Notice...

Please be advised: The WicBury Crapper and it’s staff take no responsibility for metering, publishing, filtering, or maintaining comments from our readers. Although we do our best screen most comments, some harassing, ignorant, or offensive comments may be posted by our readers.All comments are the sole responsibility of their respective commenters. By reading this blog you expressly consent to not being offended by the information contained herein and agree not to take legal action for any information contained herein against any member of the WicBury Crapper or it's staff or board. If this blog or any of it's content offends you, please leave now.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

To Spew Crap or Not To Spew Crap, that is the question...

By WicBury Crapper Board Member "ThinBlueLog"...

In our striving to be number one (literally) we have made several decisions in regards to posting screwed up postings. While we find it amusing that people whom themselves are probably posting screwed up crap about others get offended easily when screwed up crap is posted about them... we decided to limit and then totally cease the posting of screwed up crap about police officers on here.

But, people read stuff to laugh at other people's misfortunes and talk crap about each other. This is why sbynews.com and salisburygrinch.blogspot.com are so "popular" is because they talk crap about not only one another but everyone else who vexes them.

So, yes, although we took a pause to reflect on stuff.. we are back. We are back just to piss off the people who would rather us not be back.

Here's the thing, we initially made this blog in order to address some concerns of people and initially it was well received by people. Then people started, like always, talking shit about each other, including line cops. For some reason, there is almost an anti-thin blue line on the eastern shore, especially with some departments. Some people love, love to talk shit about each other because it makes them feel better about themselves. In fact, lots of times hey talk shit and some people in leadership positions listen to the shit talk and act on totally irrelevant information, false information, or information that is just stupid and has nothing to do with anything.

Take a look at your department's personnel. Although they may be competent in their jobs, their support for one another may be seriously lacking. People wonder why some departments still don't have collective bargaining but take a look at the attendance at the FOP meetings. If you want to change something for the better, you are going to have to get involved, quit talking crap, and quit stabbing each other in the back. The only way to further your own cause is to further everyone else along with you because a united front is much more powerful than a lone soldier.

Did we do right? Now we are hearing complaining that people can't talk crap about each other because we attempt to screen out most of the crap that is insulting or demeaning to cops. Sorry we wont publish that crap. We won't publish crap about anyone Sgt. or below OR publish personal attacks (as long as we can figure out who someone is talking about) directed at administrators.

So, we are here for you. We spend our personal funds to provide a "Officer of the Month" program and we still have other programs in the works. Again, if you don't like us, that is fine, don't read us and kiss our collective WicBury Crapper Asses. We are back.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Britain deploys permanently armed police in London

10/23/2009
Britain deploys permanently armed police in London
By David Stringer Associated Press

Related Articles:Police driver training: The U.K. wayLondon police 'steal' from unlocked cars

LONDON — Wielding submachine guns and pistols, British police are making rare armed patrols in crime-blighted London neighborhoods — a change in law enforcement tactics that may prompt calls for the wider use of weapons by the country's traditionally unarmed Bobbies.
London's police department said Friday that a new armed unit is carrying out regular sweeps of districts riven by gun battles between rival drug gangs.

Unlike typical police procedure, the team of about 20 officers actively seeks out criminals carrying or storing guns — rather than waiting to respond to emergency calls about incidents involving weapons.

Chief Inspector Neil Sharman said the unit began work in June to tackle pockets of rising gun crime, and will double in size from November amid concerns over the increasing use of weapons in Britain's capital.

In contrast to the United States and many European nations, British police have never routinely carried firearms on patrol, with only a limited number of specialist officers trained to use guns. Britain's Home Office said being unarmed is part of the "character of the police" in the U.K.
"In the past the police were authority figures dealing primarily with people who respected the police. However, as terrorism and crime increases in the U.K. the traditional icon of the Bobby on the beat is becoming incapable of dealing with terrorists and violent crime," said Bob Ayers, a London-based former U.S. intelligence officer.

The British public has traditionally been resistant to the routine arming of police — a skepticism heightened by the 2005 shooting death of an innocent Brazilian electrician, mistaken by police marksmen for a suicide bomber.

Yet, some argue Britain is now naive to believe that police can tackle rising levels of gun crime without weapons of their own.

"Every single police officer should have a gun," said Daniel Dixon, a 25-year-old engineer from central London. "Criminals might be carrying weapons, and the police officer is endangering himself by not having one."

In the 12 months to September, London saw a 17 percent rise in gun offenses, up from 1,484 to 1,737. According to government figures for England and Wales, there are about 50 to 60 shooting deaths in the country each year.

Scotland Yard said the new armed patrols are taking place in Brixton, a south London district with a reputation as a drug dealing hotspot, and an area of north London dogged by a turf battle between rival Turkish drug gangs.

The sweeps are being carried out about once a week by officers already attached to the specialist firearms unit. Some see the tactic as evidence the Britain may slowly be rethinking its policy on armed police. "Since 9/11 they've become much more aware of the fact that it is a violent world out there," said Ayers.

Jenny Jones, a legislator at London's City Hall and member of the oversight committee for London police, said the change in tactics is unacceptable. "I can't believe that the sight of a policeman with a machine gun will make people feel safer," she said.

London Mayor Boris Johnson's office said "armed police have a role in certain circumstances, but that should be the exception not the norm."

Dolapo Akinmade, a 35-year old accountant from Welwyn Garden City, a town just north of London, said the fact the British public rarely carry firearms means police don't need weapons. "I think society is better off without guns. If every policeman had a gun it would create a tense atmosphere," he said.

"It's a question of is it necessary, and the general feeling is that it's not," said Roy Ingleton, author of "Arming the British Police: The Great Debate."

Sheriff admit's he's bald and fat!

By CATHERINE TSAI
Associated Press Writer

DENVER --
Spectators watching the alleged balloon boy hoax unfold on live TV suggested paragliders, skydivers, fishing hooks and more to bring down the flying saucer-shaped craft thought to be carrying a 6-year-old boy.

Since the boy, Falcon Heene, was found at home and investigators declared the whole saga a hoax by the boy's parents, the e-mails flooding Larimer County Sheriff Jim Alderden's inbox have turned to criticism of his actions in the case.

In his online newsletter Thursday - titled "Up, Up and Away" - Alderden writes that people have sent e-mails from around the world, some of them calling him gullible, fat and bald with an over-inflated ego. They compared him to Barney Fife, the bumbling sheriff's deputy on the 1960s TV show "The Andy Griffiths Show."

Alderden conceded he's fat and bald. He disagreed with most of the rest.

Though he led a weekend news conference announcing his office was pursuing criminal charges against Richard and Mayumi Heene and then appeared on Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor" Monday, Alderden said he really doesn't enjoy the media spotlight.

"In fact, I'm pretty ticked off that I had to spend my weekend dealing with them instead of some quality time in the saddle," Alderden wrote. "That said, sometimes the Sheriff just has to be the spokesperson instead of putting it off on the Press Information Officer. I did my best to put an end to the media circus and have refused to do any more interviews or morning TV shows, even turning down Dr. Phil."

The Heenes haven't been arrested yet, and have denied the balloon incident was a hoax. The Heenes appeared on ABC's "Wife Swap" late last year and again in March, and investigators said the couple wanted to use publicity from the balloon episode to get their own reality TV show.
Alderden said he might address criticism next week that he misled the media in the hours after the boy was found, when he told reporters that investigators still believed the Heenes were sincere. Alderden since has said he said that because he didn't want the Heenes to be tipped off to the criminal investigation.

The semi-regular newsletter, "The Bull's-eye," is posted on a private site linked to the official sheriff's site. It carries the subtitle, "Straight Shooting from the Sheriff."

Alderden wrote that one onlooker's suggestion for bringing down the balloon involved multiple helicopters and a large net. Others suggested using blimps, skydivers, paragliders, and fishing hook and line.

Alderden thanked everyone who sent ideas to rescue the craft.
"Some suggestions were actually pretty sound. Others - not so sound," the sheriff wrote.
___
Larimer County Sheriff's Bulls-eye: http://www.larimersheriff.org/BullsEye/

A 43-year-old man pleads guilty to 3 counts of sex offense on 3 different children in his Fruitland neighborhood.

PRESS RELEASE
October 21, 2009

A 43-year-old man pleads guilty to 3 counts of sex offense on 3 different children in his Fruitland neighborhood.

This morning, Russell Glen Burnett pleaded guilty to 3 counts of 3rd Degree Sex Offense on two 8-year-olds and an 11-year-old. State’s Attorney Davis R. Ruark says Burnett committed the sex offenses on the three girls in his yard and in his home in April of 2009.
Wicomico County Circuit Court Judge W. Newton Jackson deferred sentencing today. Burnett will be sentenced within 30 days and is currently being held without bond. He is facing a maximum of 30 years in the Division of Correction, 10 years per each offense.

“A serial child molester has been removed from the streets of Wicomico County thanks to the fine police work of detectives assigned to the Child Advocacy Center,” says Ruark.
The State’s Attorney adds Burnett is also awaiting a federal indictment by the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Maryland for a number of child pornography offenses stemming from the investigation by the Fruitland Police Department and the Wicomico Child Advocacy Center.

For more information contact:
Carolyn Widdowson or Davis Ruark at 410 – 548 – 4880.

Friday, October 23, 2009

TASER advises cops not to aim at suspect's chest

October Officer of the Month Awards - Time Running Out!


(We have no idea who this guy is but he's a cop and he's getting a crappy award from a guy in a bedsheet!)
From WicBury Crapper Board Member "TheFloater"...
Get your votes in now, time's running out for October's Officer of the Month and Supervisor of the Month awards! Current nominations:
  1. Sgt J. Hill (WCSO)-Supervisor

  2. DFC K9 Lewis (WCSO)
  3. Ed saylor because those of us in Delmar love him .
  4. Isham for his constant ability to make us laugh!
  5. Christian Pecoraro from the Wicomico County Sheriff's Office. He is always willing to hlp anybody and does not talk any poo behind ohers backs. We miss you CP.

  6. Mike Dolch also from the Wicomico County Sheriff's Office for being one of the few that will stand up for his people from what I see.
  7. Sgt. Propst and Cpl. Williams! Sgt. Propst because he is a great Sgt. and tactically minded and Cpl. Williams because he is willing to help his fellow personnel out and is so pretty!

  8. DFC Chase from WCSO. He never stops working, always with a great attitude. Leading traffic guy at the agency hands down.

  9. Detective Sammy Workman he investigates criminal cases for the Sheriff's office and MSP he always does a great job and has been a Detective for several years now

Ruling shows hazy line between detention, arrest

By Peter Hermann
October 21 2009

When you tell someone you "got arrested," it's a safe bet you mean a cop put you in handcuffs and took you to jail. Turns out in Maryland you can "get arrested" without any of those things happening. In fact, the law says you can "be arrested" by a police officer even if that very same police officer insists he didn't arrest you.

The complete article can be viewed a

at:http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bal-md.hermann21oct21,0,6303271.story

Life Imprisionment in Murder Case

Today Judge Don Davis sentenced Brianna Brinkely to Life Imprisionment for her role in the Carjacking/Murder of Anitra Pirkle on January 22, 2009. Brinkely was the second defendant to be sentenced for this Murder.

Kenneth Alvira had received Life Without the Possibility of Parole and a thirty year concurrent sentence for Armed Carjacking. The State sought a sentence of Life Without Parole, but the Court, citing the fact that there was not evidence that Brinkley actually inflicted the stab wounds herself, imposed the Life Sentence. By filing the LWOP Notice, it automatically means that Brinkley will not be eligible for parole until she serves at least 25 years of her sentence before eligibility kicks in.

In addition, on any Life Sentence in Maryland the Governor's consent is required before anyone is released on parole. The State believes that the sentence imposed is a fair one. By State's Attorney Davis Ruark, "The family of Anitra Pirkle is relieved that the second person has been sentenced for her role in the carjacking and murder of Anitra. Nothing can ever make up for the loss of Anitra, a young lady who did everything right. This senseless, random act of murder is repulsive to us all.

The exceptional police work of the Wicomico Bureau of Investigation and the Maryland State Police Homicide Unit ensured that the three were captured and successfully prosecuted. I am grateful to all of the investigators involved." The third defendant, Brittany Barkley, is scheuled for sentencing on December 1st. The State is seeking Life Without the Possibility of Parole and consecutive sentences in that case.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Counsel's Back

General Counsel To Wicbury Crapper will return this weekend with a vengeance to stretch your imagination and knowledge of the law. Stay tuned as we explore strange, new issues!

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Bank Robbers, Again...?

From WicBury Crapper Board Member "Ready4Action"...

Supposedly the BB&T Bank on riverside drive AND the Shore Bank on S. Salisbury Blvd. were both robbed today. No money was obtained from the BB&T Robbery. 2 Black males, one armed with a pistol.

One again.. here's some tips:

1) Always carry your firearm off-duty.
2) Make sure your firearm is in good working order by oiling it weekly and performing a function check (unloaded).
3) Always carry an extra magazine with you.
4) Always carry or have handy a set of handcuffs.
5) Always carry your badge and identification and remember the secret law enforcement signal if challenged by on duty officers.
6) If a robbery situation occurs, attempt to find a defensible location within area, typically poured concrete stanchions or other thick objects made of wood or metal are preferable. Remember that shrapnel from these objects can hurt or kill you also.
7) Aim for center mass to stop the threat. If taking fire, aim to kill. Fire will aimed shots but at a consistent rate of fire.
8) Fire until threat is removed.
9) Watch your background.
10) Always, always wear your vest when working.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Happenings in local departments...

By WicBury Crapper Board Member "HarleyCop2009"...

Wicomico County Sheriff's Office...

Welcome to the newest addition of the Wicomico County Sheriff's Office. A new lateral deputy just started with the Sheriff's Office, having transferred from the Salisbury City Police Department just several weeks ago.

Already proactive in his prior employment, the new Deputy will "fit right in" to the Sheriff's Office and their proactive policing. Again, good luck with your new endeavor!

We would also like to congratulate another Deputy for completing his second successful (?) FTO..after years of doing police work. Transferred from the road, to another division and then back to the road, it shows the dedication of this deputy to remain focused and of administration to assist their personnel in advancing in their careers. Kudos to both the department and the deputy.

Additionally, we would like to welcome another Deputy back who just returned from extended medical leave after undergoing a serious surgery. The Deputy kept his spirits high while convalescing at home over the last several months. Although back working in the office we look forward to having this proactive deputy back on the road.

A part time deputy working in the courts division has resigned.

A payroll deduction for Furlough hours is expected to start taking place within the next two weeks.

Salisbury City Police Department...

Several people were just promoted and transferred within the department. Several officers have been promoted to the position of Corporal and one Corporal has been promoted to Sgt.

One Lt. Resigned several months ago, one officer resigned, and one Corporal accepted a demotion to the rank of PFC. We are sorry to loose these dedicated officers from their appointed positions and wish the remaining officer continued success. Keep your heads held high.

Several high profile cases (including a murder) has come to a successful conclusion resulting in arrests. The CAT team continues to produce with multiple drug and warrant related arrests. Most officers continue to keep their heads held high during these tough economic times.

Several new rookies will be graduating in this next police academy class.

The on going battle between the Chief Webster and City Council Person Debbie Campbell has seemed to come to a halt over the recent weeks (thank god because they were wasting untold amounts of printing ink at the Daily Slime on this crap)...

Maryland State Police, Barrick E...

One Trooper remains suspended at this time during an internal investigation.

Pay has been cut to all personnel by the State of Maryland with no furlough days to make up for the pay cut.

The 100 stops a month rule remains in effect.

Several shifts are extraordinarily understaffed due to internal personnel transfers and transfers to other barracks and/or divisions.

Delmar Police Department...

Delmar police department is in it's final stages for their collective bargaining agreement, congratulations!

Some internal bull is still occurring... lets iron these issues out with lower ranking personnel so that we can stay productive.

Delmar continues to make good arrests on both sides of the line and continues to utilize their personnel, the mainstay of the department, to stay steady in their mission.

Fruitland Police Department...

The new Chief continues to make marked improvements within the department. A strong vote from his personnel and the community attest to this.

Despite budget cuts the Chief does what he can with what he has but stresses good personnel management.

Newer personnel continue to learn and improve.

Crapper Rules...

By WicBury Boardmember "Kissmybrass"...

Look, yes we know we are crap.. after all this is the crapper. But, there are some rules here that everyone has to follow. Yes, yes we are assholes who dislike rules and regulations that apply to us lol. However, we still have to employ some rules here to keep things running along smoothly. One of the biggest complaints that we received in the past was that there was a lot of smack talking about others, specifically cops about other cops. This had to stop because this is not why we made this blog site. Unfortunately, it brings lots and lots of hits to the blogsite, however we are forgoing this in order to provide a more positive atmosphere for all those involved in maintaining, posting opinions, and reading this site.

Unfortunately, we don't always know who is talking about whom or what someone is talking about, although others might. We honestly don't have knowledge of all crap and goings on since the beginning of time in any agency nor do we care to pay too much attention to it. Although we find it odd that some administrators don't have any issue with making their troops lives a living hell, when the shoe is on the other foot, they tend to have really, really thin skins. Sometimes the truth hurts.

We decline to publish about half, HALF of the comments we get. These are comments that we readily identify as inflammatory or personally negative about someone. But, sometimes we skip over some or mass approve comments because they are just too many and we have other things to do. We don't spend all of our time on this blog, we have lives and families. We publish this blog because this is a place to talk crap as long as your crap is not crapping of the mouth.

Which brings us to our last point. We do not track who leaves us comments, at all. There have been some recent court cases that established that blog commenter's can be held liable civilly for their comments if their comments cause monetary damage however, blog operators can not be held liable for their readers comments, no matter what we choose to post or not. Check it out, it is a federal ruling. So if you want to talk smack, protect yourself by using an IP scrambler available all over the Internet.

  1. For federal ruling, click here
  2. For questions of your liability posting comments click here
  3. For blog operator's liability, click here

So...
  1. We will not publish negative comments about cops by name. If you include someones name or initials, we will not publish it. Sorry. We know you dislike people but hey that's life.
  2. We will publish comments about administrators as long as those comments are not personal in nature.
  3. We are not responsible for metering comments. Although we try to weed out the purely negative comments or personal comments, we don't take responsibility for comments posted by our readers. Like we said, the truth sometimes hurts. If you can't stand the heat, stay outta the kitchen.
  4. If you don't like the blog, don't read it. Suck our plunger.
  5. We do not care who reads our blog. We put information out there, we do not harp on how many readers or posters we have.

Enjoy,

KissMyBrass

The grinch posts more bullshit...

Below is complete bullshit.

Any sex offender... strike that, any criminal on probation or parole can move without notifying their probation officer or the sex offender registry. This does not make it legal but unless you tag serious criminals with GPS locator's (of which the WicBury Crapper is not opposed!) you can't stop someone from leaving their house and relocating without your knowledge. With the hundreds of sex offenders and thousands of criminals in Wicomico County it is impossible to stay on top of all of them, all of the time. This is why people repeatedly have violations of probation, because they are not reporting to their probation officer accordingly. You can't blame an agency as a whole or a particular person because they are in charge of a division because some idiot sex offender gets some wild hair (among other things probably) up his ass and decides to move without notifying anyone, just like the thousands of VOP's in Maryland and across the country... This is the sex offender's fault and he will be caught.

Frankly Lt. Roberts does a thankless job daily dealing with these perverts and sex offenders and should be applauded for the job he does because I'm sure the majority of the public would rather not interview sex offenders every day. So Grinch we poop on you, kiss our asses.


The Salisbury Grinch posted this line of crap today...
"As you can see James Brink resides at 407 McGrath Road which is in Wicomico
County yet if you search the Wicomico County Sex Offender Registry he is nowhere
to be found. Maryland has him listed and says contact Wicomico County Sheriff's
Department which the victim's mother did and received no help from Lieutenant
Roberts on the matter. Clearly the ball has been dropped by the Wicomico County
Sheriff's Office and a sexual predator is walking the streets of Wicomico County
free of being on the local sex offender registry.

http://salisburygrinch.blogspot.com/2009/10/wicomico-county-sheriffs-department.html

Rules & Regulations... Ehch...

By WicBury Crapper board member "ThinBlueLog"...

As we all know society and police departments are made of up of rules and regulations. Most are required to keep things functional. Violation of rules and regulations (*ahem* laws) and people can face serious issues like going to jail or fines. But in the recent years rules and regulations and enforcement thereof of citizens, especially society rules, have been more and more lax while rules and regulations of the police have become more and more stringent.

This is a recipe for disaster for many reasons. Primarily, the police must have more authority over citizens than that of citizens over police. This is just a simple fact because once police are placed on the defensive, such as the case today, then police become hesitant to react in situations, if taking actions at all. It is clear in which way society is moving however, society either does not care of a segment of society is in power that resists enforcement of stricter laws of society (i.e. immigration laws and reform).

While it is clearly evident that this country has many, many, many, many issues we either lack the ability, balls, or motivation in order to effect widespread change. Society keeps moving in the direction of a freer, more open outlay rather than to reign in the "changes" that keep occurring moving society in the opposite direction of where it needs to be which results in an ultimate lack of control of the most free people in society, criminals.

Criminals don't care about laws that's why they are called criminals. So, a handgun carry law only applies to honest citizens who'd rather not get arrested for carrying weapons. But, as society becomes more and more open and thus dangerous, there is an increased risk of assault, robbery, etc forcing people to carry weapons when the police can't protect them due to the original argument of more laws and regulations over the police.

Sixty years ago, this was not a problem because society did not push against the limits of it's own rules until the 1960's came about. People knew that criminals were bad and gave law enforcement the authority and latitude to use the means required in order to combat these criminals (hence some federal agents had tommy guns).

So which way do you want it?

Photos From Russian Police Academy...
























































































































Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Spotlight on Local Businesses

In a new section online we are going to spotlight local businesses and provide evaluations of each business as we secretly shop them and give you our review of that business. These reviews are purely opinionated therefore, reach a judgement and decision yourself. We are not getting paid from these business in order to promote them or give favorable opinions. Just the same, if we give a crappy review we don't want these people to know who we are so they won't spit in our food!

In today's spotlight on a local business we are going to feature:

De Vage's Subs & Donuts
748 E Main Street Salisbury, MD 21804
(410) 334-2200

De Vage's has been a staple in Salisbury for a long time and they have been serving great food the entire time. De Vage's provides a laid back atmosphere for all meals and serves excellent breakfast and lunch. They even make their own doughnuts! Although it is unknown if they are a "friendly" place to eat work wise, they are friendly people who provide good food. We recommend this business for a quick snack or a sit down meal in the 1950's style diner. Cozy and still enough room for people to sit and relax. Three and a half stars.

Captain Robert Bokinsky

Captain Bokinsky graduated from Wheaton High School in Wheaton, Maryland and continued his education receiving his Associate of Arts degree in Criminal Justice from Montgomery College in Rockville in 1979. He joined the Ocean City Police Department in May of that year and continued his education at Salisbury University where he majored in Accounting. During his career Bokinsky has served in the department’s Patrol, Criminal Investigation, Administrative and Services Divisions.

He spent several summers in the department’s Boardwalk Division and as a supervisor of the Noise Enforcement Unit. “Bo” was selected as the OCPD Officer of the Year in 1986 and shortly thereafter was promoted to Sergeant. In 1991 he was promoted to Lieutenant and assigned to the Criminal Investigation Division where he served until 1998. After assignments as a Midnight Watch Commander and Assistant Commander of the Patrol Division, Bokinsky was promoted to Captain in October of 2000 and named the agency’s Night Commander. During the fall of 2001 he was reassigned as the Commander of the Administrative Division. Capt. Bokinsky was transferred to the Criminal Investigation Division in September 2005 where he currently serves as the Division Commander.

Capt. Bokinsky is an M.P.C.T.C. certified instructor in firearms, Constitutional Law, Search & Seizure, State Criminal Code, Interrogation & Interview and Report Writing. He is a graduate of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Academy (199th Session), a member of the Harvard Associates in Police Science and the I.A.C.P.

Ocean City Police Testing...

Ocean City Police Department Applicant Testing

The Ocean City Police Department will be conducting applicant testing for future Police Officer positions as well Seasonal Police Officer and Public Safety Aide positions on the following dates:

  • November 21-22, 2009
  • January 9-10, 2010
  • February 20-21, 2010
Walk-in applicants are welcome for the November and January tests. Applicants for the February testing will be by invitation only.

You must bring the signed PHYSICIAN’S STATEMENT to the test with you. You can find the Ocean City Police Department Physical Ability Test description here.

Tests will be conducted at Ocean City Elementary School located at 12828 Center Drive, Ocean City, Maryland 21842.

Contact the Training and Recruiting Section for further questions 410-723-6612 or pdtrain@ococean.com

Ga. man shot after attacking cop with hammer

What can be improved?

Lets talk constructively. Many police officers and community members complain about issues both inside and outside of the departments and the community as a whole. So, voice your issue! Tell us what you would like to see change within your agency or if you are a citizen, what you would like to see change in your community? We want to know and we want your opinions!

FOP Lodge #111 Free Candy Scan 10-31-2009 at The Wicomico County Circuit Court Building

Anonymous said...

Glad you are back. Please post: FOP Lodge #111 Free Candy Scan 10-31-2009 at The Wicomico County Circuit Court Building. I think it is 1800 to 2100ish.

Call Circuit Court Security on 10-30-09 to verify at 410-548-4999

Monday, October 12, 2009

American Police Force Leader's Long Criminal Record

American Police Force Leader's Long Criminal Record
Zachary Roth October 1, 2009, 11:17AM

The American Police Force, that mysterious security company that just took over an empty jail in Hardin, Montana, is looking shadier than ever.

Since yesterday, details have been emerging about the background of the man behind APF -- a California-based grifter, who has said he's a naturalized U.S. citizen originally from Montenegro, and uses the name Michael Hilton.

Over the years, Hilton has served jail time for fraud, and had a string of arrests and other run-ins with the law. Based on reports from the AP, the Billings Gazette, and Prison Legal News, here's a quick rundown:

• 1988: Hilton arrested in Santa Ana, Calif. for writing bad checks.
• April 1990: Hilton is again arrested in Santa Ana for writing bad checks and for grand theft.
• 1992: A civil judgment of $83,000 is entered against Hilton and Ilia Dokovich.
• March 1993: Hilton pleads guilty in Orange County court to 14 felonies, including 10 counts of grand theft. One charge involves a $20,000 real estate scam, in which Hilton persuaded an associate to give him a deed on property in Long Beach, Calif., saying it was to be used as collateral on a loan, then sold the property to someone else. According to the AP, he spends six years in prison in California.
• 1999: A small claims judgment is entered against Hilton for $3,979.
• 2000: the same plaintiff obtans another small claims judgment against Hilton in Los Angeles County, this one for $1,852.
• March 2000: Hilton is accused of fraud, larceny, and breach of contract, in connection to a venture in which Hilton and others recruited the plaintiff to invest hundreds of thousands of dollars to create collectible Super Bowl commemorative coins. According to the complaint, Hilton and the others said the money would be used for the design and manufacture of the coins and for a license to produce them from the National Football League -- but the NFL never issued a license. Hilton is ultimately ordered to pay the plaintiff $200,000.
• Around the same period: Hilton also faces two similar fraud suits: In one, he's accused of posing as a fine arts dealer to deceive a Utah couple into giving him a $100,000 silver statue. In the other, he is said to have teamed with a doctor to recruit investors for a southern California assisted-living facility that was never built.
• November 2002: Hilton files for bankruptcy, in order to avoid eviction by his landlord.
• March 2003: Hilton is arrested for DUI in Huntington Beach.
• February 2004: Hilton files for bankruptcy once more, again to avoid eviction.
• January 2006: A $5,052 judgment lien is entered against Hilton in Orange County, CA.

A Lexis search conducted by Prison Legal News turned up the following aliases used by Hilton: Miodrag Dokovich, Miodrag Djokich, Miodrag Djokovich, Michael Hamilton, Anthony M. Hilton, Michael A. Hilton, Michael Milton and Hristian Djokich, plus related variants

Chevy Caprice police car will be on duty in 2011!

With all the talk of Ford stopping production of Crown Vics, it was no surprise that General Motors stole the show at IACP when they announced that they will be rolling out a new full-drive Chevrolet Caprice Police Patrol Vechicle.

The Caprice will be available starting in 2011. (General Motors Photo)
Related Resource:Special Coverage: IACP 2009


The 2011 Caprice PPV is not based on an existing model , but was designed specifically for law enforcement officers as a patrol vehicle. By increasing interior room (to 112 cubic feet), it will become the most spacious patrol car on the market when it’s released.

The Caprice was designed with complete officer protection in mind. One of the key features is a different driver’s seat that will improve an officer’s comfort with cutouts that allow for a tactical belt that has handguns, stun guns and other on-duty gear. Dana Hammer, Law Enforcement Vehicles Manager for General Motors, explained another officer safety feature: the optional front-seat-only side air bags that allow for a full-width rear seat barrier.

“When the barriers can’t go all the way out to the side of the driver and passenger seats, it poses a risk to officers transporting suspects or prisoners,” Hammer said. “If a guy gets out of his handcuffs, he can reach around and potentially hurt the officer. The solid barrier separating the back and front of the vehicle will protect the officer.”

“The new Chevrolet Caprice police car is the right tool at the right time for law enforcement,” said Jim Campbell, general manager for General Motors Fleet and Commercial Operations. “We asked for a lot of feedback from our police customers, which helped us develop a vehicle that is superior to the Crown Victoria in key areas.”

Blog owners falisfy their blogs regularly...

Yes, you heard it here before so we are going to say it again. Interesting how our local blogs pump up their stats and comments by commenting on their own blogs. Here is how this scam generally works...

1) A blog owner publishes an article
2) The blog owner creates responses to his own blog posting under anonymous readers in order to up the "shock value" of the article. Generally this includes making inflammatory comments.
3) Real comments are made by some readers in response to the inflammatory comments by the blog owners pretending to be their own readers.

This is a generally accepted method of "doing business" in the blog communities and most blog owners are guilty of this type of inflammatory and unethical conduct. We here at the crapper do not comment on our own articles.

U.S. Mystery 'Police' Force Has Small Montana City on Edge



U.S. Mystery 'Police' Force Has Small Montana City on Edge
Friday , October 09, 2009
Katie Landan

When two brand new, shiny black Mercedes SUVs bearing a "Hardin Police Department" logo drove through the main thoroughfare of Hardin, Mont., last week, people took notice.
"How many police forces have Mercedes?" said Charlene Warren, a local business owner who has lived in Hardin for more than half a century. "That threw up a red flag."
And speaking of flags, it did not go unnoticed that the emblem on the sides of the SUVs bore a strong resemblance to the Serbian national flag.
Furthermore, those "police department" cars were rolling through Hardin, a small southeastern Montana town of 3,600 that just happens not to have a police department.

The luxury vehicles that rolled through town belonged to the American Police Force (APF), a California-based security firm that is drafting a contract that will give it control over a $27 million medium-security prison that was built in Hardin more than two years ago, but has never held any prisoners.

But that contract is now on hold as the Montana State Attorney General's Office investigates APF and the Big Horn County Sheriff's Department enters preliminary talks about incorporating a real police department in Hardin so a similar episode doesn't occur in the future.
At first, Hardin residents were pleased that APF was planning to turn their empty prison into a training facility. Hardin has a double-digit unemployment rate and is desperate for revitalization, and the area was left high and dry last spring when the federal government decided not to use the facility to harbor Guantanamo Bay detainees. Opening the prison would mean jobs.
But since the SUV incident, APF's reputability is under scrutiny.

"We have covered this story for years now, and for the last month, it’s been one twist and turn from the other" Nick Lough, a reporter at KULR-8 in Billings, Mont., told FOXNews.com.
The latest twist: The owner of APF, Michael Hilton, is a convicted felon, including two convictions in grand theft cases, and an alleged con-artist who, according to some sources, utilizes more than 20 aliases.

"That is big controversy, is the unknown," said Warren. "There are too many lies."
Michael Cohen, a former Secret Service agent named as the would-be operator of the prison, served 14 months in prison for stealing $2,800 from the agency after his conviction in 2004. Cohen told the Associated Press he spoke with Hilton about the position but was not offered the job.

Hardin's Two Rivers Authority Board — an economic development agency — was contacted by APF about a month ago to draft a contract that would hand over control of the prison. But now the board's Web site prominently displays the following words:


We welcome anyone to visit our town!
There are no commandos in the
streets.
There is no fence or gate being built around Hardin. People are free
to come and go as they please. APF is not running our town or our police force.


Residents and concerned citizens now are voicing their opinions on street corners, at town hall meetings and in the blogosphere. They are demanding to know who APF's parent company is, what the company plans to do in their town and, finally, what on earth those two Mercedes were doing roaming their streets.

Bob van der Valk, contributing writer for the Terry Tribune and editor of the travel website Montanawithkids.com, doesn't think the people of Hardin will let the APF get the contract to run the prison.

"I think the people found out that what occurred was an under-the-table deal that shouldn't have happened," he told FOXNews.com. He said he hopes the facility will be turned into a high school to combat school overpopulation in the community.

FOXNews.com contacted Hilton's office at APF, but he declined to comment. The company's public relations director, Becky Shay, formerly a reporter for the Billings Gazette, also refused to comment. According to one report, Shay fears for her own safety and recently hired her own security team. Residents, bloggers and the media are said to be filling her inbox with their grievances, and there are reports that she has received death threats.

"They just can't give us any answers," Warren told FOXNews.com. "People are afraid. This is a good little town, we got a nice people here, and I wouldn't want to see some dishonest person, like this American Police Force, do any harm to our town."

"They found us real vulnerable right now," Warren says, "and they are just taking advantage of a good thing."

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Officer Down

How's SPD doing?

SPD has had some higher profile cases recently to include a murder last week and a police related shooting (of which the officer's were cleared). SPD's Criminal Investigation Unit has been working overtime to combat crime. Their officers are also working to combat an on going crime problem.

SPD recently promoted several persons to Corporals positions and two to Sgt positions. Congratulations to all.

Although a smaller agency a higher base turnover rate (previously) has left several voids. Although this creates gaps in effective policing due to a lack of manpower it also leads to eventual openings and upward mobility in departments.

Now accepting nominations for Officer and Supervisor of the Month - October

Please leave us your comments and suggestions of who you think should get officer and supervisor of the month for October and tell us why!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Readers Response to Last Article

A comment by a reader...

Once again, people wonder why the crime rate is getting worse and why crime and shootings are out of control yet a small percentage of people complain that they are detained, patted down, or questioned by the police.

While it is true that typically a pat-down requires RAS to justify a stop for a WEAPONS pat down (i.e. articulation is needed for a pat down to locate weapons). In a growing world of crime and a criminal element, pat downs are needed to determine if people are carrying weapons in certain situations or to determine if a crime is "a foot". To take away another right that police have to combat crime because of a perceived "harassment" is ridiculous in the same way that the search incident to arrest within a vehicle for wingspan was removed recently. The search incident to arrest of a vehicle yielded many, many drug and weapons cases in the past.. many pending cases now dismissed due to the new judgement in searching criteria.

Lastly, it seems in the article that some minority groups are concerned with the disproportionate amount of people stopped are black or minorities. Further, it should be noted that there are a disproportionate amount of people in jails and prisons that are minorities. However, ghettos in the U.S. are also disproportionately made of of minorities and thus because of various environmental and social factors then a it stands to reason that a disproportionate amount of population being minorities will commit violent criminal acts within those statistical regions. This is not a racist statement, it is simply supported by statistical data submitted to UCR.

Lets face it, a disproportionate amount of aggressive or violent criminal acts committed in Salisbury and the surrounding area(s) resulting in arrests are committed by minorities. Again, this is not a racist statement, it is a fact. Therefore, that segment of society will come under closer scrutiny by police in day to day happenings. Just like it makes sense for the police to pay closer attention in lets say Chinatown to Asians who appear to be gang members. A disproportionate amount of crime in Chinatown is committed by Asians. This is criminal profiling, not racially profiling.

Lets look at this from another angle. Lets say that you are walking out to your car from the mall and see a well dressed older black man in a suit and tie, and a cane, apparently with his older wife, standing by your vehicle, looking into the window at your GPS. Could he be trying to steal it or perhaps he's just looking at it to determine if he wants to buy one like it? The same situation given with a younger white man wearing "gangster" clothing, with a crooked hat, baggie pants with underwear showing, and a shirt with a marijuana leaf printed on it and a swisher sweet stuffed behind his ear. Which alarms you more? The white male of course because given the same circumstances, he is more likely to break into your vehicle statistically speaking. Considering his clothing it itself; he wishes to communicate from a distance his attitude and demeanor toward society (although perhaps not a criminal, fitting the criminal persona). You know this because your brain rapidly deduces the risk of both subjects and comes to the conclusion that in the given situation the white male is statistically more of a threat.

Police 'stop-and-frisk' technique drawing criticism

10/09/2009
By Colleen Long Associated Press

Related Articles:'Other person' encountersPhilly cops ready to up stop-and-frisk tacticsStudy finds no bias in NYPD's aggressive stop-and-frisk policy

NEW YORK — A teenager trying to get into his apartment after school is confronted by police. A man leaving his workplace chooses a different route back home to avoid officers who roam a particular street.

These and hundreds of thousands of other Americans in big cities have been stopped on the street by police using a law-enforcement practice called stop-and-frisk that alarms civil libertarians but is credited by authorities with helping reduce crime.

Police in major U.S. cities stop and question more than a million people each year - a sharply higher number than just a few years ago. Most are black and Hispanic men. Many are frisked, and nearly all are innocent of any crime, according to figures gathered by The Associated Press.
And the numbers are rising at the same time crime rates are dropping.

Ronnie Carr's experience was typical: He was fumbling with his apartment door after school in Brooklyn when plainclothes officers flashed their badges.

"What are you doing here?" one asked, as they rifled through his backpack and then his pockets. The black teenager stood there, quiet and nervous, and waited.

Carr said the officers told him they stopped him because he looked suspicious peeking in the windows. He explained that he had lost his keys. Twenty minutes later, the officers left. Carr was not arrested or cited with any offense.

"I felt bad, like I did something wrong," he said.

Civil liberties groups say the practice is racist and fails to deter crime. Police departments maintain it is a necessary tool that turns up illegal weapons and drugs and prevents more serious crime.

Police records indicate that officers are drawn to suspicious behavior: furtive movements, actions that indicate someone may be serving as a lookout, anything that suggests a drug deal, or a person carrying burglary tools such as a slim jim or pry bar.

The New York Police Department is among the most vocal defenders of the practice. Commissioner Raymond Kelly said recently that officers may stop as many as 600,000 people this year. About 10 percent are arrested.

"This is a proven law enforcement tactic to fight and deter crime, one that is authorized by criminal procedure law," he said.

The practice is perfectly legal. A 1968 Supreme Court decision established the benchmark of "reasonable suspicion" - a standard that is lower than the "probable cause" needed to justify an arrest.

But in the mid-1990s, then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani and NYPD Commissioner William Bratton made stop-and-frisk an integral part of the city's law enforcement, relying on the "broken windows" theory that targeting low-level offenses helps prevent bigger ones.

Street stops started to go up, and overall crime dropped dramatically in a once-dangerous city.
Last year, New York police stopped 531,159 people, more than five times the number in 2002. Fifty-one percent of those stopped were black, 32 percent Hispanic and 11 percent white.Not all stops are the same. Some people are just stopped and questioned. Others have their bag or backpack searched. And sometimes police conduct a full pat-down.

David Harris, a law professor at the University of Pittsburgh and an expert on street stops, said few searches yield weapons or drugs. And the more people are searched, the more innocent people are hassled.

"The hit rate goes down because you're being less selective about how you're doing this. That has a cost. It's not free," Harris said.

When officers make a stop, they are required to fill out a form, including the time and location of the stop and why police were suspicious. Age, race and whether the person was frisked are also recorded.

In Philadelphia, stops nearly doubled to more than 200,000 from 2007 to 2008. Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter deployed an "aggressive" stop-and-frisk policy in the year since his election in November 2007 and overall crime has dropped.

In Los Angeles, where Bratton recently stepped down as police commissioner, pedestrian stops have doubled in the past six years to 244,038 in 2008. The number of people stopped in cars is higher.
About 15 percent of the stops resulted in arrests in 2002, compared with about 30 percent in 2008, according to an analysis of the data by Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.

Several other major police departments do not keep street-stop statistics or do not release them. Chicago police refused to release numbers to the AP. Boston police say they do not keep the records. The New Orleans department is not required to keep statistics on race and pedestrian stops.

RAND, an independent research agency hired by the New York Police Department to analyze street-stop data in 2007 after public outcry, found little racial profiling. It said the raw statistics "distorted the magnitude and, at times, the existence of racially biased policing."

The NYPD continues to monitor the issue, but after the RAND analysis, officials agreed that large-scale restructuring was unnecessary.

Kelly has warned against more simplistic data reviews.

"There are 8.4 million people in New York City. That number swells to more than 10 million every work day. Police are responsible for more than 800,000 summonses and arrests annually based on the higher standard of probable cause," Kelly said.
"
Under the circumstances, it's not surprising that we make 500,000 or even 600,000 stops based on the less stringent standard of reasonable suspicion."

Civil liberties groups also complain because New York police keep a database of everyone stopped - innocent or not. That makes them targets for future investigations, said Christopher Dunn, associate legal director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.

Los Angeles was forced by federal mandate to release data on street stops - including the race of those stopped - starting in 2000 after a series of scandals. The city government promised to adopt scores of reform measures under federal court supervision.

The LAPD was released from the federal decree in July, but a report last year by the ACLU in Southern California showed that blacks were still nearly three times more likely to be stopped by police than whites.

"The initial defense was: 'Because we're over-policing higher crime neighborhoods, they're predominantly populated by people of color, and that's why,'" said Peter Bibring, an ACLU attorney in Los Angeles.

But an analysis done for the ACLU in 2008 by Yale law professor Ian Ayres accounts for differences in crime rates and still shows minorities are stopped much more.
Some people who are stopped file lawsuits against the city and speak out publicly. Most just accept it.

In Harlem, George Lucas changed his route home from work to avoid a stretch of Seventh Avenue, because he kept being stopped by the police.

"The inconvenience of walking out of my way still saves me the worry and frustration about being stopped," said Lucas, 28, director of a nonprofit.

It's so common in some areas that community groups have begun offering classes on how to behave when stopped.

Courtney Bennett of the nonprofit New York City Mission Society says he regularly hosts groups of 30 men, of all ages, who feel powerless because they are stopped routinely for what they say is no reason. Carr recently attended a similar meeting for teens at another nonprofit called The Door.

Bennett is also a member of the Order of the Feather, a black fraternity that mentors young men and promotes community service. At a recent initiation ceremony in Harlem, it did not take long to find dozens of people who said they were stopped by police.

"You see these guys? They're normal guys, you know? Regular dudes," said Paul Hawkins, 22. "They've all been affected by it somehow. They were stopped, or someone they knew, or their dad or whatever. And they're not, you know, criminals."

Criminal Charges Reissued to Former Deputy

Criminal charges have been apparently reissued to former Deputy Joel Arnold for an altercation earlier this year in which he reportedly assaulted his girlfriend. During the altercation Arnold reportedly became irate and was taken by police for mental evaluation to PMRC. Arnold was allegedly intoxicated at the time and has since quit the department he was employed with. Arnold is currently seeking employment in Private Security.

Arnold was regarded as an aggressive police officer that netted a multitude of drug arrests in his career and whom was regarded highly by his co-workers.

We wish former Deputy Arnold luck in his future endeavors and wish to express our sorrow of his loss to the community at large.

Murder at 1600

Well another murder in the city. So, how do we stem the tide of shootings and death, not only in the city, but in the country?

First we have a large problem with firearms, this is obvious. However, the problem is firearms have been flooded in the U.S. since the civil war. Therefore, any attempt to curtail people from carry weapons only effect law abiding citizens. So the police should be armed over and above what matches that of the criminals in society. Yet in many jurisdictions criminals outgun the police by carrying automatic or semi-automatic assault style rifles.

While many departments refrain from issuing rifles and shotguns to their staff because they feel that it presents a too aggressive image, many departments have started to issue these weapons in order to combat the rising violence of street crime.

Starting in the early 1990s there was a trend to scale back the aggressiveness of the police, in part because of high profile cases of alleged police abuse of civil rights. However, there is a sliding scale of civil rights. The ultimate impact of civil rights to the extreme is a lawless society however, the problem therein is that once lawlessness prevails then everyone's rights are curtailed by others, specifically criminals seeking to control the weak. This is apparent in jails and prisons across the nation. Ironically, although criminals reject the moral code of society, they adopt their own rules and regulations once in prisons with penalties far exceeding those imposed by society for similar transgressions against law and order. Do you really want weak police officers protecting you who fail or won't take action in a serious situation? When someone is breaking into your house at 3AM and you call the police, who would you rather respond, a meek, and frightened police officer or an aggressive one willing to risk their safety to protect yours?

So, what is the solution? The country and society in general must realize that they can't have it both ways. Either you have an orderly society, which requires a uniformed force to protect itself, or you have an anarchist society with a rapidly deteriorating moral code, such as we do today. We say we have all these problems yet we fail to do anything to combat them. Why do we continue to sell video games featuring murder and murder of police officers in stores? Why do we continue to have TV shows and videos that depict criminal activity? Because of freedom of speech?? When does one good outweigh the other good? Yet you can't yell fire in a crowded theater... because it incites a breach of the public peace...

A crackdown, nationwide, is needed to rapidly combat criminals. We need to start shifting our outlook to previous times with a higher moral, ethical, and criminal justice outcome.

Slim Pickens...

It seems that several departments are undergoing budget cuts. Depending which department you work for there are either furlough days or straight budget cuts across the board that are either coming or have arrived.

In this time of slim tidings for all, especially during the approaching holidays, it is important to remember that even though salaries are cut and even jobs are curtailed, there is still hopefully a light at the end of the tunnel eventually. Stay on course... family and friends are the most important aspect of our lives. Although lower pay may make things tight it is important to remember that about ten percent of the population do not have jobs. So although each departments have problems remember there are more important things to worry about each day! Relax on your days off and spend time with people and things that matter.

Egos egos egos..

Our friend in the blogword, Joe Albero, claimed his blog is ranked umong the top 1% of websites in the US and, ahem, the world. How nice...interesting figures. What is he smoking and how can we get some? WTF???!!!! HAhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahah BAAHHHhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha. ha. ha. ha. and ha.

"Thursday, October 01, 2009

Salisbury News Ranked In The Top 1% Of All Websites In The US & The World
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WicBury Crapper I, Open to LEO's Only

The WicBury Crapper I is now open to LEO's only. Please click on http://wicburycrapper.blogspot.com in order to gain access today!

Friday, October 9, 2009

Weeeerrrre baaaaccck!

Thats right, the WicBury Crapper is back in full force. We apologize for the slight lag in posting for the past several weeks however we have been dedicating our time to important aspects including support for fallen officers. However, we are back!! Let the crap roll!

We we would like to give the following nod to the following new staff members on the board of directors. Now making our board representing ten surrounding departments!