Tucson Citizen.com

Posts Tagged ‘Crime/Safety’

Passport requirements start Monday

Friday, May 29th, 2009
Travelers wait to show passport proof in this 2008 photo in Cancun.

Travelers wait to show passport proof in this 2008 photo in Cancun.

Long gone are the days of simply telling the guards at the borders you are a U.S. citizen while they merrily wave you through.

Now you’ll need proof.

Starting Monday, a passport will be required to get back into the U.S. if you’ve been traveling in foreign lands, according to a report at KOVA.com.

Passport soon required to re-enter US

New travel laws…require citizens to show a passport or passport card to get back into the US by land and sea from Mexico, Canada, the Caribbean and Bermuda.

The rule change is part of the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative.

It’s a 2004 law that’s part of recommendations from the 9-11 commission.

The rules apply to everyone, including children. Read story: www.kvoa.com/global/story.asp?s=10442531

The change may have taken five years, but it’s a positive change just the same.

Passports are wonderful pieces of documentation for several reasons:

• How else can you flit off to France at the drop of a hat?

• They are easier to keep track of than the tattered, dog-eared birth certificate

• They serve as a little scrapbook of all the exotic places you’ve been

• The photos always look better than those that end up on the driver’s license

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Do you care about this new travel requirement?

Do you and your children have passports?

If so, is your photo better than the one on your driver’s license?

NYPD cop shot, killed by fellow officer

Friday, May 29th, 2009

We’ve already established being a Tucson cop can be tough.

But try being one in New York City.

One off-duty cop, who was chasing a guy he found trying to rob his car, was shot and killed by a fellow officer, according to The Associated Press.

Off-duty NYPD cop fatally shot by fellow officer, The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A plainclothes policeman who drew his gun while chasing someone he had found rummaging through his car was shot and killed by a fellow officer who was driving by and saw the pursuit, the police commissioner said.

Commissioner Raymond Kelly said 25-year-old Omar J. Edwards died after being shot late Thursday within blocks of the Harlem police station where he worked….

The shooter was white and Edwards was black, a fact that could raise questions about police use of deadly force in a minority community.

In the past three years in the New York City area, there have been two other cases of off-duty policemen being shot and killed by other officers. Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294922.php

During my time in New York City, several very helpful Brooklyn police detectives came to my rescue when I was being stalked.

Yet I also had some less-than-stellar experience with New York City cops.

So did Abner Louima.

Anyone not familiar with the Louima case needs simply Google: plunger and NYPD.

Bears bear down on Tucson

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Two black bears recently paid a visit to some Foothills backyards. While it was not reported whether or not the bears used any area pools, Arizona Game and Fish officials did say folks should take caution.

Wildlife officials ask those in north Tucson to be ‘Bear Aware,’ Arizona Game and Fish news release

Tucson Regional Supervisor Leonard Ordway said the north Tucson area adjacent to the foothills of the Catalina Mountains is not typically bear country, but is within a short distance away from more typical bear country in the Catalinas. Bears can cover vast distances in a short period of time.

Ordway explained that biologists recognize that it is not possible to simply capture and relocate an animal that presents a public safety threat, such as an adult male bear. “If it is a threat in Tucson, it will still be a threat wherever else we might place the animal. We just don’t have vast areas of black bear habitat devoid of humans or other bears – it simply doesn’t exist,” he said.

More info: www.gf.state.az.us/

DISCLAIMER: THE FOLLOWING ARE FICTIONAL TIPS THAT MAY GET YOU KILLED.

Some quick tips will insure mauling, mutilation, future visits and possible death from the burly beasts:

• Leave your yard strewn with rotting garbage, open food containers and deer carcasses

• Walk alone, at night, and through areas where you know bears are sure to roam

• Feed them. Better yet, hand feed them bloody raw meat

• If confronted by a bear, scream like a wounded animal and start to run

• Position yourself between a female bear and her cubs

ANOTHER DISCLAIMER Seriously, please know the above tips are a joke. If you try them and get killed, we will not be held responsible.

The real tips appear below.

Wildlife safety tips

• Never intentionally feed wildlife. Even birds feeders can become attractants for larger unwanted animals if they are not handled properly to prevent spillage on the ground.

• Secure all garbage.

• Walk or jog in groups. Pay attention to your surroundings when hiking, jogging or bicycling.

• Supervise your children (especially toddlers) and keep them in sight at all times.

• Keep your pets on a leash – don’t allow them to be free roaming. Pets can easily get into conflicts with a wide range of wildlife from skunks to coyotes.

• Don’t leave pet food out where wild animals can get at it.

• If you have fruit or citrus trees, harvest ripened fruit and don’t let fruit collect on the ground.

• Trim the vegetation around your home to eliminate hiding cover for all wildlife.

What to do if you encounter a bear

• Don’t run. Running elicits what is called a predator-prey response – if you run, the animal might instinctively want to chase and catch you. Despite their imposing size, bears are quick and can reach speeds of 40 mph.

• Stay calm.

• Continue facing it, and slowly back away.

• Try making yourself look as big and imposing as possible; put young children on your shoulders.

• Speak loudly or yell and let it know you are human (don’t scream).

• Make loud noises by clanging pans, using air horns, or whatever is available.

• If attacked, fight back.

• Never get between a female bear and her cubs.

Thank a Tucson cop

Thursday, May 28th, 2009
Tucson police dog Sam is shown with Officer Quinton Gleason in this 2006 photo.

Tucson police dog Sam is shown with Officer Quinton Gleason in this 2006 photo.

Tucson cops go through a lot. They get yelled at, fled from and shot at.

They find dead bodies under overpasses.

Don’t forget they are also stuck wearing stifling uniforms in the searing Tucson heat.

Next Tuesday provides a chance to say thank you.

Tucson Police Foundation and M&I Bank invite community to honor officers on “Thank a Cop Day” June 2

Bring a thank you card to participating bank branches, sign an oversized card set up at the branch or have kids color special cards for the officers.

More info and locations: www.tucsonpolicefoundation.org/thankacopday.htm

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Have you had a particularly helpful or horrible experience with a Tucson police officer?

Are there any officers in particular you think need special thanks?

Arrest made in car wash shooting

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Sherrif’s deputies made an arrest in the shooting that left Francisco Antonio Calvillo dead and another man wounded at a South Side car wash last month.

Arturo Martin Flores, 21, is being charged with first-degree murder, first-degree attempted murder and aggravated assault, according to a report in the Arizona Daily Star.

See original story and video released by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department: www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/frontpage/114960.php

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Read post at Day of the Dead: www.tucsoncitizen.com/blog/view/1467

A Thursday morning e-mail from Lila Sorensen said shooting victim Francisco Calvillo and his brother were friends with her daughter.

“I used to pick them up and take them to my house to swim,” she wrote. “He and Adrian were nice boys. I never knew of anything bad that they did.”

Sorensen added that her daughter is devastated.

“This is the third young man she has been friends with whom have lost their lives to guns,” she said.

She said the first was Alfred Valenzuela Jr., who was accidentally shot at Lincoln Park in December 2006.

She did not mention the second death.

Restaurant worker attacked with cleaver

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

More than pork fried rice was on the menu at one Chinese restaurant when one worker attacked another with a cleaver, according to the Associated Press.

Restaurant worker hospitalized after kitchen fight, The Associated Press

PALO ALTO, Calif. — An employee of a Palo Alto Chinese restaurant is hospitalized and a second employee on the run from the police after a kitchen scuffle turned violent.

Palo Alto police say during the scuffle Wednesday evening one man suffered wounds to the face and torso after being attacked by a second man with a cleaver in the kitchen of the Jade Palace restaurant. Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294775.php

Like in the story about the 2-year-old shooting and killing her 3-year-old brother, a rule or two of common sense may have avoided this incident altogether:

1. Don’t get in a fight with anyone who is wielding a cleaver.

2. Don’t get in a fight with anyone in a kitchen. From the blender to the shish kabob skewer, there are way too many weapons in there.

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What was the worst fight you had with a coworker?

Did either of you end up in the hospital?

Sobriety checkpoint set for Saturday

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Time for another checkpoint alert, with the purpose of deterring folks from driving under the influence.

Next one up is on Saturday.

If you happen to drive through one, you also get a snazzy little informational pamphlet that outlines the dangers of driving while drunk or hopped up on drugs.

What: Sobriety checkpoint

Who: Tucson Police Department

When: Saturday evening

Where: “Within the city limits”

Why: “Our goal is to reduce the number of collisions that involve impaired drivers and lower the injuries and deaths associated with these types of collisions.

“By conducting the checkpoint, we will be able to increase the awareness of motorists about the dangers of impaired driving, deter those who may be impaired from driving, and detect and investigate DUI offenses at the checkpoint.”

All quoted info herein from a Tucson Police Department news release.

I happen to be a fan of sobriety checkpoints. It aims to nip the problem in the bud by hopefully deterring impaired driving in the first place.

Before anyone cries about tax-payer money being wasted, it must be noted that checkpoints are paid for by grants awarded specifically for that purpose.

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What do you think?

Do folks hate checkpoints as much as some hate photo enforcement cameras?

Special-needs student regularly tethered to fence

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Using a tie-out for a dog is illegal in Pima County. But apparently some school employees thought it was OK to use the same concept on a special-needs student.

Student routinely restrained to fence

Five Tucson Unified School District employees were put on notice after an investigation revealed that a special-needs student at Sabino High School routinely was left restrained to a fence by his backpack from when the bus dropped him off for school to when teachers came to take him to class.

The bus monitor involved said the exceptional-education student, whose feet remained on the ground, was attached to the spoke of the fence so he wouldn’t fall over or wander away while he waited for his escort…..

In a written explanation in the district’s investigative file, monitor Thomas Giacoma noted that for most of the school year he had used the fence and nobody voiced disapproval, adding it was done in full sight of everyone at the bus bay, from teachers to bus drivers, supervisors and students. Read story: http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/294757

Using the monitor’s logic, anything we do, no matter how atrocious, is OK if it’s in “full sight” of others.

Don’t forget Kitty Genovese was reported as murdered in “full sight” of New Yorkers peeking out their windows when they heard her blood-curling screams for help

Nobody did a thing to help.

Bodies found abandoned in defunct funeral home

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

An Indiana funeral home that had its license revoked three years ago apparently left a few things behind — like four dead bodies, according to The Associated Press.

4 bodies left behind in vacant Ind. funeral home, The Associated Press

GARY, Ind. — Church leaders who bought a defunct Indiana funeral home in a tax sale have stumbled upon four bodies that had been left behind in the vacant building…..

Lake County Coroner David J. Pastrick and his staff found one body in the bag, then another in a burial box and finally two more in caskets.

None has been identified.

Pastrick says the bodies may have been there since 2006, when the funeral home’s business license was revoked after several people filed complaints.

Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294607.php

It’s no surprise the place went out of business, but it is an awful surprise that the former owners could apparently be so crass.

Funeral homes are entrusted with more than just our money. We fully trust them to do the right thing for our dearly departed. Evidently, not all of them do.

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Have you had a particularly harrowing experience with a funeral home? What happened?

What about those that have met or even gone beyond your expectations?

Fire hazards may soon be legal

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Tucsonans, and the entire state, may soon get the go-ahead to play with fire.

Or at least play with sparklers and other small, spinning, smoking and burning objects.

Bill legalizing sparklers clears a major hurdle, Capitol Media Service

PHOENIX — Arizona is halfway to making sparklers legal.

By 34-21, the state House voted Tuesday to make it legal for stores to sell and Arizonans to use sparklers. HB 2258 would also legalize cone fountains, ground spinners and toy smoke devices.

The legislation now goes to the Senate.

If approved there, odds are it will become law. Gov. Jan Brewer, who said she played with sparklers herself while growing up in California, is on record saying she believes the current restrictions make no sense. Brewer said she allowed her own children to play with sparklers in Mexico. Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/byauthor/294569

Well, if the governor’s done it, and her kids have done it, by all means the rest of us should follow suit.

I am not much of a fan of sparklers after I accidentally burnt down the neighbor’s picnic table umbrella with one.

There went my entire summer’s allowance.

These devices can be neat, but they can also get into the hands of pranksters and rabblerousers who will use them for annoyance and destruction.

Then again, those types would get their hands on them whether they were legal or not.

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Are you a fan of sparklers, cone fountains, ground spinners and toy smoke devices?

Do you lay awake at night wishing they were legal to sell and use in Tucson?

Tyson’s tot accidentally strangled

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Yes, I very much wanted to ignore the Mike Tyson story that’s all over the Internet because, basically, he’s a jerk.

But I still feel for him once I read what happened.

His 4-year-old daughter is fighting for life after being strangled by a cord hanging from the family’s treadmill, according to a report in the Arizona Republic.

4-year-old daughter of boxer Mike Tyson critically injured

Boxer Mike Tyson’s 4-year-old daughter was in extremely critical condition at St. Joseph’s Hospital on Monday night after police said she was found with a cord or rope around her neck.

Police said they believe the girl was playing near some exercise equipment in an activity room Monday when she accidentally got tangled in a cord or rope hanging from a treadmill. The case is being treated as an accident.

Police said they think the girl’s 7-year-old brother was watching television and her mother was busy cleaning in another room when the incident happened. Read story: www.azcentral.com/community/phoenix/articles/2009/05/25/20090525hanging0525-ON.html

Take this as a cautionary tale.

Our homes may have more dangers than we think, even though we may chuckle at the warning label attached to venetian blind cords that say they are hazardous.

Another caution is to always know what your youngsters are doing.

More kids have also been taken to the emergency room after being crushed by large furniture, TVs and entertainment units.

Read story: blogs.findlaw.com/injured/2009/05/kids-injuries-from-falling-tvs-furniture-the-problem-and-prevention-tips.html

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Have you discovered any hidden – or obvious – dangers in the home?

How do you make your house safe for kids?

Dad sacrifices self to save son

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

When Joseph Gutierrez’ 5-year-old son slipped of an inflatable dolphin in to the depths of a swirling river, Gutierrez did what most parents would do.

He jumped in to save the boy, reports The Associated Press.

He also drowned.

The child was saved by two bystanders.

The boy may also grow up riddled with guilt, but certainly knowing what true love is.

Chandler dad drowns trying to save 5-year-old son, The Associated Press

PHOENIX — A Chandler father trying to save his 5-year-old son’s life drowned in a river northeast of Phoenix, police said.

Gutierrez jumped into the 17-foot-deep water (of the Salt River) to rescue the boy, as did two bystanders who had been watching people float on inflatable tubes down the river.

The bystanders saved the boy, but Gutierrez drowned. Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294413.php

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Would you risk your life to save your child?

Would you risk your life to save your parents?

Would you want your parents or children to risk their lives to save you?

South Side stabber arrested

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

More gore on the South Side, with a woman and her 13-year-old daughter stabbed and slashed in the arms and neck at the trailer park where they lived.

They survived, but the person arrested for the attack, 30-year-old Yesenia Sosa, is charged with attempted murder, among other things.

Arrest made in stabbings of woman, daughter at South Side home, Arizona Daily Star

The stabbings occurred about 12:30 p.m. in the 3500 block of East Alvord Road, near South Palo Verde Road.

The woman who was stabbed may have known the suspect, said Deputy Dawn Barkman, a spokeswoman for the Pima County Sheriff’s Department.

They were “somewhat acquainted,” Barkman said. But the victim “did not know her that well.” Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294409.php

Nice acquaintance.

Some still say the South Side is no more dangerous than other areas around town.

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What do you think?

Speed cameras go live on Memorial Day

Monday, May 25th, 2009
Smile for the speed cameras

Smile for the speed cameras

Ten speed cameras installed in Pima County have been patiently waiting to catch you in the act.

Their time has come.

The testing phase is finally finished and speeding violations will be issued starting Monday, according to a report at KVOA.com.

Don’t forget to smile for the camera if you happen to be speeding in one of the camera locations:

• La Cholla Boulevard at Sunset Road

• Mission Road at Nebraska Street

• Ina Road at Camino de las Candelas

• Swan Road at Calle Barril

• Alvernon Way near Station Master Drive

• Valencia Road near Camino de la Tierra

• Valencia Road near Wilmot Road

• River Road near Country Club Road

• Ruthrauff Road near Rillito Street

• Nogales Highway near Hermans Road

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Will speed cameras stop you from speeding?

Graduation party turns deadly

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Domestic violence can rear its ugly head just about anywhere, including at a high school graduation party.

Such was the case at a home in Mesa when a 37-year-old guy allegedly got into a fight with his ex-wife at a party.

Instead of leaving, which is what many normal people do when they get mad, he went out to his vehicle and got a gun, according to an Associated Press report.

2 dead, 6 hurt in Mesa graduation party shooting

Mesa police say two people are dead and six others wounded after a shooting at a high school graduation party at a home.

Mesa Police Sgt. Ed Wessing said Sunday that a police officer and two boys ages 8 and 10 were among those injured.

The suspect, a 37-year-old man, is in custody after a four-hour standoff at a home east of Phoenix. Read story: www.kvoa.com/global/story.asp?s=10416443

Surely the graduate will remember the party forever, and not in a good way.