Tag: Police

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dallas 911 Not Responding

The City of Dallas has multiple questions to answer about the Dallas 911 not responding after a deaf woman, Zarea Dixon, was found dead in her home when police officers took over an hour to respond to her call for help.

In a separate incident it took more than six minutes to respond to an apartment fire in North Dallas.

Dixon called 911 to report her boyfriend had broken into her apartment along South Polk Street and attacked her with a knife.

An interpreter with Sorensen Translation Services relayed that Dixon had been attacked stating her “ex-boyfriend broke into her house, beat her up and tried to stab her with a knife.”

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dixon provided the suspect’s name, description and date of birth to the police through the translator. She also said he had left her home.

Dixon “declined an ambulance but stated she ‘needed the police,'” according to the affidavit.

In addition to the non response to this woman, Dallas Police has not responded to multiple other incidents.

Additionally, Dallas police never took a report on three students burned by fireworks launched at them in North Dallas.

Dallas 911 Not Responding To Fires Either

At another event, sixty to seventy firefighters responded and saw flames coming from the second floor of the three-story apartment building upon arrival last week.

The fire quickly spread to the third floor and then into the attic space and roof of the building requiring the additional alarms by Dallas Fire Rescue.

Dallas Fire Station 29 is approximately one mile away or roughly three minutes.

Dallas 911 Not Responding

In comments to the media, Dallas Fire Fighters Association President Jim McDade said, “When the first companies got there — there was an enormous amount of fire, probably due to a delay in response,” McDade said.

There were no deaths or injuries, but more than twenty apartments were destroyed and more than one hundred residents displaced.

Slow responses can endanger firefighters. In New York, a firefighter with Brooklyn’s Ladder 170 lost his life last weekend.

Off Duty NYPD DWI

Off Duty NYPD DWI

An off duty NYPD DWI charge is the latest embarrassment for Mayor Eric Adams and Officer Tomas Garcia.

Off Duty NYPD DWI

Garcia, a thirty-one year old, was sleeping in his personal vehicle at Eighth Avenue and 61st Street when he was woken up by EMS workers around 8:30 AM.

The off duty Garcia was showing signs of intoxication and arrested at the scene.

The officer was charged with driving while intoxicated per police records.

Off Duty NYPD DWI – Latest Issue

Officer Garcia was in the 66th Precinct at the time of his arrest. It is unclear if he has been reassigned or still working patrol of any kind.

Off Duty NYPD DWI

Two Pennsylvania State Troopers were killed near Philadelphia in March. That accident has been under investigation for possible connection to DWI.

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New Year 2021 – At War with Vices

New Year 2021

As new year 2021 begins, I think now is the perfect time to reflect on where we have been this past year and where we are going. We saw the return of terrorism at a level we have not seen since September 11.

We saw a domestic terror incident in one of our greatest downtowns in America. The question is: are we ready?

New Year 2021

When celebrating New Year’s, we often make resolutions to lose weight, give up cigars or do better about some weakness. For me, I think the public safety industry’s biggest vice might be training. I am lucky to speak across the country and meet a variety of public safety professionals. Often I see us going through the motions with our training. When I see organizations that are uncommitted to training, I will usually inquire and hear that “we do this every day.” Generally, I do not believe that to be the case, but I do believe that you may be asked to respond to a unique situation. Without preparation, you will find yourself ill equipped to slay the dragon we face.

In the latter’s case I pray we do not play like we practice. It will lead to innocent people being unnecessarily hurt or killed just as quickly as not practicing at all. While walk-throughs have their place, are you really practicing enough on vehicle placement, hose deployment, SCBA failures and cardiac arrest management? These are some of the scenarios where we find ourselves in trouble on the fire ground and in emergency medicine.

New Year 2021 – New Training

Training is tough. It requires us to move away from every day issues like checking apparatus, handling public relations requests and responding to calls. It forces us to recognize that this industry changes almost daily. We have to keep up with those changes or find ourselves unable to answer the call.

Training has to be a resolution we plan to keep in 2021. It makes all the difference in every day performance.

Let me use my son as an example. He pitches with both arms like the major league baseball pitcher Pat Venditte. People are always amazed that he can throw strikes at a league par velocity with both arms. Other teams’ coaches will come up to me and remark on his talent. They don’t realize that his talent is not accidental. It is from training his body to throw with proper mechanics from both sides. His journey to throwing from both sides was not a eureka moment where the clouds parted and a voice arose which said, “Dodge, you will throw with both arms!” He just had a coach who would not allow him to play the infield as a left-hander other than first base. He wanted to play shortstop and thus began a journey where he taught himself to throw right-handed.

He has to do double the training to keep up now. The point is that it wasn’t a miracle. It was about training.

I challenge each of you to use the same mindset to become the responder you want to be and live up to the traditions set by one of America’s first firefighters, Ben Franklin, this New Year 2021.

If you are a firefighter, are you practicing for an SCBA failure? The life you save may be your own. If you are a medic, are you working with the EMTs in your system to practice pit crew CPR to provide the best chance of survival for your patient? If you are an officer, are you keeping up with building trends so that you can ensure your crew’s safety on firegrounds? Are you a stern father figure who requires your crew to be seat belted while making runs? Do you require each of your crewmembers to have their reflective vests on every call on a roadway?

These are the areas where our careless and inconsistent attitude toward training leads us down a dangerous path.

Let’s make New Year 2021 a year where we follow America’s first firefighter Ben Franklin and be at war with our own vices as they relate to training.

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Anthony Warner, Nashville Bomber Dead

Anthony Warner

Anthony Warner was identified by Metro Nashville Police Department officials as being both the downtown Christmas morning bomber and deceased.

Law enforcement went on to say they do not believe anyone else was involved in the explosion.

Anthony Warner

Anthony Warner

Anthony Quinn Warner was identified yesterday as a Person of Interest by law enforcement officials. Law enforcement has not yet cited a motive for Warner’s actions in downtown Nashville, but they are not currently seeking other suspects. Metro Nashville Police thanked their federal and state partners in the FBI, ATF, US Attorney’s Office, and Tennessee Highway Patrol.

Anthony Warner

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Anthony Quinn Warner Identified As Person Of Interest

Anthony Quinn Warner

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Anthony Quinn Warner is a 63-year-old Tennessee man who has been named as the person of interest accused in the explosion of a parked RV in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning.

FBI public affairs officer Darrell DeBusk said information developed during the course of the investigation led law enforcement to the former home of Anthony Quinn Warner on Bakertown Road in Antioch, Tennessee.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dYLgVTCFY0

Anthony Quinn Warner

Per public records Anthony Quinn Warner recently conveyed his property in Antioch, Tennessee to Michelle L Swing, of Los Angeles, California for free. A quit claim deed available through Davidson County records shows that on November 25, 2020, he gave the property in Antioch to an unmarried Swing for zero dollars.

The deed says that Warner was unmarried. The woman has ties to Tennessee and is 29 years old, according to online records. Her Facebook page is now deleted.It is unclear what their relationship is at this time. 

Warner also has an arrest history from the late 70s for felony controlled substances in Davidson County, Tennessee.

One online report says Warner “worked for himself in computers.” The report continued that he was “self-employed in IT.” It is not known if Warner worked for AT&T where internet, phone, and 9-1-1 services were still down as of this morning.

Nashville Mayor John Cooper previously called the bombing a “one-off event.”

Cooper was quoted saying “As for the explosion, we’ve got great people working on it, and we’ll get to the bottom of it,” he said in a news conference. “It seems intentional, but I think it’s just a one-off event, and people should not be concerned about it. But in a year that has had everything else, let’s add an explosion to it.”

Cincinnati police were dispatched to a similiar RV parked and running near the federal building there last night as a precaution.

 

 

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Cincinnati – Potential Second Explosives Incident Investigated

Cincinnati

Cincinnati police spokesperson Sgt. Eric Franz said authorities completed an investigation into an RV that fit the description of a ‘suspicious vehicle’ near the John Weld Peck Federal Building on 6th Street Friday evening without incident.

Cincinnati

An RV with its engine running was reported to the Cincinnati Police by the security detail at the Federal building.

Franz said, based on the RV explosion incident that took place in Nashville early Christmas morning, the police are using Explosive Detection K-9’s to clear the scene out of an abundance of caution.

Cincinnati, Nashville, Other Cities On Alert

Multiple US cities are on alert in and around telecommunications hubs tonight as social media rumors swirl about a possible attack on wireless and internet networks.

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Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion Intentional

Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion

A Nashville Christmas morning explosion rocked the streets as officers were responding to a report of shots fired in the area.

Metro Nashville Police Department officers responded to the call of shots fired around 5:30 a.m. CT Friday Christmas morning. On arrival they found a motor home parked in front of an AT&T transmission building at 166 2nd Avenue North. A recorded message that indicated a bomb would explode in 15 minutes was heard coming from the RV, Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake said during a news conference.
Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion
Officers saw no immediate evidence of shots fired but they requested the department’s hazardous devices unit and started to evacuate neighborhood residents, police said.
The RV exploded at 6:30 a.m. CT as the bomb squad was responding, police spokesman Don Aaron said.
“We do believe this to have been an intentional act,” he said. “Significant damage has been done to the infrastructure there on 2nd Avenue North.”
At least three were injured this morning in the blast, including a police officer who had been evacuating the area.
The FBI Memphis office is seeking information and digital media from today’s explosion in Nashville, Tennessee. Tips can be submitted digitally at fbi.gov/nashville or by phone by dialing 1-800-CALL-FBI. There have been several recent threats against the FBI and others.

Nashville Christmas Morning Explosion Update

Authorities have found what they believe to be human remains near the site of the explosion in downtown Nashville on Christmas morning, according to two law enforcement officials familiar with the ongoing investigation.

The remains have been sent to the medical examiner’s office for analysis.
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Merry Christmas 2020

From everyone at Never Forget 9-11 Foundation we wish you a very Merry Christmas 2020 and hope the New Year brings us all closer together. We wanted to share the quote below from one of our favorite holiday stories in hopes that we all find these days to be filled with charity, mercy, and general good acts of kindness. These are the same traits that brought America together in the aftermath of September 11 and together we accomplish so much more than apart.

We hope you will remember the many front line responders (police, fire, EMS) and hospital workers who work today to bring you safety while you spend time during this pandemic, COVID19.

Christmas 2020

An Old Quote For Christmas 2020

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us! And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless Us, Every One!” – Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol

 

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Eddie Garcia Is New Top Cop In Dallas (TX)

Eddie Garcia

Per local news, Other Side Dallas, Eddie Garcia is the new chief of the Dallas Police Department per a city press release. Chief Garcia has been police chief for the San Jose (CA) Police Department.

City Manager T.C. Broadnax Wednesday announced that Eddie Garcia will become Dallas’ 30th Chief of Police, making him the first Latino to preside over the ninth largest police department in the country. Garcia began his career with the San Jose Police Department in 1992 and has served as its Chief since 2016.

Eddie Garcia

“My story began as a young boy moving to a new city, learning to speak English in a community that promoted me to Chief. It’s an honor to be welcomed into one of America’s greatest cities for the second time as Chief.” said Garcia. “I’m truly humbled by the thought of wearing the DPD uniform and working alongside such an amazing group of committed men and women. Together in partnership and collaboration with the Dallas community, we will meet the challenges of today and beyond.”

Chief Garcia replaced Chief Reneé Hall who accelerated her departure after an inappropriate relationship with local activist Dominique Alexander was revealed.

Eddie Garcia Background

Eddie Garcia

Chief Garcia holds a bachelor’s degree from Union Institute and University. Since he started as an officer in February 1992 in San Jose, the nation’s 10th most populous city, he worked in the Patrol, Narcotics, Special Operations – M.E.R.G.E (Mobile Emergency Response Group and Equipment) unit; was a patrol sergeant, night detective and homicide investigator; and commanded the Community Services Division and the Special Investigations Unit.

During Chief Garcia’s tenure in San Jose he led initiatives to help build community trust; increase transparency; and embrace fair, impartial, and constitutional policing. Among the department’s successes they implemented basic Spanish in the police academy, launched a Spanish language Facebook page and significantly increased minority recruiting.

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