Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Police Department's"


25 mentions found


A "Wheel of Fortune" contestant has gone viral for his hilariously wrong answer on the Nov. 11 episode of the show. With only a few tiles missing, the board read "___E _OURSE_F A ROUN_ OF A___AUSE," before contestant Will Jordan gave his answer. "Treat yourself a round of sausage," he guessed — which, clearly, was wrong for a number of reasons. A clip now viewed over a half a million times on X shows Jordan's comical "missolve." Following the silly sausage solve, the game show's social correspondent and daughter of former host Pat Sajek, Maggie Sajek, got Jordan's thoughts on his "missolve" moment.
Persons: Will Jordan, Kitina, Ryan Seacrest, Pat Sajek, Maggie Sajek, Vanna White, Jordan, Sajak, Seacrest, Will, Jordon Organizations: Coast Guard, Rocky Hill Police Department, Rocky, Services Food Bank Locations: Connecticut
City officials haven't yet tallied up what the Trump campaign owes Erie for public safety costs for his most recent rally in September. The five localities that spoke to NBC News have sent their bills to the Trump campaign. Four years later, the Trump campaign hasn't paid. The unpaid bills go back even further for Spokane, Washington, which wants the Trump campaign to pay for costs incurred in a May 2016 visit, before Trump officially became the Republican nominee for president. Similarly, Erie's bills were to cover police, fire and public works personnel overtime, according to city spokesperson Rob Lee.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, they're, reimbursements, it's, Anthony Guglielmi, Guglielmi, Kamala Harris, Laura Cruz Acosta, ” Cruz Acosta, hasn't, Erin, Hut, Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton, Sanders, Clinton, didn't, Allison Franz, Nancy Sorensen, Ana Pereira, isn't, Rob Lee, I’d Organizations: Erie Times -, Trump, NBC News, Secret, nonpayment, El, El Paso City Council, Republican, Gateway, Mesa Police Locations: Erie , Pennsylvania, Erie, El Paso , Texas, El Paso, Spokane , Washington, Missoula County , Montana, Arizona, Mesa
Domo CEO Josh James stepped down in 2022 after he was accused of sexual assault, according to police reports and employees. One current Domo employee and three former employees said the company's board was made aware of the allegations against James prior to his sudden departure. In March 2023, a year after stepping down, James returned to Domo as CEO. Timeline of Josh James' departure from Domo and subsequent returnNovember 20, 2021 : According to claims in police reports, Josh James sexually assaults an employee during a business trip to Columbia, South Carolina. February 2022 : Domo fires the employee, according to her account to police officers.
Persons: Josh James, James, haven't, John Mellor, Catherine Wong, Daniel Stevenson, Mellor, Bruce Felt, Ian Tickle, Laurence, Jay, Brown, Dana Evan, Joy Driscoll Durling, James didn't, Domo, Brown Jr, James “, , ” James, what's, Organizations: Business, Securities and Exchange, Domo, Columbia —, American Fork City Police, Columbia Police Department, Columbia Police, BI, Columbia Locations: Columbia , South Carolina, Utah, Columbia, South Carolina
PUEBLO, Colo. (AP) — Two people have been arrested on charges of murder and abuse of a corpse after the discovery of a girl's body encased in concrete and a boy's remains in a suitcase in Colorado, according to police and public jail records. Police found the girl's remains in a metal container filled with concrete in a storage unit last month, according to authorities. As part of the investigation, police began searching for two children last seen in the summer of 2018, Jesus Dominguez Jr. and Yesenia Dominguez. The children hadn't been reported missing, according to the police department's news release. Available court records did not identify attorneys for Minjarez and Dominguez who could comment on their behalf.
Persons: Corena Rose Minjarez, Jesus Dominguez, Jesus Dominguez Jr, Yesenia Dominguez, hadn't, Dominguez Organizations: City of, City of Pueblo Police Department, . Police, Minjarez, Police Locations: Colo, Colorado, City, City of Pueblo
(AP) — Two off-duty police officers in Nebraska's largest city shot and killed two men in an SUV, though authorities have provided few details about the confrontation. The two Omaha officers were working at a local business at around 2 a.m. Saturday when they opened fire on the men in the SUV, police said. The men, 26-year-old Fernando Rodriguez-Juarez and 28-year-old Jonathan Hernandez-Rosales, were taken to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries and later died. Police said they found a handgun in the vehicle, but they didn't say whether there was anything illegal about that or what led the two off-duty officers to shoot the men. Police also haven't said whether the two officers, whom they haven't publicly identified, identified themselves as police to the men or whether they were wearing their police uniforms.
Persons: Fernando Rodriguez, Jonathan Hernandez, Rosales, haven't, didn't Organizations: Police, Nebraska State Patrol, Sheriff's Locations: OMAHA, Neb, Nebraska's, Omaha, Juarez, Nebraska, Douglas
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Graffiti has risen to high art in downtown Los Angeles: Taggers have covered at least 27 stories of an unfinished high-rise development. The towers were going to house a hotel and luxury condos, but the project stalled in 2019 when the Beijing-based developer ran out of money, the Los Angeles Times reported. Photos You Should See View All 45 Images“The measures will be implemented immediately and the graffiti will be removed,” it said. On Thursday, suspects were reported spray-painting a site on the 30th floor and officers were told the suspects fled in a vehicle. Officers ultimately stopped the vehicle and cited the driver for failure to yield, police said.
Persons: Taggers Organizations: ANGELES, Los Angeles Convention Center, Los Angeles Times, Police Department's Locations: Los Angeles, Beijing, area's City
New York Mayor Eric Adams accused of sexual assault in 1993
  + stars: | 2023-11-23 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Nov 23 (Reuters) - A woman on Wednesday accused New York Mayor Eric Adams of sexual assault and other offenses in a court filing, alleging they occurred in 1993 while both of them worked for the city of New York. A spokesperson for Adams denied the claim and said the mayor does not know the accuser and does not recall meeting her. New York City Mayor Eric Adams reacts during his visit to Colombia in Bogota, Colombia October 7, 2023. "The mayor does not know who this person is. Adams' lawyer said that the mayor was cooperating with an investigation but did not say what it was about.
Persons: Eric Adams, Adams, Luisa Gonzalez, Daniel Trotta, Kanishka Singh, Ross Colvin, Daniel Wallis Organizations: New York, York City, REUTERS, Reuters, New York Police, department's Guardians Association, Black, Guardians Association, FBI, New York Times, Thomson Locations: New York, New, York, Colombia, Bogota, Turkish
[1/2] A Customs and Border Protection officer watches as a vehicle burns at the Rainbow Bridge U.S. border crossing with Canada, in Niagara Falls, New York, U.S. November 22, 2023 in a still image from video. The Niagara Falls police department's Crash Management Unit has taken over the investigation of the incident, which was determined by U.S. federal agencies, including the FBI, not to have been a terrorist event. "Due to the complexity of the incident, the investigation will take some time to complete," Niagara Falls Police Department Superintendent John Faso said in a statement. "At this time the identity of those involved is pending positive identification and notification to next of kin." Reporting by Lucia Mutikani in Washington; Editing by Ross Colvin and Daniel WallisOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: John Faso, Lucia Mutikani, Ross Colvin, Daniel Wallis Organizations: Customs, Border, Rainbow Bridge, REUTERS Acquire, U.S, Niagara, Crash Management Unit, FBI, Niagara Falls Police, U.S . Customs, Border Protection, CNN, Whirlpool, Thomson Locations: Canada, Niagara Falls , New York, U.S, New York, Ontario, Niagara Falls, Niagara, Canadian, Lewiston, Queenston, Washington
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Police shot and killed a 17-year-old early Sunday during a traffic stop in a mall parking lot in Bismarck, North Dakota, while investigating the teen for a reported shooting. Police subsequently began investigating 17-year-old Nicholas Bruington, of Bismarck. About 1:50 a.m., officers stopped a vehicle in which Bruington was a passenger, near the Scheels sporting goods store in the Kirkwood Mall parking lot. Three officers shot at Bruington. Political Cartoons View All 1240 ImagesThe North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation is investigating the shooting, per the police department's protocol.
Persons: Nicholas Bruington, Bruington, Bruington “ Organizations: N.D, — Police, Police, North Dakota Bureau Locations: BISMARCK, Bismarck , North Dakota, Bismarck, Kirkwood
In particular, the judge cited provisions empowering officials to evaluate an applicant's “good moral character” and whether “good cause exists for the denial” of gun permits. The Supreme Court’s so-called Bruen decision, which struck down a New York gun law, was the high court’s first major gun decision in over a decade. Political Cartoons View All 1218 ImagesThe judge said he was staying the effect of his ruling until midnight Thursday to give the city time to appeal. Someone may be deemed to have good moral character by one person, yet a very morally flawed character by another. Such unfettered discretion is hard, if not impossible, to reconcile with Bruen,” Cronan wrote.
Persons: , , John P, Joseph Srour, Cronan, Srour, Amy Bellantoni, ” Cronan, Bruen Organizations: , Supreme, New York Police Locations: New York, Manhattan, U.S, New York City, Srour
The company plans to open a location on 125th Street — less than 2 miles from the East Harlem store. A police cruiser outside a boarded-up retail store near Union Square in San Francisco in November 2021. Ethan Swope/Getty ImagesIn San Francisco, another complicated narrative on crimeIn San Francisco, a Target on Folsom Street location went viral earlier this year for its aisles of locked-down merchandise . AdvertisementAdvertisementWalgreens had been closing thousands of stores for years before it decided the fate of the five San Francisco locations. "That's why we're actively collaborating with legislators, law enforcement, and retail-industry partners to advocate for public-policy solutions to combat organized retail crime."
Persons: , Djeneba Kone, she's, Brian Cornell, Jim Joice, Jennifer Ortakales Dawkins, Kone wasn't, That's, there's, Ethan Swope, shoplifters, James Kehoe, Kehoe, Cornell, we're Organizations: Service, Target, Aldi, Costco, East Harlem, New York City Police, St, Herald, East, Seattle Times, San Francisco Police Department, Walgreens, San, San Francisco Chronicle Locations: Harlem, Manhattan , New York, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Spanish Harlem, El Barrio, Manhattan, Bronx, East Harlem, Columbus, SoHo, Folsom, Target's, Francisco
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Florida prosecutors have charged rapper YNW Melly with witness tampering ahead of his retrial on double murder charges even as his attorneys accused them of conspiring to hide evidence that the lead detective may have lied in a related investigation. Prosecutors charged Melly this week with making sure a key witness didn't testify at his first murder trial, which ended in July with a hung jury that voted 9-3 for conviction. Jury selection in the retrial of the 24-year-old rapper is set to start next week with opening statements anticipated in early November. Boutros said Moretti told Gorel that if anyone asked, “You need to say you were here when I served the search warrant.” She said Gorel didn't reply. She said Moretti told investigators he was joking — something she said wasn't true.
Persons: YNW, Prosecutors, James Benjamin, Daniel Aaronson, Harold Pryor “, Pryor, Kristine Bradley, John Murphy, Christopher “ YNW Juvy ” Thomas, Anthony “ YNW, ” Williams, Thomas, Williams, Bortlen ” Henry, , Benjamin, Aaronson, Bradley, Mark Moretti, Moretti, Michelle Boutros, Boutros, Melly's, Jamie King, King, Adam Gorel, Gorel, Moretti's Organizations: Prosecutors, Bloods, Associated Press, Broward, “ Young, Miramar Police Department, Miramar Police Locations: FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla, Florida, Broward County
REUTERS/David 'Dee' Delgado/File PhotoAug 5 (Reuters) - Social media influencer Kai Cenat has been charged with inciting a riot after he announced a giveaway of video game consoles that drew thousands of people to a New York City park on Friday and sparked violent clashes with police. Cenat, best known for his live streams on the gaming site Twitch and YouTube videos, was also charged with unlawful assembly, Maddrey said. He said the crowd started to calm down when police officers evacuated Cenat from the park. In a video posted Thursday, Cenat told his followers that the giveaway would include computers and Playstation 5 consoles. Cenat, 21, has 6.5 million followers on Twitch and 4 million subscribers on YouTube.
Persons: Kai Cenat, David, Dee, Delgado, influencer Kai Cenat, Jeffrey Maddrey, Maddrey, Cenat, Eric Beech, David Gregorio Our Organizations: Union Square, REUTERS, New York Police Department's, YouTube, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Cenat, Washington
A Google Street View car driver led police on a 100 mph chase through a small town in Indiana. The driver of a Google Street View car led police on a 100 miles-per-hour chase and then crashed into a ditch after refusing to stop, officers said. Street View uses cars use to take pictures of neighborhoods around the world. According to the Middletown Police Department's press release, Chief Landon J. But the Google driver kept going, running a red light before coming to a closed-off bridge, the press release said.
Persons: Landon J, Dean, we're Organizations: Police, Middletown Police Department, Google, View, Middletown Police Locations: Indiana, Henry
The ex-manager of a Pennsylvania Wendy's made up a fake employee to pocket extra wages, police say. She manually clocked the "ghost employee" in and out for 128 shifts, police said. The woman was charged with theft by deception and an arrest warrant issued. In April, Johnson admitted to a police officer that she added Bright as an employee and created shifts he didn't work, police said. Wendy's didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider, made outside normal working hours.
Persons: Linda Johnson, William Bright, Johnson, Wendy's didn't Organizations: Service, Police Department, Police, Lancaster Locations: Pennsylvania, Wall, Silicon, Lancaster, Manheim
July 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division has opened an investigation into whether the Memphis Police Department has an unconstitutional "pattern or practice" of using excessive force and racial discrimination, department officials announced on Thursday. Earlier this year, the Justice Department agreed to join city officials and other agencies in a review of the Memphis Police Department after its officers fatally beat Tyre Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man, in the Tennessee city in January. The federal investigation announced on Thursday is not tied to any specific incident, Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said at a press conference, though she noted Nichols' "tragic death" in her remarks. "City and police department leaders recognize the need to scrutinize the police department's practices to prevent such incidents from ever happening again," Clarke said. Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Aurora EllisOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Tyre Nichols, Kristen Clarke, Nichols, Clarke, Jonathan Allen, Aurora Ellis Organizations: U.S . Department of Justice's Civil, Memphis Police Department, Justice Department, Thomson Locations: Tennessee, New York
Organized retail crime is rising in Wichita, Kansas, according to a report by CNN. "To see this much retail crime, it's shocking," Captain Casey Slaughter, who leads Wichita Police Department's property crimes bureau, told CNN. Organized retail crime at retailers was 26.5% higher in 2021 than in the previous year, according to a study by the National Retail Federation. Target said organized retail crime has led to more than $400 million in profit losses in 2022. Local crime officials say that drugs, and in particular fentanyl, a synthetic drug like heroin but 50 times more potent, appear to be driving a lot of the retail crime.
Persons: , Kris Kobach, Captain Casey Slaughter, Slaughter, Joe Sullivan, Sullivan, Cabela's, Robert Lee, Lee Organizations: CNN, Service, Kansas, Wichita Police, National Retail Federation, Target Locations: Wichita , Kansas, San Francisco, Wichita, Sedgwick, Sedgwick County
Lamond, who supervised the Intelligence Branch of the police department's Homeland Security Bureau, also made false and misleading statements to federal law enforcement agents about his communications with Tarrio, the Justice Department said. According to the indictment, Lamond and Tarrio had been in regular contact since 2019. Lamond wrote, "Hey brother, sad, sad news today. Tarrio pleaded guilty to charges in the Black Lives banner case and in 2021 was sentenced to five months in prison. A jury in a separate case this month convicted Tarrio and other members of the Proud Boys of seditious conspiracy involving the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters.
Elon Musk's new AI researcher Igor Babuschkin was arrested in March in a domestic violence case. Musk reportedly hired Babuschkin as part of a push to develop a competitor to OpenAI's ChatGPT. The case involved "a minor injury," but did not otherwise pose a threat to public safety, Philip told Insider. Babuschkin was arrested at 588 Webster Street, according to a police report log posted last month on the Palo Alto Police Department's website. Musk has also brought on resources including roughly 10,000 graphics processing units to execute his AI plans, Insider previously reported.
The NYPD's robotic dogs are "out of the pound" again, mayor Eric Adams announced earlier this week. Adams announced during a press conference earlier this week that the city spent $750,000 on two robotic canines the NYPD calls "Digidogs. " He said the dogs can "save lives" in situations where "you can't have police officers going inside because it's dangerous." The announcement comes just two years after the NYPD halted an experiment with the robotic dogs. In addition to the robot dogs, the NYPD will begin testing the StarChase pilot, a device that shoots a GPS-tracker to a stolen car, and the K5 ASR, an outdoor security robot, Adams said during the press conference.
In the weeks before the Covenant school shooting, Tennessee lawmakers tried to loosen gun laws. Legislation moving through committees would lower the minimum age for carrying guns from 21 to 18. Tennessee's gun laws are already lax, allowing open carry of loaded handguns without a permit. Nashville Mayor John Cooper, speaking on MSNBC Tuesday, said he hopes this is a moment in which the state can get back to "common sense" gun laws, particularly with regard to assault-style weapons. Tennessee's gun laws are already considered lax.
Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg is leading the Trump investigation into Stormy Daniels' hush money payoff. He led the New York attorney general's successful 2018 lawsuit against the Donald J. Trump Foundation, which paid $2 million in court-ordered damages for illegally misusing charitable funds. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks at a press conference after the sentencing hearing of the Trump Organization at the New York Supreme Court in New York City. Bragg is highly controversial for his approach to crimeBeyond the ongoing Trump investigation, Bragg has been harshly criticized for being too lenient while the city struggles with rising crime. Bragg's stance provoked instant blowback in New York City and in conservative media.
The plaintiffs accused Ocala of violating the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment "establishment clause," which restricts governmental involvement in religion. Ocala city officials helped organize and conduct the one-hour prayer vigil held in response to a series of shootings in which three children were struck by stray bullets. The city then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. A federal district court will now weigh the plaintiffs' establishment clause claims in light of the football coach ruling. The conservative-majority Supreme Court in recent years has chipped away at the wall separating church and state, eroding American legal traditions aimed at barring government officials from promoting any particular faith.
The Supreme Court declined to take up his case, effectively allowing the police officers to avoid the lawsuit. Novak appealed that decision to the Supreme Court, even getting the satirical news site The Onion to write an amicus brief. The Supreme Court regularly takes on less than 1% of the case petitions it receives every year, according to News 5 Cleveland. In recent years there has been an effort in the US to end qualified immunity protections for police officers. The George Floyd Justice in Police Act was passed by the House in 2020 and included a section restricting qualified immunity for police officers.
Former Memphis officer Demetrius Haley never told Tyre Nichols why he was pulled over. Department records say Haley approached Nichols while talking on the phone in a black hoodie. He yelled profanities, despite no evidence that Nichols ever swore at or threatened officers. "You never told the driver the purpose of the vehicle stop or that he was under arrest." A day after Nichols' beating, the department released a statement describing a "confrontation" with an alleged reckless driver, later identified as Tyre Nichols.
Total: 25