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Franklin TN Walmart employee accused of stealing thousands in merchandise

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FRANKLIN, Tenn. - Sept 3 2014 

Franklin police arrested a Walmart employee Friday for allegedly stealing thousands of dollars of store merchandise over several months.
According to police, Timothy Youngblood took around $5,000 worth of merchandise while working in the Walmart sporting goods department.
Police recovered much of the stolen merchandise, which included tents, appliances and cookware, among other items, from his East Cedar Street apartment.
Youngblood, 43, faces felony theft charges. His wife also faces charges for knowingly receiving stolen property under $10,000.
The investigation is ongoing. Additional charges are possible.

More Workers Are Claiming ‘Wage Theft’ privateofficer.com

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MIRA LOMA, Calif. Sept 3 2014— Week after week, Guadalupe Rangel worked seven days straight, sometimes 11 hours a day, unloading dining room sets, trampolines, television stands and other imports from Asia that would soon be shipped to Walmart stores.
Even though he often clocked 70 hours a week at the Schneider warehouse here, he was never paid time-and-a-half overtime, he said. And now, having joined a lawsuit involving hundreds of warehouse workers, Mr. Rangel stands to receive more than $20,000 in back pay as part of a recent $21 million legal settlement with Schneider, a national trucking company.
“Sometimes I’d work 60, even 90 days in a row,” said Mr. Rangel, a soft-spoken immigrant from Mexico. “They never paid overtime.”
The lawsuit is part of a flood of recent cases — brought in California and across the nation — that accuse employers of violating minimum wage and overtime laws, erasing work hours and wrongfully taking employees’ tips. Worker advocates call these practices “wage theft,” insisting it has become far too prevalent.
Some federal and state officials agree. They assert that more companies are violating wage laws than ever before, pointing to the record number of enforcement actions they have pursued. They complain that more employers — perhaps motivated by fierce competition or a desire for higher profits — are flouting wage laws.
Many business groups counter that government officials have drummed up a flurry of wage enforcement actions, largely to score points with union allies. If anything, employers have become more scrupulous in complying with wage laws, the groups say, in response to the much publicized lawsuits about so-called off-the-clock work that were filed against Walmart and other large companies a decade ago.
Here in California, a federal appeals court ruled last week that FedEx had in effect committed wage theft by insisting that its drivers were independent contractors rather than employees. FedEx orders many drivers to work 10 hours a day, but does not pay them overtime, which is required only for employees. FedEx said it planned to appeal.
Julie Su, the state labor commissioner, recently ordered a janitorial company in Fremont to pay $332,675 in back pay and penalties to 41 workers who cleaned 17 supermarkets. She found that the company forced employees to sign blank time sheets, which it then used to record inaccurate, minimal hours of work.
David Weil, the director of the federal Labor Department’s wage and hour division, says wage theft is surging because of underlying changes in the nation’s business structure. The increased use of franchise operators, subcontractors and temp agencies leads to more employers being squeezed on costs and more cutting corners, he said. A result, he added, is that the companies on top can deny any knowledge of wage violations.
“We have a change in the structure of work that is then compounded by a falling level of what is viewed as acceptable in the workplace in terms of how you treat people and how you regard the law,” Mr. Weil said.
His agency has uncovered nearly $1 billion in illegally unpaid wages since 2010. He noted that the victimized workers were disproportionately immigrants.
Guadalupe Salazar, a cashier at a McDonald’s in Oakland, complained that her paychecks repeatedly missed a few hours of work time and overtime pay. Frustrated about this, she has joined one of seven lawsuits against McDonald’s and several of its franchise operators, asserting that workers were cheated out of overtime, had hours erased from timecards and had to work off the clock.
“Basically every time that I worked overtime, it didn’t show up in my paycheck,” Ms. Salazar said. “This is time that I would rather be with my family, and they just take it away.”

Business advocates see a hidden agenda in these lawsuits. For example, the lawsuit against Schneider — which owns a gigantic warehouse here that serves Walmart exclusively — coincides with unions pressuring Walmart to raise wages. The lawyers and labor groups behind the lawsuit have sought to hold Walmart jointly liable in the case.
Walmart says that it seeks to ensure that its contractors comply with all laws, and that it was not responsible for Schneider’s employment practices. Schneider said it “manages its operations with integrity,” noting that it had hired various subcontractors to oversee the loading and unloading crews.
Business groups note that the lawsuits against McDonald’s have been coordinated with the fast-food workers’ movement demanding a $15 wage. “This is a classic special-interest campaign by labor unions,” said Stephen J. Caldeira, president of the International Franchise Association. In legal papers, McDonald’s denied any liability in Ms. Salazar’s case, and the Oakland franchisee insisted that Ms. Salazar had failed to establish illegal actions by the restaurant.
Lee Schreter, co-chairwoman of the wage and hour practice group at Littler Mendelson, a law firm that represents employers, said wage theft was not increasing, adding that many companies had become more vigilant about compliance. But that has not stopped lawyers from bringing wage theft complaints because of the potential payoff, Ms. Schreter said. “These are opportunistic lawsuits,” she said.
Michael Rubin, one of the lawyers who sued Schneider, disagreed, saying there are many sound wage claims. “The reason there is so much wage theft is many employers think there is little chance of getting caught,” he said.

Commissioner Su of California said wage theft harmed not just low-wage workers. “My agency has found more wages being stolen from workers in California than any time in history,” she said. “This has spread to multiple industries across many sectors. It’s affected not just minimum-wage workers, but also middle-class workers.”
Many other states are seeing wage-theft cases. New York’s attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, has recovered $17 million in wage claims over the past three years. “I’m amazed at how petty and abusive some of these practices are,” he said. “Cutting corners is increasingly seen as a sign of libertarianism rather than the theft that it really is.”
In Nashville last February, nine housekeepers protested outside a DoubleTree hotel because the subcontractor that employed them had failed to pay a month’s wages. “The contractor said they didn’t have the money, that the hotel hadn’t paid them,” said Natalia Polvadera, a housekeeper. “We went to the hotel manager — he showed receipts that they had paid the contractor.”
Nonetheless, the protests persuaded DoubleTree to pay the $12,000 in wages owed.
Mr. Weil said some executives had urged him to increase enforcement because they dislike being underbid by unscrupulous employers.
His agency has begun cracking down on retaliation against workers who complain, suing a Texas company that fired a janitor when he refused to sign a statement that falsely said he had already received back wages due him from a Labor Department investigation.
“This is just not acceptable,” Mr. Weil said. “You can’t threaten people to lose their jobs because they are asserting rights that go back 75 years.”
nytimes.com

Phoenix police sergeant is accused of shoplifting privateofficer.com

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PHOENIX AZ Sept 3 2014 (AP) -- A Phoenix police officer has resigned after being cited on suspicion of shoplifting.

Police say Sgt. Mike Gurry was given a criminal citation and released Tuesday for allegedly stealing an undisclosed amount of merchandise from a hobby store in northeast Phoenix.

They say Gurry later resigned from the police department.

KPHO-TV says Gurry was a 29-year veteran and since he quit and wasn't fired, he's still eligible to collect his pension.

He worked as a community action officer in Phoenix's Black Mountain Precinct.

MD. Popeyes Employee Arrested in Murder of Coworker privateofficer.com

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Brooklyn Park MD Sept 3 2014 A Popeyes employee has been arrested in the death of a coworker whose body was found at a Popeyes restaurant in Brooklyn Park, Maryland, Anne Arundel County police announced Tuesday.
A manager found the victim, a 25-year employee of the fast food chain, suffering from traumatic injuries around 8 a.m. Sunday in the back stock area of the restaurant on Ritchie Highway, police said.
Luzviminda Monreal, 47, of Laurel, was pronounced dead at the scene.
On Tuesday, police identified the suspect in her murder as Moises Gomez-Castillo, 26, of Brooklyn, Maryland.
Gomez-Castillo was arrested Monday. He has been charged with first- and second-degree murder, first- and second-degree assault, and theft. Police say the motive for the murder was robbery.
They described the victim as a hard-working employee who was involved in her community.
Monreal had worked her way up to night manager. She was known to water the tomato plants in front of the restaurant and the neighboring Pizza Boli's.
Investigators say Monreal worked at the restaurant Saturday night, and that Gomez-Castillo -- who'd worked for Popeyes on and off for about seven years -- planned a robbery based on his knowledge of the management operations of the restaurant.
Police said one theory is that the victim caught the suspect robbing the business. Authorities described the crime scene as "gruesome," over a matter of "dollars."
"We don't know what purpose he needed a sum of money for," said a police spokesperson.
Police said they've recovered numerous pieces of evidence linking Gomez-Castillo to the robbery/murder, including an undisclosed amount of money believed to be taken from the Popeyes.
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has determined the cause of Monreal's death to be multiple sharp force injuries. However, police have declined to elaborate on what kind of weapon was used.
Gomez-Castillo is being held at the Anne Arundel County Detention Center on no bond pending a bail review later Tuesday.
NBC Washington

C.W. Bill Young VA Medical Center -police settle retaliation lawsuit privateofficer.com

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Seminole FL Sept 3 2014 The C.W. Bill Young VA Medical Center and up to eight officers who served on the facility's internal police force have tentatively agreed to settle a 4-year-old lawsuit that accused the hospital's leaders of retaliating against them for workplace discrimination complaints.
The settlement, whose terms are not public, comes five years after a federal judge in a separate case warned leaders of the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Seminole to stop retaliating against employees who file such complaints.
That November 2009 warning came several months after a jury slapped the facility, then called Bay Pines, with a $3.73 million verdict in the case of four employees, including three doctors, who said their careers were sidetracked after they complained about problems in their workplace.
A document recently filed in U.S. District Court in Tampa said the case filed by the officers has been settled but requires final approval by U.S. Department of Justice officials, which is expected before the end of October.
The VA, DOJ lawyers and an attorney representing the police employees declined comment pending final settlement approval. Such settlements usually contain a stipulation that the defendant, in this case the VA, makes no admission of wrongdoing.
The VA has previously denied the allegations in the lawsuit.
A trial would have offered a potentially embarrassing glimpse into the Young VA's small police force and its operations. Police leadership and officers have long been at odds over allegations that include sexual harassment, racial discrimination, physical altercations among officers and even disputes concerning policing strategies.
All sizable VA hospitals have an internal police force, which at the Young VA numbers roughly 50 employees.
Bickering among officers and between officers and management has been ongoing for years. And much of it became public with the filing by police employees of multiple Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaints, and then the lawsuit.
The police employees' attorneys, Joe Magri and Ward Meythaler, have alleged hospital leaders have long demonstrated a pattern of singling out workers who file EEOC complaints by denying them promotions and preferable assignments, making their work life difficult and derailing their careers.
Their lawsuit noted the Young VA's director, Wallace Hopkins, while waiting to testify in an EEOC case in 2010, was overheard telling police Chief Robert Shogren he "did not care how many police officers (the chief) fired and that he could fire them all." The chief laughed, the suit said. Hopkins later said he did not recall making the statement, the suit said.
This occurred a year after a federal judge ordered Hopkins and other hospital leaders to receive "remedial instruction" on preventing workplace discrimination and retaliation. Hopkins retired in 2011.
VA officials at times seem frustrated at Magri's legal challenges to the agency, perhaps demonstrated when a human resources specialist told a police officer complaining about the Young VA police chief to "stop drinking the Magri Kool-Aid," according to court documents.
The lawsuit contains numerous allegations of workplace discrimination or misbehavior that the plaintiffs said was tolerated by the VA.
Former Young VA police Officer Darin Oakes objected to Shogren calling him "cowboy." Oakes said in the suit that he thought being called that was racially insensitive.
After Officer Michael Corcoran, a supervisor with the most seniority in the Young VA police department, spoke out against the chief calling Oakes a "cowboy," the suit said, Corcoran found himself assigned to the communications center. Corcoran, the suit said, viewed this as a demotion.
The lawsuit also said Officer Walter Slam, a combat veteran of Iraq, Afghanistan and Vietnam, who suffered a traumatic brain injury in Iraq, was receiving medical care at the Young VA that was only available on Tuesdays. But the suit said his superiors counseled him for abusing sick leave because he has "shown a pattern" of taking his sick time the same day of the week — Tuesdays.
Officer Kendra DiMaria, who was married to another officer at the time, accused a Young VA supervisor of sexually harassing her and then retaliating against her when she rebuffed his advances.
Her husband, Young VA Officer Chad DiMaria, said he was denied a promotion to sergeant after his wife refused a supervisor's advances, the suit said. The DiMarias later divorced.
Chad DiMaria's legal claim against the VA was settled in 2013. DiMaria, 38, died last month.
Former Young VA Officer Carlton Hooker, who has unsuccessfully sued the VA for workplace discrimination, questioned in an Aug. 24 letter to Young VA director Suzanne Klinker why the VA had not disciplined the supervisor accused by Kendra DiMaria of sexual harassment.
Hooker noted the VA has a "zero tolerance" policy against sexual harassment.
"I ask that you do the right thing and remove those individuals responsible for the turmoil and retaliatory actions" in the Young VA police department, Hooker said.
Tampa Bay Times

Stamford CT wheelchair Rolex bandit suspect arrested privateofficer.com

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STAMFORD CT Sept 3 2014 -- The man who police say rolled into a Stamford jewelers in a wheelchair in August and then ran out with a Rolex, macing a store clerk and knocking down a security guard on the way, was picked up by New Rochelle, N.Y. police Friday during a domestic disturbance in that city.
Capt. Richard Conklin said the man, Larry Johnson, 37, of Mount Vernon, N.Y., is being heldin lieu of a $350,000 court appearance bond for the Stamford robbery as a fugitive from justice and is awaiting extradition, which could take weeks to complete.
Conklin said Johnson, who has about 20 criminal convictions in New York for a variety of crimes, including assault on a police officer and sexual assault, was picked up sometime Friday night by New Rochelle police after they were dispatched to a domestic disturbance.
When New Rochelle police booked him they found out that he had a warrant for his arrest for the Stamford jewelry store robbery.
Once in Stamford custody, Johnson will be charged with second-degree robbery, first-degree larceny and second-degree assault, Conklin said.
During the robbery, a black man described as being in his 40s or 50s entered the Stamford Town Center mall and wheeled himself up to the Sidney Thomas jewelry store on the fifth floor a little before 3 p.m. on Saturday Aug. 2.
The thief asked a store employee to see a Rolex watch, and then he leapt out of the wheelchair, pepper-sprayed the employee and then sprayed a security guard who rushed over to catch the man.
With the $37,400 Daytona Rolex watch still in his hand, he knocked the security guard down and ran up to the mall's seventh floor parking garage, where an accomplice is believed to have been waiting with a car.
The break in the case came when crime scene investigator Cory Caserta examined the thief's wheelchair for fingerprints. He found one print on a wheel and sent it to the state crime lab for identification and it came back belonging to Johnson, Conklin said.
"He is really making a name for himself in forensics and is regionally renowned for his work and he processes the chair and comes up with a fingerprint," Conklin said of Caserta, who works in the department's Identification Bureau. "He has been getting a lot of hits with DNA and fingerprints."
Using one of Johnson's more recent mug shots from New York, police put together a photo lineup using pictures of similar looking men and showed the pictures to store employees, who quickly picked out Johnson's picture and identified him as the Rolex robber. Conklin said Johnson has a distinctive scar on his neck and visible acne and pitting on his face.
With that information, police were able to obtain the signature of a judge on an arrest warrant, which was then lodged in the FBI's National Crime Information Center, which alerted New Rochelle police that Stamford wanted him when he was arrested Friday, Conklin said.
Conklin said Johnson may be wanted for a similar robbery at a jewelry store in White Plains on June 29 of this year. During that robbery, a black man wheeled himself into the Tourneau jewelry store in a wheelchair and asked to see a watch and ran out of the store with it.
Conklin said Stamford police provided suspect information on Johnson to White Plains police, but there is no word on whether they are working to obtain a warrant for his arrest for that theft, Conklin said.
"We feel he is a strong suspect in that crime," Conklin said. "When you speak of his MO it is nearly the same, so as a prudent person you would certainly look into that."
Conklin said Johnson is also named in an arrest warrant from Ulster County, New York, but no information was available on what he is accused of doing in that county. Conklin said Johnson has no convictions in Connecticut.
stamfordadvocate

Wave of police retirements could shrink size of D.C. force as District grows privateofficer.com

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Washington DC Sept 3 2014 The District is on the cusp of a severe shortage of police officers as a potential flood of retirements and the departures of some young officers threaten to shrink the force even as the city grows and 911 calls increase.
The expected shortages are being driven by hundreds of police officers who joined the force amid a hiring binge 25 years ago and are at or near retirement age. Meanwhile, younger officers say they are leaving for better pay with suburban police departments or have become fed up with city bureaucracy.
The emerging trends have alarmed D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier and several D.C. Council members, who said that the shortages could tax a department already scrambling to keep up with the District’s new and bursting nightlife and redeveloped neighborhoods. The D.C. police department is just shy of 4,000 officers, and Lanier has warned that her force can’t get much smaller.
“We’re going to fall behind,” the chief said of the personnel shifts. She said she is hiring 300 officers a year — the maximum she can with her budget, training resources and ability to conduct background checks on candidates.
“I can’t compromise standards,” said Lanier, who also acknowledged that the department has told several officers they had to leave because they had reached mandatory retirement age, a rule that had been long overlooked but is now being enforced.
Police union officials said 192 officers left in the first six months of this year, while 209 have been hired. But defections accelerated over the summer: 73 officers left in June and July. In an average month, 15 officers leave the force.
The issue has alarmed some lawmakers. Council member Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6) said he proposed adding $6 million to the police department’s budget to hire more civilians, allowing ­Lanier to push desk-bound officers back on the streets. But the idea was rejected.
Wells, who chairs the council’s Public Safety Committee, said he believes Lanier was “forthright and honest when she asked for help.”
“I believe we need a growing police force,” he said.
Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, which studies trends in law enforcement, said the District is not alone in struggling both to keep the officers it has and to hire new ones.
He said many departments slowed or stopped hiring late last decade, and some imposed layoffs. Now, with the recession over, “we’re seeing many departments hiring at the same time,” Wexler said. “There is a lot of demand for qualified applicants. For every one person you want to hire, you have to look at 10 to 15.”
He noted the downside of hiring too many officers too fast: “You hire a whole bunch at once, they get old at the same time.”
Indeed, the District is faced with the specter of mass retirements largely because of its past hiring practices. D.C. police hired nearly 1,500 officers in 1989 alone, boosting its force by 40 percent in a single year. The Class of 1989 became notorious for the number of officers who got into legal trouble. Now, the hundreds who remain are able to retire at full pension over the next six to 12 months. One estimate by the police union says that as many as 400 officers could put in their papers now and leave.

Greenville SC shooting rampage leaves 4 dead, police officer injured privateofficer.com

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Sept 3 2014— The gunman who opened fire on a law enforcement center died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound after killing two security guards and his stepfather in a shooting rampage spanning four days, officials in Greenville County said Tuesday.
Greenville Interim Police Chief Mike Gambrell and Greenville County Sheriff Steve Loftis gave details of the shootings at a news conference.
Area media outlets reported Coroner Parks Evans said Evan Casey Bennett, 23, died of a gunshot wound to the head Monday, moments after he shot a Greenville police officer three times. The officer underwent surgery, and his condition wasn't known Tuesday night.
Gambrell said Bennett came to the law enforcement center wearing a tactical vest and camouflage pants and carrying a knife. Authorities say he shot out windows at the center before shooting the officer, who officials said had responded to calls for backup.
Loftis confirmed that Bennett was involved in the deaths of two security guards at a plant that was no longer in operation.
Officials said Bobby Wayne Wood, 65, and Richard Thomas Ellison, 53, were found shot to death by a newspaper carrier outside the guardhouse of the vacant plant Friday morning. Authorities think the men were killed late Thursday at the time of their shift change since only one of them is usually on duty.
Loftis described the shootings as a" senseless thrill killing."
Gambrel said Bennett shot and killed his stepfather, Gregory Thomas Jones, after an argument at their home on Monday. The State

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2014/09/02/3654289/1-dead-1-hurt-in-sc-police-headquarter.html?sp=/99/132/#storylink=cpy

Alabama security firm settles defamation lawsuit privateofficer.com

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Montgomery AL Sept 4 2014

Rep. Joe Hubbard, D-Montgomery, said he regrets that a lawsuit brought against DSI Security Services last year raised ethical and legal questions against the firm.
"I regret that this lawsuit may have called into question the ethical standards of DSI in any way, and that it may have been construed by some to suggest that DSI had been party to illegal or improper conduct," said the statement, dated August 26 and released Tuesday afternoon.
Hubbard's statement was part of a settlement between Hubbard and DSI Security Services, which sued Hubbard last December after a judge dismissed a lawsuit that alleged the firm, which won a State House security contract last year over two other vendors, had an improper relationship with House Speaker Mike Hubbard, R-Auburn. Joe Hubbard brought the suit on behalf of one of the losing firms.
DSI's ownership and Speaker Hubbard both testified in court last year that those allegations were untrue, and the first lawsuit was dismissed.
"DSI Security Services won the contract in a fair, open and honest way, and they have provided exceptional service to the members of the Alabama Legislature and the citizens of Alabama who visit the State House," Joe Hubbard's statement said.
Eddie Sorrells, chief operating officer and general counsel for DSI, said in an interview Tuesday he could not disclose other elements of the settlement, but said the public statement was a "requirement" from Hubbard in the settlement. The company had sought unspecified monetary damages from the state representative.
"We have maintained (that) the allegations in original suit were untrue," Sorrells said. "We never had any kind of relationship with the Speaker of the House."
Hubbard, the Democratic nominee for attorney general, said Tuesday that the statement was "the only requirement of me" in the settlement. Hubbard said he "represented a client to the best of my ability with the information I had."
"They understood I didn't do anything in bad faith and they didn't do anything in bad faith, and we were trying to set the record straight, given that the topic was somewhat charged politically before they got involved in this particular bid," he said.
DSI won a $195,000 contract to provide security at the State House in August, 2013. The following month, Hubbard filed a lawsuit on behalf of DTA Security, which had previously handled the State House security contract, that alleged that DSI owner Alan Clark and House Speaker Mike Hubbard, R-Auburn, had a close relationship and that Mike Hubbard was a part-owner of the company.
But both Clark and Speaker Hubbard, who was not named as a defendant, testified at a trial before Montgomery Circuit Judge Eugene Reese that they had never met each other. Clark and his son also testified that the business had always been run by their family, and that they had never contributed to the Speaker's campaigns. Joe Hubbard did not cross-examine the Speaker on the stand.
Hubbard has said he pursued the lawsuit on the basis of an affidavit from James Cooper, who managed security at the State House for DTA. However, Cooper said in subsequent statements that he had no proof of the allegations; that the information was gossip and hearsay, and that he had expressed concerns about his affidavit being used in a lawsuit.
"After I filed the lawsuit, DSI's in-house counsel informed me that no such relationship existed and requested that I amend the complaint," Hubbard's statement Tuesday said. "However, because I lacked documentation to verify the absence of such a relationship, I did not amend the complaint."
Reese found there was an error in the original request for proposals for the contract, but dismissed the lawsuit, saying it was exempt from state bid laws.
DSI sued Joe Hubbard the following December, saying the lawsuit was brought without probable cause or "reasonable expectation of success given their information (or lack thereof)," and that Joe Hubbard had "the intention to harass and discredit (DSI) as well as Speaker Hubbard." At the time, Joe Hubbard accused Speaker Hubbard, who was not party to the defamation lawsuit, of "election-year politics."
Joe Hubbard's Tuesday statement did not mention those allegations.
"DSI recently celebrated 45 years of business and is an Alabama success story," the statement said. "I look forward to their continued service to the state of Alabama."
Montgomery Advertiser

Girls ages 2 and 5 left in car while dad in Sands casino privateofficer.com

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Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem


Bethlehem PA Sept 4 2014 The 2-year-old and 5-year-old girls left by their father Saturday in a locked car in the Sands casino parking garage are now in the custody of Northampton County Division of Children, Youth and Families.
Bethlehem police had already announced that the girls' father, Vaylon Wong, 47, of Brooklyn, New York, was charged with endangering the welfare of children.
Today, police released more details about the incident in the Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem parking garage.
At 10:24 p.m., Sands Security reported to city police that there were two girls alone in the car, Bethlehem police said. Pennsylvania State Police patrol the casino floor but city police handle incidents outside of the South Bethlehem facility.
Bethlehem police have not specified who first saw the girls.
While police investigated, several loudspeaker announcements about the children were made inside the casino and no one responded. About 11:05 p.m., authorities found Wong, who said he owned the Lexus and left the children alone, police said.
Wong denied the children were his and said he was just watching his neighbor's kids, police said. The girls have the same last name as Wong.
"When the two children saw Wong, they referred to him as 'daddy,'" Bethlehem police Chief Mark DiLuzio said in a news release.
Wong then allegedly became uncooperative and refused to tell police where the girls' mother was and what her name is.
Casino security cared for the children until county child welfare officials arrived.
The casino and Bethlehem police pledged to continue to respond to and investigate all calls about children being left in any vehicle on the casino complex, police said.
"There is no safe and acceptable reason, in today's world, to leave small children unattended in any locked vehicle, at any time, at any location," DiLuzio said in the news release.
The incident is still under investigation by police and county child welfare officials.
Wong was arraigned early Sunday on two counts of endangering the welfare of children and two counts of recklessly endangering another person. He was sent to Northampton County Prison in lieu of $20,000 bail.
Today, Cindy Khuu posted $20,000 cash bail for Wong, court records indicate.
Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli in November 2011 vowed to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law cases of adults abandoning children at the Sands, which opened in May 2009.
In August of this year, Maurice Cook, of the 600 block of Wolfe Avenue in Easton, was spotted on casino surveillance playing blackjack while his children, ages 1,5 and 8, sat in his car in the parking garage, according to police. Cook told police he is addicted to gambling and he was sorry for what he had done, police said.
He faces three counts of recklessly endangering another person and endangering the welfare of children. Cook remains in jail after failing to post $30,000 bail.
In July 2012, Yulissa Troncoso, of Allentown, left her five children -- ages 10 months to 12 years -- alone for an hour in her SUV so she could play the slots at the Sands. In that case, a Sands security guard noticed the children unattended. County Judge Michael Koury in June 2013 sentenced the now-35-year-old to two months to two years in county prison. She was paroled in August 2013, court records show.
The mall adjacent to the casino is home to the 16,000-square-foot New Horizon Kids Quest and Cyber Quest, where for $10-$11 an hour children ages 6 months to 12 years can be left and watched by staff as late as 1 a.m. in the Kids Quest area.
lehighvalleylive.com

Deceased human fetus found at Dallas high School privateofficer.com

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First week back: The school's 1,600 students were at the end of their first week back at school after the summer break when the discovery was made


Dallas TX Sept 4 2014
A staff member has found what is being described by police as a 'deceased human fetus' in a bathroom at a Texas high school.
Authorities in east Dallas are now looking for a student they believe gave birth inside Woodrow Wilson High School during class time on Friday.
A maintenance worker made the disturbing discovery in a trash can in a second-floor girls' bathroom around 2:30pm.
Police are reviewing security footage to determine who the mother of the fetus is and have referred to the girl or woman as a 'suspect.'
A spokesperson for the Dallas Independent School District said the mother is likely a student at the school.
'We're reviewing video, talking to the teachers, trying to determine if anybody has any knowledge of any student that may have had something going on in their life, and pray,' Major John Lawton with the Dallas Police Department told Fox 4.
Police have not revealed the developmental stage of the the fetus.
Detectives with the Dallas Police Department's Child Abuse unit are investigating the incident and are hoping the mother of the fetus will come forward voluntarily.
Counselors were called to the school on Friday to help students and staff after the shocking discovery and still on-hand Tuesday as students return from the long weekend.
'The district encourages parents and families to discuss the situation with their students, and when appropriate, encourage their students to meet with counseling staff at the school,' the school district said in a statement.
'Dallas ISD will continue to provide additional support and resources to the school community during this difficult time.'


 

 


 

Parents sue school district, Colerain police over high school students' rap video expulsions privateofficer.com

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CINCINNATI OH Sept 4 2014
Lucy May -WCPO– Parents of four African-American students filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against Northwest Local School District and several Colerain Township Police Department officers alleging that their children's constitutional rights were violated.
The parents said in a news release that their children were expelled from Colerain High School for making rap music videos off campus.
"It is not a crime to be an African-American teenager," the lawsuit's preliminary statement said. "Yet, on April 10, 2014, Colerain High School administrators in coordination with Colerain Township police officers acted as if it were when they rounded up African-American students, held them in a windowless room guarded by armed police officers for upwards of six hours, and interrogated them about their social media postings and affiliations with other African-American youth."
The parents said at a news conference Tuesday afternoon that they're still seeking answers about why their sons were disciplined so harshly.
"Our kids were basically treated like criminals," said Michael Packnett, whose son was a sophomore when he was expelled at the end of last school year. "I seriously would like justice done."
School administrators accused more than a dozen African-American students of making "street" signs and belonging to a "gang," according to the lawsuit, which also alleges that many white students at Colerain High School who took part in similar conduct weren't questioned, searched, seized or disciplined.
"It's racial stereotyping to presume that young African-American kids at school who engage in these types of expressions are members of a gang," Robert Newman, one of the attorneys for the parents, said at the news conference. "This lawsuit is being brought to change this culture at Colerain High School."
Newman noted the district has had "significant disparities in its discipline" in recent years, with African-American students being disciplined more often and more severely than white students. The U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights is investigating a complaint against the district for race and disability discrimination. The Legal Aid Society of Southwest Ohio filed the complaint in March 2012.
Northwest Local School District issued a statement in response to the lawsuit Tuesday and said the filing contains "considerable inaccurate information; specifically as it implies that only African-American students were suspended and expelled, when in fact students of other races were suspended and expelled as well."
The school district's statement also said: "The district recognizes that students do not shed their constitutional rights at the school door, as determined by the U.S. Supreme Court and other case law. However, the district does recognize its right and duty to limit student speech when those actions interfere with the safety of students, or the ability of the administration to maintain a school environment that is conducive to learning."
The lawsuit alleges that the school district and police officers "unlawfully detained and disciplined the African-American students merely to placate the unfounded fears of a few parents and students about a nonexistent criminal gang at Colerain High School."
Lawsuit Details What Happened
The 57-page lawsuit details the experiences of four students who are referenced by their initials. The complaint said none of the young men ever had been in trouble with the police before. All four had their grades drop in the fourth quarter of last school year after being either suspended, expelled or both.
The boys all were suspended or expelled on April 10, 2014, less than a month after two incidents that had raised questions about the safety of Colerain High School.
In late March, an African-American student had brought a handgun to Colerain High School. The student was removed from school and charged. Nobody was hurt, but the lawsuit noted that the incident was covered extensively in the media.
Then in early April, a white man who was a former Colerain High School student was allegedly shot by an African-American Colerain High student in Green Township.
After all the media coverage of those crimes, the lawsuit states that school administrators told the students that "several" parents and students complained that some photographs on social media sites of African-American students making hand gestures had made them "uncomfortable."
School district and high school officials, along with the police, conducted a "multi-day investigation into online, outside-of-school activities of African-American students at Colerain High School," according to the lawsuit.
That investigation resulted in the questioning of many students on April 10, 2014, including the four young men whose parents filed the lawsuit.
The statement issued by Northwest Local School District on Tuesday said that 14 students were suspended and recommended for expulsion that day for "specific violations of the code of conduct."
Lawyers for the parents described the experiences of the four boys in the lawsuit.
• One young man was asked to pull down his pants and turn out the pockets of the shorts he was wearing underneath, according to the lawsuit. Later, the boy's mother was told that he was "a known gang member" and was involved in the shooting that had occurred in Green Township, the lawsuit stated. The boy was eventually suspended for 10 days and expelled for another 10 days, according to the complaint.
• Another young man was stopped on his way to his digital media class. He was held in the windowless room for five hours and wasn't allowed to go to the bathroom, according to the lawsuit. He also missed his regular lunchtime and wasn't offered anything to eat or drink, the lawsuit states.
An assistant principal showed the boy a photo of himself and another African-American student making hand signs. The young man explained that it was a still photo from a video that he had made for his digital media class in December 2013 and that he had gotten an A for the project, according to the lawsuit.
During the course of the questioning, the young man got upset and hit a filing cabinet with his hand, the lawsuit states, so a police officer kept him in handcuffs for about 30 minutes.
Ultimately, he was suspended for 10 days and expelled for another five days, according to the complaint.
• A third young man was accused of being part of the alleged gang and also was told that he was in trouble for intimidating a white staff member who issued late passes by giving her a "mean look," according to the lawsuit.
He was suspended for 10 days and eventually expelled for another 36 days, according to the lawsuit. An expulsion appeal hearing officer allowed the boy to attend the district's alternative school instead, but by the time he started there he had been out of school for 20 days, the lawsuit states.
• A fourth boy was held in the room for about three hours. As he was leaving, the former high school principal told him to hand over his phone, according to the lawsuit.
When he didn't give it to the principal right away, the lawsuit states the athletic director put him in a bear hug and then a chokehold while someone else grabbed his legs.
The young man began to have trouble breathing and dropped his cell phone, according to the complaint. While the boy was lying on the ground, a police officer cuffed him, the lawsuit states.
He got a 10-day suspension and later was expelled for 36 days, according to the lawsuit. His father appealed the expulsion, but the expulsion appeal hearing officer upheld the expulsion because the boy refused to hand over his cell phone, according to the complaint.
All of the boys saw their grades drop as a result of their suspensions and expulsions, the lawsuit states.
 What The Parents Are Seeking 
None of the boys were allowed to contact their parents until after they had been detained and questioned, according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit is seeking compensatory and punitive damages in addition to "reasonable attorneys' fees and costs." No specific dollar amount was mentioned.
The parents who filed the suit also want:
• A "declaration" that the actions taken by the school district and police were "unconstitutional,"
• A complete expungement of any references to the suspensions and expulsions in their transcripts and in students' files,
• And changes in the policies and procedures of the school district and police department so the same thing doesn't happen again.
The school district statement said the students "have been welcomed back as members of the school community" and that "code of conduct violations will continue to be fairly and consistently enforced for ALL students."
But not all the students are back at Colerain High School. Teressa Heath said she moved and is sending her son to Fairfield High School for his senior year. She made the decision after Colerain police continued to harass her son throughout the summer, she said, despite the fact that he had been a student at Northwest district schools since second grade.
"He has a potential college football scholarship. He had to go someplace else to go to school," she said.
Colerain High School officials have told all the students who were expelled April 10 that they wouldn't be able to participate in school sports ever again, said Constance Hildebrand, whose son is a sophomore at Colerain High this year.
"None of the kids that were suspended are allowed to play in any sports or participate – forever," she said.
The parents are asking Judge Timothy Black for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to have the disciplinary actions removed from their sons' records immediately.
Otherwise, the expulsions and lower grades could hurt their chances for college scholarships and admission, the parents said.
Kim and Robert Sargent said they're still shocked that their son got in trouble for the video he made as a class assignment earlier last school year.
"The videos that they did, they called them threatening, but that's just kids being kids," Robert Sargent said.
"The name of the video was called 'Law and Order,'" his wife added. "So, you know…."
The parents are being represented by downtown-based Newman & Meeks and the Legal Aid Society of Southwest Ohio.

KISS Confetti Blamed For Security Guard's Injuries privateofficer.com

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Indiana Sept 4 2014
According to Courthouse News Service, KISS vocalist/bassist Gene Simmons and his associated company have been sued by a security guard working at the band's 2012 concert in Indiana, claiming that the guard was injured after the group band "foolishly" sprayed the stage with water and confetti
Also named as defendants in the lawsuit were the concert venue (Klipsch Music Center) and Live Nation World Wide Inc.
Timothy Funk says in his lawsuit, which was filed in Hamilton Superior Court, that he fell on the "slippery, waxy, and glassy" stage after "some or all of the defendants" sprayed water from hoses "on the stage, the area around the stage, and on some of the crowd." The defendandts also sprayed confetti around the stage and crowd "in a foolish and reckless manner," Funk claims.
Funk is seeking compensation for his injuries, loss of wages loss of wages, and other unspecified damages. He is represented by Steven C. Smith of Smith Carrillo & Reeder in Anderson, Indiana.

Woman charged with making bomb threat at McCarran Airport privateofficer.com

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LAS VEGAS NV Sept 4 2014-- A woman is facing charges of making a bomb threat against a plane heading from Las Vegas to Portland, Oregon.
According to Metro Police, 48-year-old Tamara Reid was arrested Friday at McCarran International Airport after an Alaska Airlines representative accused her of making a bomb threat. The representative said Reid was upset about not being allowed on the plane because she was intoxicated and late for boarding.
The representative told police that Reid said, “How do you know if I don't have a bomb in my bag?” while she was complaining about not being allowed on the flight.
The plane was searched and nothing was found. Reid told police she was ranting at the agent because she wasn't allowed on the plane and did not even have any checked luggage on the plane. Reid denied making a threat.
KLAS

Southington Bank Robbery Suspect Kills Himself privateofficer.com

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Southington Bank Robbery Suspect Kills Himself: PoliceSouthington CT Sept 4 2014
The 28-year-old suspect in a Southington bank robbery and crash on Tuesday morning has taken his life, and police said he robbed the same bank two years ago.
Officers surrounded a house at the corner of Meriden-Waterbury Turnpike and Meriden Avenue as they investigated a robbery at the TD Bank at 921 Meriden-Waterbury Turnpike in the Plantsville section of town just after 9 a.m. Tuesday.
When police responded to the bank after receiving a call from staff, the robber – identified as Brian Jacobs – fled the bank in a car, crashed into a vehicle, drove away and then crashed again, according to Southington police Lt. Michael Baribault.
He then took off running from the car and led police on a foot chase along Marion Avenue, ultimately breaking into an empty house two miles from the bank robbery site on the corner of that road.
Jacobs slit his throat and was rushed by ambulance to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Police said it's the second time in two years he robbed the TD Bank on Meriden-Waterbury Turnpike.
No residents were home at the time of the incident. The area was cordoned off by crime scene tape and Marion Avenue was closed in the area, but the road has since reopened.
South End Elementary School and John F. Kennedy Middle School were locked down and Strong Elementary School went on external lockdown on Tuesday morning, according to automated calls received by parents in Southington.
All lockdowns were lifted at 10:15 a.m. when police determined that there was no threat to the school or community, police said.
TD Bank has also reopened.
The case remains under investigation.
NBCConnecticut

Man tried running down hospital security officer privateofficer.com

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Lebanon MO Sept 4 2014 Police are investigating an assault against a hospital security officer and a Lebanon man could face assault charges.
According to the security officer, the man, not identified in the police report, allegedly attempted to strike a hospital security guard with a vehicle Saturday.
According to a pair of reports from the Lebanon Police Department, officers were called to the hospital at about 5:30 a.m. Saturday after hospital security reported that a 29-year-old man from Lebanon, as well as another Lebanon man, allegedly became physically and verbally aggressive toward the security guard.
When the guard asked the 29-year-old man to leave the hospital, the man allegedly attempted to strike the guard with a vehicle.

Ex-youth minister in Portsmouth sentenced on sex charges privateofficer.com

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Ex-youth minister in Portsmouth sentenced on sex charges


PORTSMOUTH VA Sept 4 2014  (AP) - A former Portsmouth youth minister convicted of sex charges will spend four months in jail.

Media outlets report that Brian Norris was sentenced Tuesday in Portsmouth Circuit Court. He had pleaded guilty in May to two felony counts of indecent liberties while in a custodial or supervisory relationship.

Norris formerly was youth and singles minister at Western Branch Baptist Church in Portsmouth. Prosecutors say he had sexual contact with two teenage girls who were involved in the church's youth ministry.

The girls were 16 and 17 when the incidents occurred between September 2012 and November 2013.

1300 Security workers watch over Chicago school students privateofficer.com

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CHICAGO IL Sept 4 2014 (AP) — School opened in Chicago on Tuesday, with children and parents making their way past security guards whose bright neon vests served as a reminder of the city's efforts to protect students from the violence that plagues its streets.
A year after hundreds more "Safe Passage" workers were hired to keep children from harm, an infusion of city money has allowed Chicago to increase the number of workers from 1,200 to 1,300. Another $10 million from the state will mean 600 more workers will be lining the streets within the next several weeks.

The city is also raising from 93 to 120 the number of schools with Safe Passage routes, said Jadine Chou, the chief safety and security officer for the Chicago Public Schools.
Parents welcomed the sight of the Safe Passage workers.
"I like them on every corner, the police, too," said Shamika Bennett, who was walking her 5-year-old daughter, Dasia, to school, the girl sporting a new Dora the Explorer backpack and Nike shoes. "You feel a little safer."
The first day of school did not receive nearly as much media attention as last fall, when Mayor Rahm Emanuel's shuttering of some 50 schools before the school year began sparked concerns that some students would be at increased risk of violence because they were required to cross into rival gang territories.
The last school year ended, according to the school district, without a single student being seriously injured along any of the Safe Passage routes while guards were on duty in the nation's third-largest city.
At the same time, a number of factors this year — from troubling crime statistics to the upcoming mayor's race — will ensure that the program remains under a microscope.
On Tuesday, a day after the police department reported that the number of shooting incidents had climbed in the first eight months of the year compared to the same period last year, one mother said she worries that violence might erupt from the crowded street corners and bus stops she must negotiate to take her two young sons to school every day.
"There's no telling who's out there," said Keonya Wells on her way to a train that she will ride with them for more than 20 blocks to their school.
Similar concerns were voiced by Jeffery Currie, who was walking his 9-year-old son to nearby Dulles School of Excellence, almost exactly a year after officials at the school took the unusual step of responding to shootings in the area and a gang member's funeral by rushing students and staff off the property as soon as classes ended for five days.
"I make sure I walk him (because) I know about the streets, what happens," Currie said.
Some worry that the city is not doing enough to keep students from harm, particularly students who must leave for school early in the morning, well before the Safe Passage workers take their posts less than an hour before classes begin.
Last December, a 15-year-old girl who left her home before dawn to get to a school on the city's North Side was beaten and raped less than a half block from a Safe Passage route.
"She had to get to school earlier than the Safe Passage (workers) were on duty," said state Rep. LaShawn Ford, who said he will push to use some of the $10 million from the state to extend the guards' hours.
All this could pose a political risk for Emanuel, who is up for re-election next year. His most-talked-about potential rival, Chicago Teachers Union president Karen Lewis, has criticized Emanuel for closing neighborhood schools and dubbed him the "murder mayor" because of the city's violence.
Any violence that occurs on a student's walk to and from school could become fodder for Lewis — or any other opponent — to use against Emanuel, whose popularity has fallen over the last year.

Carroll County Sheriff's Deputy claims retaliation for role as whistle-blower privateofficer.com

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Courtesy: Carroll county Sheriff's Department websiteLOUISVILLE, KY Sept 4 2014– A Carroll County Sheriff's deputy has filed a lawsuit claiming retaliation by the sheriff for his role as a whistle-blower.
The suit was filed against the Carroll County Sheriff, his department and the county.
Deputy James Thomas Shaw says he was a whistle-blower who claimed Sheriff Jamie Kinman planted prescription drug evidence in the cruiser of a deputy who had resigned.
Shaw says Sheriff Kinman retaliated against him after making that allegation.
According to the lawsuit, Shaw says he recognized the evidence because he had dropped it off in a secure evidence box eight months earlier.
Kentucky State Police say there is an open investigation and they cannot comment on it.
The County-Judge Executive says he hasn't been served the lawsuit yet and Kinman has not returned our call.
WDRB

US. Securities Associates, Inc hired for Vineland school security privateofficer.com

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The school board awarded contracts to two private firms last week to provide full-time, long-term substitutes in an attempt to save the district the cost of hiring replacement employees.
Insight Workforce Solutions of Philadelphia will provide full-time, temporary substitute paraprofessionals, also called classroom aides, at a billed rate of $163.20 per day.
US. Securities Associates, Inc. of Atlantic City will provide the same service for security guards at a cost to the district of $12.41 per hour, per person.
Joe Rossi, the district’s personnel director, explained the firms would only be filling full-time vacancies due to attrition.
As employees voluntarily leave the district, Rossi said, security and classroom aide positions would be reviewed for potential cost savings. There are currently a half-dozen security guard and about 25 classroom aid positions that could be filled between the two firms.
When the district fills the full-time vacancy with a long-term substitute, it saves the cost of providing a benefit package, estimated between $20,000 to $25,000 per person, as well as the cost of the sick days and leaves of absences, Rossi said.
For example, Rossi explained when an employee calls out and the district calls in a substitute, two people are being paid for the one job. If a full-time substitute calls out, the firm will send a replacement and the school district is billed for one person.
The money saved could result in not cutting district jobs down the road.
“We are trying very desperately to retain our full-time employees in the face of another budget situation that we know is coming,” Rossi said..
As for the security guards, the district’s director of security John Provenzano will oversee their day-to-day activities, Rossi said. The company will also be checking on their employees’ performance and principals will give feedback.
Board solicitor Bob DeSanto said the contract does not guarantee the firms a minimum amount of work. If the service is not acceptable, DeSanto said, the firms would not be called and the contract would expire June 30, 2015.
thedailyjournal.com
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