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Daily Local & Regional NewsWatch
LA Police Protective League

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Los Angeles
Police Protective League

the union that represents the
rank and file LAPD officers

 

Daily Local & Regional NewsWatch

Daily News Digest

from LA Police Protective League

January 4, 2011

Law Enforcement

Police fatally shoot home-invasion suspect in South L.A.; 5 adults found bound inside residence
Police fatally shot a robbery suspect inside a South Los Angeles home, where five residents were found bound inside, authorities said Monday. Officers entered the residence in the 8700 block of McKinley Avenue just before midnight Sunday and confronted a man armed with a Tec-9 pistol who was attempting to escape out the back door, authorities said. An officer shot the suspect, who died at a hospital, said Officer Sara Faden of the Los Angeles Police Department.
Los Angeles Times


Law enforcement fatalities: a cause for concern and a call to action
The New Year begins with a disturbing report from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. The nonprofit organization that tracks police deaths reported preliminary information last week showing a 37 percent increase in line-of-duty deaths over the number of officers killed in 2009. Within 48 hours of the report's release, two more officers were killed, raising the total line-of-duty deaths for 2010 to 162. The news is particularly perplexing and troubling because the data runs counter to local and national trends that have violent crime falling to levels not seen in a generation.
LAPPL Blog


San Diego D.A. may challenge commutation

The San Diego County District Attorney's Office said Monday it was researching whether former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's reduction of Esteban Nunez's prison sentence in a murder case followed proper procedure. "We are exploring any possible legal action," said spokesman Paul Levikow, who confirmed San Diego D.A. Bonnie Dumanis was not notified in advance of the Governor's announcement Sunday.
KFI640


No seat belts in 42% of fatal police car crashes

At least 42% of police officers killed in vehicle crashes over the past three decades were not wearing seat belts or other safety restraints, according to a federal review. The study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which analyzed 733 crashes from 1980 through 2008, comes less than a week after a separate report found that fatal traffic incidents in 2010 were the leading cause of officer deaths for the 13th straight year.
USA Today


Crackdown on mobile signs hits the Valley

Officers towed more than a dozen so-called mobile billboards parked in the West San Fernando Valley on Sunday in an unprecedented crackdown against a controversial industry officials are trying to get off city streets. A cadre of city traffic enforcement officers also cited 32 offending vehicles with signs in a two-day sweep that included warning, fining, and impounding mobile billboard advertising displays.
Los Angeles Daily News


Jam prisoners' cellphone calls? New federal report explores possibilities

The Obama administration doesn't want dangerous prison inmates, such as convicted mass murderer Charles Manson, to make calls or send text messages from contraband cellphones because of the possibility that they could direct new crimes. But federal officials also don't want to go so far in trying to jam those communications that they create problems for nearby public safety workers or average citizens, according to a new government report.
Los Angeles Times


Mourning and Outrage

As thousands of law-enforcement officers from across the state remembered slain Woburn police Officer John "Jack" Maguire at his wake, the Middlesex District Attorney's Office said it was never notified that Maguire's accused killer was up for parole last year. The state Parole Board is under fire for releasing in February 2009 career criminal Dominic Cinelli, who was serving three concurrent life sentences.
Lowell (Mass.) Sun


State Government

Brown sees hard times
Gov. Jerry Brown said Monday he will propose a painful but honest budget next week, likely relying on deep cuts to state services and an extension of temporary taxes as he tries to prepare Californians for more tough times ahead. On the day he was sworn in as California's 39th governor, Brown sought in his inaugural address to strike a cooperative tone with lawmakers, asking them to "rise above ideology and partisan interest and find what is required for the good of California."
Associated Press

Harris will stress prevention as AG

Democrat Kamala Harris was sworn in as attorney general on Monday, becoming the first woman and first minority to hold California's top law enforcement office. She told hundreds of supporters that she will be an innovator who will be smart on crime as well as tough on crime. "Being smart on crime is about doing more preventing and less reacting," she said, promising to target chronic truancy and the underlying causes of criminal behavior as she did during two terms as San Francisco district attorney.
Associated Press

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The following has been posted to the LAPPL Blog. Remember to follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/lappl.

Law enforcement fatalities: a cause for concern and a call to action

by LAPPL Board of Directors

The New Year begins with a disturbing report from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. The nonprofit organization that tracks police deaths reported preliminary information last week showing a 37 percent increase in line-of-duty deaths over the number of officers killed in 2009. Within 48 hours of the report's release, two more officers were killed, raising the total line-of-duty deaths for 2010 to 162. The news is particularly perplexing and troubling because the data runs counter to local and national trends that have violent crime falling to levels not seen in a generation.

Traffic fatalities were the leading cause, with 73 officer deaths, while firearm fatalities jumped 20 percent from 49 deaths last year to 59 in 2010. Most alarming were the incidents in which multiple officers were gunned down. These so-called ‘cluster killings' accounted for nearly 20 percent of all fatal shootings.

A variety of explanations have been offered for the rise in deaths, from budget cuts that have fewer police working longer hours to more distracted and dangerous drivers. Memorial Fund Chairman Craig Floyd points to the existence of criminals who don't think twice – or are even eager – to kill an officer of the law. Weak penalties may also be a factor: an Atlanta man accused of gunning down a Georgia state trooper December 27 had just been released from jail two weeks earlier, and jail records show it was not the first time he had tried to flee from police.

Dale Mann, director of the Georgia Public Safety Training Center, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the law enforcement community is frustrated with weak punishments for serious crimes and the fact that cop killers rarely get the death penalty. "But by the grace of God, it could've been me and a hundred others," Mann said. "People are shooting police officers like it's nothing. One of the reasons is because they're not getting the death penalty for doing it. If they do, it'll be 30 years [before execution] and you'll have to remind the public what it's about."

Mann has a very valid point. If you share his frustration, consider speaking out at the victim impact hearing for cop killer Michael Alston (NYSID#0:3 521538N, DIN#: 93A0704) to be held on Friday, January 7, 2011, in New York. NYPD Sergeant Keith Richard Levine was off duty, driving through Manhattan on his way home, when he saw an armed robbery happening at an ATM machine. Three individuals were robbing one man when Sgt. Levine sprung into action, stopping his car and giving chase on foot.

In a recent letter to PoliceOne.com, Sgt. Levine's father, Mike Levine – a retired 30-year veteran of law enforcement – wrote, “During [the] chase and gunfight, Keith was killed by a man named Michael Alston. Alston, at the time he killed Keith, was on the street again after having been twice convicted of homicide in New York City. Killing my son I think now officially qualifies him as a serial killer, and we can't even estimate how many homicides he's gotten away with.”

Incredibly, the New York Parole Board has decided that Alston should be set free – free to kill again. With his possible release looming, the law enforcement community across our nation needs to come together and let our feelings be known. You can send a letter of opposition to the release of Alston via the New York State Board of Parole's website.

We've blocked the release of cop killers before, and we can do it again. Through our individual actions, we can achieve a collective result that clearly serves the best interests of the family and fellow officers of Sgt. Levine, as well as the law enforcement profession and our society.

Let us know what you think by leaving a comment on our Blog website.

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About the LAPPL Formed in 1923, the Los Angeles Police Protective League (LAPPL) represents the more than 9,900 dedicated and professional sworn members of the Los Angeles Police Department. The LAPPL serves to advance the interests of LAPD officers through legislative and legal advocacy, political action and education. The LAPPL can be found on the Web at:

www.LAPD.com


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