Instead, use a handheld flashlight, keeping the weapon holstered or with the barrel pointed downward. Doing so reduces the chance of shooting an unintended target.

 

2. Carry two wallets. One contains the officer’s official I.D. and badge. The other wallet is for situations when officers would rather not be identified as a cop. The second wallet is for police-free documents such as cash, drivers licenses, and credit cards.

 

3. Always handcuff a suspect’s hands behind his back, with the keyholes facing away from his hands. And to make sure he can’t slip his hands under his feet, use a cable tie to fasten the cuffs to a belt loop.

4. Many shooting situations occur at distances of ten feet or less. So, why do all firearms training at long distances? Instead, conduct some training at close range.

5. Avoid accidental discharge of weapons by following the four basic rules of handling firearms.

– Treat all guns as if they’re loaded.

– Keep your finger off the trigger until you’re ready to shoot.

– Point the weapon in a safe direction.

– Always know where a bullet will land before firing.

6. Practice shooting from odd, unnatural positions, like lying on the ground, kneeling, and squatting. Also, practice shooting with your weak hand.

7. Always check to make sure a weapon is loaded before leaving for work, especially a weapon that’s been out of the officer’s sight and control. An officer doesn’t have time to do this in the seconds prior to a gun battle.

 

8. Always call for back up if there’s a weapon involved. Being a dead hero isn’t a good thing.

 

Prince George’s County, Maryland – Two men, Cyril Cornelius Williams, 27, and Anthony A Milton, 28, have been arrested and charged in connection with the murder of Maryland State Police Trooper Wesley Brown.

Cyril Williams

Police believe Williams had been upset because Trooper Brown, who was working as an off-duty private security officer at the time, had kicked him out of an Applebees restaurant for being disorderly. Apparently, Williams and Milton waited until the trooper got off work and then ambushed him in the parking lot.

Newberry, South Carolina – Gregory Collins (above) has been charged with the murder of his chicken processing plant coworker, Anthony Hill. The two men had spent the day together, hanging out. Then, sometime after the day turned into night, Collins shot and killed Hill. He then tied Hill’s body to the back of his pickup truck and drug him for over ten miles, until the rope snapped. Collins left his friend’s body in the roadway near an elementary school. A crew was dispatched to clean the long, foot-wide stain from the highway.

Mt. Pleasant, Texas – A five-year veteran of the Mt. Pleasant police department has been arrested for selling firearms to an illegal alien who’d been indicted on felony criminal charge. K-9 officer Joshua Hatfield was arrested by a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent and a Texas Ranger.

Harris County, Texas – A man died during a traffic stop after being tasered by a Harris County deputy. During the stop the man struck the deputy in the chest and began running away. The deputy caught the man and fired his Taser as a means to terminate the situation.

Corpus Cristi, Texas – Due to budget cuts the city is shutting the doors to the police academy until 2012. That means no new officers for quite a while, but jobs are safe for the officers who’re already patrolling the streets.

Anne Arundel County, Md. – A police detective working a rape case turned to McDonalds for her crime-solving answers. She had a gut feeling about a suspect, but couldn’t pin the rape on him. No evidence. All the detective needed was a sample of the thug’s DNA to prove her theory, so she arrested the guy for an old outstanding warrant. As soon as she got him in jail the deputy bought the suspect a happy meal. Well, after finishing his burger, fries, and soft drink, the deputy collected the food and drink containers, from which the lab was able to collect a nice sample of DNA. Bazinga! The DNA was a match to the DNA found at the scene.

Tyngsboro, Ma. – Police Chief William Mulligan received a tip that one of his officers, Ronald Goulet, was spending a lot of his patrol time parked in his own driveway. In fact, it was reported that the officer spent so much time at home when he was supposed to be working, that he often had to scrape the ice from his windshield before heading back to the office. So, the chief had a GPS tracker installed on Officer Goulet’s patrol car. The result? Data from the device indicated that in eight days the officer had spent 39.5 hours parked in his own driveway, which translates into only three hours of actual patrol time each shift. The officer resigned after being confronted with the data.

Crime Scene Investigations: A Picture Of Death

 

Crime scene investigators have a huge assortment of tools at their disposal. Sure, we’ve all seen the TV shows where detectives use fancy lights and magic wands to lead them to the mysterious killer of the week. But in real life the tools are quite a bit different. Yep, they’re practical, but still pretty cool. And they’re cheap! Such as…

Remember the last time the cops dusted your light switches for fingerprints? What a mess. Black powder everywhere! Next time ask the boys in blue to make a wall protector using a piece of cardboard. Better still, make one for each switch in your house and keep them in a drawer. Then, the next time the CSI team shows up to investigate, you’re all set. No walls to scrub down.

No time to bend over when entering your favorite murder scene? Here’s the answer. This handy device—the step-n-go—allows today’s detective to simply step into a protective shoe covering and keep walking. Perfect for the investigator who simply doesn’t have the time to stand still even for a second.

Can’t get to the pesky fingerprint that’s trapped inside a piece of wadded tape? A quick trip to Radio Shack can solve that problem. Pick up a can of Component Spray and squirt some on the tape.

And there you go—the tape comes apart.

The spray freezes the tape to approximately -65 degrees. Do NOT touch the tape with your bare hands. Another trick is to place the tape inside a freezer for several hours.

 

What do you do with those old unwanted CD’s?

Toss them into your camera bag for the rainy day homicide. That’s right, it can a real pain to keep your camera tripod steady when the ground is muddy. So, place an old cd under each leg and your problem is solved. Works like a charm.

Santa Cruz Boardwalk

The first time I set foot on California soil was in the 90’s. I hadn’t started writing yet, at least not seriously. Sure, I’d dabbled at writing a few stories, mostly because I grew up reading The Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, and Poe. And I really don’t want to admit it, but I’ve even flipped through the pages of a Bobbsey Twin book or two, as well. Actually, I’ve never been very far from a book of some kind. So I guess it was inevitable that I’d someday attempt to put pen to paper. Especially since writing a book had been a dream of mine for many years.

Anyway, back to California. When our plane crossed the mountains and San Jose finally came into view, I sensed that my life had changed, instantly. I just had no idea how drastic that change would be. I was a huge mystery fan at the time, reading several books per month, and had recently ended a long career in law enforcement. I hadn’t the slightest clue that I would soon merge the two.

First, though, my wife and I explored our new surroundings. We loved the area, especially the beaches. Santa Cruz was just over the mountains from us and we made regular trips there on Friday afternoons to enjoy the boardwalk, watch the sunsets, and to hear the free concerts on the beach. In fact, it was one of those Fridays when I met Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits. Peter and I have even exchanged a few emails since.

View of the Pacific from the Santa Cruz boardwalk

The beautiful scenery, and the fact that the Bay Area was filled to the brim with talented people, began to have an effect on me. The urge to write was growing each day. But I really didn’t know where or how to start.

Capitola fisherman

I happened to see a short piece in a local paper that advertised an upcoming writing class in Los Gatos, one of my favorite cities in the Bay Area. I think the cost for the course was $68. So, I signed up.

The class was small, but not too small. My fellow students were quite talented, which was a little intimidating for me. Even so, I enjoyed it when we shared the stories we’d written. Mine were horrible, but I was finally writing and it felt great. But what really impressed me about the whole experience was the teacher. She seemed to have this uncanny ability to critique our work in a way that stimulated our creativity, conjuring up ideas from every corner of our imaginations.

California scenery is breathtaking.

I learned a lot in that class, the only writing class I’ve ever taken. And at the end of the six weeks the teacher, Becky Levine, encouraged me to continue writing. She also invited me to speak about police work to her critique group. As luck would have it, one of the members of her group was also the director for a large writers conference. After the meeting the director asked if I’d present a similar session at her conference. Well, that event started a huge chain reaction.

Since that day, I’ve spoken at dozens of conferences, published various stories, articles, and books, appeared on TV and radio, I write this blog, I’ve begun hosting my own event, The Writers’ Police Academy, and I’m in the process of completing the final rewrites of a thriller. Hopefully, I’ll have that book back in my agent’s hands within a few days.

I live elsewhere now, but I still think of California and the wonderful places we visited, like those in the photos above. I think there’ll probably be a piece of California in everything I write.

My former writing teacher, Becky Levine, has recently released a book of her own, The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide: How to Make Revisions, Self-Edit, and Give and Receive Feedback.

*   *   *

I ran across one of the short stories I wrote for Becky’s class, so I thought it would be fun to share. Finding this was sort of like seeing your picture in an old high school yearbook. Weird. Anyway, here’s my first attempt at writing.

Infidelity

Wave after wave crashed against the beach, a relentless, metronome-like cadence that pounded at the soft sand. Gobs of sea foam rode the currents and sizzled like frying bacon when it contacted the jagged rocks at the water’s edge. The combined sounds were quite maddening. Not to mention the screeching gulls and the salty air that reeked with the stench of sun-baked, rotting kelp and decaying crustaceans.

On the horizon, a small wooden trawler chugged northward against the powerful surf. Its wooden hull creaked and groaned as the craft strained to tow massive nets laden with rock fish and perch. Sea birds dove in the ship’s wake searching for remnants of bait fish that had been tossed overboard by the crew.

The man wanted to wave his arms and yell. He wanted to scream and to jump up and down. He desperately wanted to catch the eye of the boat’s bearded captain. But try as he might, rigor mortis had pinned his arms to the wet sand.

He’d not been able to move even the smallest muscle since his wife and her lover, that flannel-shirted dockworker from the harbor, had dumped his body there among the sea oats. Somehow she’d managed to slip a massive dose of oleander into his salad. He hadn’t noticed the toxic emerald-green leaves mixed among the spinach and lettuces. She’d done a great job of concealing the killer plant.

It didn’t take long. First came the nausea. No big deal. It happens. But the stomach pains that followed had been horrendous. And the vertigo. Mustn’t forget that.

In the end, there’d been no bright lights or long tunnels. There were no joyous reunions with long lost loved ones. Nothing. He wasn’t even sure if he was dead.

His mouth was locked open, and he tried really hard to scream, but the only thing that came out was a tiny crab seeking a bit of sunshine after its evening meal.

Friday's Heroes - Remembering the fallen officers

The Graveyard Shift extends our condolences to the families of each of these brave officers.

Trooper Marc Castellano, 29

New Jersey State Police

June 6, 2010 – Trooper Marc Castellano was struck by a vehicle and killed while attempting to locate the occupants of an abandoned vehicle beside Highway 195. The female driver of the abandoned car, Diana Hoffman, had been involved in a police pursuit and was later found hiding in the woods. She told officers that she had been with an armed man who’d fled the scene on foot. After an intensive search by law enforcement it was determined that the woman had lied about the man. She was taken into custody and charged with several offenses.

The driver of the car that struck the trooper was not charged.

Trooper Castellano leaves behind a wife and two children.

Officer Joshua Yazzi, 33

United States Department of the Interior – Bureau of Indian Affairs

June 7, 2010 – Officer Joshua Yazzi was killed while responding to assist an ambulance crew with a violent, intoxicated patient. He lost control of his patrol car in a curve causing it to roll over several times before tumbling down a 200 foot embankment. Officer Yazzi was ejected from the car and died at the scene.  He is survived by his wife Jessica and two children, Jaxsen and MaCee.

Entrance to road where fatal accident occurred

Officer Yazzi’s patrol car

Trooper Wesley Brown, 24

Maryland State Police

June 11, 2010 – Trooper Wesley Brown was shot and killed while working off-duty security at a Forestville Applebee’s restaurant. He’d escorted a disorderly patron from the business early in the evening. Later, that same patron was hiding in the parking lot and shot Trooper Wesley as he was leaving the restaurant. The suspect is still at large.

Trooper Wesley is survived by his fiancee.

James O'Neal

Future Schlock
by

James O’Neal (James O. Born)

One of the main reasons I wrote The Human Disguise and The Double Human was to give a voice to the concerns many cops have today. Not the concerns about a rising crime rate but about the insidious administrative changes that can kill effective law enforcement. Part of my duties with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement is to look ahead at the issues we might face in the years to come. These issues are not always related to trends in crime. It’s easy to predict that drug trafficking will increase over the next five years. You can peg certain economic crimes directly to the rise and fall of the economy. The burglary rate can be predicted somewhat based on the size of the population of 15 to 21-year-olds. The more difficult job is predicting what kind of police force will face the challenges of the future.

The Human Disguise

In The Human Disguise I laid the groundwork for a future where all of the worst fears of police officers are rolled into one storyline. A tax structure that collapses causes the consolidation of all police agencies into one department called the Unified Police Force or “UPF.” While on the face of it that doesn’t sound too terrible, in fact, it would eliminate an entire series of checks and balances in the criminal justice system. The agency that I work for has often looked into closed cases when there is evidence of mistakes or other issues. Unlike Law & Order or other TV shows, it’s very rare to find the smoking gun that releases an innocent suspect. More often, we uncover evidence that supports the original investigation. Despite the conspiracy theorists– who are, no doubt, experts at reading newspapers and watching TV– convicted criminals occasionally lie and witnesses step forward. But it is still nice to have more than one agency available to look at crimes. And, as the number of DNA exonerated prisoners attests, mistakes are made. The reality is that the accurate success rate of conviction is still astronomically high.

Almost every police agency in the country complains about a lack of resources and manpower. In both novels I tried to show what happens when this spirals out of control. Crime scene investigators are not called to homicides unless the family of the victim can afford to pay the costs. Databases can no longer be maintained. Fingerprints and DNA are only helpful if they were entered into a database years before, when the economy was still strong. This all adds up to a nightmare scenario for most professional law enforcers.

I took special care in considering the effects of other social problems on the main character, detective Tom Wilner. He, like almost every other police officer in the near future, is a combat veteran of some lingering war. Wilner is a veteran of the Second Iranian war.

Florida has been depopulated by a series of terror attacks and a pandemic. This sparse population cannot support much in the way of public service. This has also reduced crime. That’s why in The Double Human, when a serial killer is discovered, there is virtually no detective with any experience in dealing with the crime. Hardly a crime-free utopia, the state has just fallen on much harsher times.

While I have often counted cops among my fans for my crime novels written as James O. Born, I had no idea they’d feel so strongly about these near-future thrillers, written as James O’Neal. It is exactly these issues that I can explore within the context of science fiction that has touched a nerve among the law enforcement community. Science fiction has a long, proud history of exploring sensitive social issues such as racism. I had not intended to write a future thriller for the purposes of exploring what could be done today to help law enforcement tomorrow, but I’m not opposed to people viewing the novels that way.

I wrote The Human Disguise in 2007, a full year before the financial catastrophe and a year and a half before for Florida’s budget fell into a tremendous deficit. Now, surrounded by talk of limited tax revenue and bills designed to combine some police agencies, I hope I was wrong about the future.

The Double Human

James O. Born is a former U.S. Drug agent and State Law Enforcement agent.

Please take a moment to visit his website here.

Here’s a handy guide for drug slang.

1. Artillery – items used for injecting drugs.

2. Aspirin – powdered cocaine.

3. Author – doctor who writes phony or illegal prescriptions.

4. Babysit – watching over someone during their first, or a bad drug experience.

5. Baked – high on drugs.

6. Base – cocaine

7. Bin laden – heroin

8. Cake – a round chunk-like portion of crack cocaine.

9. Cooking – the process of transforming powder cocaine into crack.

10. Crack – the rock-like form of cocaine.

11. Cracker Jacks – crack users.

12. Crippled – extremely high on drugs.

13. Dart – needle

14. Dime – ten dollars worth of a drug.

15. Drop – swallow drugs.

16. E – ecstasy

17. Egg – crack cocaine

18. Eight ball – 1/8th ounce of a drug.

Eight ball on left. 1/2 ounce on right

19. Ex – ecstasy

20. Fall – arrested

21. Fairy dust – heroin

22. Flake – cocaine

23. Fry sticks – marijuana laced with embalming fluid.

24. G – $1,000

25. Gank – fake crack (it is illegal to sell fake crack).

26. George – heroin

27. Gluey – person who sniffs glue.

28. Groceries – crack cocaine

29. Hamburger helper – Crack cocaine

30. Happy dust – cocaine

31. Harry – herion

32. Heat – the police

33. Hippie crack – inhalants

34. Holding – possessing drugs.

35. Ice – cocaine

36. Ice cube – crack

37. Icing – cocaine

38. Jab – inject a drug.

39. Jelly – cocaine

40. Juggler – dealer

41. K – PCP

42. Kangaroo – Crack

43. Key (ki) – Kilo

44. Kicker – Oxycontin

45. Kissing – exchanging plastic-wrapped drugs from mouth to mouth by kissing.

46. Kit – items used for injecting drugs.

47. Lady – cocaine or herion.

48. Lit up – high on drugs.

49. Loaded – high on drugs.

50. Lucy – LSD

* More drug slang next week.

And for fun… Southern sayings for everyday things…

When someone is in close proximity to something:

“You can’t shake a stick without hittin’ a dead body in here.” (In a morgue).

After eating a large meal:

“I’m as fat as a tick.” Or, “I’m as stuffed as a Christmas turkey.”

Getting ready to fight:

“I’m fixin’ to whup your ass.”

Fixin’ to is also used in any “getting ready to” situation.

“I’m fixin’ to start dinner.”

“I’m fixin’ to write my 1,000 words for the day.”

When someone appears particularly tired.

“He looks like he’s been rode hard and put up wet.”

Or, “He looks like 10 miles of bad road.”

When referring to someone who’s a little less than fortunate in the looks department:

“Bless his heart.”

Someone who can’t seem to find his way:

“He’s as lost as last year’s Easter eggs.”

* These expressions aren’t used by all Southerners, but I was out running a few errands yesterday, made only three brief stops, and heard all of the above in a two-hour period.

Last Week In England With Paul Beecroft

My friend, Paul Beecroft, has spent a good deal of his life in law enforcement, in England. He’s worked Foot Patrol, Area Car, Instant Response Car and also as a Police Motorcyclist. He’s currently a coroner’s investigator and has traveled all over England, Wales, Scotland and even Germany to investigate crimes. Today, Paul sends us the latest scoop about England’s cops and crooks.

Last Week In England

Derrick Bird a 52 year old Taxi Driver left his home in the village of Rowrah, Cumbria, taking with him his .22 Rifle and his Shotgun. This should have just been a normal day but it was not to be. For reasons that are not yet confirmed Derrick Bird shot and killed his twin brother David and then shot and killed the family Solicitor Kevin Commons age 60. This occurs before 10.00 am.

At 10.35 emergency services are despatched to Duke Street in Whitehaven following shots fired. Bird has gunned down fellow taxi drivers killing one.

Bird has left the scene before Police arrive and he has driven off in his Taxi. He drives to the village of Egremont where he shoots and kills 60 year old Kenneth Fishburn on a bridge and also Susan Hughes in her 60’s who had been out shopping.

He then drives towards the village of Wilton and on route shoots and kills a local man Spike Dixon. In the village he then kills Jimmy and Jennifer Jackson

He then headed towards Gosforth where he shoots and kills Garry Purdham at point blank range whilst he was working in a field.

He then moved to Seascale where he kills a 64 year old cyclist Michael Poke and Jane Robinson a lady in her 70’s who was out delivering catalogues. Jamie Clark aged 23 is also shot and killed as he drives through the village.

Around 1.00 pm Cumbria Police find his Taxi which he has now abandoned and some 40 minutes later they find Bird’s body in woods near to the village of Boot.

In total Bird shot and killed 12 people and injured up to 25 others some of whom are in a serious condition.

In total there are 30 crime scenes.

The Queen of England has released a statement saying she is deeply shocked and shares the country’s grief and horror.

Update – 5:07pm 6-7-10

Police officers who frantically chased crazed killer Derrick Bird were forced to abandon their pursuit when he turned his gun on them.

Three unarmed officers followed father-of-two Bird but could not stop the massacre.

Cumbria Police insisted there was never an opportunity to stop the carnage – which left 12 dead.

A neighbourhood policing officer first gave chase after hearing shots in Whitehaven and commandeering a car.

But as the officer raced towards Bird’s car the 52-year-old pointed his gun out of the driver’s window and fired at a passing taxi.

The pursuit was abandoned to help the taxi driver and his female passenger who had been shot.

Two other officers in a police van then took up the chase but stopped when Bird pulled up and pointed his gun at them.

Thinking cabbie Bird was going to open fire the officers ducked for cover behind the dashboard.

They escaped with their lives – but lost sight of the gunman’s grey taxi as he fled.

Bird’s killing spree began in the early hours of Wednesday when he murdered his twin brother David. It is believed this – and the killings of family solicitor Kevin Commons, 60, and fellow cabbie Darren Rewcastle – were sparked by bitter grudges.

Bradford, Yorkshire

Criminology student Stephen Griffiths aged 40 has appeared in Court charged with the murder of three prostitutes.  When the Court asked him to confirm his name he replied “The crossbow cannibal”

Stephen Griffiths

Police and Forensic experts are examining a suitcase reputed to contain knives, hacksaws and some human tissue which has been found in a river near to where parts of a body were found.

An officer carries evidence away from the scene.

Forensics officials search the grounds around Griffiths’ flat.

Human remains were discovered in the River Aire.

Evidence found in the River Aire.

*Mailonline photos

Surrey

 

Peter Wallner a 34 year old Chef is sentenced to Life Imprisonment and is to serve a minimum of 20 years for the murder of his wife Melanie. Wallner killed his wife with a griddle pan and then hid her body in a freezer for 3 years before putting it in a wheelie bin to be collected during the weekly rubbish collections. Her body was discovered when neighbours spotted her foot sticking out of the bin.

*TimesOnline photos

Derbyshire

 

Police were called to an address in Holbrook, Derbyshire. The bodies of Rachael Slack aged 38 and her 23 month old son had been stabbed to death. Her ex boyfriend, 44 year old Andrew Cairns then took his own life.

Rachael Slack

Officers search for evidence outside the home.

Kitty Hawk North Carolina

The town of Kitty Hawk is a nestled in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Many of the locals believe the origin of the town’s name was derived from the Native American name Chickahawk that appeared on settler’s early maps of the area. Land deeds from the 1700’s refer to the settlements as “Kittyhuk,” “Kittyhark,” “KittyHawk,” and “Kitty Hawk.” Others insist the area was named after the “skeeterhawks” (dragonflies) that are prominent in the area. Their thinking is that the pronunciation later evolved into into the present day Kitty Hawk.

In 1903, Orville Wright sent a telegraph announcing the news about the first powered flight. That famous telegraph was sent from from Kitty Hawk. The flight actually took place in nearby Kill Devil Hills.

No matter the history, Kitty Hawk is still one of the most serene places in the country.

Photos by Chris and Stephani Fowler

An El Paso medical examiner was fired after officials learned that he’d lied about his degree and was not eligible for board certification. Fortunately, a death penalty case in which he had testified, has now been recommended to be overturned. The prisoner was scheduled for execution on July 1.

UK – A taxi driver went on a shooting rampage killing 12 people and wounding 11 others before eventually killing himself.

Baltimore – Eight murders over the three day Memorial Day holiday weekend.

Colorado Springs – Remodeling contractors found the body of a young girl in the crawl space of house. Police took DNA samples and are now searching for the last occupants of the home.

On The Border – Border patrol agents used a stun gun during the arrest of a man entering the country illegally. The man died and the medical examiner has ruled the death as a homicide. An autopsy revealed the presence of illegal drugs in the man’s system.

Secret Service officers struggle with two men who refused to get out of the street to allow President Obama’s motorcade pass. The president was returning to The White House from a school event for one of his daughters.

Laredo, Texas – Police stopped a truck containing a very large supply of assault weapons, bayonets, and ammunition. The driver of truck had been transporting the illegal weapons to Mexico.

Pennsylvania – A Kennett Square police officer is in jail awaiting trial for sexual assault. His bond was set at $2 million.

Seminole County, Fl. – An apartment complex security guard flagged down a patrol officer to report a suspicious person. The officer spoke with the suspect who then drew a gun and shot the officer. The officer is doing well and is expected to recover. The suspect remains at large.

Border Patrol photo

South Texas – Border Patrol agents seized a truck disguised as a sheriff’s office vehicle. The driver, who was dressed as a deputy sheriff, had been attempting to smuggle a load of marijuana across the border from Mexico.

* This has been a great week. We have no reports of fallen officers.