Friday, August 29, 2025

FBI Philadelphia Seeking Information In Armored Truck Robberies

The FBI in Philadelphia released the information below:

The FBI’s Philadelphia Field Office is seeking the public’s assistance in identifying and locating the individuals connected to a series of armored car robberies in Philadelphia over the summer. Between June 26, and August 12, 2025, four armored trucks were robbed, and one additional attempt occurred.

The FBI is offering a reward of up $10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of these unknown suspects.

On June 26, 2025, a Loomis truck at 5200 Whitaker Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was robbed by two unidentified suspects. The suspects, one armed with a black AR-style rifle and the other armed with a black handgun, approached the Loomis employee. The suspects took a bag of money from the back of the Loomis truck, as well as the Loomis employee’s duty firearm. The suspects fled in a brown Nissan Altima, which was later recovered. Law enforcement believes there was a third suspect who drove the getaway vehicle.

On July 2, 2025, a Brink’s truck at 8445 Frankford Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was robbed by three unknown suspects. One suspect, armed with a black handgun, approached the Brink’s employee as the employee exited a retail store. As the Brink’s employee reached for their duty weapon, two other suspects armed with AR-style rifles approached the employee. The suspect armed with a handgun took the bag of money from the Brink’s driver and attempted to gain entry into the vault in the Brink’s truck. After failing to gain entry, all three suspects fled in a silver Honda Accord, which was later recovered in West Philadelphia.

On July 15, 2025, a Brink’s truck at 8210 Castor Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was robbed by two suspects. One suspect, armed with a black handgun, approached the Brink’s driver. A second suspect followed behind, armed with an AR-style rifle. As the first suspect approached the Brink’s employee, the Brink’s employee drew their duty weapon and began firing in the direction of the suspects. The first suspect fled on foot, and the second entered a black Nissan Maxima and fled the scene.

On July 22, 2025, a Brink’s truck at 7320 Old York Road, Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, was approached by a blue Dodge Durango. The Brink’s employee observed the occupants in the Durango wearing facemasks and armed with weapons. The Brink’s employee quickly entered a nearby store and called the police. The Durango fled the scene without incident. The suspects were observed via surveillance footage parking in the store parking lot prior to the attempted robbery.

On August 12, 2025, a Brink’s truck servicing the same store from the July 22 incident, located at 7320 Old York Road, Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, was robbed by two unknown suspects. The suspects were observed via surveillance footage parking in a similar parking spot as the incident on July 22. As the Brink’s employee walked toward the entrance of the store, two suspects approached the employee, one armed with a black handgun and the other armed with an AR-style rifle. The suspects took a bag filled with money and fled the scene in a black Acura, which was later recovered.

The suspects have been described as black males in their 20s, thin to medium build. One suspect was described as a black male with light complexion, hazel eyes, and freckles. The suspects have been seen wearing all black clothing, black or gray hooded sweatshirts and black or gray pants. The suspects wore gloves and face coverings during the robberies. In three of the four robberies, the suspects took the duty weapon of the employees, and in each of the robberies, the suspects fled in vehicles previously reported stolen.

The suspects should be considered armed and dangerous. An additional reward is being offered by Brinks. Anyone with information on this robbery or these suspects is asked to contact the FBI’s Philadelphia Field Office at 215-418-4000. 

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Richard Leidy Charged In 1999 South Philly Mob-Style Murder Of Gino Marconi

FOX 29 in Philadelphia reports that Richard Leidy, 60, has been arrested and charged with murder, attempted murder and other related offenses, court documents say. 

Law enforcement sources tell FOX 29’s Steve Keeley the arrest and charges are in connection to the 1999 murder of Gino Marconi.

On April 10, 1999, Marconi, 42, and his 31-year-old girlfriend were shot on the 2400 block of South 20th Street. 

One day later, Marconi succumbed to his injuries. 

Despite being shot three times, the 31-year-old survived.

Now, 26 years later, Philadelphia police arrested Leidy at his home in South Philly on Monday, August 25.

You can read the rest of the piece and watch a video via the link below:

Richard Leidy charged in 1999 Philly murder of Gino Marconi: court documents, police sources | FOX 29 Philadelphia 

Monday, August 25, 2025

My Crime Fiction: 'California Liberty'


The story below is another chapter from my crime novel Olongapo, which I hope to soon publish.

The story originally appeared in American Crime Magazine.

California Liberty 

By Paul Davis 

I was just returning from evening chow after my eight-hour watch in the message center aboard the USS Kitty Hawk as the aircraft carrier launched aircraft from “Yankee Station” in the Gulf of Tonkin off the coast of North Vietnam in 1971. 

As I entered the Radio Communications Division's enlisted men's compartment, I heard Salvatore Lorino’s distinctive raspy, fast-paced voice. 

Lorino often visited me while we were on Yankee Station, partly because we were both from South Philly and became friends, and partly because he had two meth customers in the division. 

Lorino, a young hoodlum whom I knew slightly from the South Philadelphia neighborhood where I was raised, was several years older than I. He was about six feet tall, lean, with black hair, rugged features, and a long face with a perpetual lopsided grin that alternately charmed and menaced. 

Entering the compartment, I saw Lorino sitting in a folding chair across from Ingemi, Hunt and a couple of other sailors. The radiomen were laughing at a story Lorino was telling them. 

“Hey, Paulie, I was jes telling them about the time we went to the bullfights in TJ,” Lorino said as I sat down and listened to the story of our trip to Tujuana, Mexico. 

“We was out of Boot Camp for only three months, so we was jes a couple of “Boots” from South Philly when we went down to the border…” 

As he told the tale, I counted. Lorino got seven out of ten facts wrong.

 

While we were stationed in San Diego prior to setting sail for Southeast Asia, we were on three-section duty, which meant that Lorino and I had two out of three weekends off. I liked San Diego, especially Mission Beach, but I was not too fond of the honky-tonk bars that most of the sailors and Marines frequented in the downtown area. I preferred to visit the bars near the local colleges, where the girls were mostly from out of town, just like us.  

I also liked to visit Tijuana, which was just across the border from San Diego. I laughed as Lorino began his tale, recalling how Lorino rooted for the bull rather than the matador. At one point, Lorino stood up and shouted out to the bull, “Now! Get ‘em now!”  

The Mexican bullfight aficionados around us were not amused by the loco gringo, but the Kitty Hawk radiomen hearing the story certainly were. 

Lorino then launched into telling another liberty story. Lorino went on to tell the sailors in the compartment about the time we visited a club on Sunset Strip in Los Angeles. 

“We was in a club in LA and Paulie got us the two best looking girls in the place.” 

Lorino and I traveled in civies when we ventured to Los Angeles. I was fond of LA and liked the vibrant city’s nightlife, and I visited there previously on many of my free weekends. I liked to go to West Hollywood and hit the “happening” clubs on the mile and half of Sunset Boulevard that was known famously as the “Sunset Strip.” 

I told Lorino about the Strip and how it was home to trendy restaurants, sleazy bars and hip nightclubs. The Strip was a girl watchers’ delight and walking the Strip at night was like being part of a wild parade. Someone called the Strip a “cultural carnival.” 

I also liked the great rock music played at the clubs there and I liked dancing with the young, pretty girls. Growing up in South Philly, I had gone to teenage dances every weekend, so I knew that hitting the dance floor and dancing well was a good way to meet girls. 

Along with servicemen like Lorino and I, there were hippies, college students, tourists, music and movie people, and almost everything in between at the clubs. 

I wore my "civies" to the clubs, but unfortunately, like the other servicemen with regulation short hair, Lorino and I stood out from the young men who sported the longer hairstyles of the day. It appeared that the prettiest and most desirable girls shied away from military guys.

On the night Lorino was telling the Kitty Hawk sailors about, I asked an exceptionally good-looking college student named Susan to dance with me at a club on the Strip. She was a pretty, shapely blonde and she wore a loose blouse and tight dungarees.

“I like your high black boots,” I told her. “You can kick me if you want to.”

She laughed.

I spent a good bit of time with Susan on the crowded dance floor. Lorino grabbed Susan’s girlfriend and took her onto the dance floor as well. After a while, we took a break from dancing, and I bought Susan a drink at the bar. Lorino slid next to me with Susan’s girlfriend in his arms.  

Susan was a bit inebriated and giddy. I held her and she looked at me closely. 

I grinned, thinking this was a romantic moment and I was about to kiss her.

“Why do you have short hair?” Susan asked, stopping me from leaning in to kiss her. “Are in you in the military?” 

I just knew that my being in the Navy would be a “turn off” for her, so I thought fast. 

“No, but I don’t want to talk about it,” I replied sheepishly. 

“Why not?” 

“My hair is cut short because Sal and I just got out of San Quentin prison.” 

Her interest and imagination ignited, and she leaned into me and whispered, “Why were you in prison?” 

“We robbed a bank.” 

I heard Lorino behind me laugh. Susan nodded her head slowly, as if to say she understood. She then smiled, kissed me full on the mouth, and we returned to the dance floor. Lorino and I later took the two girls back to our hotel room. 

Apparently, this fresh-faced college girl was just fine with me being a bank robber and ex-con, but she would have surely bolted had I told her I was a sailor. 

Go figure.  

Thankfully, the girls in Olongapo had no such prejudice against sailors. 

 

On a roll, Lorino also spoke of the time we visited Disneyland in Anaheim, California. On that visit to Disneyland with Lorino, we dared to smoke marijuana openly, boldly, and quite stupidly, as we walked around the popular amusement park. 

On the Haunted Mansion ride we shared a joint in our continuously moving vehicle. At one point in the ride, the vehicle pivoted to the right before a mirror, and through Disney’s technological magic, a ghost appeared in the mirror between the reflection of Lorino and I. The ghost grinned and wrapped his arms around us.

Looking at the image between us in the mirror, I offered the joint to the ghost. I thought this was funny, and Lorino thought it was hilarious. 

The security guards monitoring the ride through the mirror were not nearly as amused. 

At the end of the ride, two security guards dressed as Western Sheriffs stopped our vehicle and ordered us to get out. 

“Are you part of the amusement ride?” I asked in jest. 

Lorino thought that too was hilarious. The guards remained unamused.         

The guards held us in a building until the Anaheim police arrived and took us into custody. We were handcuffed, placed in the police car and driven to the Anaheim police station. We were held in separate rooms. I was searched by an Anaheim police officer, and he confiscated the pocketknife I was carrying. 

I was worried about prison and getting kicked out of the Navy. Thankfully, the police officer took pity on me and told me that he was cutting me loose. He said he had been a Marine when he was a young guy, and he also did dumb things then. He told me to take off. 

I asked about Lorino, and the officer told me to “Get while the getting is good.”

I asked if I could have my knife back, and the police officer just stared at me in disbelief. I left the police station quickly and took a bus back to San Diego.  

Lorino later told me that he was arrested because he was holding more than an ounce of marijuana in a plastic bag in his pocket. He was held over the weekend and appeared before a judge on Monday morning. Lorino pled guilty to possession, was fined, and then released. 

Unfortunately for Lorino, the Kitty Hawk shoved off on Monday morning and the carrier went to sea while he stood before the judge. Lorino missed "ship's movement," which was a serious offense. Upon his return to the carrier, Lorino went before a Captain’s Mass and busted back to seaman apprentice and lost a month’s pay. 

I felt guilty that I was lucky to not be charged and “skated” through the incident, and left Lorino holding the bag, quite literally. Lorino shrugged and told me not to worry about it.

The sailors sitting around the compartment appeared to be quite amused at the pre-deployment adventures Lorino and I experienced.  

© 2025 Paul Davis 



Note: You can also read the other posted chapter from Olongapo via the below links: 

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Butterfly'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Salvatore Lorino'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: The Old Huk

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: Join The Navy And See Olongapo

Paul Davis On Crime: Boots On The Ground

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'The 30-Day Detail'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Cat Street'

Paul Davis On Crime: Chapter 12: On Yankee Station

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'The Cherry Boy'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'The Hit'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: Welcome To Japan, Davis-San

Paul Davis On Crime: A Look Back At Life Aboard An Aircraft Carrier During The Vietnam War: 'The Compartment Cleaner'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Murder By Fire'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Admiral McCain'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Hit The Head'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'A Night At The Americano'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'Missing Muster'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'The Barracks Thief'

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction: 'The City of Bizarre Happenings'

Sunday, August 24, 2025

U.S. Navy Sailor Convicted Of Spying for China

The U.S. Justice Department released the information below:

On Aug. 20, a federal jury convicted Jinchao Wei, also known as Patrick Wei, of espionage and export violations. Wei was an active-duty U.S. Navy sailor stationed at Naval Base San Diego when he agreed to sell Navy secrets to a Chinese intelligence officer for $12,000.

Following a five-day trial and one day of deliberation, the jury convicted Wei of six counts, including conspiracy to commit espionage, espionage, and unlawful export of, and conspiracy to export, technical data related to defense articles in violation of the Arms Export Control Act and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. Wei is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 1.

“The defendant, who took an oath to protect our Nation and was entrusted with a security clearance as a petty officer in the United States Navy, sold out his country for $12,000,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg. “He violated his oath, betrayed his uniform and fellow sailors, and turned his back on his adopted nation for money. This verdict serves as a warning to those who do not take seriously the solemn obligations of their positions of trust or their duty to this Nation. Do not be tempted by easy money because you will be prosecuted and sent to prison.”

“The defendant’s actions represent an egregious betrayal of the trust placed in him as a member of the U.S. military,” said U.S. Attorney Adam Gordon for the Southern District of California. “By trading military secrets to the People’s Republic of China for cash, he jeopardized not only the lives of his fellow sailors but also the security of the entire nation and our allies. The jury’s verdict serves as a crucial reminder that the Department of Justice will vigorously prosecute traitors.”

“Jinchao Wei swore oaths to become a U.S. Navy sailor and a U.S. citizen. He then committed espionage by sending photographs and videos of U.S. Navy vessels, ship movement information, technical manuals, and weapons capabilities to a Chinese intelligence officer,” said Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division. “China continues to aggressively target U.S. military members with and without clearances. This guilty verdict shows the FBI and our partners will aggressively investigate and hold accountable anyone who threatens U.S. national security. We encourage past and present U.S. government personnel to beware of anyone offering to pay for their information or opinions and to report any suspicious contacts to the FBI.”

According to evidence presented at trial, Wei was a machinist’s mate for the amphibious assault ship U.S.S. Essex. He also held a U.S. security clearance and had access to sensitive national defense information about the ship’s various systems.

The evidence introduced at trial showed that Wei was approached in February 2022 via social media by someone who claimed to be a naval enthusiast. The individual was in reality a Chinese intelligence officer. Between February 2022 and his arrest in August 2023, as their relationship developed, Wei, at the request of the officer, sent extensive information about the Essex, including photographs, videos, and about its weapons. He also sent detailed information about other U.S. Navy ships that he took from restricted U.S. Navy computer systems. In exchange for this information, the intelligence officer paid Wei more than $12,000 over 18 months.

During the trial, the government presented evidence including conversations and other messages that Wei exchanged with his Chinese handler. These communications showed the efforts they made to cover their tracks, the tasks issued by his handler, and how Wei was paid for his work.

In addition to the two espionage charges, Wei was convicted of four counts of conspiring to violate and violating the Arms Export Control Act. That law prohibits individuals from willfully exporting technical data related to a defense article without a license from the Department of State. The government presented evidence that Wei conspired with his Chinese handler to export certain technical information which required a license for export.

The FBI and NCIS investigated the case, with valuable assistance from the U.S. Department of State and Transportation Security Administration.

Assistant U.S. Attorney John Parmley for the Southern District of California and Trial Attorney Adam Barry of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section are prosecuting the case. 

Saturday, August 23, 2025

My Threatcon Column: Iran Pounded

Counterterrorism magazine posted my latest online Threatcon column. 

You can read the column below: 

Iran Pounded 

By Paul Davis

I was pleased to see that President Trump encouraged and supported Israel’s air strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. I also applaud President Trump’s bold and decisive order to send in the U.S. B-2 bombers with their bunker-busting bombs.   

Trump described the strikes as a "spectacular military success." 

"A short time ago, the U.S. military carried out massive precision strikes on the three key nuclear facilities in the Iranian regime: Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan," President Trump said. "Everybody heard those names for years as they built this horribly destructive enterprise. Our objective was the destruction of Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity, and a stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world's number one state sponsor of terror. Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success. 

"For 40 years, Iran has been saying, ‘Death to America. Death to Israel.’ They have been killing our people, blowing off their arms, blowing off their legs with roadside bombs," President Trump continued. "That was their specialty. We lost over a thousand people, and hundreds of thousands throughout the Middle East and around the world have died as a direct result of their hate in particular."

We’ve pounded the Iranians before. In 1988, an Iranian mine nearly sank an American warship, and then-President Reagan ordered the U.S. Navy to respond. On 18 April 1988, the U.S. Navy launched “Operation Praying Mantis” against Iranian targets in the Arabian Gulf in retaliation for the mining of the USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58) four days earlier. The Iranian mine blew a large hole in the ship’s hull. Ten Sailors from the Samuel B. Roberts were injured severely. The ship’s captain, Commander Paul X. Rinn, was also injured. The ship might have sunk, but the well-trained crew’s damage control effort kept the Samuel B. Roberts ship afloat. 


The U.S. response was swift and fierce. “Operation Praying Mantis,” the largest of five major U.S. Navy surface actions since World War II, was the first time that the U.S. Navy exchanged surface-to-surface missile fire with an enemy. The action resulted in the largest warship sunk by the U.S. Navy since WWII. In just one day, the U.S. Navy destroyed two Iranian surveillance platforms, sank two of their ships, and severely damaged another ship.”

 

Iran was later pounded again on January 3, 2020 in the form of a drone attack that President Trump ordered against Iranian General Qasem Soleimani. President Trump accused the notorious terrorist-supporting general, whose hands were dripping wet with American blood, of plotting imminent and sinister attacks against America.

 

As a writer, I’ve interviewed many intelligence and military officers about the threat from Iran. I especially recall speaking to Gary Berntsen a good while back. Berntsen, a former CIA officer and author of Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al-Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA’s Key Field Commander, predicted that the U.S. would eventually pound Iran. As a CIA operations officer and station chief, he often went up against the Iranians. He said it was like fighting the Nazis.

“What we call terrorism they call curriculum,” he said. “The Iranians assume that the United States won’t act even though they have provoked us by killing many of our people in Iraq and elsewhere. We are heading towards confrontation with Iran. When you look at some of the statements and some of the things they're doing, it looks like they're going out of their way to provoke Israel even more than the United States.”

 

Bernsten said the Iranians have a theocracy form of government, which they believe is divinely guided. He explained that they have a different framework from which they operate, and for the Iranians, it's not if you win or lose, it's that you show up to fight.

“I just think war is inevitable with Iran. Its either the United States or Israel against Iran. One of us, or both of us, against them,” Bernsten predicted correctly.

And if the Iranians and/or their proxies follow through on their threats of retaliation with acts of terrorism, what should President Trump do?

Pound the Iranians again. 

Paul Davis Threatcon column covers crime, espionage and terrorism.

Thursday, August 21, 2025

My Interview With Judge Patrick F. Dugan, Candidate For Philadelphia District Attorney

Broad + Liberty ran my interview with Judge Pat Dugan. 

You can read the interview with him via the link below or the text below: 

An interview with Judge Patrick Dugan

Judge Patrick F. Dugan is running for Philadelphia District Attorney against incumbent District Attorney Larry Krasner in November. He sat down with Broad + Liberty’s Paul Davis earlier this week.

Davis: My first question is why have you decided to run against District Attorney Larry Krasner again, this time as a Republican?

Dugan: The first thing I want to correct is that I am not running as a Republican. I’m running as a Philadelphian. The way that this came about was obviously I lost the Democratic Primary to Krasner and the Republicans on their own did a write-in campaign. I received nearly 7,000 votes from the Republicans; hence, I won the Republican nomination to be on the ballot come November. 

I’m still an independent Democrat, but I am running for all Philadelphians. I’m running for the Working Families Party. I’m running for people who are Democrats. I’m running for the people who are unaffiliated. I’m running for Republicans. I’m running for Independents. I’m running for people who don’t vote. I’m running for people who are too young to vote. I’m running for all Philadelphians. I am not running with political parties. I’m running as an independent who’s on the ballot due to a write-in campaign.

Davis: What are your qualifications to be the District Attorney?

Dugan: Time of service. I’m a native Philadelphia. I was a judge for seventeen years and I was elected by my fellow judges to be the President Judge for five years. I was one of the people who started the Veterans Court, which is a fantastic restorative rehabilitative-type justice program in the court with less than ten percent recidivism rate.  

I sat in Criminal Court predominantly for the last seventeen years and I saw the ends and outs of how things work. I started something called Covid Court. During Covid, I went into the prisons to have hearings because the world was shut down by the leadership, and I was not afraid to go into prisons during Covid to have hearings sooner rather than later, as to not delay justice for both the victims as well as the defendant. 

I served our nation as a soldier on active duty in the Army and as an Army reservist for 23 years, five years overseas, including in Iraq and Afghanistan. As the President Judge, I oversaw three divisions: civil, traffic and criminal, with thousands of cases a year with 250 employees and 27 judges that we had to staff and assign. Basically, I was the CEO of Municipal Court. So, I could be the CEO of the District Attorney’s Office.

I saw firsthand sitting on the bench how the District Attorney’s Office began to not prosecute people. Some of the days I saw 95 percent of the cases in front of me were withdrawn by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the District Attorney’s Office. On average, 70 percent of the cases that were charged and presented in the courtroom were withdrawn due to the policies and incompetence coming out of the District Attorney’s Office. I think that’s insane and a disservice. The District Attorney is forgetting what his oath is. His oath is to the law and to the citizens of Philadelphia.

I had a front row seat on it. That’s why I resigned from being a judge, a job that I thoroughly loved. I enjoyed going to work. I loved what I was doing, helping people, helping victims, upholding the law, being fair to defendants, victims, witnesses and to the entire system. I resigned from my job because I’m so disgusted by what was going on in the DA’s office. Somebody had to step up and take this mission on. Besides stepping down in December to do this, that’s why after contemplating for the last two months, I decided, yes, I’m going to take this opportunity and run again in November for the same reason that I resigned. I quit my job to help our city be safer.

Davis: What did you learn from your previous campaign and what are you doing differently in this campaign?

Dugan: I’m not going to do much differently, to be honest with you. Because in primaries, as you are well aware of, it’s a narrow group of people who get to vote. Very few people come out to vote in the primary. 

Davis: What was it, 30 percent of the Democrats, I believe?

Dugan: It was closer to 20 percent came out to vote. In the primary, you have to be a Democrat to vote. There are approximately a million eligible voters in the City of Philadelphia. Well, I think everybody should have an opportunity to vote. Independents, Working Family, Republicans and Democrats will all have a say now in the general election. It’s a wider pool of voters, and I think Philadelphians deserve an opportunity to actually have a race.

If I had said no, take me off the ballot, then Krasner walks into it again for four more years. Philadelphians deserve an opportunity to make that decision. I would also say that I think the reason why the Republicans came out with this plan to do the write-in was because it was very successful in Pittsburgh. Similar circumstances in the Democratic race, one guy won, the other guy got written-in, and the guy who lost the primary wound up winning in the general election. So, it’s not unprecedented. Pittsburgh-Allegheny County did it, I believe, last year. 

Davis: Do you think you are going to pull in more Democrat votes this time around, as well as other voters who are opposed to the progressive Krasner?

Dugan: A combination. I received 53,000 Democratic votes. I’m hoping that I can keep them, and I’m hoping that other people are taking a second look at this, and those who stayed home will come out to vote this time. 

I want to prosecute people running around with guns. I want to prosecute those who are carjacking, those who are stealing cars, those who are committing retail theft. “Let ‘Em Loose Larry” Krasner is not prosecuting the vast majority of these people who are committing these crimes, and it’s not fair to our citizens. If you’re going to run around with your gun, committing crimes, you’re going to get arrested and we got to prosecute you to the fullest. But for those who are committing crimes who have issues that need help and aren’t violent, we can help them with restorative rehabilitative justice, which is what I was involved in.  

Davis: Krasner appears to be running against President Trump rather than you.

Dugan: Krasner is running against Trump to get clickbait and get more people from California to send him money. He’s fear-mongering and he’s dodging the issues. So many times in the primary at meetings he would insinuate that I was a Nazi. He would not address his retail theft policies, and the media has given him a free pass. 

Davis: Most of the cops that I’ve spoken to support you. If elected, will you work closely with the police, and have less of an adversarial position than Krasner has with the cops?

Dugan: The DA should be partners with many folks, including the mayor and the police commissioner. Krasner doesn’t want to be a partner with the police because he doesn’t play well in the sandbox. He has to be the head of everything.

Davis: Many people have noted that Krasner acts more like the activist defense attorney that he used to be rather than a prosecutor. Do you agree?

Dugan: Absolutely. A case gets tossed against a police officer and Krasner, for whatever reason, will bring that police officer back to the court and refile charges time and time again, despite being told there’s nothing there. It has become a personal vendetta.

Davis: Thank you for speaking to us. 

Paul Davis, a Philadelphia writer and frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty, also contributes to Counterterrorism magazine and writes their online Threatcon column. His work has also appeared in the Washington Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Weekly. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com  

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

FTC: Scammy Texts Offering “Refunds” For Amazon Purchases


The Federal Trade Commission offers some crime prevention tips regarding crooks pretending to be from Amazon:

 

 Scammers are pretending to be Amazon again. This time, they’re sending texts claiming there’s a problem with something you bought. They offer a refund if you click a link — but it’s a scam. Here’s how the scam works so you can avoid it.


You get an unexpected text that looks like it’s from Amazon. It claims the company did a “routine quality inspection” and an item you recently bought doesn’t meet Amazon’s standards or has been recalled. The text offers you a full refund and says you don’t need to return the item — as long as you click a link to request your money back. But there is no refund. Instead, it’s a phishing scam to steal your money or personal information.


To avoid a scam like this:

  • Don’t click links in unexpected texts — and don’t respond to them. If you think the message could be legit, contact the company using a phone number, email, or website you know is real — not the info from the text.
  • Check your Amazon account. If you’re worried, log in through the Amazon website or app — don’t use the link in the text — to see if there’s a problem with or recall on anything you’ve ordered.
  • Send unwanted texts to 7726 (SPAM) or use your phone’s “report junk” option. Once you’ve reported it, delete the message. 
  • Learn more about how to get fewer spam texts. And if you spot a scam, tell the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.

Want to know more about what to do if you have a problem with something you bought? Read Solving Problems With a Business: Returns, Refunds, and Other Resolutions.

Monday, August 18, 2025

DEA Launches Bold Bilaterial Initiative To Dismantle Cartel Gatekeepers And Combat Synthetic Drug Trafficking

The DEA released the information below: 

WASHINGTON – The Drug Enforcement Administration announces a major new initiative to strengthen collaboration between the United States and Mexico in the fight against cartels, whose trafficking networks are responsible for flooding American communities with deadly synthetic drugs.

At the core of this effort is Project Portero, DEA’s flagship operation aimed at dismantling cartel “gatekeepers”, operatives who control the smuggling corridors along the Southwest Border. Gatekeepers are essential to cartel operations, directing the flow of fentanyl, methamphetamine, and cocaine into the United States while ensuring the movement of firearms and bulk cash back into Mexico. By specifically targeting them, DEA and its partners are striking at the heart of cartel command-and-control.

To advance this effort, DEA has launched a multi-week training and collaboration program at one of its intelligence centers on the Southwest Border. The program brings together Mexican investigators with U.S. law enforcement, prosecutors, defense officials, and members of the intelligence community. Over the course of several weeks, participants will identify joint targets, develop coordinated enforcement strategies, and strengthen the exchange of intelligence.

Project Portero is also coordinated with the Homeland Security Task Force (HSTF), ensuring a whole-of-government approach. HSTF integration brings together law enforcement, intelligence, defense, and prosecutorial elements, aligning priorities and operations so the United States can apply its full capabilities against cartel networks.

“DEA is taking decisive action to confront the cartels that are killing Americans with fentanyl and other poisons,” said DEA Administrator Terrance Cole. “Project Portero and this new training program show how we will fight - by planning and operating side by side with our Mexican partners, and by bringing the full strength of the U.S. government to bear. This is a bold first step in a new era of cross-border enforcement, and we will pursue it relentlessly until these violent organizations are dismantled.”

This initiative reflects Administrator Cole’s broader priorities: recommitting DEA to enforcement, dismantling cartels designated as terrorist organizations, and strengthening collaboration with foreign counterparts. While fentanyl is the most urgent threat, Project Portero addresses all aspects of cartel criminal activity—from drug smuggling to weapons trafficking to illicit finance—that cross the border and endanger American communities. 

Saturday, August 16, 2025

My Crime Fiction: 'Site One: The Joker'

The short story below originally appeared in American Crime Magazine.

Site One: The Joker

By Paul Davis

As I write this in my comfortable book-lined basement office, I’m sitting at my desk in front of my computer and enjoying a good cup of coffee and a fine cigar. 

I’ve never smoked cigarettes, as I was an amateur boxer in my youth, and we were told that smoking cigarettes would rob us of our valuable second wind. (Although some professional boxers have been known to smoke crack). 

But I’ve enjoyed cigars for many years, going back to my early 20s. 

A tugboat in the water

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I recall how I often enjoyed smoking a cigar out on the deck of the USS Saugus (YTB-780) back in 1975 when I was a young sailor. The Saugus, a 100-foot-long Navy harbor tugboat, was assigned to the U.S. Navy’s "Site One" nuclear submarine base at Holy Loch, Scotland. 

A person sitting on a boat

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Having previously served on the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk during the Vietnam War, I had to adjust from serving on one of the world’s largest warships to one of the Navy's smallest boats. 

Although I was not thrilled with Scotland’s awful winter weather, especially when the tugboat was ordered out into the Irish Sea to rendezvous with submarines and we encountered 50-foot waves and Gale Force 10 winds, I generally liked serving on a small boat with a small crew with no officers. 

And the people of Scotland were friendly and kind to me and the many other American sailors who were stationed there during the Cold War.

I spent time in Dunoon, which was the town nearest to the base, and I had a flat in Glasgow. I also visited Edinburgh quite often, ventured north to visit Inverness and Loch Ness, and I visited a good number of other Scottish cities, towns and offshore islands during my time there. I also visited London.

The Scottish winters are cold and rainy, but Scotland is quite beautiful in the summer. As a student of history, and being Scot Welsh on my father's side, I enjoyed visiting the many historical sites in Scotland. I also enjoyed visiting the Scottish pubs.

I traveled all over Scotland, the United Kingdom and Europe during those two years on the tugboat. 

Several ships in a bay

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During the Cold War the U.S. Navy base at Holy Loch was the headquarters of Submarine Squadron 14 (COMSUBRON 14). The base, called "Site One," consisted of the USS Canopus, a 644-foot-long ship called a submarine tender, a floating dry dock that could accommodate submarines, and a large barge with a super crane. All were anchored in the middle of the loch.

Submarines ventured to Site One from the sea before and after their patrols and tied up to the anchored submarine tender. The submarines received supplies, maintenance and repairs at the floating Navy base.

The base also had several small boats that tied up to the barge. Two of the boats were 100-foot harbor tugboats, which were the workhorses of the bustling floating naval base. 

A submarine in the water

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The USS Saugus and the USS Natick (YTB 760) towed ships, barges, submarines and other craft in, out and around the site, as well as put out fires and broke up oil slicks.

The tugboats were often sent to sea to rendezvous with submarines for medivacs, classified missions and transfers of the COMSUBRON 14 Commodore and his staff. The tugboats also went to sea to perform in exercises with the submerged submarines and then retrieved the torpedoes used in the exercises from the sea.

Working on the tugboat was hard, physical and dangerous, but we were proud of our service. Working with the rugged and independent crew on the tugboat felt like I was serving in McHale's Navy, one of my favorite TV shows from my youth. 

I worked on deck, stood helm watches while at sea, stood security watches in port, and during my second year onboard I was the boat's supply petty officer.     

Stationed on the USS Natick, the other assigned tugboat to Holy Loch, was a big and burly West Virginia hillbilly named Joe Marks. He was quite a character, an irrepressible joker, and we enjoyed cutting each other up. It became something of a rivalry. He took my sarcastic asides in good humor, and he sometimes gave as good as he got.

In summer, Marks liked to go around the boats shirtless and shoeless. I called him Li'l Abner after the barefoot hillbilly in Al Capp's cartoons.

One evening while I had the watch on the Saugus and Marks had the watch on the Natick, Marks came out on deck as I did for "Evening Colors," the tradition of lowering the Flag on ships. Moored to the large floating barge, we looked up as a team appeared on the tender's fantail to lower the ship's flag, as we were to follow suit. 

Marks, that crazy fool, was shirtless and barefoot as he lowered the flag on the Natick. I laughed and then I called up to the team on the tender told them to look at the sailor as he lowered the flag. 

The team looked down and could not believe that the tugboat sailor was half naked. 

"Fuck you, Davis," Marks said. "I'll get you for this."    

The senior petty officer on the tender reported the incident to the Natick chief, and the chief chewed out Marks when he first came aboard in the morning. 

Later that morning Marks tried to rile the Saugus' chief and get back at me.

Most of the crew were afraid of Joseph Coolidge, the Saugus’ chief petty officer, an odd, humorless man who rarely spoke, much like another Coolidge, the 30th president known as “Silent Cal.” 

As the story goes, President Coolidge was once confronted by someone who told him that he bet a friend that he could get the quiet chief executive to say three words.

"You lose," President Coolidge reportedly replied.

Although Chief Coolidge said little, when angered the tugboat chief would bark orders with a powerful voice that made most errant sailors shake. 

A person wearing a hat

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Chief Coolidge had a stone, deadpan face, and he reminded me of the silent film comic Buster Keaton. I called him “Chief Cool,” based on his name and his aloof and taciturn manner, and the nickname caught on with the rest of the tugboat sailors. 

Marks saw the chief sitting with us and drinking coffee in the galley that morning. 

“Morning, Chief Cool. How are ya?” 

The guys in the galley were shocked that Marks would address the feared chief as “Chief Cool.” 

The chief ignored him. 

“Did you know that Davis here started everyone calling you Chief Cool?" 

There was dead silence in the galley. Then, quite unexpectedly, the chief looked at me and smiled. 

I don't think anyone had ever seen him smile before. He got up and left the galley without saying a word. 

Everyone laughed. Apparently, the chief thought the nickname was complimentary. 

Marks was taken aback, but he still tried to get the better of me. 

The weather that day was nice for a change as the Saugus and Natick were moored to the floating barge, and I took a break from my supply petty officer duties and stepped out on the deck and lit a cigar. 

Some of the crew were on the Saugus' fantail smoking cigarettes. Marks came out and saw me with my cigar and he laughed and pointed at me. 

“Don’t you feel old smoking that ci-gar?” 

“No,” I replied. “I feel...prosperous.” 

This got a laugh from a couple of guys, and as Marks probably didn’t know what prosperous meant, he had to come back with a good zinger. 

“It looks like you’re smoking a big ole dick,” he said with a laugh. 

I took a long draw on the cigar and replied, “I would prefer to think of it as a woman’s elongated nipple.” 

I got the bigger laugh.

 

Although Marks was a happy-go-lucky guy, and he got along well with his deck supervisor, he turned downright mean and nasty when it came to Billy Joe Johnson.

Johnson, a short and stocky man in his late 30’s from Georgia, was a First-Class Engineman and Marks’ section leader. Like the USS Saugus, the Natick had three sections. Every third day Johnson’s section stayed aboard the tugboat overnight and the section’s crew members held security watches throughout the night and were assigned to cleaning the tug's various spaces. Johnson’s section and the other two sections rotated staying aboard the tugboat every third weekend.

Marks, the joker, resented taking orders from Johnson, a serious and humorless career sailor, and Marks often clashed with him. On one weekend midnight watch, Johnson woke up and berated Marks’ poor performance and ordered him to clean the galley again. 

Marks called Johnson a “fuckin’ lifer,” and the two argued over the cleanliness of the galley’s tile deck. Johnson told Marks to swab the deck again or he would put him on report. 

Marks responded by threatening Johnson. He told the senior enginemen that he would “whoop his country ass if he ever saw him on the beach.” 

Johnson walked away from the gallery and returned to his rack. Marks grumbled, took a mop and swabbed the deck again. 

 

The Natick, like the Saugus, had two small cabins, one on the starboard side and the other on the port side. The starboard cabin was occupied by the tug’s chief, and the port cabin was occupied by the next senior petty officer, Enginemen First-Class Bobby Joe Johnson.

Other than the times the tug went overnight on a mission, the cabins were used as offices, as the chief and Johnson were married and had homes in the Navy Housing area.  

Marks was not the only sailor aboard the Natick that hated the petty officer. Fireman Mark Towers, a young, skinny sailor with a thin dark mustache from Norfolk, also hated Johnson. Johnson was his supervisor, and Johnson rode the lazy and larcenous fireman hard.

Towers, a petty thief, lingered aboard the Natick after the crew left the boat for the evening, leaving only the duty section aboard. Johnson left the tugboat and boarded the boat that left the base and cruised across the loch to the Scottish pier. He headed towards the EM (Enlisted Men’s) Club with the Natick’s Second-Class Electrician, where the two sailors had hamburgers and cold American beer.

The duty section’s sailors were eating dinner in the galley, so Towers snuck down the passageway to Johnson’s cabin. He broke the lock on the cabin door and stepped into the cabin. Johnson, a pipe smoker, had a dozen pipes hung on a rack on his small desk. Towers placed the rack and pipes into a sack. He searched the cabin and found a watch and $125 dollars in cash, which he placed in the sack with the pipes. He placed the sack over his back like a crooked Santa Claus and left the tugboat.

Once on the “beach,” as the sailors called the Scottish shore, Towers took a taxi to a Dunoon pub where he sold the pipes to a local thief that he often did business with.

The following day at muster Johnson reported the theft to the Natick’s chief and he pointed a finger, figuratively and literally, at Marks. Marks was insulted and infuriated, and he denied stealing from Johnson.  The chief separated the two and said he would look into the theft.     

Two nights later, Marks stood in the parking lot of the EM (Enlisted Men’s) Club and waited for Johnson to come out of the club. When Johnson came out and walked toward his car, Marks came out of the shadows and confronted Johnson, his right hand raised with a thick, six-inch branch that he had found under a tree. 

“Let’s get it on, you lifer son of a bitch,” Marks said.

Johnson stood his ground silently and pulled his work knife from his pocket. Marks saw the knife, and in a panic, he dropped the branch, turned and ran. 

 

Marks told me the story the following day. He said that he saw Johnson earlier at morning muster and the enginemen said nothing about the incident and Johnson apparently did not put Marks on report.     

“You’re lucky he didn’t,” I said. “You could have could have been charged with threating a petty officer with a deadly weapon. You could have been put in the brig or even prison. Maybe you should cut Johnson a little slack.”    

“Yeah, I guess the lifer ain’t all bad,” Marks said with a laugh. 


Some months later Towers was caught red-handed rifling through a shipmate’s locker, having cut off the combination’s lock with the tugboat’s bolt cutter.

The owner of the locker, a tough deck hand named Al Mason, discovered Towers pocketing some of his money in front of the locker.

Mason punched Towers in the back of his head and Towers’ forehead hit the ledge of the locker’s top shelf and he collapsed to the deck.

The chief heard the noise below in the crew’s quarters and he and Johnson ran down the steps and saw Mason kicking Towers as he cowered on the deck. The chief and Johnson pulled Mason away and Towers was able to get to his feet.

The chief and Johnson marched Towers up to the tender’s brig where he confessed freely to stealing various valuables from the crew, including Johnson’s pipes and cash.

With Towers placed under arrest and placed in the ship’s brig, the chief and Johnson returned to the Natick. Johnson was pleased to see Marks at the galley’s table. He told Marks that he was sorry that he accused him of stealing his valuables.

“Sure,” Marks the joker replied with a laugh. “Does this mean y’all get off my case?”

“No,” Johnson said.       

© 2025 Paul Davis 

Note: You can read my other crime fiction stories via the link below:

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Fiction Stories