Oct 122010
 

Blue Knights Co. 01 is happy to announce they are hosting the 2010 Colorado State Patrol 75th Anniversary Top Gun Competition September 25, 2010.

The Colorado State Patrol was established in 1935 as a division of the Colorado Department of Highways. The agency was originally known as the Colorado State Highway Courtesy Patrol. It was one of only four law enforcement agencies then existing in the state of Colorado. On September 23, 1935, 44 men selected from a pool of over 7,500 applicants began six-weeks of intensive training at Camp George West, which is located in Golden, Colorado.

On Saturday, September 25, 2010 the Colorado State Patrol will hold an Open House, located at the Academy, from 10am – 4pm, which will include a Police Motorcycle Skills Competition. The Colorado State Patrol has invited the Blue Knights Law Enforcement Motorcycle Club- Colorado Chapter 1, to bring their experience hosting the Top Gun Cops Motor Officers’ Competition over the last 21 years.

Competitors and spectators alike are encouraged to attend on Saturday, September 25, 2010. The event’s course will be unique to previous events hosted by the Blue Knights.

Unfortunately registration is closed for this year.

Top Gun Competition

Oct 082010
 

This video is the promo for the Blue Knights top Gun Challenge 2010. It was filmed by the Z.E.R.O. Colorado unit. It is the Super Bowl Of Police Motorcycle Obstacle Courses for Police officers to complete in a Fast safe manner without dropping the Bike and knocking over the fewest cones possible in a series of eliminations. The fastest officer with the lowest cones knocked over WINS! There will be another video A LOT better and A BUNCH of Pictures COMING SOON if you would like them we will direct you to the link to get them.

We wish to thank the Blue Knights and all who were there to help us with this Event to be made possible!! charities

Sep 202010
 

The Laughlin Bash Public Safety Motorcycle Rally is September 29th – October 3rd.  I am a Co founder of the Rally and it would be great to get the Blue Knights out to the function.  The site is LAUGHLINBASH. The more Knights the better 🙂

I also attached a colored flyer which can be emailed and posted. Thanks in advance

John Knapp (aka Napstr)

Laughlin Bash Info/Registration

The Laughlin Bash is a non-profit Public Safety motorcycle event for ALL active and retired Public Safety personnel. (i.e. EMS, Police, Fire, Corrections etc). This Event is not to be confused with the Laughlin River Run, which is held in April.

The Rally is an opportunity for all current and retired Public Safety personnel to get together, make new and see old friends. If you don’t ride a motorcycle come on by anyhow.

Laughlin is a great place to hold this event.  It has the hotel rooms, casinos, outlet shopping and water sport activities on the Colorado River.  Let’s put it this way, there’s a lot to do in Laughlin and at the hotel.  There is the Beach…Paddle Boats, Jet Ski Rentals, the Comedy Club at 7:00 pm each night and Octoberfest on the Boardwalk for all of October!

The average temperature is in the low 90’s to 70’s in the evening, with no to very little humidity, and LOTS of sunshine……… the guaranteed great riding weather!

Our preferred hotel this year will be the Edgewater Hotel – Casino Resort.

We also provide links to the other hotels nearby if you prefer to stay somewhere else.

On the Saturday night, the 50/50 draw will take place for monies going to the winner’s favorite Charity.  The more people you have in your group attending and the more tickets you purchase, the greater chance of winning.  On your registration online for attendance, please list your Charity.

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Sep 142010
 

Well, Mr. Citizen, it seems you’ve figured me out. I seem to fit neatly into the category where you’ve placed me. I’m stereotyped, standardized, characterized, classified, grouped, and always typical. Unfortunately, the reverse is true. I can never figure you out.

From birth you teach your children that I’m the bogeyman, then you’re shocked when they identify with my traditional enemy…the criminal!

You accuse me of coddling criminals…until I catch your kids doing wrong.

You may take an hour for lunch and several coffee breaks each day, but point me out as a loafer for having one cup.

You pride yourself on your manners, but think nothing of disrupting my meals with your troubles.

You raise hell with the guy who cuts you off in traffic, but let me catch you doing the same thing and I’m picking on you.

You know all the traffic laws…but you’ve never gotten a single ticket you deserve.

You shout “foul” if you observe me driving fast to a call, but raise the roof if I take more than ten seconds to respond to your complaint.

You call it part of my job if someone strikes me, but call it Police brutality if I strike back.

You wouldn’t think of telling your dentist how to pull a tooth or your doctor how to take out an appendix, yet you are always willing to give me pointers on the law.

You talk to me in a manner that would get you a bloody nose from anyone else, but expect me to take it without batting an eye.

You yell something’s got to be done to fight crime, but you can’t be bothered to get involved.

You have no use for me at all, but of course it’s OK if I change a flat for your wife, deliver your child in the back of the Patrol car, or perhaps save your son’s life with mouth to mouth breathing, or work many hours overtime looking for your lost Daughter.

So, Mr. Citizen, you can stand there on your soapbox and rant and rave about the way I do my work, calling me every name in the book, but never stop to think that your property, family, or maybe even your life depends on me or one of my buddies.

Yes, Mr. Citizen, it’s me…the lousy cop!

The author of this article was Trooper Mitchell Brown of the Virginia State Police. He was killed in the line of duty two months after writing the article. As a salute to the millions of men and women police officers who put their lives on the line for us everyday, please pass this on.

Sep 122010
 

The book is always better than the movie, so when you write your use-of force report, put the reader in your shoes and make them feel the fear you experienced.

The recent police shooting in Benton Ridge, Ohio clearly demonstrates that an unarmed suspect’s words and actions can create a situation which would lead reasonable officers to believe that their lives are in imminent danger. In this situation, more than one officer perceived the danger and dramatically backed away from the van. Then, more than one officer fired as the enraged suspect burst violently out of the window of the vehicle. But that video, as compelling as it is, is woefully inadequate as a true record of events. For that, we must turn to the reports from the officers involved. That’s why this event is a stark reminder for all officers that in a use-of-force incident, the report you write is critical to the post-incident events that inevitably follow.

Dynamic Story Telling
Officers involved in any use-of-force situation must freeze frame the moment. In their report, they must articulate every bit of information given to them leading up to the decision to use force. They must also document every statement, threatening gesture, and overt act that created the perception of danger which led them to the decision to fire.
After the fact the suspect may lie and the attorney will likely spread the lie. The media will then report the lie (and probably speculate and edit the tape to shape their story). Defense experts will make good money explaining how they would have done things differently. All of these people will be able to replay the tape over and over again in slow motion before coming to a conclusion in a situation that played out in mere seconds before your eyes.

There are so many cases in which suspects’ threatening words and movements lead officers to believe they are facing an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm. Suspects arm themselves with cell phones and other fake weapons and at times make movements feigning attack. That first report where you freeze a critical moment in time will help you accurately frame the desperate events. It should put the reader in the shoes of the officer involved.

For example, the suspect bent on “suicide by cop,” wants to be shot, so they aggressively do what they have to do to get their wish. A suspect may point a firearm at an officer and say, “You are going to die tonight!” and the reasonable officer will stop the perceived threat by shooting until the suspect no longer presents a threat. The discovery later that the gun was not loaded (or was even a toy) can never alter the officer’s perception at the moment the decision was made to shoot the suspect.

Put the Reader in Your Shoes
Officers who use force on a suspect should take the time to paint a vivid picture and put the reader in the officer’s shoes. Articulate your fears of your own impending death or great bodily harm that would lead anyone reading the report to come to the same conclusion as you did. Officers are hesitant to admit that they experienced fear, but this is the appropriate time to admit to the world in writing, “Because of … I was afraid for my life and my partner’s life.”

The book is always better than the movie. Grainy video images of cannot accurately capture the fear an officer in survival mode will experience. The viewer can not feel the painful tearing of cartilage as the officer scrambles to avoid an assault. They can’t see the protruding arteries in the suspect’s neck or smell the rank odor of intoxicants on his breath. The video will not show the spray of saliva into the officer’s face as it is flung out of a suspect’s mouth when he screams, “I’m going to kill you cop!” A vivid, truthful, and realistic description of what is transpiring can tell so much more than the partial digital recording of an incident shot from a bad angle, in poor focus, and in low-light conditions.

The dynamics of a shooting are such that certain specifics may come back to you at a later time. This is a natural phenomenon, so when that happens complete a supplemental report to outline the missing critical details you may recall later.

In the inevitable legal follow-up to these events, you have an advantage over the suspects, the attorney, the defense experts, and the media. You have the truth in your pocket.

Winston Churchill once said, “The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end there it is…” in your report.

About the author

Dan Marcou retired as a highly decorated police lieutenant and SWAT Commander with 33 years of full time law enforcement experience. He is a nationally recognized police trainer in many police disciplines and is a Master Trainer in the State of Wisconsin. He has authored three novels The Calling: The Making of a Veteran Cop , S.W.A.T. Blue Knights in Black Armor, and Nobody’s Heroes are all available at Barnes and Noble and Amazon.com. Visit his website and contact Dan Marcou

Sep 112010
 

The department was all astir, there was a lot of laughing and joking due to all the new officers, myself included, hitting the streets today for the first time.

After months of seemingly endless amounts of classes, paperwork, and lectures we were finally done with the Police Academy and ready to join the ranks of our department.

All you could see were rows of cadets with huge smiles and polished badges. As we sat in the briefing room, we could barely sit still

anxiously awaiting our turn to be introduced and given our beat assignment or, for the lay person, our own portion of the city to “serve and protect.”

It was then that he walked in. A statue of a man – 6 foot 3 and 230 pounds of solid muscle, he had black hair with highlights of gray and steely eyes that make you feel nervous even when he wasn’t looking at you.

He had a reputation for being the biggest and the smartest officer to ever work our fair city. He had been on the department for longer than anyone could remember and those years of service had made him into somewhat of a legend.

The new guys, or “rookies” as he called us, both respected and feared him.

When he spoke even, the most seasoned officers paid attention. It was almost a privilege when one the rookies got to be around when he would tell one of his police stories about the old days.

But we knew our place and never interrupted for fear of being shooed away. He was respected and revered by all who knew him.

After my first year on the department I still had never heard or saw him speak to any of the rookies for any length of time.

When he did speak to them all he would say was, “So, you want to be a policeman do you hero? I’ll tell you what, when you can tell me what they taste like, then you can call yourself a real policeman.”

This particular phrase I had heard dozens of times. Me and my buddies all had bets about “what they taste like” actually referred to.

Some believed it referred to the taste of your own blood after a hard fight. Others thought it referred to the taste of sweat after a long day’s work.

Being on the department for a year, I thought I knew just about everyone and everything. So one afternoon, I mustered up the courage and walked up to him.

When he looked down at me, I said “You know, I think I’ve paid my dues. I’ve been in plenty of fights, made dozens of arrests, and

sweated my butt off just like everyone else. So what does that little saying of yours mean anyway?”

With that, he merely stated, “Well, seeing as how you’ve said and done it all, you tell me what it means, hero.”

When I had no answer, he shook his head and snickered, “rookies,” and walked away.

The next evening was to be the worst one to date. The night started out slow, but as the evening wore on, the calls became more frequent and dangerous.

I made several small arrests and then had a real knock down drag out fight. However, I was able to make the arrest without hurting the

suspect or myself. After that, I was looking forward to just letting the shift wind down and getting home to my wife and daughter.

I had just glanced at my watch and it was 11:55, five more minutes and I would be on my way to the house. I don’t know if it was fatigue or just my imagination, but as I drove down one of the streets on my beat, I thought I saw my daughter standing on someone else’s porch. I looked again but it was not my daughter as I had first thought but merely a small child about her age. She was probably only six or seven years old and dressed in an oversized shirt that hung to her feet. She was clutching an old rag doll in her arms that looked older than me.

I immediately stopped my patrol car to see what she was doing outside her house at such an hour by herself. When I approached, there seemed to be a sigh of relief on her face. I had to laugh to myself, thinking she sees the hero policeman come to save the day.

I knelt at her side and asked what she was doing outside.

She said “My mommy and daddy just had a really big fight and now mommy won’t wake up.”

My mind was reeling. Now what do I do? I instantly called for backup and ran to the nearest window.

As I looked inside I saw a man standing over a lady with his hands covered in blood, her blood.

I kicked open the door, pushed the man aside and checked for a pulse, but unable to find one. I immediately cuffed the man and began doing C.P.R. on the lady.

It was then I heard a small voice from behind me, “Mr Policeman, please make my mommy wake up.” I continued to perform C.P.R. until my backup and medics arrived but they said it was too late. She was dead.

I then looked at the man. He said, “I don’t know what happened. She was yelling at me to stop drinking and go get a job and I had

just had enough. I just shoved her so she would leave me alone and she fell and hit her head.”

As I walked the man out to the car in handcuffs, I again saw that little girl. In the five minutes that has passed, I went from hero to monster.

Not only was I unable to wake up her mommy, but now I was taking daddy away too.

Before I left the scene, I thought I would talk to the little girl. To say what, I don’t know. Maybe just to tell her I was sorry about

her mommy and daddy. But as I approached, she turned away and I knew it was useless and I would probably make it worse.

As I sat in the locker room at the station, I kept replaying the whole thing in my mind. Maybe if I would have been faster or done

something different, just maybe that little girl would still have her mother.

And even though it may sound selfish, I would still be the hero.

It was then that I felt a large hand on my shoulder. I heard that all too familiar question again, “Well, hero, what do they taste like?”

But before I could get mad or shout some sarcastic remark, I realized that all the pent up emotions had flooded the surface and there was a steady stream of tears cascading down my face.

It was at that moment that I realized what the answer to his question was.

Tears.

With that, he began to walk away, but he stopped. “You know, there was nothing you could have done differently,” he said.

“Sometimes you can do everything right and still the outcome is the same. You may not be the hero you once thought you were, but now you ARE a police officer.

Aug 232010
 

The Vagos and Hell’s Angels had a shoot-out yesterday. Both clubs are very active here in San Diego so keep a heads up where they might have contact with each other…as in other areas.

Glenn Carpenter

http://www.abc15.com
By: Katie Fisher
By: Deborah Stocks

CHINO VALLEY, AZ – Authorities say 27 suspects have been arrested in connection with a shootout Saturday involving rival gang members that left a neighborhood in northern Arizona on lockdown and sent five people to the hospital.

Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Dwight D’Evelyn said that around 12:15 p.m. several calls were made to report shots fired near Yuma Drive and Road 3 North in Chino Valley, about 100 miles northwest of Phoenix.

D’Evelyn said rival motorcycle gangs who live near each other on Yuma Drive became involved in a confrontation just before the gun battle.

According to Kim Stam, manager of a nearby bar, the shooting occurred between members of the Hells Angels and Vagos motorcycle clubs. D’Evelyn confirmed members from both gangs were present at the shootout, where at least 50 rounds were fired.

“This has been coming for a long time,” Stam said. “They want this to be their town, one of them.”

Officials said at least five people were injured in the shooting and that one was air-lifted to a Valley hospital. Two others were treated at Yavapai Medical Center and another was treated and released at the scene. None of the injuries appear to be life-threatening.

Detectives are reportedly trying to locate another injured gang member who was helped away from the scene in an unknown vehicle.

D’Evelyn said following Saturday’s initial investigation, 27 suspects have been arrested in connection with the shooting. Charges include attempted homicide, aggravated assault, endangerment, participation in a criminal street gang, and unlawful assembly.

YCSO was reportedly assisted by numerous law enforcement agencies including the Chino Valley Police Department, U.S. Forest Service Law Enforcement, Department of Public Safety, Prescott and Prescott Valley Police Departments, and the Arizona State Gang Task Force.

Investigators remained at the scene Sunday, continuing to gather evidence. D’Evelyn said several motorcycles were also impounded.

Aug 082010
 

Got this from a fellow retired TPD Officer

This is chilling…

Both of these SOB’s should have been put to death instead of us paying their room and board for the rest of their lives.

“Anyone against the AZ law 1070 should see this video.  Tell me our bill should not be passed! These people are coming to our State, but they may very well end up in yours.  Don’t let the sob stories fool you.

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