Also good police work.
Copinthehood.com has moved to qualitypolicing.com
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Good (but not for tourism)
Here’s to Sgt Kelly and his good Times Square shooting!
The man was carrying a card that said: “I feel sorry for a cop if he think Iām getting into his paddy wagon.ā
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NRA gun owners for gun control
E.J. Dionne writes about an interesting poll of NRA members.
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L.A. acts to cap medical marijuana dispensaries
I’m all for regulation. But a ban on locations within 1,000 feet of a residence could be the same as a ban. We’ll see.
The storyin the LA Times.
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Honduras anti-drugs chief killed
The BBChas the story.
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British Badass
Man wrestles gun from 19-year-old outside pub in Manchester.
No doubt helped by a bit of Dutch courage.
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Perjury
It’s not unusually for to hear people lie in court. What is unusual is for somebody to be charged for it. Of course in this case it took an innocent man going to prison for a rape that wasn’t.
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Would be 10 years now…
December 6, 1999, was my official D.O.E. in the Baltimore Police Department (even though I was already two-months into an academy class). Had I stayed on the job, I would now have ten years on, with ten more to go.
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Just Get New Fingers
The problems with security that used biometric data (like fingerprints) are 1) we have too much faith in it, and 2) it doesn’t “fail” well.
If you lose your driver’s license, you get a new one. What do you do if somebody steals your fingerprint?
Here’s a case from Japan of fingerprint alteration.
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In Memory of Marcellus Ward
Ward was killed 25 years ago. His assassination and last dying breaths were caught on tape and haunted the memory of many Baltimore police officers, some of whom I worked with. At a memorial, held where Ward was killed, Commissioner Bealefeld said that it is “not for us to judge the results of his sacrifice.” And certainly a memorial to a slain officer is notthe time and place for that.
But at some point we needto ask. Why are we risking our lives? What are we getting in return? If we don’t ask these questions, more good men and women will die.
The block Ward give his life to protect has long since died. Like too much of Baltimore, it’s vacant, boarded up, and abandoned. Here’s the 1800 block of Frederick, odd side. Ward was killed upstairs in the Formstone house in the center with the potential window display:

By risking his life to protect others, Ward died a hero. That I do not doubt or forget. But it’s hard to imagine that Baltimore or Frederick Avenue would be any worse off today if Ward had simply called in sick that day. And the world would certainly be a better place if Ward and other officers killed in the drug war were still with us. I’ve said this before (to the consternation of some). I don’t want to see any other officers killed for a war we are not winning and cannot win.When I put my life on the line every night for the men and women of the Eastern, I would often think about the fallen officers pictured on the walls. Ward always stood out for some reason. (I’m not making it up that his picture hangs in the Eastern, am I?) From what I heard he was a good guy. And from his picture, he just seemed more human than most other cops pictured.
Police Commissioner Bealefeld is a good man and the best commissioner Baltimore City has seen in a long while, certainly better than the previous five commissioners (I’ll only vouch for worse commissioners as far back to and including Frazier). Maybe Bealefeld even gets it when he talks about the war on drugs and the “seemingly impossible task” of winning it? Who knows. But the war isn’t his to call off.
Here is Peter Hermann’s takeand his story in the Sun with the sad headline: “At memorial, a new vow to wage war on drugs.”