Archive for June, 2017

Jr. Police Academy a win for students, law enforcement – Community journal

The annual Kerrville Junior Citizen Police Academy offers to pre-teens and teenagers a look inside the requirements and operation of law enforcement units, and this summers class will finish their two weeks of instruction on Friday.

Officers leading the sessions picked a handful of students to be interviewed while the rest continued in a discussion of gang awareness, one day last week.

Students from the class of 26 included Katrina Rodriguez, 11; Roy Parks, 11; Greyson Murphy, 13; and Ashton Britton, 14.

They are all first-timers in this event, while the rest of the class includes some young students who are alumni repeating the JCPA.

This group of four was interviewed about halfway through the nine mornings of classes, but already had definite opinions about what they had learned so far.

Lessons for the students

The class schedule included the following topics, led by Kerrville Police Officers Juan Trevizo and Paul Gonzales with guest speakers Kathy Andrews, KPD Investigator Machetta of the S.O.U., Texas Game Warden Buckaloo, Police Officer Beard, Sheriffs Deputy Jimmy Poole, Paul Huchton of 911, Special Agent Triola of the FBI, and Kerrville EMS and Fire Department.

Day One started with an opening ceremony and discussion of a code of conduct, dress code and ethics; and introduction to the JPA program; and the first of several lessons on the flag ceremony and flag etiquette.

Day Two included health and wellness, and discussion of the duties of a school resource officer and of internet safety and bullying.

Day Three offered alcohol awareness and information about the Special Operations Unit of the police department and their equipment.

Day Four featured visit by a Texas Parks & Wildlife Department Game Warden; and a discussion of gang awareness with the students.

Day Five included Crime Scene Investigation (CSI), fingerprints and student investigation of a mock crime scene.

Topics during the second week were scheduled to include an introduction to crime prevention, traffic laws and safety, mock traffic stops, gun safety, public speaking, police communications and 911, the FBI, juvenile probation and operation of the local Juvenile Detention Center, first aid basics and fire safety, and a tour of a Fire Department ambulance and rescue truck.

The two-week academy was to end with a full flag ceremony, letters of appreciation to the supervising officers, a graduation ceremony and a meal provided for the students and their parents by the volunteers of the Citizen Police Academy Alumni Association.

Student reactions

Parks said, I signed up to come, to learn about the daily life of police officers. I know one of the officers here personally.

Murphy said hes already decided he wants to be a Crime Scene Investigator himself when hes older.

Im interested in the science of it, he said.

Rodriguez immediate response was, I want to be a profiler for the FBI and save peoples lives.

Ive always wanted to be a park ranger and I wanted to learn from the game warden, Britton said. I like wildlife.

Parks said during week one of the sessions he most enjoyed learning more about the Parks and Wildlife Department.

I liked the CSI lesson the best, but the Parks & Wildlife information was good, too, Murphy said.

Rodriguez said the S.O.U. officers didnt bring the whole van they work from, but they brought an assortment of their specialized equipment for the young students to examine.

Britton said she especially enjoyed the game wardens presentation.

The young students said another game warden brought a trained drug detection and tracking dog, a Labrador retriever that was about four and a half years old.

The students in the class hid a cell phone in the building at the Doyle Community Center, they said, and the dog found it when instructed by its handler.

Parks said he learned Labradors are better for that job than German Shepherds when law enforcement departments choose dogs to be trained.

(Officer Treviso predicted correctly that any of his students who were interviewed probably would pick the session with the drug dog as one of their favorites.)

The students said they tell their families about their lessons each day, such as trying the drunk goggles one day.

Britton said she was challenged to catch a plastic bottle while wearing the goggles, and couldnt do it.

Parks said, They had three levels of drunk with the goggles and one of the exercises was to wear the goggles and walk a straight line. Only one girl in the class could do it.

Asked about the bullying, safety and gang awareness information, they all said they had seen or were otherwise experienced with incidents at school.

Britton said, Im going to Tivy High School next year and I think its going to be crazy.

Parks said hes previously had conversations with a couple classmates who told him one was selling drugs to the other. He said he and another friend didnt want to be snitches, but they chose to tell a school administrator.

Rodriguez said she had seen fights at school, even back to fifth grade; and Murphy agreed, saying hes seen a lot of fights at Hal Peterson Middle School. Sometimes the fights werent seen by adults because the students involved chose hidden locations behind lockers in the locker rooms or in the bathrooms.

The flag etiquette lessons continued each day, with the young students first activity each day the raising of the American flag outside the building, and their last activity the lowering of it.

Each time a trio of students were picked to unfold the flag and raise it, and another trio chosen to lower it and fold it again.

Each time the rest of the students were expected to stand at attention on the parking lot and observe, until dismissed.

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Jr. Police Academy a win for students, law enforcement - Community journal

Ann Coulter’s fury with Trump growing daily no punches pulled in latest rebuke – TheBlaze.com

On Friday, The Blaze reported conservative commentator and author Ann Coulter posted a series of social media messages on her Twitter account criticizing President Donald Trump for failing to focus on shutting down the U.S.-Mexico border and choosing instead to prioritize issues Coulter feels should be pushed to the back of the line.

Coulters comments followed a speech Trump gave in Miami announcing changes to former President Barack Obamas controversial policies governing U.S. relations with Cuba.

I thought with Trump wed finally have a president helping OUR country, Coulter tweeted. So far: Syria, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Italy, China, N Kor. Today: Cuba.

At least Cubas in our hemisphere, Coulter wrote. How long can it be before he gets to America?

Right-leaning outlet Mediaite managed to get Coulter to comment on her Twitter tirade against Trump, and she didnt hold back.

It was a whole series today! Coulter told Mediaite. This jacka** is really ticking me off. And today Cuba? F***ing Cuba? If hed run a campaign promising to do everything hes done in the last 6 months, hed never have been elected. [Quote edited for language.]

After the Mediate story was published, Coulter claimed on Twitter she didnt intend for the quote about Trump to be published.

I wouldnt have cursed if Id known [Jonathan] Levine now works at @Mediaite, Coulter wrote. Thought I was emailing a friend. Now you know I REALLY mean what I tweet.

I have half-naked photos of @LevineJonathan. (Very cute!) Youd think I could speak openly in an email to him, Coulter wrote.

In May, Coulter penned a scathing rebuke of Trumps failure to close the border after agreeing to pass a budget that did not include funding for a border wall.

Apparently, Trumps fine with no wall and everything else in a bill straight out of George Soros dream journal if only the Democrats hadnt been so rude as to tell the public about it, Coulter wrote. When your main complaint is that the other side is gloating too much, maybe youre not that great a negotiator.

Yeah, sure, its only 100 days in, its an artificial deadline, the media is dying to say Trump has failed and so on, Coulter wrote.

Except: Planning for the wall should have begun on Nov. 9, and a spade should have been put into the earth to begin building it the day after Trumps inauguration, Coulter added. Now, its 100 days later, and we still dont have the whisper of a prospect of a wall.

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Ann Coulter's fury with Trump growing daily no punches pulled in latest rebuke - TheBlaze.com

Britain seeks ‘special’ EU ties as Brexit talks start – Reuters

BRUSSELS Brexit Secretary David Davis arrived in Brussels on Monday to launch talks he hoped would produce a "new, deep and special partnership" with the EU in the interest of Britons and all Europeans.

Beaming as he met the European Union's chief negotiator Michel Barnier at the EU executive's Berlaymont headquarters, the veteran campaigner for Britain to quit the bloc said he aimed for a "positive and constructive" tone in the talks, adding: "There is more that unites us than divides us."

Barnier, a former French minister, has voiced impatience in the past that Britain has taken nearly a year to open talks. Looking more somber than his British counterpart, he said he hoped they could agree a format and timetable on Monday.

His priority, he said, was to clear up the uncertainties which last June's Brexit vote had created. He and Davis are due to give a joint news conference in the evening.

Almost a year to the day since Britons shocked themselves and their neighbors by voting on June 23 to cut loose from their main trading partner, and nearly three months since Prime Minister Theresa May locked them into a two-year countdown to Brexit in March 2019, almost nothing about the future is clear.

Even May's own immediate political survival is in doubt, 10 days after she lost her majority in an election.

Officials on both sides play down expectations for what can be achieved in one day. EU diplomats hope this first meeting, and a Brussels summit on Thursday and Friday where May will encounter - but not negotiate with - fellow EU leaders, can improve the atmosphere after some spiky exchanges.

Davis's agreement to Monday's agenda led some EU officials to believe that May's government may at last be coming around to Brussels' view of how negotiations should be run.

WHICH BREXIT?

May's election debacle has revived feuding over Europe among Conservatives that her predecessor David Cameron hoped to end by calling the referendum and leaves EU leaders unclear on her plan for a "global Britain" which most of them regard as pure folly.

While "Brexiteers" like Davis have strongly backed May's proposed clean break with the single market and customs union, finance minister Philip Hammond and others have this month echoed calls by businesses for less of a "hard Brexit" and retaining closer customs ties.

With discontent in europhile Scotland and troubled Northern Ireland, which faces a new EU border across the divided island, Brexit poses new threats to the integrity of the United Kingdom.

It will test the ingenuity of thousands of public servants racing against the clock to untangle 44 years of EU membership before Britain is out, 649 days from now, on March 30, 2019. For the officials sitting down on Monday, at least on the EU side, a major worry is Britain crashing out into a limbo, with no deal.

For that reason, Brussels wants as a priority to guarantee rights for 3 million EU citizens in Britain and be paid tens of billions of euros it says London will owe on its departure.

With a further million British expatriates in the EU, May too wants a deal on citizens' rights, though the two sides are some way apart. Agreeing to pay a "Brexit bill" may be more inflammatory.

Brussels is also resisting British demands for immediate talks on a future free trade arrangement. The EU insists that should wait until an outline agreement on divorce terms, ideally by the end of this year. In any case, EU officials say, London no longer seems sure of what trade arrangements it will ask for.

But Union leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron, are also determined not to make concessions to Britain that might encourage others to follow.

When 52 percent of British voters opted for Brexit, some feared for the survival of a Union battered by the euro crisis and divided in its response to chaotic immigration. The election of the fervently europhile Macron, and his party's sweep of the French parliament on Sunday, has revived optimism in Brussels.

(Editing by Janet Lawrence)

LONDON A van plowed into worshippers near a London mosque on Monday, injuring 10 people in what police said was a deliberate attack on Muslims that was being treated as a terrorist incident.

MOSCOW The United States should respect Syria's territorial integrity and refrain from unilateral actions in this country, Russian news agencies quoted Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying on Monday.

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Britain seeks 'special' EU ties as Brexit talks start - Reuters

European Union agrees to use sanctions against cyber hackers – Hindustan Times

The European Union (EU) can levy economic sanctions on anyone caught attacking EU states computer networks, EU foreign ministers said on Monday, the blocs latest step to deter more attacks following incidents in Britain and France.

With German national elections in September, interference in democratic votes is a concern for the bloc after accusations of Russian meddling in the US presidential election last November and the French election in May.

EU foreign ministers agreed that so-called restrictive measures including travel bans, assets freezes and blanket bans on doing business with a person, company or government could be used for the first time.

A joint EU response to malicious cyber activities would be proportionate to the scope, scale, duration, intensity, complexity, sophistication and impact of the cyber activity, the bloc said in a statement.

US intelligence agencies concluded last year that Russia hacked and leaked Democratic Party emails as part of an effort to tilt the presidential election in favour of President Donald Trump, which Russia denies.

A British intelligence agency has told political parties to protect themselves against potential cyber attacks, while the French government dropped plans to let its citizens abroad vote electronically in Sundays legislative elections because of the risk of cyber attacks.

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European Union agrees to use sanctions against cyber hackers - Hindustan Times

America in Retreat, Europe en Marche – New York Times


New York Times
America in Retreat, Europe en Marche
New York Times
Giving some 45 million Ukrainians the right to travel freely through the 26 countries of the Schengen area is something of an achievement at a time when, across the European Union, the word immigration sounds like a recipe for electoral disaster.

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America in Retreat, Europe en Marche - New York Times