Friday, September 5, 2014

This report represents some events the FWC handled over the past week; however, it does not include all actions taken by the Division of Law Enforcement.

FWC

Division of Law Enforcement

FWC logo and law enforcement badge 

Weekly Report

August 29 - September 4, 2014

 

This report represents some events the FWC handled over the past week;

however, it does not include all actions taken by the Division of Law Enforcement.

 

Patrol, Protect, Preserve

 

 

NORTHWEST REGION

 

BAY COUNTY

 

Officer Price was on patrol when he checked a fisher who possessed six egg-bearing blue crabs.  A citation was issued for the violation.

 

JACKSON COUNTY

 

Officer Forehand was patrolling in the area of Merritt’s Mill Pond Fish Management Area when he observed three subjects fishing from a vessel. The subjects appeared to be catching numerous fish and placing them into their vessel. Due to the size and bag limit regulations on shellcracker, Officer Forehand set up surveillance on the three subjects and awaited their return to the landing. Upon their return, a resource inspection revealed the subjects were in possession of numerous undersized shellcracker. Appropriate citations were issued.

 

LEON COUNTY

 

Officers Mims and Raker were on patrol on the Ochlockonee River. A vessel inspection was conducted revealing license violations as well as a short black bass that was found inside the cooler. The subject admitted to catching the bass and had an active warrant out of Leon County. The subject was charged with possession of undersized black bass and booked into the Leon County Jail.

 

SANTA ROSA COUNTY

 

Officer Lewis was patrolling in the Blackwater River State Park when he observed two men leaving the parking area and heading down to the river.  He asked them if they paid the daily use fee and they stated that they had not.  While he was talking to them, they seemed to be trying to get Officer Lewis to go on.  Officer Lewis obtained their identification and determined that one of the men had an active warrant.  He was arrested and transported to jail.

 

 

NORTH CENTRAL REGION

 

CLAY COUNTY

 

Officer Bryan and Lieutenant Glover were on vessel patrol on Kingsley Lake during a very busy Labor Day weekend in Clay County. The officers noticed a person who appeared to be extremely young operating a jet ski by himself. The officers conducted a stop and determined the child was approximately nine years old. The officers asked where the child’s father was and he pointed to a man on a tube being pulled by what appeared to be another child under fourteen years old on a jet ski. The officers escorted the child back to shore and talked with his parents. The officers informed the parents that it was illegal to allow a child under the age of fourteen to operate a jet ski by him/herself. It was also determined that the child pulling the father on a tube with a jet ski was also under the age of fourteen. There were close to a hundred vessels on the lake at that time creating a very dangerous condition for a child to be operating a jet ski. The father was issued a misdemeanor citation for allowing a child under the age of fourteen to operate a personal watercraft.

 

COLUMBIA COUNTY

 

Resource Protection Services (RPS) Officer McDonald and Officer Nichols received information regarding night hunting that was occurring in northern Columbia County. The officers worked the area for just one night and were planning on multiple nights. On the first night, around midnight, the officers observed a small car slow down and shine a field with a spot light; the passenger got out of the vehicle and fired shots across the field. The officers immediately made contact with the men. Both men were cited for attempting to take deer at night with a gun and light and trespassing. Felony charges are pending for trespass by projectile. The rifle and spotlight were seized as evidence.

 

DIXIE COUNTY

 

Officers Butler, Hilliard, Wiggins, Allen and Johnston worked a detail targeting illegal theft of crab traps. Investigations Bureau and Investigator Sharp assisted with this detail. During the six days that the officers worked this detail, they were able to apprehend six violators who were robbing crab traps. The suspects were charged with felony crab trap violations.

 

Officers Butler and Cooper responded to a search and rescue on the Gulf of Mexico. The missing subjects had gone fishing out of the town of Suwannee when their older vessel capsized. During the search, Officer Butler had come off plane with his vessel to discuss the search with Officer Cooper on the phone. During his conversation, Officer Butler observed a reflection in the waves. He headed in the direction of the reflection, spotting the missing subjects. Officer Butler was able to pull both persons on board his vessel rescuing them.

 

DUVAL COUNTY

 

An officer was exiting Jennings State Forest after midnight when a vehicle went by with no headlights on. A subsequent traffic stop revealed that the vehicle had a tag that was not assigned and the correct registration for the vehicle had been expired for three years. The driver was operating on a suspended license and had multiple prior arrests for driving while suspended and had several instances where he failed to appear on criminal charges. He was arrested and during the booking process it was discovered that he also had outstanding fines from a criminal mischief charge. Additionally, he had not completed probation requirements on a concealed weapons charge.

 

Officers working in the northern end of Duval County on Labor Day made several fish cases including red drum, black drum and flounder. One subject, who was found with nine undersized black drum and had no measuring device, said that he estimated the size of the fish with his hand. While he did have a large hand, it was not large enough as the fish measured between 11 and 12 inches.

 

Officer Sweat was on patrol at Joe Carlucci Boat Ramp and observed a vessel that was motoring up to the ramp. Officer Sweat made contact with the vessel and told the operator that he would be conducting a vessel inspection. Officer Sweat allowed one of the occupants to get the truck and trailer to pull the vessel. During the inspection, Officer Sweat observed 32 empty beer cans throughout the vessel. The operator was slurring and unsteady on his feet when getting the requested safety equipment. Officer Sweat conducted standardized field sobriety tests on the operator and determined that he had accumulated enough clues to be impaired. Officer Sweat arrested the operator for BUI. The operator refused to provide a sample of his breath and was booked into the Duval County Jail.

 

LAFAYETTE COUNTY

 

Officers Huff and Brookes received information that a guest in a local state park river camp was possibly wanted for failure to appear in a bordering county. The officers made contact with the suspect and after verifying his identity, it was confirmed that the subject had two outstanding warrants in Suwannee County. The subject was placed under arrest and transported to the Lafayette County Jail.

 

LEVY COUNTY

 

Officer Russo and K9 Officer Dishman worked the Labor Day Holiday in the area of the Waccasassa and Withlacoochee rivers. During an inspection of a vessel, the Captain was asked how many fish they had aboard and the Captain stated they had caught a couple of sharks. Aboard the vessel were three other passengers, all stating they had been fishing. An inspection of the vessel revealed the vessel lacked several required safety items and none of those occupants had valid fishing licenses. The vessel contained two spotted sea trout and eight black tip sharks. The occupants of the vessel were issued the appropriate paperwork for the safety violations, license violations and over the bag limit of shark.

 

NASSAU COUNTY

 

Officer Sweat was on patrol on the St. Mary’s River in Nassau County. During a boating safety inspection, Officer Sweat noticed that the operator of the vessel was not acting normal. Officer Sweat was in a location where cell and radio services were very limited, but he was able to contact Georgia Department of Natural Resources Rangers Dupree, Williams and North. They assisted Officer Sweat during his evaluation of the operator. Officer Sweat conducted field sobriety tests on the operator and concluded that the operator was impaired. During the time it took them to get to the Nassau County Jail, the operator told Officer Sweat that he had had a recent surgery and admitted to drinking 7-8 beers in a four-hour period. At the Nassau County Jail, the operator was booked for BUI and he provided a sample of his breath with results of 0.120 and 0.114.

 

TAYLOR COUNTY

 

Investigator McMillan saw a vehicle shine a spotlight and gun displayed from the passenger side window. Investigator McMillan stopped the vehicle, which contained two occupants. Both men were cited for attempting to take deer at night with gun and light.

 

 

NORTHEAST REGION

 

ST.JOHNS COUNTY

 

Officers Hickman and Miller, and Investigator Brechler conducted a two-day special enforcement detail at the Guana River Wildlife Management Area (WMA)/State Park in northeast St. Johns County. With the recent nor ‘eastern winds blowing, which traditionally “turn on” the redfish bite at the WMA dam, the three officers focused their enforcement efforts on fishermen who might be tempted to violate the redfish daily bag limit. During this detail, the officers and investigator cited four fishermen for exceeding the daily bag limit, with one fisherman harvesting nine redfish, seven over the limit and a major violation/first degree misdemeanor. Additionally, one citation was issued for possessing undersized redfish, 12 warnings for trespassing inside the water control structure spillway, three warnings for failure to possess a shoreline saltwater fishing license and one warning for littering.  

 

LAKE COUNTY

 

Officer Weber received information that a 10-point buck in velvet was illegally poached at night in north Lake County. Officer Weber and Lieutenant Steinke located the two suspects. With the assistance of a Lake County Sheriff’s Office Corporal, the suspected shooter was interviewed and a full confession was obtained. Officer Weber and Lieutenant Steinke were able to locate the 10-point buck deer head and an additional 6-point velvet buck deer head that was also taken during the closed season (in the second suspect’s freezer in Volusia County). The officers obtained a full confession from the second suspect who was driving the truck when the 10-point buck was killed. The second suspect also confessed to killing/possessing the 6-point buck. Both deer heads and a .22 Magnum rifle were seized as evidence. Officer Weber filed charges on both suspects including taking/possessing deer during the closed season, willful wanton waste of wildlife and shooting from a county-maintained roadway.    

 

BREVARD COUNTY

 

Officer Land was on patrol in the Sebastian Inlet State Park and was conducting fisheries inspections along the north jetty, when he introduced himself to two anglers fishing from the rocks on the jetty. The fishermen were standing near a pile of lady fish that they claimed to have caught. Officer Land was able to see part of another fish between two rocks not far from the pile of lady fish. Officer Land asked one of the fishermen what kind of fish was under the rocks. The fisherman claimed he did not know and denied catching the fish. Officer Land asked the fisherman to pull the fish out so he may examine it. The fisherman pulled out a 30.5” snook. No other anglers were in the vicinity, and the snook was still moving. Officer Land issued a notice to appear to both fishermen for possession of snook during closed season. The snook was returned to the resource.  

 

Officer Boyers and Loeffler were on water patrol on Sykes Creek. They observed a male fishing from the shore and several others around a campfire nearby. They stopped to conduct a fisheries inspection. During the inspection, they discovered fourteen, undersized sheepshead. All of the fish were scaled and gutted. Two of the males admitted to catching the fish. Neither male was a U.S. citizen and could only provide identification from Guatemala. Officers Boyer and Loeffler placed the two males under arrest and transported them to the Brevard County Jail.

 

Officers Loeffler and Boyer were on water patrol on the Indian River on Labor Day Weekend when they observed a vessel operating a spotlight. After initiating their vessel’s blue lights to conduct a vessel inspection, the officers observed a female passenger switch places with the operator and assume control of the vessel. During the stop, the officers noted signs of impairment from the original operator and the smell of alcoholic beverages emitting from the vessel. Further inspection of the vessel also revealed a bucket full of empty beer cans. The original operator performed poorly on seated field sobriety tasks and was subsequently arrested for BUI.  He refused to provide a breath sample.

 

OSCEOLA COUNTY          

 

Officer Arendas encountered a female that was visibly upset at the boat ramp parking lot in Saint Cloud. The female was looking for her husband and two daughters, age 6 and 8, which had gone out on their boat at 3:00 PM and had not returned. While gathering information from her, she got a call from a friend that the husband had launched his boat at Whaley’s Landing. Officer Arendas headed there with vessel in tow.  With the assistance of the Osceola County Sheriff’s helicopter, the vessel was located. Officer Arendas made contact with the operator and his two children who were in good spirits.  Officer Arendas transported them and towed their vessel back to Whaley’s Landing where their mother was waiting.

 

Investigator Trusley and Lieutenant Fugate were on patrol and were conducting vessel safety inspection on boats returning to the Lake Cypress Boat Ramp. While conducting an inspection on an airboat, Investigator Trusley observed signs of impairment from the operator of the vessel as well as the passenger. The occupants quickly explained to Investigator Trusley that they were not moving the truck because they had been drinking all day, and that they planned to sleep in the truck. After conducting an investigation, Investigator Trusley determined the operator was showing many signs of impairment and his normal faculties were impaired. He then placed the subject under arrest for operating a vessel under the influence of alcohol or controlled substance (BUI). He also charged the individual with failure to transfer the title of the vessel within 30 days and no HIN displayed.

 

VOLUSIA COUNTY

 

Officer Ransom was on vessel patrol near Disappearing Island when he observed a pontoon boat that had run aground. The operator was able to free the pontoon without assistance. Officer Ransom conducted a stop to perform a safety inspection. During the inspection, Officer Ransom observed signs of impairment from the operator. After performing poorly on seated field sobriety tasks, the operator was arrested for BUI. He refused to provide a breath sample.

 

 

SOUTHWEST REGION

 

HIGHLANDS COUNTY

 

Officers Demeter and Ervin were on vessel patrol on Lake Lotela when they encountered two subjects who were fishing. Four undersized bass were found in the boat. One subject claimed to have caught all of the bass and received a notice to appear in court for the violation.

 

 

SOUTH REGION A

 

BROWARD COUNTY

 

Lieutenant Laubenberger and Officers Corteguera and Warne responded to the Dania Beach Pier late at night in reference to a call of a pelican hanging from a tree in the vicinity. The officers located the pelican in a precarious situation. It was hanging upside down from a tree around 40 feet off the ground. The officers were unable to climb the tree due to no branches to grab onto. Mr. Brown from Wildlife Rescue responded to the area. He fashioned a long handheld net. The pelican was able to be freed from the tree. Its wings and feet were wrapped in monofilament line.  The pelican had what appeared to be a small wound to its chest. Other than that, it seemed alert. Mr. Brown took possession of the pelican and delivered it to Busch Wildlife Care Center where it will be treated and released to the wild.

 

Officer Vacin, while on water patrol, responded to a call for assistance from the Hollywood Police Department. The call was in reference to a boating accident that occurred in their city.  The Hollywood Police Department handled the BUI arrest involved in this case and Officer Vacin is conducting an ongoing boating accident investigation.

 

Officers Brock and Mirabel were on water patrol in the vicinity of the 17th Street Causeway Bridge in Ft. Lauderdale. They conducted a stop on a vessel for a boating safety inspection and a violation of a restricted area rule. With information gathered during the stop, the operator of the vessel was arrested for BUI and delivered to the Broward County Jail.

 

Investigator Teems was on patrol at John Lloyd State Park when she observed a vehicle traveling north bound at a high rate of speed in a 20-mph zone with bicyclists present.  She initiated a traffic stop and immediately smelt a strong odor that she recognized to be the odor of cannabis emanating from the vehicle.   As she was speaking to the driver, she observed smoke coming out from the center console.  She asked the driver why was there smoke coming out of the middle console.  He stated he had a pipe that he was using to smoke the marijuana.  The passenger then stated she also had marijuana in the glove box in her brown cosmetic bag.  Both driver and passenger were issued citations for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia and Possession of Cannabis under 20 grams.  The driver was also issued a citation for Speed Too Fast for Conditions. 

 

GLADES COUNTY

 

Officer Alford and Lieutenant Brown were patrolling Lake Okeechobee in Glades County. They observed a vessel at Harney Pond Canal on plane with four people on board. After a boating safety inspection, the vessel would not start. The officers assisted the vessel back to the boat ramp.

 

HENDRY COUNTY

 

K-9 Officer Lilley and Officer Hofheinz were on water patrol on the Caloosahatchee River conducting safety inspections.  The officers noticed a boat keeping a wide berth from them pulling up to a set of docks at a local park.  The subjects from the boat began to walk up the bank when the officers advised the occupants to return to the boat for an inspection.  The Captain advised that they were going to use the bathrooms when the officers observed one of the male subjects begin to run from the park and across the highway into a nearby neighborhood.  The officers were able to locate the house that the subject had run to, but the occupants were being very difficult and would not allow them inside. At that time, the home owner pulled up and K-9 Officer Lilley advised her of the situation and she immediately let him inside where he located the subject’s wet, red shorts that he fled in; he had obviously changed his clothes.  The officers were able to ascertain the subject’s identity and continue to investigate the incident.

 

Lieutenant Steelman received a complaint from archery hunters in Spirit of the Wild WMA in regard to palmetto berry pickers walking around their hunting areas. Officers Teal, Greene, McLendon, Bergwerff, and Lieutenant Steelman responded to the area. Officer McLendon observed a white van pull off of SR 29 and pick up three individuals who had jumped the fence from the WMA with eight bags containing approximately 800 pounds of palmetto berries. All subjects were issued Notices to Appear in court for illegal take of palmetto berries from a WMA.

 

K-9 Officer Lilley was contacted by the Hendry County Sheriff’s Office for assistance. They advised that they had recovered a stolen vehicle and were requesting an area search to attempt to recover the stolen vehicle’s keys and to recover any other evidence that may be there.  K-9 Officer Lilley responded to the area and deployed K-9 Roscoe and searched the area for a while.  K-9 Roscoe recovered a small glass pipe and the stolen vehicles keys which were hanging on the fence directly above the pipe.  Deputies charged the suspect with numerous violations. The stolen vehicle was returned to the registered owners along with the vehicles keys.  The owners thanked Officer Lilley and K-9 Roscoe for their efforts.   

 

MARTIN COUNTY

 

Officers Bergwerff and Moss were on patrol in Martin County. While driving on the east side of Stuart Causeway, they observed three men fishing off the causeway. Officer Moss stopped the vehicle to make contact with the individuals.   During the fisheries inspection, the suspect who had been fishing with his two sons was found to be in possession of nineteen black drum, four of which were undersized. The suspect was asked if he measured the black drum and he replied by demonstrating how he measures fish using his shoe and guessing about another inch was legal size. He also stated that he did not know the bag limit on black drum or the other fish he had in his possession; two sea trout and one sheepshead were found to be of legal size and bag limit.  The suspect was checked through arrest net revealing that in May 2013, he was issued a citation for size limit on black drum. The subject was cited for possession of undersized black drum and warned for over the bag limit of black drum.  The four undersized black drum were returned to resource.

 

PALM BEACH COUNTY

 

Officer Stone, Investigators Booth, Luher and Lieutenant Russo responded to a single vehicle accident on Stumpers Grade in the JW Corbett WMA. A Jeep Cherokee had struck a tree at a high rate of speed and the two occupants were injured.  Both the occupants were air lifted to St. Mary’s Trauma Center for care.  Lieutenant Russo, Officer Stone and Investigator Booth responded to St. Mary’s Medical Center.    The driver of the vehicle was questioned and charges are being pursued by the FWC for DUI.  Both occupants of the vehicle were released from St. Mary’s Medical Center with no life threatening injuries.  

 

ST. LUCIE COUNTY

 

Officers were on water and park patrol during the Labor Day Holiday, focusing on heavily used areas such as popular sandbars and area spoil islands. Fort Pierce Inlet State Park remained busy throughout the holiday but did not reach maximum capacity as in years past. Overall, approximately 95 vessels were inspected with 405 public contacts being made. Those contacts resulted in approximately 9 warnings and 14 citations being issued for boating safety-related violations. Five Notices to Appear were issued for resource violations. Fifteen traffic citations were issued on violations ranging from unsafe speed, safety belt not worn and window tint.

 

During the holiday, Officers Payne and Fretwell responded to a single vessel crash in the Fort Pierce cut. It was reported that a vessel struck a channel marker with such force that it cut it in half. The vessel was towed to North Bridge Boat Ramp where the operator and several passengers disembarked. EMS was called to the scene to treat one subject who was reported to have several broken ribs. No other injuries were reported. The crash remains under investigation.      

 

Officer Pifer was on land patrol in Port Saint Lucie when he observed a subject fishing at a local spillway. Next to the subject was a stringer with a snook attached to it. The subject was contacted and advised that the snook harvest season was currently closed and also that the snook appeared to be undersized, approximately 14 to 16 inches in length. The subject was cited for the violations and the snook was released alive.

 

COPS

 

Officers Teal and Greene taught a hunter’s education class in Hendry County to about 30 people. They taught the people in attendance about Florida’s hunting laws and regulations and answered many questions.

 

 

SOUTH B REGION

 

COLLIER

 

Investigator Michael Haney and Officer Reid White were on water patrol for two days within Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. During their patrols they stopped two vessels to perform boating safety inspections, one of which was in a manatee speed zone.  During the inspections they observed signs of impairment from the operators and administered seated field sobriety tasks.  Each operator was determined to be BUI and arrested, each refused to take a breath alcohol test and they were both transported to jail.

 

MIAMI-DADE

 

Officer Jorge Pino and Major Alfredo Escanio participated in a special detail consisting of several marine law enforcement agencies targeting boating under the influence. During the operation the two officers issued 15 citations, several warnings and arrested one person for operating a personal water craft while intoxicated.

 

Officers Reynaud, Perez and Washington were patrolling the waters off of Dinner Key in Biscayne Bay when they saw a personal water craft idling in the channel towing another PWC. The PWC that was being towed had no Florida registration numbers. The officers approached the male operator and escorted him along with the two PWCs to dock where they initiated an investigation. It was shortly after that the officers received information that the 2 PWCs involved in the incident were stolen. The officers contacted the reporting agency, The Key Biscayne Police Department, and turned over the investigation to them.

 

Several FWC officers responded to reports of a violent fight at Nixon Beach near Biscayne Bay. When the officers arrived they separated the combatants and began to gather information about the cause of the raucous. One male was subsequently arrested for battery after the evidence on the scene concluded that he was the primary aggressor.

 

Officers Martin and Delgado along with Lieutenant Pomares were patrolling the waters of Biscayne Bay when they stopped a vessel in order to conduct a safety inspection. As the captain of the vessel opened the front cabin door to demonstrate that he had all the safety equipment required, the officers smelled a strong odor of marijuana coming from the cabin. Further inspection raveled a small joint inside a bag. A citation for possession of cannabis was issued.

 

An officer and investigator were on water patrol near Caesar's Creek when they stopped a vessel to conduct a fisheries inspection.  The subject on board showed the officers fish that had been caught and placed in a cooler.  However, upon further investigation, the officers located a garbage bag that not only contained refuse but also contained two fresh, large fish fillets.  Upon questioning, the subject stated that he had caught and filleted a snook.  The subject was cited for multiple violations and the fillets were seized for testing. 

 

An FWC investigator completed a two year old boating accident investigation by arresting the suspect and taking him to jail.  On July 2012, a nighttime collision occurred between two vessels, east of Dinner Key Marina.  One unidentified vessel fled the scene, leaving the second vessel with two seriously injured people on board to fend for themselves.  The investigator worked diligently to gather the necessary facts, information and evidence.  The investigator, in conjunction with other FWC law enforcement personnel then arrested the suspect when he was observed stepping outside of his residence. 

 

MONROE 

 

Officer Mattson, Officer Hein and Captain Dipre were on water patrol in the area of the Whale Harbor channel when they noticed a vessel motoring across the sea grass flat in a clearly marked no motor zone. Officer Mattson stopped the vessel and immediately noticed the operator was demonstrating signs of impairment. The operator was administered several field sobriety exercises, which he failed. The subject was placed under arrest and transported to the Plantation Key Jail.

 

Lieutenant Riesz, Officers Mattson and Officer Hein were on water patrol in the upper Keys when they saw a vessel displaying a divers-down flag in the middle of the Whale Harbor Channel. For safety reasons the officers instructed the divers to get out of the water. The officers noticed that one of the divers had several lobsters in his catch bag. A subsequent fisheries inspection revealed that the subject was in possession of undersized lobsters and was thus cited accordingly.  

 

Lieutenant Riesz, Officer Mattson, and Officer Hein were patrolling the waters of the upper Keys when a BOLO was issued for individuals harvesting undersized lobster on the north end of the Whale Harbor Bridge. Officer Mattson dropped off Lieutenant Riesz and Officer Hein at a nearby marina so they could approach the subjects by land. Lieutenant Riesz and Officer Hein made contact with an individual and conducted a fisheries inspection. The individual was in possession of grossly undersized lobster and as such was issued a notice to appear.

You could hear a ...

 pin drop
Once upon a time when our politicians did not tend to apologize for our country's prior actions, here's a refresher on how some of our former patriots handled negative comments about our great country.
 
These are good
 
JFK'S 
Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, was in France in the early 60's when 
DeGaulle decided to pull out of NATO.
DeGaulle said he wanted all US military out of
France as soon as possible
Rusk responded,
"Does that include those who are buried here?" 
DeGaulle 
did not respond.
You 
could have heard a pin drop.
 
 
When in England , at a fairly large conference,
Colin Powell was asked by the Archbishop of Canterbury
if our plans for Iraq were just an example of 
'empire building' by George Bush. 

He answered by saying,
"Over the years, the United States has sent many of 
its fine young men and women into great peril to fight for
freedom beyond our borders.
The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return
is enough to bury those that did not return."
You 
could have heard a pin drop.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
There was a conference in France
where a number of international engineers were taking part,
including French and American.
During a break, one of the French engineers came back into
the room saying,
"Have you heard the latest dumb stunt Bush has done?
He has sent an aircraft carrier to Indonesia
to help the tsunami victims.
What does he intend to do,
bomb them?"
 
A Boeing engineer stood up and replied quietly:
"Our carriers have three hospitals on board
that can treat several hundred people;
they are nuclear powered and can supply
emergency electrical power to shore facilities;
they have three cafeterias with
the capacity to feed 3,000 people three meals a day,
they can produce several thousand gallons of
fresh water from sea water each day,
and they carry half a dozen helicopters for
use in transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck.
We have eleven such ships;
how many does France have?"
You 
could have heard a pin drop.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
A U.S. Navy Admiral
was attending a naval conference
that included Admirals from the
U.S., English, Canadian, Australian and French Navies
At a cocktail reception, he found himself standing with
a large group of officers that included personnel from most of those countries. 
Everyone was chatting away in English as they sipped their drinks,
but a French admiral suddenly complained that,
whereas Europeans learn many languages,
Americans learn only English.
He then asked,
"Why is it that we always have to speak English in these conferences
rather than speaking French?" 
Without hesitating,
the American Admiral replied,
"Maybe it's because the 
Brit's, Canadians, Aussie's and Americans
arranged it so you wouldn't have to speak
German."
You 
could have heard a pin drop.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
AND 
THIS STORY FITS RIGHT IN WITH THE ABOVE...
 
Robert Whiting,
an elderly gentleman of 83,
arrived in Paris by plane.
At French Customs,
he took a few minutes to locate his passport in
his carry on.
 
"You have been to France before, monsieur?"
the customs officer asked 
sarcastically.
 
Mr. Whiting
admitted that he had been to France 
previously.
 
"Then you should know enough
to have your passport ready."
 
The American said,
"The last time I was here,
I didn't have to show it."
 
"Impossible.. 
Americans always have to show their passports on
arrival in France !"
 
The American senior gave the Frenchman a long hard look.
Then, he quietly explained,
''Well, when I came ashore at Omaha Beach on
D-Day in 1944 to help liberate this country,
I couldn't find a single Frenchman 
to show a passport to." 

You 
could have heard a pin drop.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If 
you are proud to be an American, pass this on!
If not, delete it.
I am proud to be of this land -- AMERICA
I am proud to be an American
 

President Caps Military Pay : MOAA

President Caps Military Pay : MOAA. We should cap his golf vacations and other wastes of our $$!

Narcos are choking Chihuahua communities...

Borderland Beat

Link to Borderland Beat

Narcos are choking Chihuahua communities

Posted: 04 Sep 2014 11:10 PM PDT

Proceso (8-29-14) (www.proceso.com.mx/?p=380757)

By Patricia Mayorga, translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

Street in Guadalupe y Calvo, Chihuahua

The presence of the military in some of the Chihuahua municipalities has not prevented  organized crime from murdering its rivals and other civilians who refuse to submit. Organized crime targets indigenous communities dispersed throughout the "Golden Triangle" area in an effort to grab their lands and use them to grow marijuana and opium poppy. Even there, where there is a history of growing narcotics, the people cannot stay because criminals have become extremely violent.

Guadalupe y Calvo, Chih. (Proceso).- Guadalupe y Calvo is traditionally a mining municipality, but its principal activity during the last 50 years has been growing marijuana and opium poppy. It became a prosperous and envied region, reaching the highest minimum wage in the country. Businesses, hospitals, schools, all of its society earned a living with those crops... but these products turned against the people.  Hundreds of residents in the area, which is part of the drug trafficking Golden Triangle, had to flee to stay alive.

The Sinaloa Cartel established its base of operations in Puerto de Yerbitas, another town in this municipality, on the highway that goes to the municipal seat of government and towards Badiraguato. And so Yerbitas, like its neighbor, El Ocote, was left almost uninhabited since 2013. The same thing happened with other towns in Guadalupe y Calvo faced with the threat from the criminal group. Because of its rugged terrain and complicity on the part of the authorities, the zone has been ideal for drug trafficking operations for decades.

Residents who fled from Yerbitas seven years ago remember Fernando Covarrubias, 22 years old, who returned with his family after a long absence. He was a boss with the Sinaloa Cartel and was murdered in 2012, but his cell was established there.

In April, 2011, Covarrubias was arrested with two other young men in Turuachi in possession of firearms and drugs in the same municipality (File No. PGR/CHI/PARR/942/2011-C). Those interviewed remember he was released quickly.

A young man who came from his town narrates: "Fernando had another boss and when they killed him along with with other people, they begin to dispute the plaza, and that's when it gets ugly, because everybody knew him. They say they haven't killed he boss yet, but the people from Sinaloa operate there, and the kid himself began to bring people from outside into Yerbitas."

When they killed Covarrubias, his family had to leave the town because they were threatened.  

"The ones who worked with him and his acquaintances had to leave, because he wasn't involved only with drugs, he also had businesses that bought and sold lumber. There were a lot of people working with him, they persecuted them or threatened them. All the family... to the fourth degree... it didn't matter, they killed or threatened them, too, the same with the families of the men they killed along with him. There were about 40 families affected between 2012 and 2013," the witness recalls.

Just in May of 2013 they killed several people. "Not much was known, but they murdered three girls that night and some more men, there were many 'disappeared'. Over there, they kill people and the bodies never show up," says another displaced young woman.

The first witness indicates that the criminals have their favorite areas to dump bodies and leave vehicles abandoned, but nobody dares touch them or report it to the authorities: "They are new pickups, nobody recovers them. A grey Avalanche was left for along time near Yerbitas, going up through Turuachi, who knows if it's still there."

The few people who remain in town live in fear. "You're always checking with your friends to see how things are when you want to go anywhere. First, you ask how things are."

Before, at 6:00 pm, the streets were full of people, they'd get together in the towns. Today, although the presence of the military in the county seat has allowed some places to be taken back, the people from the towns prefer to go home early. The stores also close.

"Since last year, the landing strips that weren't being used any more have been reopened", adds the interviewee, "They have been reconditioning them. In prior years they were working only as lumber centers, they were going strong, but because a lot of them have had to leave due to the violence, they fixed them up and airplanes began to land again ... but they take off very quickly."

Last year they murdered Jaime Orozco Madrigal, who was running for municipal president. Before and after that, there was a crime wave in the region: three men from the town of La Hacienda were kidnapped and their bodies were later returned. They abducted another five (men) from the town of Mesa de San Jose, and they were never seen again. The bodies of two others, 25 years old and with their hands tied, were dumped on the road to the Dolores Section.

From that point on, criminal groups incinerated vehicles and people, they savagely murdered inhabitants of Puerto de Yerbitas. Not all the murders were officially reported, and several victims were never found.

Just in five days in July, two women, 17 and 21 years old, were murdered in Yerbitas; the head belonging to the second woman was never found. In other operations, authorities secured eight AK-47 magazines and a fragmentation grenade. They also found two cargo trucks incinerated in which, they said, there were no bodies, but people from the municipality say there were at least nine bodies incinerated.

Also during those days, six men were wounded in a gunfight and two pickups were burned. The wounded men were being transferred to hospital in ambulances when they were rescued by their friends.

A month before that, near Yerbitas, they murdered two children (7 and 11 years old), their father and their grandparents. Then they killed a soldier.

There were gunfights in Baborigame, too, and the gunmen kept the town in fear for a long time. "It's inexplicable; everybody knows where the narco roadblocks are located, there are soldiers, but nobody does anything", says one of the displaced people. And he remembers the peaceful past: "Before, it was peaceful, you could walk around at dawn through beautiful scenery. You knew that a lot of people were in the business of growing marijuana, there were always gunmen, but that was all; they were not sicarios (killers.) The terror started with the sicarios."    

Several local residents agree that the criminals diversified six years ago. "Now, the ones that are real nervous are those who own sawmills, but they extort everybody, even the indigenous people. Last year, around July, they killed a lumber yard owner because he wouldn't pay the 'cuota' (protection money)".

The first investigator of the State Commission on Human Rights in Parral (Comision Estatal de Derechos Humanos), Victor Manuel Horta Martinez, says that last year the (human) displacements intensified and that the towns of Guadalupe y Calvo were left practically uninhabited. The challenge for the commission was to follow up on the murders, threats, kidnappings and extortion cases on their own initiative since there were no criminal complaints. The terror paralyzed the people.

The young woman they decapitated in Puerto Yerbitas was Horta Martinez's niece. She had six other brothers and the whole family had to flee.

The state authorities' strategy to fight crime is simple. In October of 2013, when Jorge Enrique Gonzalez Nicolas was named general prosecutor for the state, he gave orders that police reports from the southern zone were not to mention homicides; they (homicides) would only be disclosed when the media requested it.

Resistance by indigenous people 

Alonso Molina Carrillo, one of the community leaders in Coloradas de la Virgen, points out that the authorities never pay attention when they report threats or murder attempts. "I've spoken with the commander and the Pubic Ministry, but they don't even go there. They're either afraid or have been bought off. One of them told me, 'Put on a hood and go for it.' Where's the help?".

He warns that the criminals want to take their lands to plant drugs. "I remember my parents used to tell me... we have a map from 1912. It was an indigenous community, there were no divisions or lumber cutting, one lived peacefully. In 1955, they began to organize it as an ejido(communal land)... In 1970, they divided us into indigenous people and mixed blood people (mestizos). They left us the rough terrain. There's about 52,000 acres of forest, one part has been cut down, more than half of it, but all they gave the indigenous people was rough terrain. There's no pine trees, no forest, only hills.

"But we have always lived there,within the ejido, because our town is there, we have meetings, we appoint the governor, we organize feasts, we have our belongings, from our forefathers. They cannot run us off. We're from there, we're inside the ejido, we are not ejidatarios[registered members of an ejido], but rather, comuneros (communal landowners)," Molina explains.

In 1992, the mestizos took away their right to an ejido with the agrarian reform. They even took a census without including them. "They have threatened us, but they haven't arrested anybody", he says, but the worst part is that since 1970, they have murdered seven of their leaders.

Today, for safety's sake, they prefer not to "get together with many mestizos nor to participate in gossip, because then we say things, while drinking or something like that, and then they begin to investigate us, to see how we're doing; then they begin to bother us", says Molina.

Sometimes they start to cut down the community's forest, but about 50 indigenous people get together. "We file a complaint, which we already filed with Semarnat (Secretaria de MedioAmbiente y Recursos Naturales; Department of Environment and Natural Resources). We have an order preventing them from doing it. We go as a group, including men and women". And, yes, they managed to stop the lumber cutting two years ago, but at the cost of frequent threats.

In any case, in Coloradas de la Virgen, drug traffickers are trying to take over the lands. They have their tactics: "They get in by force, they deceive the people. They tell them, 'I'll help you, I'll help you', but in the end, they build their homes and throw them out."

"Many work with them. The work consists of doing everything for the mestizo owners, who are people from outside. There are many families... After the harvest, they leave... but while they are there, they build homes with sheet metal, with wood, they drive late model pickups, dress well, because they've got money."

Some of the indigenous people who help them are children. "They're around, they force them to become sicarios. Once they invite them to work with them, it's as if they tell them: 'You're going to do this.' The only new hires are children between 12 and 15 years old," he narrates.

The closest school is three hours away by pickup and 12 hours on foot. To get medical care, people have to wait until the health brigades go there, and if somebody gets sick, they ask help from Baborigame, which is three hours away.

"I think the best way to end all this is to take away all of the Petate ranch, which is close to Coloradas. There's another small ranch called Huechi, where there's also another group of outsiders who are also planting." 

The defense of their properties in Choreachi cost the lives of two young indigenous men, Jaime Zubia Ceballos and Socorro, whose families had to leave the town because of threats. The teachers in he town also left.

The violence unleashed by the criminal groups forced Isela Gonzalez and Ernesto Valencia -- activists with the Alianza Sierra Madre -- to seek government assistance from the Mecanismo de Proteccion para Personas Defensoras de Derechos Humanos y Periodistas  (Office for the protection of defenders of human rights and journalists). Their petition was accepted, but so far, not even the risk assessment has been completed.

Also, the community of Choreachi, where a young defender of indigenous lands was murdered last year, presented a request before the Inter-American Human Rights Commission for precautionary measures to protect the community, the traditional authorities and the Alianza Sierra Madre (Sierra Madre Alliance). The petition, which they submitted through the Center for the Human Rights of Women, is being analyzed.

For this reason, the Trust for Competitiveness and Citizen Participation was formed in 2010, to which the Citizen Observatory for Prevention, Security and Justice belongs.

Businessmen in the state contributed an extraordinary surcharge of 5% of the state payroll tax to help repair the social fabric.

According to data compiled by the Observatory, the municipality has only 55 police officers and a yearly average budget of 9.5 million pesos ($730,000.00) for security. The  average education level for the population is fifth grade, 21% is illiterate and only 30% of the population is economically active.  

This year, Guadalupe y Calvo will receive 14.3 million pesos ($1.1 million) from the National Program for the Prevention of Social Violence and Crime. 


        

   


    

Executed and beheaded the brother PRD federal deputy in Guerrero

Posted: 04 Sep 2014 06:04 PM PDT

Decapitated, with signs of torture and narco message,  the body of Joel Miranda Salgado, brother of PRD federal deputy Marino Miranda was found, in the municipality of Teloloapa.

The Attorney General of Guerrero confirmed the killing of Joel Miranda Salgado, who was beheaded.. The deceased was the brother of PRD Federal Deputy Marino Miranda Salgado.   

The PGJE confirmed that around 10 am, the police received a report that in the interior of the supply store Diana, located in Colonia Vicente Guerrero, was found the decapitated body. 

Local, State and Mexican Army elements arrived at the site of the discovery. 

Corporations confirmed that it was Joel Miranda Salgado, brother of Marino Miranda Salgado, former Mayor of Teloloapan and current Federal Deputy for the federal electoral district 02. 

The case was referred to the Special State Prosecutor for the Northern Region of Guerrero.

Comment from Pepe of  BB:

Teloloapan is located in the northwest of Guerrero, in an area controlled by La Familia Michoacán (LFM), but disputed by Guerreros Unidos (GU).  This area has seen some brutal narco violence in the last couple years.  LFM uses Teloloapan as their base in the region. GU holds nearby Iguala as its northern base of operations.   

This is an area where local autodefensas  have arisen in the last year or so.  Earlier this year, federal diputado and former Mayor of Teloloapan Marino Miranda Salgaldo accused these AD's of being tied to the GU's.   Later he backed away from that assumption.

The current mayor of Teloloapan, a close ally of Marino Miranda, famously appeared in a LFM video two years ago, where he promised to appoint personnel favorable to LFM: 

From Proceso:
The body was found in bed, with the head tossed on the floor.  Under the head was a message: 

“Esto les va a pasar a todos lo que apoyan a Los Negros, aquí estamos putos” 

"This is what is gonna happen to all those who support Los Negros - here we are, fags." 

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