
12-22-2009, 09:50 AM
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Stolen Avitar
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Brunswick,
GA
Cobra Make, Engine: BDR 1311 428PI
Posts: 3,044
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Not Ranked
Lots of info here:
http://policelink.monster.com/news/a...wa-perp-killed
And I just got this from NLEOMF:
As the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund prepares to release our preliminary 2009 law enforcement fatality report next week, two clear headlines are emerging:
1. Compared with 2008, the total number of line-of-duty deaths is down about 5% this year – to the lowest number in five decades!
2. However, the number of officers shot and killed is up in 2009, driven by an alarming rise in incidents in which multiple officers were targeted.
Fewer officers lost overall in 2009 is certainly encouraging. Our upcoming Research Bulletin will detail the areas where improvements have been made in saving officers’ lives. The report will provide the type of detailed data which has become a signature service the Memorial Fund provides to the law enforcement community and the public at large.
But the encouraging news on officer safety is offset by a sharp increase in ambush and rampage-style assaults on our officers. In five communities this year – Oakland, Pittsburgh, Okaloosa County (FL), Seminole County (OK) and Lakewood (WA) – more than one officer was gunned down by the same offender. These and other brutal attacks on law enforcement have taken a huge toll on the departments in which these officers served and the communities they protected.
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"It certainly brings up a lot of uneasy feelings to say the least. For a lot of us, it's still pretty fresh." — Oakland Police Officer David Wong
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Officer David Wong of the Oakland Police Department knows this first hand. In March, Oakland lost four officers to an armed offender following a traffic stop and barricade, and Officer Wong was among those honoring the Lakewood Police Department when four of its officers were executed in late November by a career criminal who specifically targeted them in a local coffee shop.
"It certainly brings up a lot of uneasy feelings to say the least, "Officer Wong told The Oakland Tribune. "For a lot of us, it's still pretty fresh…. We do kind of put ourselves in harm's way when we swear the oath and put on the badge and the uniform, but something like that where it's so calculated — if an officer were engaged in some kind of chase or some kind of combative encounter, that's different. But just sitting there, starting their shifts, it puts it in a different perspective."
Stats:
http://www.nleomf.org/facts/officer-fatalities-data/
NLEOMF Research Team
If you're on the job guys, watch your six. It's getting ugly out there.
Steve
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