The Shiv - Documentation

Stolen car leads to immigration arrests
By MARK FLEMING
The case began unfolding about 1:15 p.m. Friday when a Deer Park police officer following the electronic signal from the LoJack device in a stolen care followed it into Pasadena, and Pasadena police joined in the search, according to Vance Mitchell, public information officer for the Pasadena Police Department.The Deer Park and Pasadena officers followed it to a residence in the 4100 block of Whirlaway Drive, which is near the intersection of Spencer Highway and Red Bluff Road. Two men jumped out of the truck and tried to flee, only to be caught by police officers. Another man jumped from a second floor window of the home and was also captured.In all, police arrested five men who tried to flee the home, Mitchell said. All were found to be illegal immigrants from Mexico. Two women from Mexico and a 15-year-old girl were also in the house and found to be in the country illegally. Mitchell said they were not arrested or charged with a crime, but were taken into custody to be held for immigration officers.Mitchell said a number of weapons were recovered from the home, including one stolen assault rifle. One of the men said he had just arrived the previous day. Another was in possession of a U.S. identification card he admitted was a false document obtained at a Houston-area flea market.
All eight people who were detained were later interviewed by federal immigration authorities and turned over to their custody for investigation and deportation, Mitchell said.In what looks like a well-planned robbery, Mitchell said thousands of dollars worth of building materials were stolen from a construction site at Red Bluff Road and Genoa-Red Bluff Road on Thursday morning.About 5 a.m. a security guard working at the site reported he had been patrolling the construction area on a bicycle when he was accosted by two armed men. The guard said the men’s faces were partially covered and one was holding a handgun and the other a shotgun. He said they immediately blindfolded him, limiting the description he was able to provide police.The guard said he was tied up and locked in a storage container, during which time he could hear trucks and heavy equipment operating. After about an hour, the men untied him, but warned him not to come out of the container until they had left.When the man came out of the container, Mitchell said, he found the battery had been taken from his cell phone. He went to a nearby store and called police.Mitchell said the quantity of material stolen probably required three large trucks to remove.Police crime scene investigators gathered evidence, and the investigation is continuing.Police are still unsure exactly what crime was committed in a Halloween afternoon incident in which a Pasadena man suffered numerous cuts and had to be taken to the hospital by helicopter. Mitchell said police hope to learn exactly what happened when they have been able to question the man more fully.What police know is witnesses saw two men come to the door of the man’s apartment in the 3600 block of Shaver Street. A struggle followed, during which the man either jumped or was thrown through the window of his second-floor apartment, falling to the parking lot below. Witnesses then saw the men flee in a newer model brown pickup truck.The victim suffered cuts to his hand, head and face consistent with breaking through a window, Mitchell said. It was not immediately clear if the man was a victim of an attempted robbery or was assaulted for some other reason.In another assault Saturday afternoon, quick response by bystanders and police resulted in two men going to jail charged with robbery of an ice cream vendor in the 700 block Richey Street.Police report two men approached the vendor, who operates a tricycle-mounted cart selling ice cream about 5 p.m. and started to make a purchase. As he served them, they became belligerent and got into a verbal altercation with the vendor. One of the customers then demanded the vendor’s money and began striking him, pushing him to a ground.A bystander called the police, and followed the attackers in his car. He led police to the suspect vehicle, and the men in it were stopped and arrested for the robbery.Mitchell identified the men charged in the incident as Pasadena residents Jose Martin Castro, 25, and Dustin Storm Autrey, 18.
Zachary Christie is a six-year old student in Newark, Delaware who is facing 45 days in reform school because he brought his new Cub Scout eating utensil to school for lunch. The utensil includes a knife, and this violates the school's brainlessly, robotically enforced zero-tolerance policy on "weapons on school property."Critics contend that zero-tolerance policies like those in the Christina district have led to sharp increases in suspensions and expulsions, often putting children on the streets or in other places where their behavior only worsens, and that the policies undermine the ability of school officials to use common sense in handling minor infractions.
"Something has to change," said Dodi Herbert, whose 13-year old son, Kyle, was suspended in May and ordered to attend the Christina district's reform school for 45 days after another student dropped a pocket knife in his lap. School officials declined to comment on the case for reasons of privacy.
Ms. Herbert, who said her son was a straight-A student, has since been home-schooling him instead of sending him to the reform school...
"I just think the other kids may tease me for being in trouble," he said, pausing before adding, "but I think the rules are what is wrong, not me."
It's a Fork, It's a Spoon, It's a ... Weapon? (Thanks, Ron!)
(Image: Case Boy Scouts of America Caramel Jigged Bone Hobo Knife 4-1/8", Knifecenter.com; illustration only, this is not necessarily the cutlery Zach Christie got in trouble for carrying)
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md) said that an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP)—“it would bring down the whole [electrical] grid and cost between $1 trillion to $2 trillion” to repair with full recovery taking up to 10 years!
“It sounds like a science-fiction disaster: A nuclear weapon is detonated miles above the Earth’s atmosphere and knocks out power from New York City to Chicago for weeks, maybe months. Experts and lawmakers are increasing warning that terrorists or enemy nation state could wage that exact type of attack, idling electricity grids and disrupting everything from communications networks to military defenses…such an attack would halt banking, transportation, food, water, and emergency services and might result in the defeat of our military forces.” (Federal Times—September 21, 2009)
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) says “the U.S. is ill-prepared to prevent or recover from an EMP”—they are asking Congress for authority to require power companies to take protective steps to build metal shields around sensitive computer equipment.
It is imperative for us to protect our critical infrastructure so that we are not vulnerable to the devastating effects of a potential EMP blast. We must think beyond simple guns and bullets and realize that our technological progress is on one hand a great advantage to our society, but on the other hand, can be a huge liability if our technical nerve centers are “taken out”. Our technology is a great strategic advantage for us, but also it is our soft underbelly, and whether, we are surprised by an EMP or some hard-hitting cyber warfare, we are back to the stone age and it will hurt.
It also occurs to me that the same tools terrorists use against others can also be used against them.
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md) said that an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP)—“it would bring down the whole [electrical] grid and cost between $1 trillion to $2 trillion” to repair with full recovery taking up to 10 years!
“It sounds like a science-fiction disaster: A nuclear weapon is detonated miles above the Earth’s atmosphere and knocks out power from New York City to Chicago for weeks, maybe months. Experts and lawmakers are increasing warning that terrorists or enemy nation state could wage that exact type of attack, idling electricity grids and disrupting everything from communications networks to military defenses…such an attack would halt banking, transportation, food, water, and emergency services and might result in the defeat of our military forces.” (Federal Times—September 21, 2009)
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) says “the U.S. is ill-prepared to prevent or recover from an EMP”—they are asking Congress for authority to require power companies to take protective steps to build metal shields around sensitive computer equipment.
It is imperative for us to protect our critical infrastructure so that we are not vulnerable to the devastating effects of a potential EMP blast. We must think beyond simple guns and bullets and realize that our technological progress is on one hand a great advantage to our society, but on the other hand, can be a huge liability if our technical nerve centers are “taken out”. Our technology is a great strategic advantage for us, but also it is our soft underbelly, and whether, we are surprised by an EMP or some hard-hitting cyber warfare, we are back to the stone age and it will hurt.
It also occurs to me that the same tools terrorists use against others can also be used against them.