PDA

View Full Version : Reward offered in brazen attacks on police


Jeanfromfillmore
03-03-2010, 11:23 AM
Reward offered in brazen attacks on police
By JOHN ASBURY
The Press-Enterprise
Two recent assassination attempts on Hemet gang task-force officers add to a national trend of more brazen and sophisticated attacks on police, often by gang members, law enforcement experts say.
The attacks on the Hemet-San Jacinto Gang Task Force headquarters come amid an increase of violence against police nationwide this year that could reverse a trend of declining officer deaths.
Both attempts in Hemet failed, but were characterized as unusually violent. Last week, a bullet fired by an altered gun narrowly missed an officer opening a parking lot gate at the task force's building, a block from the police station.
On New Year's Eve, the same building was targeted when a gas line was rerouted to rig the building to explode when officers stepped inside.
Experts say attacks on a police facility, such as the ones against the Hemet Gang Task Force building, are nearly unheard of. The FBI has joined the task force in the investigation of the attacks. While Hemet police have not identified any suspects, they believe the threat may involve area gang members now under investigation.
On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors approved up to a $100,000 reward for information in the case that leads to an arrest or conviction.
The gang task force includes Hemet police, Riverside County sheriff's deputies, district attorney's investigators and probation and parole officers, and is one of eight teams throughout the county.
Nationally last year, 125 officers were killed, the lowest number since 1959. Already this year, 34 officers have been killed in the line of duty in shootings and traffic fatalities, including three in California in the past week. That is more than double the rate of slain peace officers in the same period last year, according to the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund.
"Right now we are averaging an officer dying in the line of duty just about every other day," Law Enforcement Memorial Fund spokesman Kevin Morison said. "We still have men and women get up and know their next call could be potentially life-altering or life-ending."
Criminals have stepped up their attacks on officers who may be cracking down or moving in on their territory, said California State Sheriff's Association Executive Director Jim Denney.
Booby traps have been planted to defend marijuana fields. Tripwires have been connected to explosives or shotguns. A suspect with a live grenade was captured in Northern California before an attack was carried out, Denney said.
One of the greatest concerns for police is the recent attacks on several officers at once, as in the four officers fatally ambushed in November in a Lakewood, Wash., coffee shop. Last year's shooting deaths included 15 officers killed in five separate incidents.
Law enforcement is now concerned that recent coordinated attacks on officers may be spawning copycat plots, Morison said.
"The planned assault on peace officers has become more prevalent and is definitely a cause of concern," Denney said. "As law enforcement becomes more active in enforcing criminal activity, criminal organizations are becoming more sophisticated in avoiding detection and organizing assaults on police."
Officer deaths rise
Officer deaths this year have jumped by 112 percent over the 16 fatalities nationwide through March 1 last year. Three deaths have come in California in the past week. Two Fresno County officers were killed during a shootout while serving a search warrant. A San Diego County deputy died Sunday while in pursuit of a wrong-way driver.
Authorities say there has been an increase in the violence of the attacks on police. Shooting deaths increased in 2009 by 23 percent, taking a toll of 49 officers across the country, compared with 39 officers killed in 2008. More officers have died from on-duty traffic collisions than any other cause for the past 12 years.
The last Inland officer killed was U.S. Border Patrol Agent Robert Rosas, who was ambushed in July in El Centro near the Mexican border. Previously, Rialto police Officer Sergio Carrera Jr. was fatally shot in 2007 while serving a search warrant.
Hemet police and San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies in Highland came under fire in December during separate shootings that struck patrol cars.
Hemet Police Chief Richard Dana said the gang task force has not been deterred by the assassination attempts.
"It's a very real threat. Someone is actually seeking to kill our officers," Dana said. "This required some real time and effort to potentially kill a police officer. It's not OK."
Increased penalties
Authorities have improved training and procedures to reduce fatalities from the numbers of decades ago. In the 1970s, police averaged 228 deaths annually, while this past decade the average has been 162 officers killed each year. On Sept. 11, 2001, 72 law enforcement officers were killed in the terrorist attacks on the United States. It was the single deadliest day for authorities.
Additional training, body armor and protective equipment and less lethal options, including Tasers, have better protected officers and helped keep situations from turning deadly, Morison said.
"The reality is with all those protections, when you get people hell-bent on killing police officers, there's no magic wand to protect officers from those types of attacks," Morison said.
Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco said gangs have become more aggressive in carrying out attacks on law enforcement, which Pacheco compared to attacks on Mexican authorities on the border. Additional threats have been made against the district attorney's office and prosecutors.
The district attorney's office has a prosecution unit dedicated to peace officer assaults, attempted murders and murders. In each case, prosecutors have imposed a hard-line, no-plea-bargain policy and pushed for the maximum sentence.
Two state laws increased the penalty for assaults on peace officers, following the deaths of Riverside County sheriff's deputies Michael P. Haugen and James Lehman Jr. in an ambush in 1997 near Whitewater.
The two bills, authored by Pacheco, require 15 years to life in prison for attempted murder of an officer, and at least life without parole, or eligibility for the death penalty, for a murder conviction.
"It's honorable work. Every member of law enforcement accepts that risk," Pacheco said. "You address it aggressively. It's not a casual occurrence; it is in essence a nuclear attack. You don't tolerate it; you respond with everything you've got."
http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/stories/PE_News_Local_W_attack03.4644056.html

Kathy63
03-04-2010, 07:13 AM
This breaks my heart.

I have a friend who moved out there 9 years ago escaping the gangs of Riverside. She went to Riverside running from the gangs of Lakewood/Bellflower, where she went to escape the hispanic gangs making life miserable in Downey.

Where can she go now? She is 65 years old. Her entire life (as mine has been) has been spent one step ahead of gangs, drugs, violence. She thought that Hemet/San Jac was far enough, rural enough, to let her live out her life in peace.

Not so.

Ayatollahgondola
03-04-2010, 07:24 AM
I think most of us have come to understand that eventually there was going to be no place to run

Ole Glory
03-04-2010, 08:18 AM
Subject: ALERT! Deported Mexican Alien Charged in Death of Sheriffs Deputy in San Diego

Huge news here in San Diego - a fiery crash and death of Sheriffs Deputy Ken Collier early Sunday morning near Santee after he chased a wrong way driver on Hwy. 52.

The drunk and drugged driver is a previously deported illegal alien from Mexico. He's been charged with Manslaughter.

First San Diego Deputy killed in the line of duty in 13 years.

Story and video here:
http://www.10news.com/news/22725703/detail.html

The Illegal Alien carnage never ends..... Another needless death in San Diego. Will we ever secure our borders and enforce our laws? How many innocents must die for our open borders? How much longer can we afford this "cheap labor"?

Jose Pedro Lopez Jasso, 22

----- Original Message -----
From: netwebmaster@sdsheriff.org
Sent: Wednesday, March 03, 2010 11:54 PM
Subject: San Diego County Sheriff - Request for Inmate Charges

Requested on Wednesday, March 03, 2010 11:54:51 PM. The data contained in this web site should not be relied upon for any type of legal action.

Anyone who uses this information to commit a crime or to harass an inmate or his or her family may be subject to criminal prosecution and civil liability. Extreme care must be taken in the use of information because mistaken identification may occur when relying solely upon a name to identify individuals.

ALTHOUGH THE INFORMATION ON THIS SITE IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, INFORMATION IS PROVIDED ON AN AS IS BASIS, AND ACCURACY AND/OR COMPLETENESS CANNOT BE GUARANTEED. NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND IS GIVEN WITH RESPECT TO THE CONTENTS OF THIS WEBSITE.

Requested charge information for booking number: 10715373 (Only active charges and arrests are shown.)

Arrest: 1
Charge#: 1
Bail Flag: Y
Bail Amount:$750,000.44
Description: DUI:ALC/DRUG:RSLT:BOD INJ
Code:VC
Statute:23153(A) VC

Arrest: 1
Charge#: 3
Bail Flag: I
Bail Amount:$0.00
Description: DRIVE WRONG:HWY:INJ/DEATH
Code:VC
Statute:21651(C) VC

Arrest: 1
Charge#: 4
Bail Flag: I
Bail Amount:$0.00
Description: DUI .08 ALCOHOL:BODLY INJ
Code:VC
Statute:23153(B) VC

Arrest: 1
Charge#: 5
Bail Flag: I
Bail Amount:$0.00
Description: GROSS VEHICLE MANSLAUGHTER
Code:PC
Statute:191.5(A) PC

Arrest: 2
Charge#: 1
Bail Flag:
Bail Amount:$0.00
Description: Rel Dt/Tm: Agency: ICE
Code:
Statute: HOLD

Bail Flag Codes:
Y or I - Charge is eligible for bail.
H or N - Inmate may not be bailed out on that given charge.
B - Bail is not required on this charge.

Patriotic Army Mom
03-04-2010, 03:55 PM
The creeps mom will just say that mijito was just having fun. I hate to read these stories.

ilbegone
03-04-2010, 04:31 PM
This breaks my heart.

I have a friend who moved out there 9 years ago escaping the gangs of Riverside. She went to Riverside running from the gangs of Lakewood/Bellflower, where she went to escape the hispanic gangs making life miserable in Downey.

Where can she go now? She is 65 years old. Her entire life (as mine has been) has been spent one step ahead of gangs, drugs, violence. She thought that Hemet/San Jac was far enough, rural enough, to let her live out her life in peace.

Not so.

A lot of gang bangers have been run out of the city right behind your friend.

The other side of the coin is that District Attorney Pacheco is an A-hole who is incapable of distinguishing between a regular person subjected to a scurrilous police report and a cold blooded serial killer.

I believe the "death threat" referred to was a classified ad placed by a brainless Press Enterprise employee which described an estate sale and listed Pacheco's home address.

Kathy63
03-05-2010, 04:20 PM
The import of attack like this, is that we are increasingly becoming just like mexico with the same kind of attacks on the police that mexico has. No one wants to say that this is the trend, but it is.

ilbegone
03-05-2010, 08:06 PM
I didn't catch it all, but there seems to have been another attempt in Hemet.

What appeared to me to be a gang task force vehicle had been pulled into a convenience store on Sanderson street, then the officer noticed that a suspicious item had fallen off the underside of the car.

So far, gas piped into an anti gang office, a firearm rigged with a trip wire, and now maybe a bomb attached to the underneath of a police unit.

The gas thing took some time to do, and the other weapon installs might not have been quick in and out operations, certainly there were some visibility issues to whoever has been carrying all this out.

The FBI got involved before the last attempt, and no suspects.

Hmmmmm...

ilbegone
03-05-2010, 08:09 PM
Third Attack Hits Hemet Gang Task Force

KESQ.com News Services

HEMET - An anti-gang officer in Hemet discovered today that a device had been attached to his car with potentially deadly consequences -- in what appears to be the third attempt in two months to injure or kill members of an anti-gang unit in southwest Riverside County.

According to Hemet police, around 8 a.m., a member of the Hemet/San Jacinto Gang Task Force parked his unmarked vehicle next to an AM/PM store at 298 S. Sanderson Ave. and spotted a threatening device adjacent to the car.

The Hemet police officer immediately cleared the area and requested the sheriff's bomb squad to investigate, said Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart.

Authorities cordoned off the intersection of Sanderson and Acacia avenues and closed access to the area from surrounding streets and parking lots, Wisehart said.

"We're not releasing what type of device it was," he told City News Service. "All we can say is it would have killed or injured the officer if it had done what it was supposed to do."

According to the lieutenant, the explosive device had been affixed to the officer's vehicle prior to his arriving at the mini mart.

The sheriff's bomb unit disabled the instrument, and the area was reopened to traffic around 1 p.m., Wisehart said.

No suspects have been identified.

The task force, which is comprised of Riverside County sheriff's deputies, Hemet police officers and other law enforcement officials, has been targeted twice before.

On Dec. 31, authorities discovered that a natural gas line on the roof of the task force's headquarters building had been redirected into the facility, filling it with gas, which could have caused an explosion.

On Feb. 23, an anti-gang officer was opening a gate at the task force's office in the 500 block of Saint John Place when he was nearly struck by a bullet that was part of a booby trap triggered when the gate moved.

The task force is now operating from an undisclosed location.

On Tuesday, the Riverside County Board of Supervisors approved a $100,000 reward for information leading to the capture of whoever is responsible for the previous two attacks.

"I'd like to think the money will lead us to the people doing this," said Wisehart. "There's no honor among thieves, so hopefully someone will give it up."

He said the threats not only create undue stress, but tear investigators away from other cases.

"Some things end up on the back-burner when you've got this kind of intense investigation," Wisehart said.

Authorities suspect area gangs are behind the attacks.

ilbegone
03-05-2010, 08:12 PM
"It's like war," said Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart. " Based on everything that's happened, we didn't want to get to close to it."



http://blogs.pe.com/news/digest/2010/03/just-in-bomb-threat-may-be-thi.html

"Right now it is believed that it is related to the other incidents, yes," Lt. Duane Wisehart said. "Somebody's apparently declared war on us." http://www.mydesert.com/article/20100305/NEWS0801/100305028/Updated-Hemet-police-investigate-possible-booby-trap-left-at-officer-s-car

No arrests have been made in either case but investigators lifted DNA and a fingerprint from the roof of the building after the gas incident. http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-hemet-bomb,0,765787.story

Kathy63
03-06-2010, 05:49 AM
This is the same kind of war being fought in mexico. I can't believe the cops are so stupid that they can't recognize this. I guess they'll have to have heads rolled into a local bar to get the message.

Pretty soon I suppose they will start finding the bodies of tortured citizens dumped in front of the police station.

The police are going to treat this as random acts of violence until it is so huge and out of control the police chief asks for asylum in Montana.

Jeanfromfillmore
03-06-2010, 12:41 PM
Third attack attempted on gang officers
A Hemet gang officer's vehicle was booby-trapped Friday with a device that police described as "designed to kill" -- the third assassination attempt since New Year's Eve against task force officers.
A member of the Hemet-San Jacinto Gang Task Force parked at an am/pm convenience store at Sanderson and Acacia avenues in Hemet about 8 a.m. Friday and went inside to buy coffee. When he came out, he saw a suspicious device on the pavement next to his car and called for help, Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart said.
"It's like war," Wisehart said, standing next to yellow crime scene tape as the device was being inspected. "Somebody's going to get lucky eventually -- or what will be unlucky for us."
Police declined to describe the device but said it was designed to kill the officer when he approached the car and got in, or when he got out, Wisehart said.
Police are not sure whether the device was attached to the plainclothes officer's black, unmarked Crown Victoria at his home or some other place where it was parked. The device was on the car when he drove to the am/pm market, and it fell off there.
"The first thing you think is if they're following you," Wisehart said. "They may be watching us as much as we're watching them."
The investigation shut down city streets for blocks in south Hemet and prompted the evacuation of several businesses near the market. Hemet police called the Riverside County sheriff's Hazardous Device Team.
Bomb technicians, one wearing a black mask, inspected the car with the aid of a bomb-sniffing dog. They determined the device was not explosive.
Hemet police will send it to the Department of Justice to be tested for fingerprints and DNA. The officer's car will be stored as evidence. Police are studying surveillance footage from the store.
"For our guys, the message is that you're not safe anywhere," Wisehart said.
The gang task force was targeted twice before -- on New Year's Eve and again last week -- at its office near the Hemet police station. After the second attack, the team moved to a new site.
In the first attack, someone cut a hole through the building's roof and rerouted a line to fill the office with natural gas, intending it to explode when a person turned on a light or computer, causing a spark.
Last week, a rolling gate was booby-trapped with a firearm that would fire a bullet at anyone opening it. The bullet narrowly missed an officer.
No suspects have been identified, but police think it may be a gang under investigation. Before the Dec. 31 incident, police had cracked down on outlaw motorcycle gangs, and a white-supremacist gang was dismantled last year. None has been linked to the attacks.
No gangs or suspects have been ruled out, Wisehart said.
Each incident is being investigated by Hemet police, the gang task force and the FBI.
"We will get them," Police Chief Richard Dana said.
Hemet police have declined to state what specific measures are being taken to protect officers. Dana said officers may seem less friendly in interacting with the public, out of concern for their safety.
The gang task force is made up of seven officers from Hemet police, the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, the district attorney's office and probation and parole departments. It is one of eight units in the county. Police have not said which officers from which agencies were involved in the incidents, but said it was a different officer each time.
Gang task force officers aren't uniformed, but wear black bullet-proof vests.
The San Jacinto Valley has about 2,000 gang members who either are locals or have moved there from Los Angeles, said Hemet police Lt. Mark Richards, a one-time task force leader.
The Riverside County Board of Supervisors last week offered a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to a conviction in the cases.
Hemet City Councilwoman Robin Lowe said she would seek assistance from state legislators to restore staffing that the Hemet Police Department lost to budget cuts.
"This is a domestic terrorist attack on our Police Department and our community," Lowe said.
http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/stories/PE_News_Local_W_webtaskforce.228f173.html

Jeanfromfillmore
03-06-2010, 01:38 PM
Anti-Gang Police Officer's Car Booby Trapped With Deadly Device
An anti-gang officer in Hemet, Calif., discovered a deadly device attached to his car Friday — in what appears to be the third attempt in the past two months to injure or kill members of an anti-gang unit in southwest Riverside County, MyFoxLA.com reported.
An officer with the Hemet/San Jacinto Gang Task Force called for back-up after discovering a threatening device next to his car, parked outside of a store. Authorities cordoned off the intersection near the vehicle while a bomb unit disabled the instrument.
The explosive device had been affixed to the vehicle prior to the officer's drive to the store, Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart told MyFoxLA.com.
"We're not releasing what type of device it was," Wisehart said. "All we can say is it would have killed or injured the officer if it had done what it was supposed to do."
Authorities have not yet named a suspect.
The booby trap comes months after authorities discovered a natural gas line on the roof of the task force's headquarters building had been redirected into the facility — filling it with gas, which could have caused an explosion. In February, an anti-gang officer was opening a gate at the task force's office when he was nearly struck by a bullet that was part of a booby trap triggered when the gate moved, MyFoxLA.com reported.
The task force is now operating from an undisclosed location.
The Riverside County Board of Supervisors approved a $100,000 reward for information leading to the capture of whoever is responsible for the previous two attacks.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,588251,00.html

Kathy63
03-07-2010, 07:03 AM
From my friend who lives out there, the opening that the gangs took advantage of was a senior HUD housing development for the low income elderly. After complaints that this HUD housing was discriminatory, it was opened to all low income families. The gangs swooped in on the backs of anchor babies and welfare receiving mothers. The elderly were forced out as the targets of rising violence.

The rest is Juarez, or maybe Tijuana. Just like in mexico, the war is against the police. It will spread to target the politicans. If I worked at City Hall, I be demanding those gas lines be inspected too.