Domestic Violence

Domestic violence isn’t limited to physical abuse.

It comes in many forms, such as threats, stalking and intimidation, name calling, threatening the children or pets, threatening suicide to get you to do something, preventing you from getting a job or even going out of the house, withholding money, and preventing you from contacting family and friends.

Unwanted sexual activity is also a form of domestic violence.

Many times, the abuser uses domestic violence to maintain control and power over his wife or girlfriend (most victims are women). Some of the means/abuse used to control a spouse are:

1) Emotional abuse—make her feel as if she’s crazy, or unworthy.

2) Controlling what she does, who she sees, where she goes, and even what she reads.

3) Make her believe the abuse is her fault.

4) Using the children—threatens to take them away or make them feel guilty about them.

5) Uses money—won’t allow her to work, makes her ask for money, and takes her money.

6) Treats her like a servant—doesn’t allow her to make decisions.

7) Physical violence—hitting, slapping, biting, choking, kicking, threatening her with a weapon, (or using a weapon against her).

If you or someone you know is being abused

Please don’t wait. Call.

Domestic abuse hotline: 1-800-799-7233

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Please don’t wait.

Call.

Domestic abuse hotline: 1-800-799-7233

 

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anthrax poison. the silent killer

Viruses and Bacteria as Weapons

In the grand scheme of murder, knives and guns pale in comparison to the instruments death that are nearly invisible to the human eye. Long before man shaped the first stone into a weapon, viruses and bacteria silently killed humans and animals alike. These tiny but deadly organisms can shut down the body’s entire operating system, and they can destroy every single organ in the body.

A terrorist attack involving deadly viruses and bacteria is a threat that looms over the heads of government officials. After all, a single, minute particle of either of the killer bugs, such as anthrax, botulism, tularemia, bubonic plague, ricin, ebola, and hantavirus, can be easily cultured and multiplied many times over. This process can be performed in any home in the country with minimal time, training, and equipment.

How easy? Well, a potential terrorist could simply order a starter bug from a laboratory supply company (a reference lab), much like a reader orders a book from Amazon. The bug is shipped to the buyer as a freeze-dried sample in the regular U.S. mail, or with any of the other popular shipping companies.

frozen viruses and bacteria as weapons

Frozen “bugs” are easily shipped via regular mail services

Frozen “bugs” are easily shipped via regular mail services

Of course, reference lab customers must have proper credentials to place an order for anthrax. However, packages could easily be intercepted by people with ill-intentions against the U.S. and its citizens. And, how difficult would it be for a potential terrorist to gain employment in the biotech industry (new drug discovery)? This is a field that’s comprised of scientists who work with these bugs on a daily basis with very little accountability, if any, in many instances. Many of these science-folks come to us from other countries and would be virtually undetectable as terrorists until it was too late. And, if all else failed for the terrorist, he could find the bacteria in its natural environment, growing naturally on dead plant material and in fresh water or rainwater.

Anthrax is caused by a spore-forming bacteria, Bacillus anthracis. Humans can become infected through skin contact, ingestion or inhalation of spores from infected animals or animal products. Anthrax can be delivered as a powder, such as in the cases of the letters mailed to U.S. officials. However, a better, more deadly method of delivery would be in aerosol form. Once the bacteria are inhaled, the disease progresses so rapidly that, once the symptoms began to appear, it would most likely be too late to prevent the victim’s death.

anthrax-poison

Skin lesion caused by anthrax

Anthrax Symptoms

Symptoms of anthrax contamination include, skin infections, fever, chills, fluid in the lungs, difficulty breathing, nausea, weight loss, fever, diarrhea, and abdominal bleeding. Contrary to the belief of some people, inhaled anthrax contamination is not contagious. It cannot be passed from one person to another.

Anthrax study requires that the work be conducted in a Biosafety Level 2 laboratory (BSL 2 labs are required to have waste contamination equipment on hand). However, if the study is to be performed on anthrax in aerosol form, a BSL 3 lab is required (BSL 3 labs require testing in enclosed equipment with high-tech ventilation systems. Access is limited to only those working on current experiments).

A 2008 anthrax investigation involving aggressive interview tactics by police investigators led to a bit of public protest. As experts, FBI agent and behavioral scientist Clint Van Zandt and I were once called on to discuss those tactics on NPR’s Talk of the Nation. You may remember Agent Van Zandt from his involvement in high-profile cases, such as Waco/David Koresh, Timothy McVeigh, and The Unabomber.

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Friday's Heroes - Remembering the fallen officers

deputy-curtis-bartlettDeputy Sheriff Curtis Allen Bartlett, 32

Carroll County Virginia Sheriff’s Office

March 9, 2017 – Deputy Curtis Bartlett was killed in a vehicle crash while responding to assist other deputies and Virginia State Police Troopers who were in pursuit. The offender was apprehended and charged with driving on a revoked license resulting in death, and other crimes.

Deputy Bartlett is survived by his parents and four siblings.

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clumsy cops

Have a Nice Trip, See You Next Fall

Yes, police officers look sharp in their neatly pressed and properly-creased uniforms, shiny shoes, and polished hardware. They stand straight and tall. They move with purpose. They’re as steady as a boulder and have nerves of steel. They’re fearless.

Well, most of them.

However …

Did you know there are cops who have two left feet? You know what I mean … clumsy cops. Every department has them—butterfingered badge-wearers, klutzy K-9 handlers, ungraceful undercover officers, lumbering lieutenants, stumbling sergeants, and, well, you get the idea.

Police officers are no different than anyone else. They’re human. They trip. They stumble. They spill and drop things. And they sometimes fall.

So what happens when one of the “bumbling blue” has a slight faux pas while at work?

Shallow Grave Workshop, Writers' Police Academy

Shallow Grave Workshop, Writers’ Police Academy

Let’s dig into this unusual topic and see what we can uncover

Everyone has their own secret weapons for fixing life’s little problems, right? You know what I’m talking about … problems such as removing candle wax from a tablecloth by placing the soiled material in the freezer for a couple of hours, and then … presto! The wax scrapes right off.

Wait! What if the wax dripped onto your brand new carpet? No problem. Simply fill a metal pan with ice cubes and place directly over the wax. Soon, the wax freezes and you’ll be able to whack it a few times with a hammer, breaking the hardened wax into bits and pieces. Pick up the shattered wax and discard.

Okay, I understand the confusion. you want to know what in the world household hints have to do with cops? Well, we already know there are cops who encounter “problems” and must be ready to tackle them on a moments notice.

Secret Weapons for fixing a Cop’s Little problems

A broken name tag

1. You’re on patrol in the “rough” part of town when you roll up on a couple of guys who’re in the midst of a pretty good fist-fight. So you call in your location, asking for backup, and then dive in to separate the two. As always, the little one is as slippery as an eel swimming in a vat of cooking oil, and the big one delivers a jackhammer-like punch with his left hand. Unfortunately, he’s right-handed and the blows coming from that ham-size fist feel like incoming missile strikes. But, you’re a survivor and you somehow manage to get cuffs on both men. Afterward, you’re sitting in your patrol car telling your backup to slow down, you’ve got everything under control (as if they were hurrying), and you notice your name tag is hanging by only one metal clasp.

Badge clasps - fixing cops little problems

So, what do you do? Easy fix. Pencil erasers.

Quick fix for a broken badge...pencil erasers

Tear the eraser from one of the pencils you keep in the console and push it over the end of the pin. It’ll hold the name tag snugly in place until the end of the shift.

Use a Handheld CB Radio

2. You’re parked on the side of the interstate waiting for an approaching pursuit. The last report from the state to your south indicated their officers were headed your way, chasing a silver Honda driven by a murder suspect. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could somehow contact the drivers of those two passing tractor-trailers and ask them to occupy and block both lanes and then slow down to a near crawl? Then the suspect would at least have to hit the breaks for a minute or two, giving the officers time to catch up to him. Well, why don’t you use the handheld CB radio you picked up at the yard sale a few weeks ago. Power it up and give a good ‘ol “Breaker, Breaker, Smokey needs assistance,” shout out. The operators of those eighteen wheelers are normally more than happy to help out the driver of a “plain brown wrapper.” 10-4?

Spare Handcuff Key

Belt Keeper

Belt Keeper

3. There’s nothing worse than being on the losing end of a fight, especially when you’re wearing a police uniform. Well, maybe there is one thing that’s just a wee bit worse than a black eye and bruised ego. And that’s losing a fight and getting handcuffed with your own cuffs! Imagine the teasing that’s headed your way. Can’t let that happen. No way!

 

You’ve got to get out of the cuffs before your co-workers find you sitting in a dark alley with your hands bound behind your back.

Be prepared, guys.

A little preventive medicine here and you’ll never be caught with your pants down again. Simply duct-tape a spare handcuff key to the inside of your duty belt, where it meets the small of your back. That’s the best spot because you can reach it with either hand. It might take a few minutes to wiggle the key from beneath the tape, but what else have you got to do? By the way, some duty belts have small cuff key pockets fitted into the back of the belts.

Also, a handcuff key could easily attach to a belt keeper.

Belt keepers loop around the duty belt and the belt holding up the officer’s pants.

Without belt keepers the duty belt would easily and quickly fall down to the ankles, especially when running/chasing someone through a dark alley.

Two belt keepers positioned between handcuff cases

Two belt keepers positioned between handcuff cases

Leg Irons for Big Men

4. Don’t you just hate it when you finally get the big man under control and suddenly learn that your cuffs are too small to fit his tree-trunk-size wrists? So what do you do? If you let go he’s going to start pounding on your sore head, again.

Here’s an idea. Send your partner back to the car (while you’re hanging on to the thug like a rodeo clown trying to calm a buckin’ bronco) to retrieve a pair of leg irons, the ones you use for transporting dangerous criminals to court. They’re large enough to hold anyone, including the guy who’s now about to toss you through your own car window if your partner doesn’t hurry.

Double Up On Skinny Minnie

5. And then there’s a guy whose wrists are so small they slip free of the cuffs no matter how tightly you ratchet them. Again, there’s a solution. Hold his arms together behind his back (hands facing opposite directions) and lock one single cuff over both of Skinny-Minnie’s tiny wrists. Then attach the second cuff to the little fellow’s belt or belt loop.

Break out the Spice Rack

6.  At night (stakeouts, etc.), when you need to use light, keep one eye closed to preserve your night vision.

20170307_114521Meat Tenderizer

7. Finally, you’ve just left a particularly gruesome murder scene and notice another pesky blood stain on the sleeve of your uniform shirt. Now what do you do? After all, the department only issued you five shirts and four pair of pants.

First, calm down. Next, simply break out the emergency can of meat tenderizer you keep in the glove compartment and apply a fair amount of it to the stained area.

MeatPounder2

No, silly. Not that kind of meat tenderizer. This …

Then, with the shirt material properly pounded treated, rush home, using lights and siren, if possible, because time is not a friend in this situation, and immediately toss the garment into the wash. I’m kidding, course, about the use of lights and sirens. They’re for real emergency use only. You know, murders, robberies, and the times when sudden restroom urges hit and you’re three miles from the nearest public facility.

Then kick back, relax, and enjoy the rest of the night. Wait a minute! Is that … yes, it’s a gravy stain on your new pants. Better sprinkle a little artificial sweetener on it to soak up the grease. And isn’t that a red wine stain? Where’s the salt shaker?

Might as well remove the green gunk from the bullets while you’re at it. A little paste made from vinegar, flour, and salt should have the brass shining like new money, all 46 rounds.

Man, are you ever going to be ready for the 0800 inspection …

Hey, hold on! This isn’t our usual inspection. What are you guys up to???

I want my lawyer!!

20170305_152127 2

 

 

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Origami Shields

Lightweight Protection for Officers: Origami Shields

Officer I. Aintskeert responded to back-up Ben Knowsitall, his shift partner of twenty years. Knowsitall was pinned-down behind his vehicle at a domestic violence call, where a drugged-up homeowner/professional wife beater opened fire the moment the unsuspecting officer parked in the driveway, got out, and started walking toward the house.

The situation facing Knowsitall was precisely the reason the academy training officer emphasized that responding officers should always park at the street to give themselves time to assess, and to not rush blindly into an ambush. But complacency often reigns, especially after several years on the job without a single bullet wound. Knowsitall regretted that he’d let down his guard.

As every officer within a ten mile radius raced to assist, Officer Aintskeert pulled his patrol car near his buddy to help shield him from the barrage of bullets zinging precariously close to his shaved head. “Hey, it’s sexy,” he’d told his coworkers the day he hairlessly returned to work after Miss Ethel of Ethel’s Beauty and Chitterling  Emporium spent the better part of the morning shaving, clipping, and weed-wacking on his football-shaped dome.

Between snips and cuts, she’d taken time to stir the barnyard-stench-inducing pot of boiling entrails on the stove situated conveniently beside her styling station. His buddies had feigned disgust as he told of how he’d looked on as she used a wooden spoon to fish a few of his freshly-shorn hairs from the steaming cauldron.

However, the abhorrence lasted only a few minutes, because when the noon hour rolled around, with mouths in full watering mode and bellies growling like angry lions, they’d all practically run to Miss Ethel’s place to purchase a fresh dish of yummy, slimy, and stinky chitterlings.

Miss Ethel definitely knew the way to a cop’s stomach, and their hearts. She also knew how to tickle their funny bones when it came to preparing porcine delicacies. Sure, the “pig thing” is offensive to cops, but they simply loved Miss Ethel’s cooking so much that they overlooked her quirky sense of humor …

1457871948jb2ji“Never fear, Ben, ’cause I. Aintskeert is here!” said the cocky newcomer to the firefight. He continued his attempts to calm his distraught partner while he pawed through the contents in the trunk of his patrol car. He shoved aside two shotguns, a sniper rifle, a stack of traffic cones, a lemon yellow raincoat, and a small cooler containing his lunch—two PP&Js, a bag of corn chips, and a large Zippy-Pop Orange Soda. Beneath those things was a black vinyl bag, the object for which he searched so diligently. He pulled out the container, set it on the pavement, and extracted its contents … a brand new Bullet-Proof Origami Shield.

Officer Aintskeert unfolded the shield and placed it between Knowsitall and the caveman-looking madman who was still lobbing .357 rounds in their direction. When a round pinged off the edge of Aintskeert’s left front fender, he, too, dove behind the flexible shield. Twenty minutes later SWAT arrived and terminated the threat. Well, the guy ran out of bullets and surrendered, but it sounded way “cooler” to say “terminated the threat,” right?

Okay, that was a bit goofy, but the origami shield is very real.

Designed by BYU engineers, the lightweight folding shield is made of 12 layers of Kevlar and is capable of stopping bullets from 9mm, .357 Magnum, and .44 Magnum pistols.

How the Origami Shield Works

Origami Shield

Simplicity is a must when on the receiving end of gunfire. Officers often have only one “shot” at getting it right!

Origami Shield

Origami Shield

The new origami shield provides lightweight protection for one or multiple officers. The origami shield weighs only 55 lbs., whereas its metal counterparts could weigh as much as 100 lbs., or more. And, the latter does not offer as much coverage. For example …

13975259_10154325298753930_5585732420593924171_o

Author Lee Goldberg ~ 2016 Writers’ Police Academy. Notice that Lee’s lower legs are exposed to potential gunfire.

Screen Shot 2017-03-06 at 11.52.04 AM

Building Searches – 2012 Writers’ Police Academy. Once upstairs and prior to entering the condo to search for bad guys, WPA recruits learned how to effectively utilize the shields and their weapons while safely conducting the search.

 

Friday's Heroes - Remembering the fallen officers

deputy-sheriff-michael-butlerDeputy Sheriff Michael Butler, 39

Lowndes county Georgia Sheriff’s Office

February 25, 2017 – Deputy Michael Butler was killed in a crash with a semi truck while responding to domestic violence call. The truck crossed the center line and Deputy Butler had no chance of avoiding the collision. The driver of the truck stopped and pulled Deputy Butler from his burning patrol car, but it was too late to save him.


agent-rickey-odonaldSpecial Agent Ricky O’Donald, 54

Federal Bureau of Investigation

February 17, 2017 – Agent Ricky O’Donald suffered a fatal heart attack subsequent to completing the agency’s physical assessment testing.

He is survived by his wife and daughter.


c_haverly.pngDeputy Sergeant Kevin Haverly, 26

Greene County New York Sheriff’s Office

February 28, 2017 – Deputy Sergeant Kevin Haverly was killed in a car crash. It was at the end of a graveyard shift when his patrol vehicle left the roadway and struck a utility pole.

He is survived by his wife, three children, mother, and sister.

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Detectives

Detective Lofland

Like all rookie investigators, I couldn’t wait to prove my worthiness. I wanted to catch the case that would surely grace the pages of detective magazines and grocery store tabloids everywhere.

I was a brand new detective with a shiny gold badge and several years of experience behind it. Bad To The Bone, as George Thorogood would eventually sing. In fact, why don’t you click on the video below and crank up the volume while reading the rest of this piece. You know, to set the mood …

Ready? Let’s do this …

Being a detective was cool, or so I thought. I even thought of growing my hair a bit longer to get away from the traditional “cop look” and to amplify the level of cool I knew must’ve been oozing from my pores like oil from a newly-tapped well. Some say that once you become a cop you’ll never lose the look, but I was sure going to try.

Standing in my new office, one featuring a desk all to myself and a real honest-to-goodness door with a knob and everything, a door I could close whenever I wanted, I began to unpack the boxes of personal items—notepads, pens, certificates and framed photos for the wall, and a few other cop odds and ends.

As you probably guessed, I’d arrived over an hour early for my shift. I was excited and I’d wanted to have a bit of alone time to savor the moment. And there was I was, experiencing the very same smells, sights, and sounds I’d experienced many, many times before when bringing suspects to the detectives for interviews. But doggone it, from that second forward those smells and sights and sounds belonged to me … and, well, they also belonged to the other detectives who quickly let me know that my stuff was in their way and that I’d parked in the wrong spot and that I was on call the following weekend and that the others had first picks of vacation weeks and that I’d be on call on Christmas and, and, and …  It. Was. Heaven!

The desk phone rang. Uh, oh. How should I answer it? Would it be too presumptuous to say Detective Lofland? After all, I’d only officially been on the job for … uh, ten minutes. But that’s what was on the name plate on the door and the one on my desk. So Detective Lofland it was. After all, according to Mr. Thorogood, when you’re “bad to the bone,” even kings and queens step aside when you walk the streets, so I grabbed the receiver and answered … “Hello.”

My First Case

Okay, so I chickened out and blew the first opportunity to say my name and new title out loud, but the phone call was from dispatch so it really wouldn’t have mattered to them if I’d said I was Abraham Lincoln or Bugs Bunny. They just wanted to pass along the information and get it off their hands.

The dispatcher said patrol officers requested a detective at the scene of an armed robbery. A cashier at a local convenience store told the uniforms a tall man wearing a hoodie aimed a rusty-looking handgun at her and then demanded all the cash in the register. Since I was the only detective around at the time, I said I’d take this mind-blowingly complex case. Can you sense the paint drying from where you sit? It gets better. They always get better.

Anyway, four or five marked units sat at various angles in the parking lot of the convenience store, all parked somewhat near the entrances. As usual … overkill from a bunch of officers who had nothing better to do other than counting the ticks of the clock while waiting for another graveyard shift to pass by.

I pulled in behind one of the patrol cars and slid out of my well-used but new-to-me Chevrolet Caprice, realizing this was my first assignment wearing a coat and tie. I also realized how wonderfully cool and comfortable I felt as opposed to wearing a uniform and hot Kevlar vest.

The clerk was still a bit hyper and quite shaken (“shaken and stirred” as one of my old captains used to say when describing nervous victims). She said the robber became extremely angry when she couldn’t open the cash drawer on the first try (she said her mind went blank when she saw the gun), so he climbed over the counter and started yanking on the register until it broke free of its mounts and wires. Then he grabbed the register and ran outside across the parking lot to an old blue Ford. As she pushed the panic button to summon police, the robber sped off heading south on Main.

Fingerprint KitI had the clerk lock the doors to keep out customers and the swarm of looky-loos who’d begun to gather outside, and went to my car to retrieve my fingerprint kit. I didn’t see any need to call out anyone else merely to dust for prints and search for bits of trace evidence that were probably nonexistent.

I set the fingerprint kit (a fishing tackle box filled with powders, brushes, lifters and tape) on the countertop well away from where the register used to be, and then slipped on a pair of blue latex gloves.

That’s when I saw the wallet. It was an older wallet. Well-worn and well-used. The familiar circular print embedded in the leather told me the owner believed in practicing safe sex. I reached down and picked it up, asking the clerk if it belonged to her? I knew her answer before she spoke. It wasn’t hers.

I thought there was no way this could be that simple. However, I opened the wallet, pulled out a Virginia drivers license (back then Virginia used a person’s social security number as their official driver’s license number), and asked the clerk if the man in the picture was the man who’d robbed her. “Yes,” she’d said. “No doubt about it. That’s him.”

The idiot dropped his wallet at the scene of the crime. Duh…

So I packed up my things, pulled the gloves from hands, and headed to my car. I called for backup and then I and a parade of marked patrol cars all drove to the address on the robber’s driver’s license. Lo and behold, parked in the driveway was an old blue Ford. Behind the driver’s seat in plain view, was a nice, shiny cash register. Sitting behind the steering wheel was a snoring, tall man wearing a hoodie. On the seat next to him was an old, rusted revolver with wooden grips. Not only was this crook dumb, he was either too cheap or too poor to get himself a decent weapon.

Screen Shot 2017-03-01 at 11.12.21 AMI opened the car door, slowly so as to not wake the sleeping beauty, and then grabbed the robber’s hand and arm and pulled him outside to the ground where I and a patrol officer quickly applied handcuffs to the robber’s wrists.

I learned later the bad guy had been on the tail end of a two-day crack binge when he robbed the store, probably to get some cash to keep the high going. However, since he was well on his way down, he simply crashed when he arrived home, which made the arrest about as simple and easy as they come.

And the excitement continued. Like the the times when …

I once worked an arson case where the firebug also dropped his wallet at the scene. Again, it was a simple matter of driving to the address on the driver’s license where we found the big dummy at home eating a bowl of Captain Crunch cereal.

2011-07-06_12-37-11_553And then there was the time when four teenage burglars entered a business to steal whatever they could haul away. The first little darlin’ made his way to the roof and then slid down a large drain pipe into my waiting arms. I had to send in my dog to nab the others, and nab one he did. Well, let’s just say that my four-legged partner seemed to enjoy the taste of fresh “rump” roast.

Oh, and then there was the man who broke into a store, took off his mask, and walked straight to the surveillance camera, looking directly into the lens before covering it with his stocking cap/mask.

When he finished gathering items he went back to the camera to retrieve his cap, which he used to wipe and rub the recording device (doing away with prints, I suppose), again, staring directly into the lens. I recognized this genius as someone who’d been arrested numerous times for B&E’s. Not the sharpest bandit on the block.

Of course, time marched on and the cases became more complicated than arresting two-bit B&E guys. Soon I had more murder, kidnapping, narcotics, and sexual assault cases than you could shake a stick at, but I’d still occasionally come across one where the crook was, well, let’s just say he was not too bright. So I, and other officers, arrested him over and over again, and he’d go to jail or prison for while to work in the institution’s kitchen or furniture shop until his time was up. Then he’d come home and start breaking and climbing through windows and doors all over again.

Of course, ten stints in the prison woodworking shop and a not-so-bright bad guy could have a difficult time using lock picks and other burglar tools.

 

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