ReportWire

Tag: law enforcement

  • Court blocks release of hundreds of immigrants arrested in Chicago-area crackdown

    [ad_1]

    CHICAGO — A federal appeals court blocked the immediate release of hundreds of immigrants detained during a Chicago area immigration crackdown in a split decision Thursday that also allowed the extension of a consent decree outlining how federal immigration agents can make warrantless arrests.

    The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments last week about the 2022 agreement governing how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement can arrest immigrants besides those being specifically targeted in an operation. The consent decree has been in the spotlight amid the Trump administration’s Chicago-area immigration crackdown that’s led to more than 4,000 arrests.

    Last month, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings, who found the government violated the agreement, ordered the release of more than 600 immigrants on bond, which the appeals court paused. Roughly 450 remain in custody, attorneys say.

    In the 2-1 opinion, the appeals court said Cummings overstepped his authority on the blanket release of the detainees without assessing each case individually. The consent decree “carefully maps out what the district judge can or cannot order” to balance enforcement and public safety, according to the opinion. But the ruling also said the Trump administration wrongly categorized all immigrant arrestees as subject to mandatory detention.

    Plaintiffs’ attorneys said they were disheartened by the ruling but glad the court upheld the extension of the agreement, which among other things requires ICE to show documentation for each arrest it makes. Federal judges elsewhere including in Colorado have also ruled to limit warrantless arrests.

    Attorneys pushed for a quick decision, saying many are being deported without knowing their options. The hundreds of detainees, mostly from the Chicago area, were arrested from summer through the early weeks of the “Operation Midway Blitz” immigration crackdown in the fall. Attorneys have said they have collected information on hundreds of more people they believe were also improperly arrested.

    “We will work tirelessly to ensure that people who were unlawfully arrested will be able to return to their families and communities as soon as possible,” said Keren Zwick with the National Immigrant Justice Center.

    A message left Thursday for the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned.

    The consent decree, which expired earlier this year, was extended until February. The federal government tried to challenge the extension in court.

    The agreement was originally reached between immigrant rights groups and the federal government following a lawsuit over 2018 immigration sweeps. It applies to immigrants arrested in six states covered by the ICE field office in Chicago. Those states are Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky and Wisconsin.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A Chinese whistleblower now living in the US is being hunted by Beijing with US tech

    [ad_1]

    MIDLAND, Texas — Retired Chinese official Li Chuanliang was recuperating from cancer on a Korean resort island when he got an urgent call: Don’t return to China, a friend warned. You’re now a fugitive.

    Days later, a stranger snapped a photo of Li in a cafe. Terrified South Korea would send him back, Li fled, flew to the U.S. on a tourist visa and applied for asylum. But even there — in New York, in California, deep in the Texas desert — the Chinese government continued to hunt him down with the help of surveillance technology.

    Li’s communications were monitored, his assets seized and his movements followed in police databases. More than 40 friends and relatives — including his pregnant daughter — were identified and detained, even by tracking down their cab drivers through facial recognition software. Three former associates died in detention, and for months shadowy men Li believed to be Chinese operatives stalked him across continents, interviews and documents seen by The Associated Press show.

    “They track you 24 hours a day. All your electronics, your phone — they’ll use every method to find you, your relatives, your friends, where you live,” Li said. “No matter where you are, you’re under their control.”

    The Chinese government is using an increasingly powerful tool to cement its power at home and vastly amplify it abroad: Surveillance technology, much of it originating in the U.S., an AP investigation has found.

    Within China, this technology helped identify and punish almost 900,000 officials last year alone, nearly five times more than in 2012, according to state numbers. Beijing says it is cracking down on corruption, but critics charge that such technology is used in China and elsewhere to stifle dissent and exact retribution on perceived enemies.

    Outside China, the same technology is being used to threaten wayward officials, along with dissidents and alleged criminals, under what authorities call Operations “Fox Hunt” and “Sky Net.” The U.S. has criticized these overseas operations as a “threat” and an “affront to national sovereignty.” More than 14,000 people, including some 3,000 officials, have been brought back to China from more than 120 countries through coercion, arrests and pressure on relatives, according to state information.

    “They’re actively pursuing those people who fled China. … as a way to demonstrate power, to show there’s no way you can escape,” said Yaqiu Wang, a fellow at the University of Chicago. “The chilling effect is enormously effective.”

    The technology used to control officials at home and abroad over the past decade came from Silicon Valley companies such as IBM, Oracle and Microsoft, according to a review of hundreds of leaked emails, government procurements, and internal corporate presentations obtained exclusively by AP. This technology mines texts, payments, flights, calls, and other data to identify the friends and family of officials and their assets.

    Among the agencies pursuing Li and his family is China’s economic crimes police, which hunts corruption suspects domestically and abroad. IBM said in internal slides that it sold the i2 surveillance software program to this Economic Crime Investigation Bureau, and procurement records show Oracle and Microsoft software was sold to that same division. Leaked emails show i2 software was copied by a former IBM partner, Landasoft, and sold to China’s disciplinary commissions, which investigate officials. None of the sales violated U.S. sanctions.

    IBM said in a statement that it sold its division making the i2 program in 2022, and has “robust processes” to ensure its technology is used responsibly. Oracle declined comment, and Microsoft did not respond.

    China’s State Council, Ministry of Public Security, National Supervision Commission, and Supreme People’s Court and Prosecutorate did not respond to faxed requests for comment. China’s foreign ministry told AP that Chinese authorities protect the rights of suspects, handle cases lawfully and respect foreign sovereignty.

    “We urge relevant countries to drop double standards and avoid becoming a safe haven for corrupt officials and their assets,” it said.

    Li’s story is a rare firsthand account from a former Chinese official. Beijing has accused Li of corruption totaling around $435 million, but Li says he’s being targeted for openly criticizing the Chinese government and denies criminal charges of taking bribes and embezzling state funds. A review of thousands of pages of legal, property, and corporate records, interrogation transcripts, and Li’s medical and travel files obtained exclusively by AP, as well as interviews with nine lawyers, support key parts of his story, showing distorted charges, blocked access to evidence, coercive confessions, and altered legal records.

    Li drew ire because as a former official, he knew well and exposed the inner workings of local politics, including naming names. While in the U.S., he also started what he called the Chinese Tyrannical Officials Whistleblower Center.

    “China places enormous emphasis on the political discipline of even former officials and (Communist) Party members,” said Jeremy Daum, Senior Fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. “So when one becomes a vocal critic of the country’s leadership, it doesn’t go over well.”

    At a pro-democracy gathering in California in 2020, Li said, he was tailed and questioned by a stranger who knew his identity. That November, an activist secretly working for Beijing asked Li to a meeting and added him to a dissident group chat monitored by China’s police, a 2025 FBI indictment later revealed. In June, an FBI letter identified Li as the possible victim of a crime involving an unregistered Chinese agent.

    Both the FBI and the White House did not comment on Li’s specific case. But the White House said it pursues any violations of U.S. law, and the FBI told AP it considers China’s efforts to retaliate against people in the U.S. who exercise their rights “unacceptable.”

    Li’s future in the U.S. is unclear. The Trump administration has paused all asylum applications. If he doesn’t return, he could face trial in absentia; if convicted and deported, he could face life in prison.

    “Electronic surveillance is the arteries for China to project power into the world … each step that every one of your relatives takes is being monitored and analyzed with big data,” Li said. “It’s absolutely terrifying.”

    Li, a stocky and well-built man who projects authority, rose through the ranks through the 1990s and 2000s, when China’s growing prosperity also brought corruption. Beijing formed a new “economic crime investigation bureau” and established what it called “Golden Tax,” “Golden Finance,” and “Golden Audit” systems to track businesses and officials across the country, using tech from Silicon Valley companies.

    Li worked as a state accountant in his hometown, Jixi, in far northeastern China, where he signed off on contracts to purchase American technology. “Bulwark against corruption,” the local media dubbed him.

    Li’s family prospered, investing in apartment complexes and renting out forklifts and bulldozers, raising questions over whether he used his position to enrich relatives. Li and his lawyers don’t deny conflicts of interest or civil violations, but say profits were made from legal, regular business operations and deny criminal charges of embezzlement and bribery.

    The same technology to fight corruption was also used for surveillance. Police accessed banking records, financial transactions, “Golden Tax,” “Golden Finance,” and “Golden Audit” data along with their own digital policing systems to sift through the finances of wide swaths of the population.

    Officials began deploying surveillance technology against each other. China’s former top security official was found to have wiretapped political opponents. And a former vice state security minister colluded with a businessman to leak tapes of a political competitor having sex with a mistress.

    In June 2011, Jixi gained a new leader: Xu Zhaojun, a local party boss.

    Months later, Li was named vice mayor of Jixi. He soon heard stories about Xu, his new boss.

    In January 2012, Xu splurged on an extravagant family getaway to China’s tropical Hainan Island, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars of public money on first-class tickets, lavish seafood dinners, and luxury suites, according to photos and receipts obtained by Li and seen by AP. They brought a maid, bought gold jewelry, and used the VIP airport terminal.

    At first Li stayed silent. But Xu kept spending: Luxury cars. Clothes from Louis Vuitton. A high-roller trip to Vegas, with paid escorts and expensive watches.

    Xu allegedly colluded with property developers to demolish an apartment complex, a culture center and a thriving shopping plaza for new construction, standing to earn millions in the process, documents show.  More than 100 people complained.

    But rather than investigate Xu, the Jixi authorities went after the protesters, and police said they were “strictly preventing” residents from complaining to the central government in Beijing, documents show.

    The funds Li had earmarked for Jixi’s surveillance apparatus was being turned on ordinary people. He was aghast.

    “It only became clear after I became vice mayor,” Li said. “From top to bottom, it’s all corrupt.”

    It all changed in 2012, when Xi Jinping became China’s top leader.

    Gifts of watches, cigarettes and high-end liquor were curbed. Private clubs shuttered, upscale restaurants closed. Banquets were canceled, red carpets rolled up, and thousands arrested.

    Back in Jixi, Xu ordered more seizures: Investors wanted to privatize a funeral home. When staff discussed making formal complaints, Xu had some arrested.

    Li knew the risks of reporting his boss were high. But in early 2013, Xi called on the party to catch “tigers and flies” in corruption — officials high-ranking and low.

    Li gathered evidence: photos, memos, and piles of receipts. He typed out a letter about Xu, accusing his boss and his cronies of embezzling more than $100 million. “They’re not just greedy for the money of the living, but they also eat the money of the dead,” he wrote.

    The daring gambit backfired at first.

    The party demoted Xu but didn’t arrest him. Furious, Xu sought revenge, and Li found himself and his relatives the target of state scrutiny. Li’s family was threatened, and his siblings were fired from their government jobs.

    But Li’s complaint against Xu had opened the floodgates, with accusations from others mounting. In August 2014, an official from Beijing asked Li for a meeting about Xu. They spoke well into the night.

    Within a week, Xu was arrested. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison.

    Xu is in prison and could not be reached. Chinese authorities did not respond to a request for an interview with Xu.

    Party officials asked Li if he wanted a new post. But he had lost faith in the party.

    “I saw through the nature of the system,” Li said. “So I quit.”

    In 2014 and 2015, the launch of operations Fox Hunt and Sky Net began ensnaring hundreds of former officials and their business partners abroad.

    Beijing set up big data centers to track money and relationships and established an online portal to report “fleeing party members and government officials.”

    A playbook emerged: Trawl through police databases to find transactions or property that could be deemed suspicious. Identify friends and family who could be coerced to confess. Then announce corruption charges.

    A leaked photo of the internal police software used to hunt officials suggests the moniker “Sky Net” was inspired by an American movie, “The Terminator,” about a cyborg assassin that hunts humans.

    At first, the U.S. government was open to cooperating with Beijing’s requests for information and extradition, said Holden Triplett, FBI attache in Beijing from 2014 to 2017. But soon, the U.S. realized China’s anti-corruption campaign was often about stifling dissent.

    “It was such a low level of information, not even really evidence, it was not enough for us to take any action ever,” Triplett told AP. “What they tended to focus on were things that frankly were threatening to the state and threatening to the party potentially, or somehow would make the party look bad.”

    In 2015, Washington complained that Chinese agents were flying to the U.S. and stalking targets without approval, including U.S. permanent residents. Agents brought night goggles from China, snapped photos and taped threatening messages on doors.

    Marketing documents and a leaked copy of software used against officials fleeing abroad show how American technology enabled Beijing’s playbook.

    IBM marketed i2 to Chinese police to allow them to flag officials based on the value of their assets and that of their families, according to a slideshow whose metadata identifies it as being from 2018. They customized financial software to add a function for Chinese officials to “sign off” on orders.

    i2 was also copied by an IBM Chinese reseller, Landasoft, which developed its own software that drew connections to flag “suspicious individuals,” such as relatives connected to a targeted official. A leaked copy of Landasoft software showed one button was called “associated persons management.” Another showed special functions for Valentine’s Day and other holidays, when loved ones were more likely to call.

    Landasoft systems flagged suspicious transactions and tracked suspected prostitutes or when two people of the opposite gender booked the same hotel room. Landasoft did not respond to a request for comment.

    Monitoring and threatening family was key to getting back anyone who had fled.

    “A fugitive is like a kite,” said Li Gongjing, a captain in the economic crime investigation division of the Shanghai police, in an interview with state media. “He may be abroad, but the string is in China, and he can always be found through his family.”

    After Li quit the party, auditors trawled through his finances — usual practice for departing officials. Three years later, in 2017, they declared him clean.

    The next year, Xi removed term limits, allowing him to rule for life. He used the anti-corruption campaign to sideline rivals and eliminate opposition.

    Soon, even those who were hunting other officials fell victim to the government.

    In 2018, Chinese police official Meng Hongwei was detained in Beijing, abruptly ending a two-year term as Interpol president during which the international policing organization issued hundreds of Red Notices requested by China. Red Notices alert global law enforcement to look out for a criminal suspect, upon request of a member country, but Interpol has spent years trying to prevent abuse of the system for hunting down political asylum-seekers.

    In February 2020, agents came for Li’s friend and former deputy, district chief Kong Lingbao, who had criticized Beijing’s censorship of key information in the COVID-19 pandemic. A rival secretly recorded Kong saying during a private dinner that he could no longer work for the party. Kong was summoned to the local discipline inspection office and never came out: he was being investigated for “inappropriate remarks”.

    Kong’s arrest prompted a friend to ring Li in Korea and warn him. That July, Chinese authorities opened an investigation into Li.

    A month later, Li told The Epoch Times, a dissident Chinese publication, that he had quit the party, and portrayed himself as a dissident. He says he did not know he was under investigation at the time.

    A week after the interview was published, strangers stalked Li at the unveiling of a sculpture dedicated to pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong, asking menacing questions and tailing him by car. Agents identified the address of one of his safe houses.

    In early September, the party publicly accused Li of embezzling “huge amounts” of state funds, paying money for sex and fleeing abroad. It was “only a matter of time”, authorities declared, before Li would be arrested.

    “We advise all corrupt officials who have fled abroad, including Li Chuanliang, that no matter how cunning a fox is, it cannot escape the eyes of the hunter,” it said.

    Official statements and interviews with four people familiar with Li’s case show Xi and the central government got directly involved after Li spoke out.

    Beijing tapped phones, seized assets and installed cameras outside the homes of friends and family. Some detained were denied surgery or other medical care, even those recovering from heart disease, cancer, and other illnesses. Li’s aunt was released from a hospital in a vegetative state with bruises on her head and all over her body. Even the Li family grave was dug up.

    Li’s friend, Kong, was sentenced to over a decade in prison for allegedly taking bribes. The party claimed he had watched porn and ignored his work, which they blamed for the spread of COVID in his district. Furious, Li kept speaking out.

    In December 2020, a man from Shanghai posing as a private investigator approached Zheng Cunzhu, vice chairman of the dissident China Democracy Party. The man offered $100,000 in bribes for information on Li and promised more if he obstructed Li’s bid for asylum, Zheng said in an interview and a letter.

    In February 2021, Li learned the Chinese government had asked Interpol to issue a Red Notice declaring to police worldwide that Li was a wanted man. Interpol retracted the Red Notice after Li filed a complaint.

    Li began donning masks and hats in public and carrying multiple phones, wary of surveillance. He floated from safe house to safe house with Christians across the United States.

    In October 2024, a Chinese court announced that Li was suspected of corruption totaling over 3.1 billion RMB, or roughly $435 million. The government claimed they seized 1,021 properties, 38 vehicles, and 18 companies belonging to Li and charged his relatives and associates with crimes related to Li. The lawyers who reviewed the case told AP there were serious anomalies with the charges.

    Many of the lawyers Li has tried to hire were rejected, threatened, and put under surveillance. At least three were summoned by Chinese legal authorities. They were told Li’s case was “political” and important to leaders from Beijing, and warned against speaking publicly, according to memos viewed by AP.

    “Once you get to the point that you’re criticizing the party, it’s no holds barred,” said Ryan Mitchell, a law professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “Resistance is punished.”

    In a courthouse in China, Li’s friends and family faced legal proceedings tied to his corruption charges. A plainclothes officer outside stopped an AP reporter from taking photos, saying a “sensitive political case” was being heard.

    “They didn’t show any evidence. Instead, they told a story,” one of the lawyers told AP, declining to be named because they were warned against speaking to the press. “They wouldn’t even show us the accusations.”

    Authorities in Heilongjiang, where the proceedings were held, did not respond to a faxed request for comment.

    Li is now cut off from friends and family, denied legal assistance and clueless even to the details of the charges against him. So he is once again resorting to speaking out — this time on YouTube.

    Li acknowledges the situation seems hopeless. But he’s pressing on.

    “Why am I speaking up?” he said. “Today, it’s me. Tomorrow, it might be you.”

    __

    Independent investigative journalists Myf Ma in New York and Yael Grauer in Phoenix and AP journalists Serginho Roosblad in Texas, Garance Burke in San Francisco and Byron Tau in Washington contributed to this report.

    —-

    Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org or https://www.ap.org/tips/.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Quincy man arraigned in Route 128 rest stop shooting

    [ad_1]

    SALEM — A Quincy man was arraigned Thursday in Salem District Court on seven charges related to a shooting that took place on Route 128 North about 11:30 p.m. on Monday, according to the Office of Essex County District Attorney Paul F. Tucker.

    Thomas D. Perkins, 26, is charged with two counts of armed assault with intent to murder with a firearm, two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, carrying a firearm without a license (second offense), possessing ammunition without a firearm ID car (subsequent offense), discharging a firearm near a highway, and defacing property.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm!6C<:?D A=62565 ?@E 8F:=EJ E@ 2== @7 E96 492C86D] %96 q6G6C=J !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E 2?5 E96 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E6 !@=:46 C6DA@?565 E@ E96 :?4:56?E]k^Am

    kAm!6C<:?D 2==6865=J 3642>6 :?G@=G65 😕 2 G6C32= 2=E6C42E:@? H:E9 2?@E96C >2=6 😕 E96 A2C<:?8 =@E @7 E96 q6G6C=J $6CG:46 !=2K2 C6DE DE@A @? #@FE6 `ag }@CE9]k^Am

    kAm&A@? C6EFC?:?8 E@ E96:C C6DA64E:G6 G69:4=6D[ E96 4@>>@?H62=E9 2==686D E92E !6C<:?D AFCDF65 E96 @E96C 5C:G6C @?E@ E96 9:89H2J 2?5 7:C65 2E 9:D G69:4=6[ H9:49 2=D@ 42CC:65 2?@E96C A6CD@?]k^Am

    kAm%96 sp’D ~77:46 2D<65 E92E E96 5676?52?E 36 96=5 H:E9@FE 32:= A6?5:?8 2 52?86C@FD?6DD 962C:?8] yF586 {:D2 r@C6 8C2?E65 E96 C6BF6DE 2?5 DE:AF=2E65 E92E !6C<:?D 92G6 ?@ 4@?E24E H:E9 2?5 DE2J 2H2J 7C@> E96 EH@ :?5:G:5F2=D 😕 E96 @E96C G69:4=6]k^Am

    kAmpDD:DE2?E s:DEC:4E pEE@C?6J !2EC:4< r@==:?D C6AC6D6?E65 E96 4@>>@?H62=E9 2E E96 2CC2:8?>6?E] !6C<:?D H2D C6AC6D6?E65 3J 2EE@C?6J |6892? %2J=@C]k^Am

    kAm!6C<:?D 😀 D4965F=65 E@ C6EFC? E@ $2=6> s:DEC:4E r@FCE 7@C E96 52?86C@FD?6DD 962C:?8 @? %9FCD52J[ s64] `g]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • Cincinnati approves $8.1 million settlement with protesters arrested in 2020

    [ad_1]

    CINCINNATI, Ohio — The city of Cincinnati approved an $8.1 million legal settlement Wednesday with hundreds of non-violent protesters who had alleged mistreatment at the hands of city and county authorities when they were arrested during the racial justice demonstrations of 2020.

    Cincinnati City Council approved the deal after its terms were outlined last week. It brings to a close years of litigation that stemmed from protests over the killing of George Floyd and other unarmed Black people.

    None of the 479 plaintiffs had been charged with a felony or violent offense nor been involved in any property damage — though some did occur. All were charged with misdemeanor curfew violations during nights of protests from May 30 to June 8, 2020, but those were later dismissed by the city amid a flurry of conflicting court rulings.

    The lawsuit they brought collectively in 2022 alleged police brutality, wrongful arrests, inhumane jail conditions and unlawful seizures of property.

    Hamilton County, whose sheriff and jail were also named in the lawsuit, will pay $65,000 toward the settlement, with the city paying the remainder.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Tear Gas, Pepper Spray and Chemical Irritants Eradicated by SoRite’s New Fast-Acting Defense Cleanse Solution

    [ad_1]

    Defense Cleanse Helps Law Enforcement Officers, Correctional Personnel and Security Professionals Recover From Direct Exposure to Defense Sprays in as Little as Three Minutes

    SoRite today announced the release of SoRite® Defense Cleanse (Defense Cleanse), a fast-acting decontamination solution engineered to quickly neutralize the effects of tear gas, pepper spray, and other chemical irritants. Developed specifically for law enforcement officers, correctional personnel, and security professionals who carry defense sprays, it helps users rapidly recover from direct exposure as well as “spray blowback” that can occur during tear-gas deployment. Defense Cleanse is the only non-toxic, sodium-chlorite-based solution on the market that both neutralizes irritants and lifts contaminants from the skin. It is also suited for the hunting, outdoor, and self-defense environments.

    Member tested and recommended by the National Tactical Officers Association, Defense Cleanse is engineered to remove capsaicin oil found in OC (pepper spray), CS (tear gas), CN (riot control agents), and bear spray. It delivers one of the fastest recovery times available on the market, significantly reducing eye tearing and burning, sneezing, coughing, skin irritation, sore throats, and in extreme cases, vomiting.

    In field use and training environments, users have reported “eyes open” after direct exposure of defense sprays to the face and eyes in as little as three minutes and full recovery within five to 10 minutes. For lesser “blowback” applications, recovery times are even faster. Competing solutions can take up to 15 minutes to begin working. Unlike wipes or soaps that provide partial relief, Defense Cleanse targets contaminants at the chemical level. It reduces the “afterburn” effect that occurs when residual contaminants reactivate during sweating or showering.

    “Defense Cleanse was developed because there was a distinct need in the field for a non-toxic solution that would rapidly counteract the effects of all types of tear gases and pepper sprays,” said Autumn Ryan, CEO and founder of SoRite. “Whether the exposure happens during duty, training, outdoor activity or an unexpected encounter, it is imperative that everyone has access to a solution that is easy to deploy, works immediately and consistently, and enables them to rapidly return to normal activities.”

    Defense Cleanse is formulated to be non-toxic, non-corrosive and fragrance-free. “It requires no personal protective equipment and is safe for use on skin, uniforms, duty gear, and equipment,” adds Ryan. “It is ready to use out of the package, needs no mixing or preparation, and is built around SoRite’s W.A.R.P. protocol of ‘Wipe, Apply, Rinse, Purge’ to remove oily capsaicinoids and irritants quickly and effectively.”

    Defense Cleanse is available in gallon jugs for use by large teams dealing with major incidents and individual towelettes and aerosol canisters for field deployment and rapid application by individual officers, small teams, hunters, and members of the public. A cup of Defense Cleanse can also be used as a laundry additive to decontaminate defense sprays from clothing.

    For agencies, officers and outdoor professionals who depend on fast recovery to maintain safety and operational readiness, Defense Cleanse sets a new standard for chemical irritant aftercare.

    About SoRite

    SoRite develops high-performance decontamination and cleaning solutions for professional, tactical and consumer use. The company is on a mission to make life safer, cleaner, and better for everyone. Its products are grounded in scientific research and designed to provide fast, reliable results and exceed operational demands while delivering industrial-strength performance without toxic trade-offs. SoRite is a Woman-Owned Business and was established in 2015.

    Source: SoRite

    Related Media

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Police/Fire

    [ad_1]

    In news taken from the logs of Cape Ann’s police and fire departments:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Police seeking info in early morning shooting at 128 rest stop in Beverly

    [ad_1]

    BEVERLY — Police are investigating a report of a shooting at the Route 128 rest stop in Beverly.

    Officials have not documented any injuries as a result of the incident, police said.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%96 :?4:56?E @44FCC65 2C@F?5 ` 2]>] |@?52J H96? 2 DFDA64E 7:C65 D9@ED 2E 2?@E96C G69:4=6 27E6C 2 G6C32= 2=E6C42E:@? 2E E96 C6DE DE@A[ $E2E6 !@=:46 D2:5 😕 2 AC6A2C65 DE2E6>6?E]k^Am

    kAm%96 C6DE DE@A 😀 =@42E65 @? E96 ?@CE93@F?5 D:56 @7 E96 9:89H2J ?62C qC:>32= pG6?F6 2?5 92D 2 82D DE2E:@?[ ECF4< C6DE 2C62[ 4@?G6?:6?46 DE@C6 2?5 72DE 7@@5 4@FCE]k^Am

    kAm}@ 2CC6DED 92G6 366? >256]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • Manchester Police/Fire

    [ad_1]

    MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA — In news taken from the logs of Manchester-by-the-Sea’s police and fire departments:

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmkDEC@?8mu:C6 2=2C>Dk^DEC@?8m H6C6 C6A@CE65 @? w2C3@C $EC66E 2E “i`f 2]>][ q@2C5>2? pG6?F6 2E `ai“ A]>] 2?5 $F>>6C $EC66E 2E di_c A]>] %96 =2EE6C EH@ H6C6 =2E6C 56E6C>:?65 E@ 36 72=D6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mx?5:G:5F2=D H6C6 2DD:DE65k^DEC@?8m @? @? q62G6C s2> #@25 2E “ia_ 2]>][ 2?5 @? r6?EC2= $EC66E 2E gia_ 2?5 `_i`_ 2]>] 2?5 aiac 2?5 ci`_ A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mr@>>F?:EJ A@=:4:?8k^DEC@?8m H2D 4@?5F4E65 @? {:?4@=? $EC66E 2E gi_f 2]>] 2?5 ai_e A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_icc 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 C6A@CE H2D >256 23@FE 2 5:DEFC32?46 @? !@H6C w@FD6 {2?6[ 2 AC@A6CEJ H2D 4964<65 2?5 D64FC65]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mgi_` 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p ?@E:7:42E:@? 23@FE 2 FE:=:EJ :DDF6 2E E96 :?E6CD64E:@? @7 qC:586 2?5 w2C3@C DEC66ED H2D >256]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`i_` 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 >@E@C G69:4=6 DE@A 2E E96 :?E6CD64E:@? @7 $F>>6C $EC66E 2?5 {:?4@=? $EC66E[ 2 HC:EE6? H2C?:?8 H2D :DDF65]k^Am

    k9bm k^9bm

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Police/Fire

    [ad_1]

    In news taken from the logs of Cape Ann’s police and fire departments:

    Rockport

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmkDEC@?8m|@?52J[ s64] `k^DEC@?8mk^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8maiaa 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 H6==36:?8 4964< H2D 4@?5F4E65 @? |2:? $EC66E[ 2? 2>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE H2D C67FD65]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`i`d 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 C6A@CE H2D >256 23@FE 2? 2?:>2= @? w:89=2?5 $EC66E[ D@>6@?6 H2D C6A@CE65=J DA@<6? E@]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m$F?52J[ }@G] b_k^DEC@?8mk^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meibg 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 >65:42= 2=2C> H2D C6A@CE65[ 2? 2>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE H2D 4@?5F4E65 @? rFCE:D $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mai“ 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p >65:42= 6>6C86?4J 2>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE H2D 4@?5F4E65 7C@> rFCE:D $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m$2EFC52J }@G] ahk^DEC@?8mk^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mkDEC@?8m|65:42= 6>6C86?4:6Dk^DEC@?8mik^DEC@?8m p>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE E@ 2 9@DA:E2= H2D 4@?5F4E65 7C@> !9:==:AD pG6?F6 2E di`b 2]>] 2?5 @? |2:? $EC66E 2E ficd A]>]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mbicg A]>]ik^DEC@?8m p? 2>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE H2D 4@?5F4E65 7C@> $E2E:@? $BF2C6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_i`c 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 C6A@CE H2D >256 23@FE 2 >@E@C G69:4=6 4C2D9[ E96 u:C6 s6A2CE>6?E H2D 5:DA2E4965 E@ vC2?:E6 $EC66E]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8muC:52J[ }@G] agk^DEC@?8mk^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meicd A]>]ik^DEC@?8m pD A2CE @7 2? :?G6DE:82E:@? 23@FE 2? @5@C @? {@?8 q6249[ }2E:@?2= vC:5 H2D ?@E:7:65]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_i`a 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p >65:42= 6>6C86?4J 2>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE H2D 4@?5F4E65 7C@> }@CH@@5 r@FCE]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8mhid_ 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p >65:42= 2=2C> C6A@CE65 @? $@FE9 $EC66E H2D =2E6C 56E6C>:?65 E@ 36 72=D6]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8meice 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 7:C6 2=2C> H2D C6A@CE65[ E96 u:C6 s6A2CE>6?E H2D 5:DA2E4965 E@ s!( (2J]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m%9FCD52J[ }@G] afk^DEC@?8mk^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m|65:42= 6>6C86?4:6Dk^DEC@?8mi p>3F=2?46 EC2?DA@CE E@ 2 9@DA:E2= H2D 4@?5F4E65 7C@> |2:? $EC66E 2E cice 2]>] 2?5 s@4< $BF2C6 2E dibg A]>] ]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m`_idb 2]>]ik^DEC@?8m p7E6C 2 7:C6 2=2C> H2D C6A@CE65[ E96 u:C6 s6A2CE>6?E H2D 5:DA2E4965 E@ (@C46DE6C !=246]k^Am

    kAmkDEC@?8m(65?6D52J[ }@G] aek^DEC@?8mk^Am

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lawrence stabbing suspect captured by SWAT team

    [ad_1]

    LAWRENCE — The suspect in a stabbing Sunday morning was captured after police officers with specialized SWAT team training were deployed to a Kent Street home, police said. 

    Police Chief Maurice Aguiler said a man suspected of stabbing another man in the vicinity of South Union and Kent streets was taken into custody by Lawrence Police Department entry team members at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. 

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmp8F:=6C D2:5 E96 @77:46CD H6?E E@ E96 9@>6 2C>65 H:E9 2 D62C49 H2CC2?E] k^Am

    kAm%96 >2? H2D DE23365 23@FE hicd 2]>] 2?5 E2<6? E@ {2HC6?46 v6?6C2= w@DA:E2= 7@C 6>6C86?4J EC62E>6?E] w:D :?;FC:6D 2C6 ?@E 36=:6G65 E@ 36 =:76 E9C62E6?:?8[ p8F:=6C D2:5] k^Am

    kAm%96 :56?E:E:6D @7 ?6:E96C E96 G:4E:> ?@C E96 DFDA64E H6C6 :>>65:2E6=J 2G2:=23=6 $F?52J] k^Am

    kAm%96 DFDA64E >2J =:<6=J 36 492C865 H:E9 2DD2F=E 3J >62?D @7 2 52?86C@FD H62A@?] ~E96C 492C86D >2J 36 A6?5:?8[ p8F:=6C D2:5] k^Am

    kAm%96 :?4:56?E C6>2:?D F?56C :?G6DE:82E:@? 2?5 p8F:=6C D2:5 >@C6 56E2:=65 :?7@C>2E:@? H@F=5 =:<6=J 36 C6=62D65 |@?52J] k^Am

    kAmk6>mu@==@H DE277 C6A@CE6C y:== w2C>24:?D<: @? %H:EE6C^) ot28=6%C:3y:== 2?5 %9C625D 2E ;:==J92C>2]k^6>mk^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Jill Harmacinski | jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Shopping mall shooting wounds 2, prompts Black Friday evacuation in the Bay Area

    [ad_1]

    SAN JOSE, California — Police in California evacuated a shopping mall Friday, one of the busiest shopping days of the year, after a shooting left two people with gunshot wounds.

    The shooting was an isolated incident, the San Jose Police Department said on the social platform X.

    Officers evacuated and cleared Valley Fair Mall in Santa Clara to confirm there was no threat to public safety.

    The wounded were taken to a hospital, police said.

    San Jose and Santa Clara are neighboring cities about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of San Francisco.

    The day after Thanksgiving, known in the retail industry as “ Black Friday,” marks the official start of the holiday shopping season in the U.S. and is the biggest shopping day of the year.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Robert Dear, shooter in Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood attack, dies in federal custody

    [ad_1]

    The man accused of killing three people and wounding nine others at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs a decade ago died in custody over the weekend, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

    Robert Dear, 67, died at 6:30 a.m. Saturday in the U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, Bureau of Prisons spokesperson Randilee Giamusso said. His death was “preliminarily linked to natural causes,” Giamusso said Tuesday, and prison officials followed advanced medical orders before he died.

    Dear’s death ends a decade-long — and ultimately unsuccessful — effort to convict him of crimes connected to the mass shooting. Although Dear had been in state or federal custody since the 2015 attack and confessed to carrying out the mass shooting, he was never convicted because he was always considered to be too mentally ill to go through the court process — that is, he was consistently found incompetent to stand trial.

    Fourth Judicial District Attorney Michael Allen said in a statement Tuesday that the victims of the shooting were denied justice in the “evil attack.”

    “All three victims and this community deserved the full measure of justice in this case, but they are now denied that possibility,” Allen said. “Their family members and loved ones have endured this horror for far too long.”

    The Bureau of Prisons declined to provide any additional information about Dear’s death and officials with the Greene County Medical Examiner’s Office did not immediately return requests for more information.

    Dear’s attorneys did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday.

    Dear was accused of attacking the Planned Parenthood clinic on Nov. 27, 2015. Authorities believe he intended to wage “war” on the clinic because the staff performed abortions. He arrived armed with four SKS rifles, five handguns, two more rifles, a shotgun and more than 500 rounds of ammunition, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Twenty-seven people who were inside the clinic at the time hid until they could be rescued by law enforcement, according to prosecutors. Dear fired 198 rounds in the attack and tried to blow up propane tanks to take out law enforcement vehicles during a five-hour standoff.

    Those killed were Ke’Arre Stewart, 29, Jennifer Markovsky, 36, and Garrett Swasey, 44, a campus police officer who responded to the clinic after hearing there was an active shooter. Another four police officers were wounded.

    The issue of Dear’s competency stalled the state’s murder case against him in 2016. Federal prosecutors brought their own case alleging firearm and civil rights violations in 2019; those proceedings also stalled due to Dear’s compromised mental state.

    competency evaluation considers whether a criminal defendant is mentally ill or developmentally disabled, and whether that mental illness impedes the defendant’s ability to understand the court process. Rooted in the constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial, competency centers on two prongs — whether defendants have a factual and rational understanding of the proceedings, and whether defendants are able to consult with their attorneys and assist in their own defenses.

    Experts previously testified that Dear understood the facts and circumstances of his case but was still incompetent to proceed because he could not assist in his own defense.

    Dear was known for frequent outbursts in court. During a 2019 hearing, he declared himself to be a “religious zealot” who was being prosecuted in a “political kangaroo court.” In 2021, he insisted in federal court that he was competent to stand trial, shouting, “I’m not crazy.”

    In September, a federal judge started the process for Dear to be committed long-term to the mental health facility in Missouri after finding he was unlikely to be restored to competency.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bangkok court issues an arrest warrant for Thai co-owner of Miss Universe pageant

    [ad_1]

    BANGKOK (AP) — A court in Thailand said Wednesday that it has issued an arrest warrant for a co-owner of the Miss Universe Organization in connection with a fraud case.

    Jakkaphong “Anne” Jakrajutatip was charged with fraud then released on bail in 2023. She failed to appear as required in a Bangkok court on Tuesday. Since she did not notify the court about her absence, she was deemed to be a flight risk, according to a statement from the Bangkok South District Court.

    The court rescheduled the hearing for Dec. 26.

    According to the court’s statement, Jakkaphong and her company, JKN Global Group Public Co. Ltd., were sued for allegedly defrauding Raweewat Maschamadol in selling him the company’s corporate bonds in 2023. Raweewat says the investment caused him to lose 30 million baht ($930,362).

    Financially troubled JKN defaulted on payments to investors beginning in 2023 and began debt rehabilitation procedures with the Central Bankruptcy Court in 2024. The company says it has debts totaling about 3 billion baht ($93 million).

    JKN acquired the rights to the Miss Universe pageant from IMG Worldwide LLC in 2022. In 2023, it sold 50% of its Miss Universe shares to Legacy Holding Group USA, which is owned by a Mexican businessman, Raúl Rocha Cantú.

    In an unrelated case in Mexico, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday that Rocha Cantú has been under investigation since November 2024 for alleged organized crime activity, including drug and arms trafficking, as well as fuel theft.

    The Attorney General’s Office said in a statement that Raúl “R” was the target of the investigation. A federal agent who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation confirmed that was Rocha Cantú.

    The Miss Universe Organization did not respond to a request for comment.

    Earlier this month, a federal judge in Mexico approved 13 arrest orders against targets in the case. The federal agent would not confirm or deny whether an order was issued for Rocha Cantú.

    Jakkaphong resigned from all of the company’s positions in June after being accused by Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission of falsifying the company’s 2023 financial statements. She remains its largest shareholder.

    Her whereabouts remain unclear. She did not appear at the 74th Miss Universe competition, which was held in Bangkok earlier this month.

    This year’s competition was marred by various problems, including a sharp-tongued scolding by a Thai organizer of Fátima Bosch Fernández of Mexico, who was crowned Miss Universe 2025 on Nov. 19. Two judges reportedly dropped out, with one suggesting that there was an element of rigging to the contest. Separately, Thai police investigated allegations that publicity for the event included illegal promotion of online casinos.

    On Monday, JKN denied rumors that Jakkaphong had liquidated the company’s assets and fled the country, but there has been no immediate reaction regarding the arrest warrant. She could not be reached for comment.

    Jakkaphong is a well-known celebrity in Thailand who has starred in reality shows and is outspoken about her identity as a transgender woman.

    __

    AP writer Fabiola Sánchez in Mexico City contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lowell man arrested after pursuit, accused of ramming police cruiser with truck

    [ad_1]

    MANCHESTER, N.H. —  A Lowell man is facing a pile of charges after an early-morning pursuit that topped 100 mph ended with him ramming a State Police cruiser with his pickup truck when cornered in Manchester.

    Alejandro Vargas, 27, was captured by police after the alleged vehicle pursuit turned into a foot pursuit following the crash. According to the New Hampshire State Police, it was later determined that Vargas had an outstanding U.S. Marshals warrant.

    The incident began at about 1:20 a.m. Tuesday, when the State Police said they received reports that Epping police officers had briefly pursued a 2026 Chevrolet Silverado on Route 101 westbound. Shortly afterward, members of the Candia Police spotted the pickup truck, which was allegedly clocked traveling at 105 mph.

    Police said Trooper Brian Knell observed the truck as it entered Interstate 93 South in Manchester. He caught up with the vehicle at Exit 1 on Interstate 293 North and attempted a traffic stop, which the driver — later identified as Vargas — allegedly ignored.

    The pursuit that ensued continued onto Exit 4 of I-293, where the truck turned onto Arnold Street, which is a dead end. Vargas is alleged to have turned the vehicle around and struck a State Police cruiser driven by Trooper Brian Taylor.

    Police said the truck then crashed into two additional parked vehicles before Vargas and a passenger jumped out of the truck and fled on foot in opposite directions.

    Manchester police officers arrived with a drone and spotted Vargas running south near Hill Street, less than a half-mile from the crash scene. Officers quickly tracked him down and took him into custody.

    The passenger, meanwhile, was not located.

    Vargas is charged with felony reckless conduct with a deadly weapon, along with misdemeanor counts of disobeying an officer, resisting arrest, simple assault, and conduct after an accident, in addition to several violations.

    Details of Vargas’ U.S. Marshals warrant were not immediately available, nor was the outcome of his arraignment, which was scheduled to take place in Manchester District Court on Wednesday.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

    [ad_2]

    Aaron Curtis

    Source link

  • Judge Says ICE Used ChatGPT to Write Use-of-Force Reports

    [ad_1]

    Last week, a judge handed down a 223-page opinion that lambasted the Department of Homeland Security for how it has carried out raids targeting undocumented immigrants in Chicago. Buried in a footnote were two sentences that revealed at least one member of law enforcement used ChatGPT to write a report that was meant to document how the officer used force against an individual.

    The ruling, written by US District Judge Sara Ellis, took issue with the way members of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other agencies comported themselves while carrying out their so-called “Operation Midway Blitz” that saw more than 3,300 people arrested and more than 600 held in ICE custody, including repeated violent conflicts with protesters and citizens. Those incidents were supposed to be documented by the agencies in use-of-force reports, but Judge Ellis noted that there were often inconsistencies between what appeared on tape from the officers’ body-worn cameras and what ended up in the written record, resulting in her deeming the reports unreliable.

    More than that, though, she said at least one report was not even written by an officer. Instead, per her footnote, body camera footage revealed that an agent “asked ChatGPT to compile a narrative for a report based off of a brief sentence about an encounter and several images.” The officer reportedly submitted the output from ChatGPT as the report, despite the fact that it was provided with extremely limited information and likely filled in the rest with assumptions.

    “To the extent that agents use ChatGPT to create their use of force reports, this further undermines their credibility and may explain the inaccuracy of these reports when viewed in light of the [body-worn camera] footage,” Ellis wrote in the footnote.

    Per the Associated Press, it is unknown if the Department of Homeland Security has a clear policy regarding the use of generative AI tools to create reports. One would assume that, at the very least, it is far from best practice, considering generative AI will fill in gaps with completely fabricated information when it doesn’t have anything to draw from in its training data.

    The DHS does have a dedicated page regarding the use of AI at the agency, and has deployed its own chatbot to help agents complete “day-to-day activities” after undergoing test runs with commercially available chatbots, including ChatGPT, but the footnote doesn’t indicate that the agency’s internal tool is what was used by the officer. It suggests the person filling out the report went to ChatGPT and uploaded the information to complete the report.

    No wonder one expert told the Associated Press this is the “worst case scenario” for AI use by law enforcement.

    [ad_2]

    AJ Dellinger

    Source link

  • California labor leader pleads not guilty to misdemeanor over immigration protest

    [ad_1]

    LOS ANGELES — The leader of a major labor union in Southern California who was arrested while protesting an immigration raid earlier this year has pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor charge and will face trial in January.

    David Huerta is president of the Service Employees International Union California. He was arrested June 6 while joining a large crowd of demonstrators outside a business in Los Angeles where federal agents were investigating suspected immigration violations.

    Huerta was initially charged with obstruction, resistance or opposition to a federal officer — a class A felony. However, federal prosecutors last month dismissed the original felony charge of conspiracy to impede an officer.

    On Tuesday, he entered a not guilty plea to misdemeanor obstruction of justice. His trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 20, 2026, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    During the June protest, Huerta sat down in front of a vehicular gate and encouraged others to walk in circles to try to prevent law enforcement from going in or out, a special agent for Homeland Security Investigations, which is part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, wrote in an earlier federal court filing.

    An officer told Huerta to leave, then put his hands on Huerta to move him out of the way of a vehicle, the agent wrote. Huerta pushed back, and the officer pushed Huerta to the ground and arrested him, according to the filing.

    Huerta’s union represents hundreds of thousands of janitors, security officers and other workers across California. His arrest became a rallying cry for immigrant advocates across the country as they called for his release and an end to President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

    Abbe David Lowell and Marilyn Bednarski, Huerta’s attorneys, said in a statement that they will seek “the speediest trial” to vindicate him.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Judge’s footnote on immigration agents using AI raises accuracy and privacy concerns

    [ad_1]

    Tucked in a two-sentence footnote in a voluminous court opinion, a federal judge recently called out immigration agents using artificial intelligence to write use-of-force reports, raising concerns that it could lead to inaccuracies and further erode public confidence in how police have handled the immigration crackdown in the Chicago area and ensuing protests.

    U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis wrote the footnote in a 223-page opinion issued last week, noting that the practice of using ChatGPT to write use-of-force reports undermines the agents’ credibility and “may explain the inaccuracy of these reports.” She described what she saw in at least one body camera video, writing that an agent asks ChatGPT to compile a narrative for a report after giving the program a brief sentence of description and several images.

    The judge noted factual discrepancies between the official narrative about those law enforcement responses and what body camera footage showed. But experts say the use of AI to write a report that depends on an officer’s specific perspective without using an officer’s actual experience is the worst possible use of the technology and raises serious concerns about accuracy and privacy.

    Law enforcement agencies across the country have been grappling with how to create guardrails that allow officers to use the increasingly available AI technology while maintaining accuracy, privacy and professionalism. Experts said the example recounted in the opinion didn’t meet that challenge.

    “What this guy did is the worst of all worlds. Giving it a single sentence and a few pictures — if that’s true, if that’s what happened here — that goes against every bit of advice we have out there. It’s a nightmare scenario,” said Ian Adams, assistant criminology professor at the University of South Carolina who serves on a task force on artificial intelligence through the Council for Criminal Justice, a nonpartisan think tank.

    The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment, and it was unclear if the agency had guidelines or policies on the use of AI by agents. The body camera footage cited in the order has not yet been released.

    Adams said few departments have put policies in place, but those that have often prohibit the use of predictive AI when writing reports justifying law enforcement decisions, especially use-of-force reports. Courts have established a standard referred to as objective reasonableness when considering whether a use of force was justified, relying heavily on the perspective of the specific officer in that specific scenario.

    “We need the specific articulated events of that event and the specific thoughts of that specific officer to let us know if this was a justified use of force,” Adams said. “That is the worst case scenario, other than explicitly telling it to make up facts, because you’re begging it to make up facts in this high-stakes situation.”

    Besides raising concerns about an AI-generated report inaccurately characterizing what happened, the use of AI also raises potential privacy concerns.

    Katie Kinsey, chief of staff and tech policy counsel at the Policing Project at NYU School of Law, said if the agent in the order was using a public ChatGPT version, he probably didn’t understand he lost control of the images the moment he uploaded them, allowing them to be part of the public domain and potentially used by bad actors.

    Kinsey said from a technology standpoint most departments are building the plane as it’s being flown when it comes to AI. She said it’s often a pattern in law enforcement to wait until new technologies are already being used and in some cases mistakes being made to then talk about putting guidelines or policies in place.

    “You would rather do things the other way around, where you understand the risks and develop guardrails around the risks,” Kinsey said. “Even if they aren’t studying best practices, there’s some lower hanging fruit that could help. We can start from transparency.”

    Kinsey said while federal law enforcement considers how the technology should be used or not used, it could adopt a policy like those put in place in Utah or California recently, where police reports or communications written using AI have to be labeled.

    The photographs the officer used to generate a narrative also caused accuracy concerns for some experts.

    Well-known tech companies like Axon have begun offering AI components with their body cameras to assist in writing incident reports. Those AI programs marketed to police operate on a closed system and largely limit themselves to using audio from body cameras to produce narratives because the companies have said programs that attempt to use visuals are not effective enough for use.

    “There are many different ways to describe a color, or a facial expression or any visual component. You could ask any AI expert and they would tell you prompts return very different results between different AI applications, and that gets complicated with a visual component,” said Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, a law professor at George Washington University Law School.

    “There’s also a professionalism questions. Are we OK with police officers using predictive analytics?” he added. “It’s about what the model thinks should have happened, but might not be what actually happened. You don’t want it to be what ends up in court, to justify your actions.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Orlando mail thief wanted; $100K reward offered for information leading to arrest

    [ad_1]

    A $100,000 reward is being offered to anyone who can provide information leading to the arrest and conviction of a mail thief.According to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, a suspect can be seen on surveillance footage prying open mailboxes and stealing mail from the Ventura post office in Orlando.The incident occurred on Nov. 21 just after midnight. The United States Postal Inspection Service has issued a letter to residents, warning them of the ongoing criminal investigation and the difficulty in determining which mail pieces have been affected.Martha Morales headed to the post office near Curry Ford and South Goldenrod on Tuesday. Morales, who has had a PO box for nearly ten years, discovered the letter from the Miami division of the United States Postal Inspection Service when she checked her mail Tuesday night. “Going on ten years,” she said.”We are currently conducting a criminal investigation in your area involving a mail theft ring,” the letter stated.The letter further explained, “Because of the nature of the crime, it is difficult to determine exactly what mail pieces corresponding to you have been taken. It is possible recovered mail was returned to you and/or mail was destroyed as a result of the perpetrators actions.”On the door of the post office, the same letter Morales received is displayed, along with another notice about adjusted lobby hours to protect mail and ensure timely service. Morales expressed her concern, saying, “Oh yeah,” when asked if she would double-check her mail for missing checks.Flagler Sheriff Rick Staly noted that mail theft is typically considered a federal offense, and his office has investigated similar cases recently. “We have investigated a theft of five, six hundred pieces of mail that were attributed to a group out of Central Florida,” Staly said. “They were stealing checks, they were washing the checks, and then adding a different amount and a different person payable.”Sheriff Staly encourages residents to report stolen mail to their post office and local law enforcement. As for the mailbox theft on Curry Ford, it remains unclear what the thief managed to steal. Morales hopes, “they got caught.”Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact law enforcement at 1-877-876-2455. WESH 2 reached out to the inspection service for more information on the alleged theft ring, but by Tuesday night, had not heard back. Though mail theft would typically be considered a federal offense, Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly said his office investigated mail theft just within the last six or seven months. “We have investigated a theft of five, six hundred pieces of mail that were attributed to a group out of Central Florida,” Staly said. As far as what that group was doing with the mail they stole, Staly said, “They were stealing checks, they were washing the checks, and then adding a different amount and a different person payable.”If your mail gets stolen, the sheriff encourages you to tell your post office and local law enforcement.

    A $100,000 reward is being offered to anyone who can provide information leading to the arrest and conviction of a mail thief.

    According to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, a suspect can be seen on surveillance footage prying open mailboxes and stealing mail from the Ventura post office in Orlando.

    The incident occurred on Nov. 21 just after midnight.

    The United States Postal Inspection Service has issued a letter to residents, warning them of the ongoing criminal investigation and the difficulty in determining which mail pieces have been affected.

    Martha Morales headed to the post office near Curry Ford and South Goldenrod on Tuesday.

    Morales, who has had a PO box for nearly ten years, discovered the letter from the Miami division of the United States Postal Inspection Service when she checked her mail Tuesday night. “Going on ten years,” she said.

    “We are currently conducting a criminal investigation in your area involving a mail theft ring,” the letter stated.

    The letter further explained, “Because of the nature of the crime, it is difficult to determine exactly what mail pieces corresponding to you have been taken. It is possible recovered mail was returned to you and/or mail was destroyed as a result of the perpetrators actions.”

    On the door of the post office, the same letter Morales received is displayed, along with another notice about adjusted lobby hours to protect mail and ensure timely service. Morales expressed her concern, saying, “Oh yeah,” when asked if she would double-check her mail for missing checks.

    Flagler Sheriff Rick Staly noted that mail theft is typically considered a federal offense, and his office has investigated similar cases recently. “We have investigated a theft of five, six hundred pieces of mail that were attributed to a group out of Central Florida,” Staly said. “They were stealing checks, they were washing the checks, and then adding a different amount and a different person payable.”

    Sheriff Staly encourages residents to report stolen mail to their post office and local law enforcement. As for the mailbox theft on Curry Ford, it remains unclear what the thief managed to steal. Morales hopes, “they got caught.”

    Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact law enforcement at 1-877-876-2455.

    WESH 2 reached out to the inspection service for more information on the alleged theft ring, but by Tuesday night, had not heard back.

    Though mail theft would typically be considered a federal offense, Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly said his office investigated mail theft just within the last six or seven months.

    “We have investigated a theft of five, six hundred pieces of mail that were attributed to a group out of Central Florida,” Staly said.

    As far as what that group was doing with the mail they stole, Staly said, “They were stealing checks, they were washing the checks, and then adding a different amount and a different person payable.”

    If your mail gets stolen, the sheriff encourages you to tell your post office and local law enforcement.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trial date set for wounded police officer

    [ad_1]

    SALEM — Now that a wounded North Andover police officer has a 2026 trial date, her defense team is turning its attention to the culture of the North Andover Police Department and what transpired before the shooting nearly five months ago.

    A jury trial has been set for Feb. 9 in Essex County Superior Court following a trial assignment conference on Tuesday for Kelsey Fitzsimmons, 29, who was shot by a responding officer and colleague in her North Andover home after being served with an abuse prevention order filed by her then-fiance, North Andover firefighter Justin Aylaian.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmu:EKD:>>@?D 7246D 2 492C86 @7 2DD2F=E 3J >62?D @7 2 52?86C@FD H62A@? DE6>>:?8 7C@> E96 D9@@E:?8 :?D:56 96C 9@>6 yF?6 b_]k^Am

    kAm!@=:46 2==6865 u:EKD:>>@?D 2:>65 2 8F? 2E @?6 @7 E96 @77:46CD[ H9:49 =65 E@ 96C 36:?8 D9@E 😕 E96 496DE] u:EKD:>>@?D 92D 4=2:>65 D96 ?6G6C 2:>65 96C 7:C62C> 2E 2?@E96C A6CD@?[ 3FE H2D D9@E 3642FD6 @7 2 72:=65 DF:4:56 2EE6>AE 2D 96C :?72?E D@? H2D 36:?8 E2<6? 7C@> 96C]k^Am

    kAm%96 EC:2= 😀 D4965F=65 E@ 36 962C5 3J yF586 z2E9=66? |4r2CE9J}6J>2?[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 4@FCE 5@4<6E]k^Am

    kAmu:EKD:>>@?D 92D 366? 96=5 H:E9@FE 32:= D:?46 $6AE] “ 27E6C |4r2CE9J}6J>2? C6G@<65 96C E6C>D @7 C6=62D6] u:EKD:>>@?D C6>2:?D 2E E96 (6DE6C? |2DD249FD6EED #68:@?2= (@>6?’D r@CC64E:@?2= r6?E6C 😕 r9:4@A66]k^Am

    kAmpE E96 4@?76C6?46 %F6D52J[ yF586 %9@>2D sC649D=6C 42==65 E96 42D6 D6C:@FD 3FE ?@E 4@>A=:42E65 2D 96 6?4@FC2865 E96 2EE@C?6JD E@ 2CC:G6 2E 2 EC:2= 52E6 2?5 7@C E96 EC:2= E@ 36 AC:@C:E:K65 5F6 E@ u:EKD:>>@?D’ 56E2:?>6?E] pE 36DE[ 96 D2:5[ D96 4@F=5 36 @? C6DEC:4E:G6 4@?5:E:@?D 29625 @7 E96 EC:2= A6?5:?8 E96 $FAC6>6 yF5:4:2= r@FCE’D 7F== A2?6= 564:D:@? @? 96C C646?E 2AA62= E@ 36 C6=62D65 7C@> ;2:=]k^Am

    kAmw6C 5676?D6 E62>’D >@E:@? 7@C DA64:7:4 5:D4@G6CJ 7:=65 uC:52J H2D 5632E65 😕 4@FCE]k^Am

    kAmu:=:?8D 3J u:EKD:>>@?D’ =2HJ6CD %:>@E9J qC25= 2?5 |2CE92 r@2<=6J :?4=F56 6G:56?46 C6BF6DED C6=2E65 E@ E96 }@CE9 p?5@G6C !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E[ :ED DE2E:@?’D DFCG6:==2?46 7@@E286[ 5@4F>6?ED E92E D9@H @77:46C >:D4@?5F4E[ :7 @77:46CD 2C6 @? 2 ”qC25J =:DE” 2?5 DA64:7:4 EC2:?:?8 7@C @77:46CD @G6C E96 =2DE D6G6C2= J62CD]k^Am

    kAmqC25= D2:5 @? yF?6 b_[ A@=:46 @77:46CD H6C6 G:6H65 @? E96:C A9@?6D E6IE:?8 2E E96 D9@@E:?8 D46?6 2?5 9:D E62> H2?ED E96 >6DD286D]k^Am

    kAmqC25= 25565 E92E 96 36=:6G6D E96C6 H6C6 2=D@ E6IE >6DD286D 6I492?865 36EH66? pJ=2:2? 2?5 E96 @77:46CD H9@ D6CG65 E96 C6DEC2:?:?8 @C56C =625:?8 FA E@ E96 @77:46CD’ 2CC:G2= 2E E96 9@FD6] qC25= C6BF6DE65 E9@D6 >6DD286D 36 AC@5F465 2D H6==]k^Am

    kAmx? E96 DA64:7:4 5:D4@G6CJ >@E:@?[ E96 C6BF6DE 42==D 7@C 2== E6IE[ A9@?6[ ?@E6D 2?5 6>2:= 4@?G6CD2E:@?D @G6C E96 =2DE EH@ J62CD 36EH66? pJ=2:2? 2?5 E9@D6 @77:46CD]k^Am

    kAmqC25= C6>:?565 sC6D9D=6C 96 925 >256 2 >@E:@? @? pF8] ae[ 7@==@H:?8 u:EKD:>>@?D’ 2CC2:8?>6?E 😕 $FA6C:@C r@FCE[ E@ >2<6 2?J G:56@ 7@@E286 7C@> E96 DE2E:@? @? yF?6 b_ 2G2:=23=6] qC25= D2:5 u:EKD:>>@?D H2D 2E E96 DE2E:@? E92E 52J[ H:E9 96C 323J[ AC:@C E@ E96 D9@@E:?8 7@C 96C r!# C646CE:7:42E:@?]k^Am

    kAmu:EKD:>>@?D’ E62> C6BF6DE65 ?@E @?=J E96 G:56@ 7@@E286[ 3FE 2=D@ E96 ?2>6D 2?5 4@?E24E :?7@C>2E:@? @7 2?J @77:46C H9@ 6:E96C :?E6C24E65 @C D2H 96C 5FC:?8 E92E DA64:7:4 E:>6]k^Am

    kAm~? $6AE] `g[ qC25= D2:5 DE2E6 AC@D64FE@C y2>6D vF3:E@D6 E@=5 9:> E96 DE2E:@? G:56@ H2D @?=J 2G2:=23=6 324< E@ yF=J d]k^Am

    kAmq2D65 @? >2E9[ qC25= D2:5 E96 yF?6 b_ G:56@ D9@F=5 92G6 366? 2G2:=23=6 H96? 7:CDE C6BF6DE65 😕 pF8FDE[ 32D65 @? yF=J G:56@D DE:== 36:?8 D2G65 😕 $6AE6>36C] w6 DEC6DD65 E96 :>A@CE2?46 E@ 96C 5676?D6 E92E E96J 92G6 E96 G:56@]k^Am

    kAmvF3:E@D6 @3;64E65 E@ qC25=’D >@E:@? 7@C E96 G:56@ %F6D52J[ D2J:?8 96’D 4@?7:56?E E96 G:56@ ?@ =@?86C 6I:DED] xE 😀 F?4=62C 9@H @7E6? E96 56A2CE>6?E E2A6D @G6C :ED DFCG6:==2?46 G:56@D]k^Am

    kAmw6C E62> 2=D@ H2?ED E@ =@@< 2E E96 !@=:46 s6A2CE>6?E’D EC2:?:?8 C6=2E65 E@ FD6 @7 7@C46[ 5@>6DE:4 42==D[ >6?E2= 962=E9 42==D[ D6CG:46 @7 C6DEC2:?:?8 @C56CD 2?5 E2<:?8 4FDE@5J @7 49:=5C6?[ 2?5 H92E :ED A@=:4:6D 2?5 AC@465FC6D 2C6 C6=2E65 E@ E9@D6 EJA6D @7 42==D] qC25= 2?5 r@2<=6J 2=D@ H2?E 2 =:DE @7 EC2:?:?8 @776C65 @C 4@?5F4E65 3J E96 56A2CE>6?E 2?5 :7 E96 C6DA@?5:?8 @77:46CD 2EE6?565 2?J 5FC:?8 E96 =2DE D6G6? J62CD]k^Am

    kAm%96 DA64:7:4 5:D4@G6CJ >@E:@? 2=D@ 42==D 7@C E96 EC2:?:?8 C64@C5D @7 E96 E9C66 @77:46CD H9@ H6?E E@ 96C 9@FD6 H:E9 E96 C6DEC2:?:?8 @C56Ci {E] $62? s2=6J[ @77:46CD %:>@E9J w@FDE@? 2?5 !2EC:4< }@@?2?] xE 2=D@ C6BF6DED 2== 5:D4:A=:?2CJ 2?5 EC2:?:?8 C64@C5D 7C@> E96 }@CE9 p?5@G6C 2?5 {2HC6?46 A@=:46 56A2CE>6?ED 7@C }@@?2?[ E96 @77:46C H9@ D9@E u:EKD:>>@?D 😕 E96 496DE]k^Am

    kAmu:EKD:>>@?D’ 4@>A=6E6 A6CD@??6= 7:=6 H:E9 2?J 5@4F>6?ED C67=64E:?8 4@>A=2:?ED @C 56>2?5D 7@C C6=:67 >256 3J 96C 282:?DE E96 56A2CE>6?E @C 😕 C6=2E:@? E@ 96C 6>A=@J>6?E 😀 :?4=F565 😕 96C 5676?D6’D C6BF6DE 7C@> E96 DE2E6]k^Am

    kAm%96 C6BF6DED 2=D@ =@@< 7@C A9@?6 C64@C5D 7C@> H:E?6DD @77:46CD[ :?4=F5:?8 r9:67 r92C=6D vC2J[ C6=2E65 E@ E96 D9@@E:?8 2?5 9@H C6DA@?5:?8 @77:46CD E@ u:EKD:>>@?D’ 9@>6 @? yF?6 b_ H6C6 5:D4:A=:?65 5F6 E@ E96 :?4:56?E]k^Am

    kAmp 5:D4@G6CJ >@E:@? 962C:?8 😀 D4965F=65 7@C s64] `h 😕 tDD6I r@F?EJ $FA6C:@C r@FCE 29625 @7 E96 EC:2=]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Angelina Berube | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • Thousands of arrests by Trump’s task force in Memphis strain crowded jail and courts

    [ad_1]

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A task force ordered by President Donald Trump to combat crime in Memphis, Tennessee, has made thousands of arrests, compounding strains on the busy local court system and an already overcrowded jail in ways that concerned officials say will last months or even years as cases play out.

    Since late September, hundreds of federal, state and local law enforcement personnel tied to the Memphis Safe Task Force have made traffic stops, served warrants and searched for fugitives in the city of about 610,000 people. More than 2,800 people have been arrested and more than 28,000 traffic citations have been issued, data provided by the task force and Memphis police shows.

    The task force, which includes National Guard troops, is supported by Republican Gov. Bill Lee and others who hope the surge reduces crime in a city that has grappled with violent crime, including nearly 300 homicides last year and nearly 400 in 2023.

    From 2018 to 2024, homicides in Memphis increased 33% and aggravated assaults rose 41%, according to AH Datalytics, which tracks crimes across the country using local law enforcement data for its Real-Time Crime Index. But AH Datalytics reported those numbers were down 20% during the first nine months of this year, even before the task force got to work.

    Opponents of the task force in majority-Black Memphis say it targets minorities and intimidates law-abiding Latinos, some of whom have skipped work and changed social habits, such as avoiding going to church or restaurants, fearing they will be harassed and unfairly detained. Statistics released at the end of October showed 319 arrests so far on administrative warrants, which deal with immigration-related issues.

    The effects have rippled beyond the streets, into the aging criminal courthouse and the troubled jail. Officials are concerned about long waits in traffic court causing people to miss work and packed criminal court dockets forcing inmates to spend extra days waiting for bail hearings.

    “The human cost of it is astounding,” said Josh Spickler, executive director for Just City, a Memphis-based organization that advocates for fairness in the criminal justice system.

    The mayor of Shelby County, which includes Memphis, has requested more judges to hear cases that could span months or years. County officials are discussing opening court at night and on weekends, a move that would help manage the caseload but cost more.

    Meanwhile, Shelby County Jail inmates are being moved to other facilities because of overcrowding, officials say. Inmates at jail intake are sleeping in chairs, and jail officials are asking county commissioners for funding to help address problems, such as a corrections employees shortage.

    These issues raise concerns from activists and officials about safety in a jail that has seen 65 deaths since 2019, according to Just City. Court case backlogs mean defendants and crime victims could spend an unfair amount of time dealing with the criminal justice system, said Steve Mulroy, the county’s district attorney.

    “The task force deployment probably could have used more planning,” said Mulroy, a Democrat whose office is cooperating with the task force. “More thought could have been put into the downstream effects of the increased arrest numbers.”

    There were hundreds more jail bookings and bail settings during the first several weeks of the task force’s operation than during the comparable period last year, an increase of about 40% in each category, according to county statistics.

    The jail, which has a regular capacity of 2,400, had an average daily population of 3,195 inmates in September, the most recent month when statistics were available. County officials said that number was expected to rise for October.

    As of mid-November, 250 overflow jail detainees were being housed at other facilities, compared with 80 in November 2024. Some of those are outside Shelby County, which makes it harder for lawyers and relatives to visit and increases the cost of bringing defendants to Memphis for hearings.

    In a letter to commissioners, Chief Jailer Kirk Fields has requested at least $1.5 million in emergency funds, noting that more inmates means more expenses for food, clothing, bedding and linens.

    One issue is whether there are enough judges to hear cases, especially after lawmakers eliminated two judgeships during last year’s session.

    On Oct. 31, Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris wrote to state court officials asking for additional judges, saying the county is preparing for at least 3,500 to 5,000 people being arrested. More arrests increase jail expenses and the possible hiring of more public defenders, prosecutors and jail employees, he wrote.

    “This places Shelby County in extreme financial peril,” Harris wrote.

    The Tennessee Supreme Court’s response said that while lower court judges reported more judges are not necessary at this time, it has designated two senior judges to help should they be needed.

    “Part of it is, understanding just what the cadence is going to look like over the next few months and then developing a strategy,” the governor said earlier this month, noting that the state is monitoring the situation.

    Some officials have proposed Saturday court sessions and night court sessions two or three nights a week, Mulroy said. They’ve considered having a clinic where people facing misdemeanor warrants could surrender, to help clear those up.

    Mulroy’s office also is reevaluating whether detention is necessary for people jailed in hundreds of low-level cases.

    “If there’s no basis to think they’re a danger to the community or a flight risk, and they’re in there just because they can’t afford their bail, we can take a second look,” he wrote.

    Ryan Guay, a U.S. Marshals Service and task force spokesperson, told The Associated Press that the high volume of arrests reflects the force’s effectiveness.

    “We recognize that this success places additional demands on the broader criminal justice system, including courts and detention facilities,” Guay said.

    The Federal Bureau of Prisons has said that it is making a satellite prison camp available to the task force. The bureau said the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office would assume oversight of the facility. A sheriff’s office spokesperson declined to comment on the camp’s location, citing operational security.

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Christopher L. Keller in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed.

    [ad_2]

    Source link