Showing posts with label Officers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Officers. Show all posts

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Number of US army officers fired for misconduct tripled in 3 yrs – report


Reuters / Mark WilsonRT News


US armed forces misconduct has reached worrying proportions, with drug, alcohol and sexual abuses and expulsions on the rise, documents obtained by the AP reveal.


The past three years seem to have been the hardest on army officers, as they have seen a steep, three-fold increase in departures due to misconduct and internal crimes, according to the documents. A total of 119 Army officers were forced to leave due to misconduct in 2010, which closely matched the average since 2000, but the figure more than tripled in 2013 to 387. For enlisted soldiers, the number jumped from 5,600 in 2007 to upward of 11,000 in 2013.  


This may be in part due to the army’s rapid expansion in the last decade, owing to a soaring demand for soldiers in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq. This may have led to a relaxing of standards for the purpose of retaining soldiers in ranks that needed to stay filled.


Also, a possible reason is that long, repeated exposure to combat puts both an individual strain on the soldiers and their leaders, but also changes the ethics and style of how recruitment and behavioral oversight are conducted in periods of prolonged war.


Similarly, the protracted period of conflict could have led to a greater number of soldiers with psychological problems being allowed to stay, because commanders didn’t have the time or the luxury of being more selective about who to keep and who to dismiss.


At the height of the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions, the Army was inflated to a record 570,000, more than any other military service.


Speaking to the AP, one of the Army’s top officials, General Ray Odierno, had a slightly expanded take on the issue, believing that soldiers’ commitment and competence may also have forced commanders to overlook certain disciplinary or psychological issues in the military.


General Ray Odierno, commanding general of the Multinational Force Iraq (Reuters / Saad Shalash)General Ray Odierno, commanding general of the Multinational Force Iraq (Reuters / Saad Shalash)


Odierno doesn’t believe that “a lack of character was tolerated in [the war] theater, but the fact of the last 10 or 12 years of repeated deployments, of the high op-tempo — we might have lost focus on this issue.”


Gambling, drinking and sexual misconduct form part of a series of high-profile scandals that have plagued the US military, leading to scathing reviews and changes in personnel regulations. One army general was demoted for lavish spending, while another had to face charges of sexual misconduct, with multiple gambling and drinking violations pinned on a number of others.


The US chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Army General Martin Dempsey, said: “It is not the war that has caused this, it is the pace, and our failure to understand that at that pace, we were neglecting the tools that manage us as a profession over time.”


General Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (Reuters / Joshua Roberts)General Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (Reuters / Joshua Roberts)


The string of offenses also extends to some truly massive cases along the lines of Marines urinating on the corpses of Taliban fighters, while some posed for pictures with their body parts. Cases like these lead Odierno to the conclusion that more attention needs to be paid to the problem, and that there is a move in the positive direction. “We are not tolerant at all of those showing a lack of character… We have to refocus ourselves so we get to where we think is the right place.”


Regarding the Navy, in the period 2004-13, one third of all misconduct cases had to do with drugs and alcohol, of which 1,400 each year were classified as “serious offences,” often involving civil or criminal trials.


American commanders believe the problem cannot be traced back to any one particular issue and are working out ways to identify all issues that lead to intense misconduct by their military.


As Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said during a recent briefing: “I don’t think there is one simple answer to the issue of ethics, values, a lapse in some of those areas… Was it a constant focus of 12 years on two long land wars, taking our emphasis off some of these other areas? I don’t know.”


Following these thoughts, Hagel announced a plan to appoint a special officer that would deal with identifying the root causes of what is happening.


US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel (Reuters / Yuri Gripas)US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel (Reuters / Yuri Gripas)


Speaking about how the problem extends not only to junior officers, but also to senior leaders, Odierno said that a lot of them do not realize that power is another factor – a corrupting one. “Some don’t realize it’s happening to them,” he said of its effects on character.


As part of the effort to address the problem, senior officers are facing evaluation by their juniors at the behest of the military and its new policies.


http://rt.com/usa/army-misconduct-soldiers-rise-280/






Number of US army officers fired for misconduct tripled in 3 yrs – report

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Plebgate: honesty and integrity of police officers in question, says IPCC

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Plebgate: honesty and integrity of police officers in question, says IPCC

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Father recalls watching son being shot, killed by LAPD officers


Kate Mather and Richard Winton
Los Angeles Times
December 21, 2013


121613_1


Bill Beaird wept Friday as he recalled watching live on television as Los Angeles police officers fatally shot his son at the end of a pursuit.


Sometime before the shooting, Beaird said, his son Brian had called to say that police were chasing him. Beaird said he urged his son to pull over. But Brian Beaird kept driving his Corvette at high rates of speed, eventually broadsiding another car Dec. 13 in downtown Los Angeles. The shooting was filmed from TV news helicopters.


The elder Beaird said he watched in shock as his 51-year-old son staggered out of the wrecked Corvette, briefly putting his arms in the air as he walked behind the vehicle to the passenger side, and police opened fire.


Read more


This article was posted: Saturday, December 21, 2013 at 5:12 pm









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Father recalls watching son being shot, killed by LAPD officers

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Nuke troubles run deep; key officers "burned out"





FILE – This April 15, 1997 file photo shows an Air Force missile crew commander standing at the door of his launch capsule 100-feet under ground where he and his partner are responsible for 10 nuclear-armed ICBM’s, in north-central Colorado. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File)





FILE – This April 15, 1997 file photo shows an Air Force missile crew commander standing at the door of his launch capsule 100-feet under ground where he and his partner are responsible for 10 nuclear-armed ICBM’s, in north-central Colorado. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Eric Draper, File)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh talks to a reporter in his office at the Pentagon, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Trouble inside the Air Force’s nuclear missile force runs deeper and wider than officials have let on. An unpublished study for the Air Force obtained by The Associated Press cites “burnout” among launch officers with their finger on the trigger of 450 weapons of mass destruction. And this: evidence of broader behavioral issues across the intercontinental ballistic missile force, including sexual assault and domestic violence. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





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Nuke troubles run deep; key officers "burned out"

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Sar-e-Aam - 15th December 2012-Corrupt Police Officers Exposed by **Sar-e-Aam Team**

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Sar-e-Aam - 15th December 2012-Corrupt Police Officers Exposed by **Sar-e-Aam Team**

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Ohio facial recognition database can be accessed by 30,000 police officers, others without any oversight

By Madison Ruppert


Editor of End the Lie


(Image credit: threephin/Flickr)

(Image credit: threephin/Flickr)



Some 30,000 police officers and court employees in Ohio can access driver’s license images in the state’s facial recognition database with no oversight or audits, according to a report.


While this is the nation’s most permissive system, the fact is that facial recognition systems are used nationwide with similarly lax legal standards, as I reported in June. Similar databases are on the rise thanks to the FBI’s distribution of facial recognition software and their $ 1 billion facial recognition system.


An investigation by the Cincinnati Enquirer/Gannett Ohio found that the system was implemented without first reviewing security protocols or telling the public about it.


Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine’s office launched the facial recognition system in June, according to the Enquirer. The technology was in use in over half of the states at the time, according to DeWine.


Such technology is not only used in law enforcement contexts. Indeed, increasingly powerful facial recognition systems are being rolled out on platforms ranging from mannequins to drones to border crossings to city-wide systems around the globe.


However, the Enquirer reports that some states have the use of these systems on a tight leash.


In Kentucky, only 34 people can run a facial recognition search, according to the Enquirer. Of those, three are in the license bureau and 31 are in the state police department.


Ohio’s level of access is “unmatched anywhere else in the country,” according to the Enquirer. As part of their investigation, they contacted officials in every other state and the District of Columbia to obtain details about their facial recognition systems.


In addition to Ohio, 37 states along with the District of Columbia have launched facial recognition systems that are capable of matching a driver’s license picture with another photograph.


In most states, the system was launched by the driver’s license bureau in an attempt to prevent duplicate identification cards and fraud. Ohio’s system, on the other hand, was launched by the attorney general.


On the other hand, 12 states do not use facial recognition software at all. Another 12 states use facial recognition software but reportedly do not allow law enforcement agencies to access the technology.


Since Ohio launched the system, it has been quite popular. Officers have performed at least 2,600 searches on the new database since June 2.


The precise nature of these searches is not clear, though the system can be used to match driver’s license images and police mug shots with any image, even one captured by a surveillance camera.


The database does not just include photos. The investigation found that any of the 30,000 people with access to the database could also acquire information as personal as home addresses and Social Security numbers.


DeWine said that he is satisfied with the system’s “adequate” safeguards. He said that the threat of prosecution and other safeguards help prevent misuse of the system.


However, we know that government employees aren’t always the most scrupulous when it comes to use of their systems.


After all, NSA employees used the agency’s massive international surveillance network to spy on their lovers and former spouses.


Furthermore, a recent Enquirer report revealed, “The lead attorney for Ohio’s law enforcement database resigned in 2009 after misusing the system but was not charged with a crime.”


“Without stronger restrictions and security measures, how many cases of abuse are slipping by in offices across the state?” the Enquirer asked.


The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Ohio clearly does not agree with DeWine’s claims about adequate safeguards.


In an August 26 press release, the ACLU of Ohio called on DeWine to “pull the plug” on the program.


“Without specific limits on what government can do with this technology, its use will inevitably and eventually spread to Ohioans who are not criminal suspects,” said ACLU of Ohio Associate Director Gary Daniels. “This is not speculation. It is a foregone conclusion when government thinks of law enforcement first and its citizens’ right to privacy last.”


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Ohio facial recognition database can be accessed by 30,000 police officers, others without any oversight

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Iraq attacks kill a dozen police officers

Iraqi men inspect the wreckage of cars at the site of a car bomb explosion in central Baghdad on September 18, 2013.



About a dozen police officers have been killed in several attacks in northern Iraq amid ongoing violence in the Arab country.


The attacks took place on Saturday with Iraqi officials saying 11 officers were killed in the latest incidents of the months-long surge of violence in the country.


The deadliest incident came after four bombers attacked a headquarters for police commandos in the city of Beiji, located 250 km north of the capital, Bagdad.


Seven police officers were killed and 21 others injured in the attack. The guards killed one of the bombers, but the other three entered the compound and set off their explosive belts.


In a separate incident, two prison guards were shot dead after unknown gunmen stormed their houses in a village near Mosul city, 360 km northwest of Baghdad.


A roadside bomb also struck a convoy in Mosul, killing two soldiers and wounding four others.


Violence has surged across Iraq in recent months, reaching its highest level since 2008.


According to the United Nations, more than 5,000 people have been killed in acts of violence so far this year in Iraq, 800 of them in August alone with Baghdad Province worst hit.


July was Iraq’s deadliest month in five years with 1,057 people killed and 2,326 wounded in terrorist attacks.


The Iraqi government says al-Qaeda-linked groups and members of the outlawed Ba’ath Party are behind the surge in terrorist attacks in the country.


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Iraq attacks kill a dozen police officers

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Nearly 200 British Police Officers Under Investigation for Sexual Assault


British police

Photo: Wikimedia Commons



By JG Vibes
Intellihub.com
August 25, 2013

On a daily basis, there are countless people worldwide who use their position of authority to hurt others.  This is the whole purpose of authority anyway, to abuse and exploit people without suffering any consequences.  It is quite common for police officers or other enforcement agents of the state to assault, frame and even rape innocent people.  Recently in the UK, nearly 200 police officers and staff workers were accused of sexual assault.


The Guardian reported that Police forces are being ordered to face up to corruption by officers who commit sexual offences against vulnerable women and young people, as figures obtained by the Guardian reveal 169 officers and support staff are under investigation for predatory sexual behavior.’ [1]


According to the report only a small number of these cases will actually be reviewed by an independent group, the vast majority of the cases will be investigated by the police themselves.


Debaleena Dasgupta, a lawyer representing women who have been raped or sexually assaulted by police officers, said: “If a woman reports rape or sexual assault by a police officer it is not just that the investigation has to be properly carried out, it has to be seen to be done properly in order for victims to have confidence in the system.”


“If these cases are being investigated by the police themselves, then victims are going to get anxious. The IPCC may not have perfect resources but they should be fighting for them in order to investigate these kinds of cases.”


In a film made by Nottinghamshire police, which is being released to all forces next month, the woman said: “I thought he was going to work and doing a professional job, making a difference, and it was all just lies. It affected everybody.


“These people [his victims] were vulnerable. He was in a position of authority. He abused their trust, he abused the public’s trust.”


This type of situation is not an uncommon incident, just afew weeks ago we reported on a Texas cop who resigned amid allegation that he sexually assaulted a woman in front of her children while questioning her in her own home.[2]


Sources:


[1] Police investigate 169 staff over predatory sexual behaviourThe Guardian


[2] Cop Resigns After Woman Accuses Him of Sexual Assault With Her Children NearbyIntellihub


Writer Bio:

VibesJG Vibes is an Intellihub.com investigative journalist, staff writer and editor. He is also the author of “Alchemy of the Modern Renaissance”, an 87 chapter e-book and is an artist with an established record label.

For media inquires, interviews, questions or suggestions for this author, email: vibes@intellihub.com or telephone: (347) 759-6075.

Read more articles by this author here.

*****



Intellihub.com



Nearly 200 British Police Officers Under Investigation for Sexual Assault

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Fake Police Officer Pulls Over Real Police Officers




Dressing up as police officers67 Not Out – by Mike Perry


There’s a lesson in this short coincidence story for those who like dressing up as police officers.


One gentleman in northern New Mexico had all the police gear: police lights on his vehicle, a real police weapon etc. “So,” he must have thought, “let’s put this equipment to good use.”   


Dressing up as police officer t-shirt

He was out and about, saw a speeding car and pulled it over. He told the vehicle occupants he was a member of the State Police Search and Rescue. All well and good but … whoops!


The two men in the vehicle really were law enforcement officers – in an unmarked car.


I guess the lesson is: if you want to pretend you are a police officer, just be careful who you pull over.


I first saw this story on Daily Progress. They asked a relevant question, which hasn’t been answered:


“We are left to wonder, however, about one curious detail. Were the state police agents actually speeding? If so, did they have a legitimate need?”


But come on, police officers driving too fast when they don’t need to – surely not!!


Police joke cartoon

http://www.67notout.com/2013/08/fake-police-officer-pulls-over-real.html



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Fake Police Officer Pulls Over Real Police Officers

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Hagel Stresses Accountability to Army"s Newest Officers



American Forces Press Service


By Amaani Lyle
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, May 25, 2013 – Noting the new demands of a “shifting and complicated world,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel today emphasized the need for accountability and integrity in the responsibilities awaiting the Army’s newest officers in his commencement address at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y.


“You’ve made a courageous decision to offer yourself for a very purposeful life,” Chuck Hagel said to the more than 1,000 members of the academy’s 215th graduating class. “You’ve learned the meaning of duty, honor and country, and you will now be asked to lead our nation’s soldiers – an awesome responsibility.”


Hagel said his time in the Army forever shaped him, and that while tactics, techniques and training have changed over the decades since served as an enlisted soldier in Vietnam, some things are enduring.


“The basic principles of soldiering and leadership remain the same,” he said. “Character and courage are still the indispensable requisites of both life and leadership.”


The most important part of leadership is taking responsibility for your own actions and decisions and holding all around you accountable, the secretary told the graduating class, noting that the career of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower “provides one of the greatest examples of this kind of accountability.”


“On the eve of the Normandy invasion, which he would command, Eisenhower scribbled a message on a piece of paper in the event that D-Day was a failure,” Hagel said. “Eisenhower’s framed words hung in my Senate office for 12 years. They read: ‘Our landings have failed, and I have withdrawn the troops. My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available. The troops, the air and the Navy did all that bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt, it is mine alone.’


“That is accountability, “and I often think of that story when I look at Eisenhower’s portrait in my Pentagon office,” he continued. “Eisenhower’s simple and honest statement should be a guiding point for all of us in positions of authority and responsibility, and for all of you as you embark upon your military careers.


The secretary said he learned in Vietnam that “combat is a furnace that can consume” soldiers, but it can also forge them into something better than before. Today’s ground forces have shouldered a heavy burden over the longest period of sustained combat in American history, he added.


In addition to budget constraints that are forcing the Army and all services to cancel training and curtail exercises, Hagel noted other significant menaces to the health and quality of the all-volunteer force, such as alcohol, drug abuse, suicide, mental illness, sexual harassment and sexual assault.


“You’ll need to not just deal with these debilitating, insidious and destructive forces, but rather, you must be the generation of leaders that stop it,” Hagel said. “This will require your complete commitment to building a culture of respect and dignity for every member of the military in society.”


Hagel described sexual harassment and sexual assault in the military as profound betrayals of sacred oaths and trusts.


“This scourge must be stamped out,” the secretary said. “We’re all accountable and responsible for ensuring that this happens. We cannot fail the Army or America. We cannot fail each other, and we cannot fail the men and women that we lead.”







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Hagel Stresses Accountability to Army"s Newest Officers