Jun 142013
 

LAPD Purchases 188 Dodge, Ford Patrol Vehicles

POLICE Magazine
June 14, 2013

Former U.S. Marine & LAPD Sgt. Joel Miller poses next to an LAPD Dodge Charger Pursuit. (Photo by Blake Bobit)

Former U.S. Marine & LAPD Sgt. Joel Miller poses next to an LAPD Dodge Charger Pursuit. (Photo by Blake Bobit)

 

The Los Angeles Police Department has ended its patrol-car purchasing drought, adding 188 new 2013 model-year patrol vehicles from Chrysler and the Ford Motor Company.

Earlier this year, the LAPD ordered 100 Dodge Charger Pursuit patrol cars, 50 Ford Police Interceptor Utility vehicles, and 38 Ford P.I. sedans. For the first time in four years, the city provided the agency funding to purchase new vehicles. The $6.5 million in funding came from the fiscal year ending June 30.

The new vehicles will replace aging Ford Crown Vics in the agency’s fleet. The Dodge Chargers are expected to be on patrol by the end of July. The Ford P.I. vehicles will be on the street in October, LAPD’s fleet manager, Vartan Yegiyan, told POLICE Magazine.

“While the funding was not available, personnel were diligently testing the new police vehicles in the market from Chevrolet, Dodge, and Ford,” Yegiyan said. “There is a chance we may get more money for next year.”

In its purchase order for the Chargers, the LAPD acquired rear-wheel-drive marked units powered by a 3.6-liter V-6 engine. The LAPD also bought all-wheel Ford P.I.s powered by a 3.7-liter V-6 power plant.

Choosing a V-6 Charger over the V-8 version wasn’t a difficult decision, because it gives officers sufficient performance while giving the agency good fuel economy, Yegiyan said.

“There is no real advantage for us to have more horsepower or speed because these cars go fast enough to do the job,” Yegiyan added. “They have equivalent performance and speed compared to the Crown Vics.”

The department is now equipping the vehicles to make them patrol-ready. Some of the vehicles will get a vinyl wrap rather than two-tone paint. The agency has also hired an outfitter to add generic hardware, emergency lights, and sirens.

Direct Link:  http://www.policemag.com/channel/vehicles/news/2013/06/14/lapd-purchases-nearly-200-dodge-ford-patrol-vehicles.aspx

Apr 052012
 

Sexual predator targeting San Fernando Valley high school girls

Los Angeles Times
April 4, 2012

Valley predator

 

Authorities in the northeast San Fernando Valley continued their search Wednesday for a sexual predator they say is targeting high school girls.

Los Angeles police said the man may be responsible for two attempted kidnappings and seven instances of lewd acts over the last 15 months.

He was described as a male Latino or Asian with short, curly black hair that has some gray in it. He has brown eyes and may have some facial hair and is about 5 feet, 6 inches tall and 160 to 200 pounds.

Investigators from the LAPD’s Mission Division said they have various descriptions of the car he may be driving. It could be a 2000 to 2010 red or white Honda, Nissan or Toyota.

In an email Wednesday to constituents, City Councilman Richard Alarcon asked for the public’s help in finding the predator and “in looking out for your neighbor as the police search” for him.

The most recent incidents occurred March 12 at 9 p.m. in the 1400 block of Van Nuys Boulevard and at 4:10 p.m. March 29 at Beachy Avenue and Bromwich Street, according to authorities.

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/04/sexual-predator-targeting-san-fernando-valley-high-school-girls-is-sought.html

Feb 292012
 

Hackers publish private information about L.A. police officers

Los Angeles Times

By Andrew Blankstein 

Twitter.com/anblanx

February 24, 2012

http://latimesphoto.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/police-memorial01.jpg

 

Photo: LAPD officers outisde police headquarters.

Credit: Los Angeles Times

 

 

The FBI is probing an Internet breach in which hackers publicly posted private information belonging to more than 100 local law enforcement officers who are part of the Los Angeles County Police Canine Assn.

Tony Vairo, a San Fernando police officer, who is president of the group, told The Times that they were contacted by the FBI Tuesday morning informing them that information belonging to its members, who include the Los Angeles police and Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies, had been compromised.

“I’m appalled that our website was breached,” Vairo said. “It’s not right and we will pursue it [a case] on every level, state or federal.”

Vairo described the FBI probe into the hacking incident as being part of an ongoing criminal investigation. FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller would not comment on what, if any, involvement the agency had in the case.

The incident, first reported Tuesday by CNET.com, comes two months after personal information about more than two dozen members of the Los Angeles Police Department’s command staff was anonymously posted on an Internet site.

In that case, the hackers posted officers’ property records, campaign contributions, biographical information and, in a few cases, the names of family members, including children. But that information was gleaned from public records.

Authorities said the current intrusion is different because the information gleaned from the association’s website was not available to the public.

Marshall E. McClain, president of the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officer’s Assn., which has three members whose information was compromised, said his association has contacted the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office to ask for a criminal investigation.

The postings were linked to from a publicly available Twitter account, where unnamed activists claimed responsibility for the information dump. The information was posted on a site that allows users to anonymously input data. This type of site has increasingly been used to post personal information of individuals who raise the ire of online activists. The practice is known as “doxing.”

 

ALSO:

Teen didn’t mention bullying in suicide notes, authorities say

Roosevelt High teacher accused of having sex with two students

Security probed after teens found having sex at O.C. Juvenile Hall

 

Direct Link:

Feb 292012
 

Fighting L.A.’s gangs with families

 

Officials say L.A. Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes’ effort, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, is working.

Los Angeles Times
Opinion / Editorial
By Jim Newton
February 27, 2012
Guillermo Cespedes

 

Guillermo Cespedes speaks to the media after his appointment. (Los Angeles Times / September 8, 2009)

In a large conference room at City Hall East, more than 100 gang-intervention workers gathered last week to hear about a new approach to heading off gang violence and the destruction it causes. They had come to hear a family tell its story.

The mother did most of the talking, guided by a counselor. She was there with two of her children, a son and a daughter, and they’d been through the wringer. An older daughter had gotten in trouble, deeper and deeper. She’d neglected her schoolwork and fought back when her parents tried to discipline her. She ran away from home, got pregnant. “The road she was on,” the mother said, “was not good.”

As the mother and father became increasingly preoccupied with trying to set their older daughter straight, they had less time to spend with their younger children, and soon those two began to show signs of trouble as well. Their grades dropped; the boy’s interest in sports flagged.

Gripped by the sense that they were losing control, the parents called for help. It came in the form of a local organization, whose counselor dove into the life of this young family, escorting the kids to school, arranging for tutors, counseling the parents. Slowly, life settled down. The son got glasses, started doing his homework and brought up his grades; the younger daughter joined a program for future executives and thrived.

Asked to explain what got his attention and turned him around, the boy responded, “Jesus,” then quickly added, “and the ladies.”

The counselor for this session was Harry Aponte, a nationally recognized gang-intervention expert from Philadelphia, and he patiently waded through the family history as the audience of intervention workers listened, many taking notes.

This family-centered approach represents a new tack in Los Angeles’ long quest to divert young people from gangs. The philosophy behind it is that focusing on a single troubled child isn’t enough. Schools and neighborhoods surround children, but their families are their core of support and thus the most natural people to help them.

“We’re shifting the focus from the individual to the family,” Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes explained. “Every family has a problem-solving mechanism that gets jammed. We’re trying to address that.”

Police and others credit Cespedes’ efforts, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, with making steady progress against gang violence in Los Angeles. Last year, crime overall in the city continued its long decline (though homicides ticked back up by a single killing, from 297 to 298), and the drop in gang crime continued to outpace that for crime generally. Fewer gang members fired shots or were themselves shot, and gang crimes overall fell by more than 15%, from 5,537 to 4,694. (Again, homicides were an exception, though a relatively small one: 170 killings in 2011 were attributed to gang violence, up from 161 the year before.)

So impressed is Police Chief Charlie Beck with the program’s contribution to reducing gang crime in Los Angeles that, in an interview with Times reporters and editors last week, he said he’s judging the field of mayoral candidates in part by which ones would keep the office structured as part of the mayor’s staff. That configuration is useful, Beck explained, because gang crime is not spread evenly throughout the city, and giving the council oversight of the efforts means that there are pressures to spread its resources across 15 districts, rather than concentrate them where they are needed. “If [the program] becomes a council department again,” he said, “it’s not going to have the focus it has now.”

Meanwhile, the approach is continuing to evolve. Driven by the program’s determination to fuse research and real-world experience, Cespedes says he and others have concluded that families need to be at the center of the program’s efforts. Hence the training last week at City Hall.

During his 90 minutes with the family, Aponte listened carefully as the mother and her children spelled out the elements of their success as well as the challenges that lie ahead. The older daughter has just had her baby and is living in a group home. The younger children still have a long way to go in school, and the temptation of gangs will not recede with just one strong report card.

But Aponte also recognized the family’s progress, its emergence from a long stretch of tough work. “You’re celebrating life,” he observed. “You’ve gone through a dark alley, and now you’re celebrating.”

The mother nodded, as did her children. Aponte turned to his audience to emphasize the point: “They will not lose this…. This is their trophy to take home.”

 

 

 

 

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-newton-column-gang-intervention-20120227,0,3021365.column

Jan 162012
 

Police Officers Save Elderly Woman From Burning Home

 

KTLA News

David Begnaud

January 15, 2012

 

VIDEO: Watch David Begnaud’s Report

 

Police Officers Save Woman From Burning HomeLAPD Rampart Division Officers Seree Rattanapichetkul and Anthony Farias. (KTLA-TV) 
Click here to find out more!

 

WESTLAKE (KTLA) –

Officers from the LAPD Rampart division are being praised for their bravery Sunday after risking their lives to save an elderly woman from a burning home.

The fire broke out around 9:30 a.m. at a home in the 1100 block of S. Westlake Avenue.

Officers Seree Rattanapichetkul and Anthony Farias, who were on patrol in the area, saw heavy smoke coming from the upper level of the home and called the fire department.


The officers helped two residents escape from the home to a safer location. They were then told there was a 89-year-old woman still in the kitchen at the back of the bottom floor.

The officers made their way through the smoke-filled home and led her to safety before going back in to make one last check of the home, according to Los Angeles Police Department Lt. Wes Burhmester.

The residents and the officers were treated at the scene for minor smoke inhalation.

“Due to the swift actions of the residents and Officers Farias and Rattanapichetkul, everyone survived the blaze and no one was seriously injured,” a police department press release said.

All the furniture and items in the home were saved, according to David Spence of the Los Angeles Fire Department.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-officers-save-woman-from-burning-home,0,3128995.story