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Porn Users Forum » Success. California murder suspect and daughter killed in shootout. |
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09-28-22 05:19am - 817 days | Original Post - #1 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Success. California murder suspect and daughter killed in shootout. It's not yet clear who killed the murder suspect. Or who killed the murder suspect's daughter. The murder suspect's daughter was wearing a helmet and tactical gear, and the cops didn't realize who she was while she ran toward the cops. The cops might have killed her. Was the 15-year-old girl was armed? Not revealed. The cops might have shot her. How many times was she shot? Not revealed. Who shot her? Does it matter? The suspect (the father is the murder suspect) is dead, so case closed. ---- ---- California murder suspect, teen daughter killed in shootout Associated Press STEFANIE DAZIO and ROBERT JABLON September 27, 2022, 8:37 PM LOS ANGELES (AP) — An abducted 15-year-old girl and her father — a fugitive wanted in the death of the teen's mother — were both killed amid a shootout with law enforcement Tuesday on a highway in California's high desert, authorities said. San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus did not specify whether Savannah Graziano was shot by the responding deputies. Deputies had been in pursuit of the father's pickup truck, and multiple shots were fired out of the rear window during the chase. The vehicle became disabled around Hesperia, and the firefight ensued. Dicus said the girl was wearing tactical gear as she exited a truck's passenger side and ran toward the sheriff's deputies. The deputies did not initially realize it was the girl who was running toward them, Dicus said, because she was wearing a helmet and a military-style vest that can hold armored plates. She was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead shortly before noon. This undated photo provided by the City of Fontana Police Department shows Savannah Graziano. This undated photo provided by the City of Fontana Police Department shows Savannah Graziano. Her father, 45-year-old Anthony John Graziano, was found in the driver's seat and pronounced dead at the scene. A rifle was found inside the car. Graziano allegedly killed Tracy Martinez, 45, on Monday in a domestic violence incident in the city of Fontana, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) south of Hesperia, according to Fontana police Sgt. Chris Surgent. Family members told investigators that the couple had been going through a divorce. Investigators had issued an Amber Alert after Graziano fled with his daughter. He had been described as armed and dangerous. On Tuesday, a 911 caller reported seeing the Nissan Frontier in Barstow, according the sheriff's department. In the original killing, officers had responded at around 7:30 a.m. Monday to reports of gunfire, and found the victim with multiple gunshot wounds at a home, police said in a statement. Martinez was rushed to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Tuesday’s crime scene caused major backups along Interstate 15. This undated photo provided by the City of Fontana Police Department shows Anthony John Graziano. This undated photo provided by the City of Fontana Police Department shows Anthony John Graziano. | |
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09-28-22 01:24pm - 816 days | #2 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Was the shooting of the girl justified? Cops are taught to shoot to kill, not to wound. Legally, the cops are probably shielded by law from killing the girl. That is the way most cases are handled. The exceptions are rare, but sometimes cops face civil or criminal charges for killing someone. But if the girl was unarmed, what was the justification for killing the girl? Shoot first, and ask questions later? Since the girl is dead, she can't answer too many details of why she was killed. And the cops are saying the girl might have been shooting at them. No proof, just cops giving their side of the argument. No cops have stated they were shooting at the girl. What will the medical examine report? The sheriff, Dicus, said the father and possibly the daughter were shooting at the police. Does he have any proof the daughter was shooting at the police? Or is he just speculating, and giving a reason why the cops might have killed her. So it's just a case of over-excited cops firing their guns at a suspect. ------ ------ Abducted teen killed running towards police during wild shootout between cops and her murderer father Police said officers did not realise it was Savannah Graziano, 15, running towards them in a helmet and military vest. An abducted 15-year-old girl and her father - a fugitive wanted over the death of the teen’s mother - were both killed amid an intense shootout with police on Tuesday on a highway in California’s high desert. San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus did not specify whether Savannah Graziano - who was wearing a helmet and a military-style vest as she ran towards officers during the firefight - was shot by the responding deputies or her father Anthony John Graziano, 45. Graziano had allegedly killed his estranged wife the day before and abducted their daughter. Investigators had issued an Amber Alert after Graziano fled. He was described as armed and dangerous. A 911 caller reported seeing the suspect’s Nissan Frontier around Barstow on Tuesday, according the sheriff’s department. Deputies located the pickup truck and chased it on the highway for about 70km. Savannah Graziano, 15, and her father Anthony Graziano, died in the shootout with police. Throughout the chase, Graziano — and possibly his daughter as well — was “constantly shooting back at the deputies” through the truck’s rear window, Dicus said. The shooter put several rounds through a patrol car’s windshield and later disabled a second pursuing vehicle, the sheriff said. The pickup truck became disabled on the shoulder of a highway in the city of Hesperia, and the firefight ensued. Dicus said the girl was wearing tactical gear as she exited a truck’s passenger side and ran toward the sheriff’s deputies. She fell to the ground amid the gunfire. The deputies did not initially realise it was the girl who was running toward them, Dicus said, because she was wearing a helmet and a military-style vest that can hold armoured plates. Anthony John Graziano was wanted over the death of his estranged wife. Anthony John Graziano was wanted over the death of his estranged wife. Credit: City of Fontana Police Department /AP She was taken to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. Her father was found in the driver’s seat and pronounced dead at the scene. A rifle was found inside the car. One deputy was injured by shrapnel during the firefight, Dicus said. Graziano allegedly killed Tracy Martinez, 45, on Monday morning in a domestic violence event in the city of Fontana, near San Bernardino, according to Fontana police Sergeant Chris Surgent. Family members told investigators the couple had been going through a divorce. Martinez was rushed to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead. | |
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09-28-22 02:08pm - 816 days | #3 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
The facts come out. The murdered girl was forced to wear a helmet and tactical gear, because the cops had a bet who could put her down first. And another bet on who would fire the fatal shot. The winners of the bets have not yet been announced. So the money is being held by the sheriff, who will announce the winners at a meeting of the cops involved. Just speculation, of course. The official report has not yet been released. | |
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09-28-22 02:17pm - 816 days | #4 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Inmate serving life for fatal Vegas bombing escapes prison. But not to worry: the cops will hunt this man down, and either shoot to kill, or, capture him, because he was being held in a medium-security prison. Medium security, since he was only serving a life sentence. They realized he was missing after conducting a head count. Which took place a few days after he escaped. I guess they only do a head count every few days, since prisoners are supposed to stay in prison. ------ ------ Inmate serving life for fatal Vegas bombing escapes prison Associated Press September 28, 2022, 7:57 AM LAS VEGAS (AP) — Authorities were searching Tuesday for a 42-year-old convicted bombmaker who escaped from a Nevada prison where he was serving a life sentence for a deadly 2007 explosion outside a Las Vegas Strip resort. Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered an investigation into the incident after he said late Tuesday his office learned the escapee had been missing from the medium-security prison since early in the weekend. “This is unacceptable,” Sisolak said in a statement. Officials didn't realize until Tuesday morning Porfirio Duarte-Herrera was missing during a head count at Southern Desert Correctional Center near Las Vegas. A state Department of Corrections statement said search teams were looking for him. Duarte-Herrera, from Nicaragua, was convicted in 2010 of killing a hot dog stand vendor using a motion-activated bomb in a coffee cup atop a car parked at the Luxor hotel-casino. Records show his co-defendant, Omar Rueda-Denvers, remained in custody Tuesday. The 47-year-old from Guatemala is serving a life sentence at a different Nevada prison for murder, attempted murder, explosives and other charges. A Clark County District Court jury spared both men from the death penalty in the slaying of Willebaldo Dorantes Antonio, whom prosecutors identified as the boyfriend of Rueda-Denvers’ ex-girlfriend. Prosecutors said jealousy was the motive for the attack on the top deck of a two-story parking structure. The blast initially raised fears of a terrorist attack on the Strip. Officials described Duarte-Herrera as 5 feet, 4 inches tall and 135 pounds, with brown eyes and brown hair. Sisolak said his office ordered corrections officials to “conduct and complete a thorough investigation into this event as quickly as possible.” “This kind of security lapse cannot be permitted and those responsible will be held responsible,” he said. | |
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09-28-22 02:29pm - 816 days | #5 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Woman hit by train while in police car is out of hospital. The woman has multiple injuries, and is currently bed-ridden. I assume the woman was a suspect for the road-rage incident, which is why she was hand-cuffed and placed in the back of the cop car. But as far as I can tell, the woman was never told why she was being held, while she was arrested (I assume she was arrested, since they handcuffed her and put her in the back of a cop car). Maybe they told her the reason while she was in the hospital. But no reason was reported for stopping a cop car on a railroad crossing while a train was coming down the line. As far as I know, it's illegal to park a car on a railroad crossing. Except maybe cops have special rights. Who is supposed to pay for the crashed police car? My best guess: local taxpayers. Not the idiot cops who parked the car. ----- ----- GREELEY, Colo. — A 20-year-old woman who was seriously injured when the parked police patrol vehicle she was detained in was struck by a freight train in northern Colorado has been released from the hospital. Yareni Rios-Gonzalez, of Greeley, is recovering at home with nine broken ribs, a broken arm, a fractured sternum and numerous other injuries to her head and back, her attorney, Paul Wilkinson, told KUSA-TV. “She is bedridden. She can move around a little bit. She also has a fractured leg that she wasn’t initially aware of,” he said. “She’s still really, really hurt.” Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to a report of a road rage incident involving a firearm in Fort Lupton on Sept. 16. A Platteville police officer stopped Rios-Gonzalez’s car just past a set of railroad tracks and parked the patrol vehicle on the crossing. She was placed in the back of the police vehicle, which was hit by the train as officers were searching her car. Police bodycam and dashcam video shows officers scrambling as the train approaches and slams into the patrol vehicle, which is parked squarely on the tracks. One officer says, “Oh my God," multiple times and another yells, "stay back,” as the train's horn blares before the crash. Bodycam footage shows officers running toward the mangled and crushed patrol vehicle through what appears to be a debris field left by the impact. The Fort Lupton Police Department is investigating the road rage report, while the Colorado State Patrol is investigating the crash. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation is looking into the woman’s injury while she was in police custody. No one has been charged in the alleged road rage incident or the crash. | |
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09-29-22 03:05am - 816 days | #6 | |
LKLK (0)
Active User Posts: 1,583 Registered: Jun 26, '19 Location: CA |
Black man sues cops after a White cop uses a stun gun on him while the Black man was strapped to a chair. The Black man says he used to feel respect for the law. But now, after getting tased while strapped to a chair, the Black man now feels fear and distrust towards cops. This is not right. The White cop should have pulled out his 357 Magnum, or his 44 Magnum (Dirty Harry's weapon of choice), and started blasting away. That would have prevented the Black man from suing. Cops are supposed to stand together. But the sheriff threw the cop who used the taser under the bus, saying the cop alone bears responsibility, and none of the rest of the department had anything to do with the Black man being tased or mistreated. ----- ----- 'Now I have fear': Black man sues after sergeant used stun gun while he was fully restrained NBC Universal Deon J. Hampton and Erik Ortiz September 27, 2022, 5:35 PM DENVER — A Black man who was fully restrained in a chair when a white sheriff’s sergeant in Boulder County, Colorado, used a Taser on him alleges race was a “motivating factor” in the decision to use excessive force, according to a newly filed federal lawsuit. The plaintiff, Travis Cole, says the incident on the night of Sept. 21, 2020, at the Boulder County Jail has left him traumatized and distrustful of law enforcement. “I had a fine respect for officers of the law, but now I have a fear,” Cole, 34, told NBC News on Monday. “I don’t feel they’re here to protect and serve.” The sergeant who deployed the stun gun, Christopher Mecca, resigned in the wake of the incident in lieu of termination and was arrested on misdemeanor counts of third-degree assault and official misconduct. A jury convicted him in December 2021 and he was sentenced to probation. Cole’s attorney, Mari Newman, said it was a failure of training on the part of the department and Mecca’s superiors for allowing “unconstitutional” conduct to occur. Mecca “made a conscious decision to use force in a way that he thought he could get away with,” Newman said. “He took Travis’ race into account when deciding what kind of excessive force to use against him.” Before his encounter with law enforcement, Cole, of Rogers, Arkansas, said he had been drinking to celebrate his birthday with his then-girlfriend in Longmont, northeast of Boulder. At the time, he was considering moving to Colorado. But when the pair began arguing that night, police were called. Cole was arrested on a domestic violence charge and transferred to the Boulder County Jail. (Newman said that the charge in his case was later dropped.) The Boulder County Sheriff’s Office had said that Cole was intoxicated and had been “physically combative” with the arresting officers that night. At the jail, he was strapped in a chair. He told NBC News that the officers started being “rough” with him by pulling and grabbing his neck, and that Mecca looked at him strangely and provoked him with name-calling. In an edited three-minute security video provided by Newman and taken from inside the jail, deputies can be seen placing a mask over Cole’s face in order to protect against spitting, according to the lawsuit. According to the lawsuit, Mecca taunted Cole as the other deputies restrained him in the chair. Cole could be heard in the video saying “Let’s go!” repeatedly, with Mecca responding, “You want to go?” At that moment, according to the suit, Mecca “activated his taser and electrocuted Mr. Cole, watching his restrained body shake and writhe for approximately five seconds — an act of sheer cowardly sadism with no conceivable legitimate law enforcement or penological purpose, and a certain infliction of excessive force.” Cole continued to sit in the chair for four hours, and deputies refused to unstrap him to use the bathroom, according to the suit. The suit also alleges the other law enforcement officers at the scene “did nothing to intervene” and did not tell Mecca to stop or “take any action to de-escalate the situation.” Cole’s suit, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado on Sept. 21, names Mecca as well as Sheriff Joe Pelle and several other deputies as defendants. Neither the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office nor Mecca immediately responded to a request for comment. Pelle said in a statement last week to The Denver Post that the agency at the time already had a policy in place that prohibited the use of a stun gun on any restrained inmate. “The sheriff’s office acted quickly and with full public transparency in the handling of this misuse of force, and to hold the former employee accountable,” the statement said. “The sheriff disagrees with the allegations in the lawsuit alleging culpability on the part of our agency, and counters that the former employee acted outside of our policy and training, and bears responsibility for that decision alone.” While the department said Mecca self-reported the incident, the suit contends that officials became aware only after two Longmont police officers who witnessed the use of force notified their supervisors. Cole’s lawsuit also alleges that Mecca reported to his superiors that he decided to use a Taser on him because of his race. Newman clarified the comment was made in an interview following the incident and that Mecca said, “I didn’t think it would look good on camera with deputies using brute force on an African American male.” Newman said the entire department should also be held accountable for a practice of “improper conduct,” given that there was a prior incident in 2017 in which a woman named Lauren Gotthelf was placed in a restraint chair with her hands cuffed behind her and then Tased. Gotthelf filed an excessive force lawsuit that was settled with the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office for $400,000 that same week as the incident involving Cole took place. At the time the lawsuit was filed, the sheriff’s office said it had “factual disagreements” with the allegations made, but later agreed to change certain policies, including banning the use of a stun gun on someone already placed in a restraint chair. Cole said his lawsuit, which is seeking unspecified damages, was filed “because this has been happening so often around the world and a lot of people don’t know that they can speak out.” “They can’t continue to get away with it,” he added. Deon J. Hampton reported from Denver and Erik Ortiz from New York. | |
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