HVACTech
Member
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2008
- Messages
- 3,736
Why?
this is a clear demonstration of how far "they" are above us.
mundane.
Why?
this is a clear demonstration of how far "they" are above us.
mundane.
Why?
I feel like I'm completely alone in my views on police on here. I'm caught between the hardcore Cantwellites and the people who actually believe in the whole "good cop" myth...
I feel like I'm completely alone in my views on police on here. I'm caught between the hardcore Cantwellites and the people who actually believe in the whole "good cop" myth...
Who here hasn't logged in for several days?
I don't understand how this relates to my question.
I feel like I'm completely alone in my views on police on here. I'm caught between the hardcore Cantwellites and the people who actually believe in the whole "good cop" myth...
“We are aware of some conversations … it’s clear that he has been planning this for some time. I really don’t want to go beyond that with specifics about what he has told other people but it is very clear to us that he has held these beliefs, I just think other people didn’t think he would act on this.”
OP said:Noonan confirmed that one trooper was killed and the other was injured and taken to Geisinger Medical Center in Scranton, where he was in stable condition after undergoing surgery.
He provided few details on the shooting but said the attack seemed to be directed at state police.
"This has been an emotional night for all of us," Noonan told reporters.
reuters said:Pennsylvania's attorney general on Thursday identified top state officials who received pornographic emails on government computers, reversing course after a long-running fight with reporters who sought the release of the information.
All of the officials named by Attorney General Kathleen Kane served under Governor Tom Corbett when he was attorney general and his successor, Linda Kelly.
The list includes two current officials in the Republican governor's administration: Frank Noonan, the commander of the Pennsylvania State Police, and E. Christopher Abruzzo, the state's top environmental official.
Because he might have stated legitimate grievances...
As MailOnline exclusively reported on Thursday, Frein may have believed Douglass, 31, was having an affair with the fugitive's sister-in-law Melissa Frein.
Melissa Frein lives less than half a mile away from Douglass in Olyphant, Pennsylvania and police admit the two knew each other. They say they aggressively interviewed Melissa about rumors of an affair but say they now do not believe the two were involved.
I don't think that transgression deserves a death sentence but it would explain why the police aren't concerned about the general public being harmed.
A possible motive for retribution to Trooper Friendly is revealed. Sleeping with other men's wives usually doesn't end well.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...iller-search-haunted-hotel-used-MTV-show.html
I don't think that transgression deserves a death sentence but it would explain why the police aren't concerned about the general public being harmed.
But could the combination of being a cop AND having an affair bring things up to that level?
Manhunt for Frein escalates around Snow Hill Falls neighborhood near state forest
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Laura MCCrystal, Inquirer Staff Writer
Posted: Sunday, September 28, 2014, 11:19 AM
PRICE TOWNSHIP, Pa. -- The manhunt for Eric Frein appears to have narrowed to a wooded area bordering a state forest, where residents have once again been advised to stay home as troopers patrol on foot and helicopters circle overhead.
Police presence that intensified Saturday afternoon escalated Sunday morning in a rural neighborhood here, where residents live on lots of several acres off dirt roads. Frein, charged with killing a state trooper and wounding another, continues to evade capture after more than two weeks in the Poconos woods.
The focused search includes the back yard of 61-year-old Pat Snively, who said helicopters hovered so low to the ground near her home that trees swayed wildly in the wind and she could see the faces of the pilots.
"It looked like Black Hawk Down, those helicopters," she said.
Snively and her neighbors also lost power for several hours Saturday evening. PPL Electric reported that 78 customers lost power in the area; state police could not confirm that the outage was caused by wind from the helicopters.
The search appeared to be centered in the woods just behind Snively's home. Her grandchildren were playing in her back yard yesterday afternoon when an armed trooper in camouflage signaled to her son.
The trooper advised them to take the children inside -- and stay there. A man who believed to be Eric Frein had been spotted in the woods behind their home, the trooper told them, but he had run away.
Trooper Adam Reed said he "can't provide information on the possibility of recent sightings," but confirmed that the police were focusing their search on the Snow Hill Falls neighborhood, where Snively lives.
As the search enters a third week, many residents have attempted to resume their normal routines. But the nearly 1,000 law enforcement officers who have descended on the woods in Monroe and Pike counties have shown no sign of stopping the search. By Sunday morning, Snively said more state troopers were arriving in white vans, and police cruisers lined the road.
"I don't mind, as long as they catch him," she said.
"I don't mind, as long as they catch him," she said.