Tag: Police officer

  • DAILY ANALYZE : Police Officer Tony Farrell Confronts Police Officers About London Bombing 7/7 Being a False Flag

    DAILY ANALYZE : Police Officer Tony Farrell Confronts Police Officers About London Bombing 7/7 Being a False Flag

    Police Officer Tony Farrell Confronts Police Officers About London Bombing 7/7 Being a False Flag

    Dave Perry
    Dec 20, 2012

    Tony Farrell confronts the Police Service by throwing down the gauntlet. He challenges West Midlands Police to do their job and arrest him under Section 15 (iii) Terrorism Act 2000. He educates a team of police officers and community support officers from South Yorkshire Police on the business ethics of their own force where “Justice with Courage” has been sadly replaced with “Injustice without Courage”.

    The reaction he receives from Police Officers is startling.

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  • Israel: Police Officer Killed as Bedouin Riot Against Demolitions

    Israel: Police Officer Killed as Bedouin Riot Against Demolitions

    police killed israilYERUSHALAYIM – A police officer was killed and several people were wounded – including Arab MK Ayman Odeh – in riots that broke out Wednesday morning in the Bedouin town of Umm al-Hiran in the Negev. Also killed was the terrorist who undertook the attack. One police officer was injured as well.

    Police identified the officer as 1st Sgt. Erez Levi, 34, Hy”d.

    The deaths were the result of an apparent attempted car-ramming attack against a group of police officers, who were trying to keep the peace in the face of riots by residents, as authorities sought to demolish illegal structures. A jeep sped in the direction of a group of police officers, whereupon officers opened fire on the vehicle, killing the driver and a second individual. One rioter was injured and taken to a Be’er Sheva hospital for treatment. Police said that the driver was a member of an Islamist group, but this was denied by family members.

  • DC transit police officer charged with aiding IS group

    DC transit police officer charged with aiding IS group

    DC Metro SystemA Washington, DC transit police officer was arrested on Wednesday on charges he attempted to provide material support to the Islamic State (IS) group, the US Justice Department said, in the first such case involving a member of law enforcement.

    Accordıng to reuters In July, Nicholas Young, who lives in Virginia, sent codes for gift cards worth $245 to an FBI informant. The gift cards were intended for mobile-messaging accounts that the IS group uses to recruit its followers. Young believed the informant he was messaging was an acquaintance who was working with the militant group, according to court records.

    Young, who had worked for the transit authority since 2003, had been on the radar of federal law enforcement since 2010, according to an affidavit in the complaint filed in US district court in Virginia on Tuesday.

    Metro authorities said Young was fired immediately after his arrest on Wednesday.

    The 36-year-old US citizen is the first law enforcement officer charged with attempting to provide material support to a designated terrorist organisation, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

    The Justice Department has brought IS group-related charges against more than 90 people since 2014.

    Young did not pose a threat to Metro train riders or employees during the six years he was under federal surveillance, according to Joshua Stueve, a spokesman for the Eastern Virginia US Attorney’s Office.

    “None of the things that he said, none of the things he wanted to do related to anything here. His interest was totally in how he could get overseas and what he could do over there,” Stueve said.

    In 2014, he met several times with an undercover FBI agent who was posing as an eager recruit of the IS group, according to the affidavit, and advised the agent about how to evade law enforcement as he left the United States to join the militant group.

    Young sent the gift card codes after the informant told him that the group needed help setting up mobile messaging accounts, according to the affidavit, and then promised to cover his tracks: “Gonna eat the SIM card. Have a good day.”

    “Metro transit police alerted the FBI about this individual and then worked with our federal partners throughout the investigation,” said Metro general manager Paul Wiedefeld, calling the allegations against Young “profoundly disturbing.”

    Young had travelled to Libya in 2011 to support rebels trying to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi, the affidavit said.

    That year, he also discussed with informants ways of smuggling guns into the federal courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, where he will appear on Wednesday, according to the Justice Department.

  • Athens Chaos, Police officer turned into a fireball

    Athens Chaos, Police officer turned into a fireball

    Greek riot police, protesters clash

    Unions are angry at the ongoing austerity measures

    Athens police

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) – Young demonstrators hurled rocks and fire bombs at riot police as clashes broke out Wednesday in Athens during a mass rally against austerity measures, part of a general strike that crippled services and public transportation around the country.

    Police fired tear gas and flash grenades at protesters, blanketing parts of the city center in choking smoke. Thousands of peaceful demonstrators ran to side streets to take cover. A police officer was attacked and his uniform caught fire in the city’s main Syntagma Square, and his motorcycle was burned.

    At least two people were injured and another three arrested. One group of rioting youths smashed paving stones in front of the central Bank of Greece, but there were no immediate reports of any serious damage.

    More than 30,000 protesters attended the Athens rally, which had been calm before the clashes. Protesters chanting “Don’t obey the rich — Fight back!” marched to parliament as the city center was heavily policed. A brass band, tractors and cyclists joined the rally.

    The rally was part of Greece’s first major labor protest this year as Prime Minister George Papandreou’s Socialist government faces international pressure to make more lasting cuts after the nation’s debt-crippled economy was rescued from bankruptcy by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

    The 24-hour strike halted trains, ferries and most public transport across the country, and led to the cancellation of more than 100 flights at Athens International Airport. The strike also the closed the Acropolis and other major tourist sites.

    State hospital doctors, ambulance drivers, pharmacists, lawyers and tax collectors joined school teachers, journalists and thousands of small businesses as more middle-class groups took part in the protest than have in the past. Athens’ main shopping district was mostly empty, as many small business owners shuttered their stores.

    Unions are angry at the ongoing austerity measures put in place by the Socialist government in exchange for a euro110 billion ($150 billion) bailout loan package from European countries and the IMF.

    Stathis Anestis, deputy leader of Greece’s largest union, the GSEE, said workers should not be asked to make more sacrifices during a third straight year of recession.

    “The measures forced on us by the agreement with our lenders are harsh and unfair. … We are facing long-term austerity with high unemployment and destabilizing our social structure,” Anestis told The Associated Press. “What is increasing is the level of anger and desperation … If these harsh policies continue, so will we.”

    Elsewhere, about 15,000 people rallied and minor scuffles broke out in Greece’s second largest city, Thessaloniki, while Anestis said around 60 demonstrations were being planned in cities and towns across Greece. He said the GSEE was in talks with European labor unions to try and coordinate future strikes with other EU countries.

    Earlier this month, international debt monitors said Greece needed a “significant acceleration” of long-term reforms to avoid missing its economic targets. It also urged the Socialist government to embark on a euro50 billion ($68 billion) privatization program to pay for some of its mounting national debt that is set to exceed 150 percent of the GDP this year.

    The IMF has said some of the frequent demonstrations against the Greek government’s reforms were being carried out by groups angry at losing their “unfair advantages and privileges.”

    AP

    Wane.com

    Photo: Mirror