Showing posts with label LAPD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LAPD. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Just The Facts, Ma'am: On This Day In History Dragnet TV show debuts
As History.com notes, on this day in 1952 Dragnet first appeared on TV.
Jack Webb (seen in the below photo) produced, directed and starred in the popular TV crime drama.
You can read about the TVs series via the below link:
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/dragnet-tv-show-debuts?cmpid=email-hist-tdih-2017-0103-01032017&om_rid=de5e4076c942a595dbda53f758321d197499484f6d117f61b6ac5c08e0d6f0aa&om_mid=130948377&kx_EmailCampaignID=9007&kx_EmailCampaignName=email-hist-tdih-2017-0103-01032017&kx_EmailRecipientID=de5e4076c942a595dbda53f758321d197499484f6d117f61b6ac5c08e0d6f0aa
Labels:
Cop show,
Dragnet,
Jack Webb,
LAPD,
On This Day in History,
TV crime drama
Sunday, March 6, 2016
Former LAPD Detective Mark Fuhrman Refuses To Watch FX Series On O.J. Simpson Trial
Michael Starr at the New York Post interviewed Mark Fuhrman, a former LAPD detective who was part of the O.J. Simpson investigation and now refuses to watch the FX TV series about the Simpson trial.
This Tuesday’s episode of FX’s “The People v. O.J. Simpson” will feature one of the most notorious episodes from the murder trial — the testimony of LAPD Detective Mark Fuhrman. Fuhrman found the infamous bloody glove on Simpson’s property and gave key testimony. He later pleaded no contest to a perjury charge stemming from his false claim on the stand that he had not used a racial slur in the past decade. The defense had cited his use of an epithet to suggest the glove was planted. Now 64, Fuhrman is a crime analyst, an expert for cable news and author of several true-crime books, including “Murder in Brentwood,” his 1997 best-seller about the Simpson case. He spoke to The Post about the television series and the case.
You refuse to watch “The People v. O.J. Simpson.”
The last 20 years, I have watched the facts dismissed by the media, journalists and the public simply because it does not fit within the politically correct narrative. At this late date, FX is attempting to establish a historical artifact with this series without reaching out to any prosecution sources. In a time when Americans read less and less and investigative journalism is on vacation, it is sad that this movie will be the historical word on this infamous trial. After all, it was “based on a true story.”
You can read the rest of the interview via the below link:http://nypost.com/2016/03/06/why-this-lapd-detective-wont-be-watching-fxs-o-j-series/
Friday, January 22, 2016
Semper Cop: Happy Birthday To Former LAPD Detective Sergeant And Best-Selling Author Joseph Wambaugh
Happy birthday to Joseph Wambaugh, who was born on this date in 1937.
Joseph Wambaugh is the author of several classic police and crime novels, including The Onion Field and The Choirboys.
You can read my interview with Joesph Wambaugh via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/11/semper-cop-interview-with-novelist.html
You can also read my Philadelphia Inquirer review of Joseph Wambaugh Hollywood Station below:
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Former LAPD Sgt And Bestselling Author Joseph Wambaugh's Hood Version Of The Christmas Song
Note: You can visit Joseph Wambaugh's Facebook page via the below link:
https://www.facebook.com/JosephWambaugh/
https://www.facebook.com/JosephWambaugh/
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Quentin Tarantino Called Police To Investigate 'Home Intruder' Less Than Two Weeks Before Branding Them 'Murderers' During Controversial New York Rally
Darren Boyle at the Daily Mail reports that police critic Quentin Tarantino call the LAPD just two weeks before he offered a rant against police officers in New York.
Quentin Tarantino called police 13 days before his controversial appearance at a New York rally where he branded some officers 'murderers' over the killings of several unarmed black people.
The Pulp Fiction director rang the LAPD when he found someone wandering around the back yard of his Los Angeles home. The 6'1-tall star asked the man to leave, but when he refused, the movie maker called 911.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3303431/Quentin-Tarantino-called-police-investigate-home-intruder-two-weeks-branding-murderers-controversial-New-York-rally.html#ixzz3qdKKVO1h
Labels:
crime,
Darren Boyle,
LAPD,
police critic,
Quentin Tarantino,
The Daily Mail
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
A Witness To Anarchy: Joseph Wambaugh On The 1965 Watts Riots - From Inside A Black-And-White
In light of the street riots in Ferguson, Missouri and assaults on police officers around the country, it is interesting to look back at the 1965 Watts riots from the view of a police officer inside a black and white patrol car.
Joseph Wambaugh, a former LAPD detective sergeant and author of best-selling and critically acclaimed novels and nonfiction books about LAPD officers, such as The Onion Field, The Choirboys and Hollywood Station, offers a look back at Watts in 1965 in the Los Angeles Times.
7 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 12, 1965, about 2,000
people gather at 116th and Avalon. Tension is still high after the mob violence
of the previous night following the arrest of an alleged drunk driver, but the
people are not rioting.
A short time later, random shots are fired at a
police vehicle on Imperial Highway, but there are no reports of massive rioting.
Many of the officers in police divisions north of 77th Street Station listen on
police radios and do not believe that the volatile unrest near Watts will spread
to other parts of South Los Angeles.
The next afternoon, however, calls go out to officers
at home, even those who work plainclothes assignments, ordering them to report
to 77th Street Station in uniform. The nameless voice on the line adds: “Leave
the necktie and soft hat but bring your helmet and baton. You're about to
witness anarchy.”You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-0811-wambaugh-watts-riots-20150811-story.html
Note: You can also read my interview with Joseph Wambaugh via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/11/semper-cop-interview-with-novelist.html
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Happy Belated 78th Birthday To Joseph Wambaugh
Happy belated birthday to former LAPD detective sergeant and bestselling author Joseph Wambaugh, who turned 78 on January 22nd.
Joseph Wambaugh is the author of several classic novels about the police and crime, such as The Onion Field and The Choirboys.
You can visit Joseph Wambaugh's web site at http://www.josephwambaugh.net/ and you can read my interview with him via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/11/semper-cop-interview-with-novelist.html
You can also read my Philadelphia Inquirer review of his novel Hollywood Station via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2013/08/my-philadelphia-inquirer-review-of.html
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Michael Connelly Sends LA Detective Harry Bosch Into 'The Burning Room'
Steph Cha offers a good review of Michael Connelly's latest Harry Bosch crime thriller, The Burning Room, in the Los Angeles Times.
Twenty-two years ago, Michael Connelly introduced the world to Harry Bosch, a determined cop with a haunted past and a heart of gold. Bosch was an old soul at the start of "Black Echo," a homicide detective in his early 40s with an infamous, colorful career and two tours in Vietnam to boot. In "The Burning Room," Bosch is in his mid-60s, reluctantly nearing the end of his career after 18 novels' worth of action and mystery. He's the oldest detective in the Open-Unsolved Unit, entering his final year on his Deferred Retirement Option Plan. "To him, every day he had left on the job was golden."
As part of a new departmental initiative, Bosch is paired with the youngest officer in his unit, a 28-year-old "slick sleeve" and rising star named Lucia Soto. The two form an amiable, productive partnership — not only is Soto smart, she's as hardworking and dogged as Bosch, driven in part by a formative tragedy in her childhood.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Seventy-Two Linked to Broadway Crips Criminal Street Gang Charged in Federal Racketeering Indictment That Alleges Murders, Robberies, and Drug Sales in South Los Angeles
The U.S. Attorney's Office, Central District of California, released the below information yesterday:
LOS ANGELES—More than 1,300 FBI agents and LAPD officers this morning arrested 50 people associated with the Five Deuce Broadway Gangster Crips, a street gang that claims control of a South Los Angeles neighborhood and drug sales in an area just west of the Skid Row district of Los Angeles. Those taken into custody are among 72 defendants named in a 213-page racketeering indictment that outlines two decades of criminal conduct, including murders, robberies, extortion, witness intimidation, and narcotics trafficking.
The investigation into the Broadway Crips was called Operation Gremlin Riderz, because authorities focused on a particularly violent clique—or subset of the gang—called the Gremlin Riderz.
According to the 112-count indictment that was unsealed this morning, the Broadway Crips, which has an estimated 200 members, operated as a criminal enterprise that used violence and intimidation to control an area centering on the intersection of 52nd Street and South Broadway in South Los Angeles. The gang was formed in the 1970s to confront other African-American street gangs,
according to the indictment, which alleges that the enterprise has grown into a violent and criminal enterprise that conducts annual meetings and enforces a strict set of rules.
“Criminal street gangs make their livelihood by ruthlessly preying on the innocent people that live in the neighborhoods they claim as territory,” said United States Attorney AndrĂ© Birotte, Jr. “What makes the conduct of this gang particularly insidious is not only the violent crimes alleged but also the exploitation of Skid Row drug users who are already living in difficult circumstances.”
The defendants named in the federal indictment face various charges, including conspiracy to engage in racketeering activity in violation of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act; violent crimes in aid of racketeering; conspiracy to interfere with commerce by conducting a series of robberies that targeted bank customers; weapons offenses; and various drug trafficking activities involving crack cocaine, cocaine, methamphetamine, phencyclidine (PCP), Ecstasy, marijuana, and codeine.
The indictment specifically alleges that members of the gang:
- committed four murders, dating back to 1987, that include fatal shootings of unarmed men with no gang affiliations in 2003 and 2012;
- threatened a surviving victim of the 2003 shooting, which followed a concert at the House of Blues on the Sunset Strip;
- conspired to murder a fellow gang member who had provided a statement to law enforcement in relation to the 2012 murder incident in which a total of four people with no gang ties were shot, including a 10-year-old girl on a bicycle;
- fired shots at California Highway Patrol Officers who were pursuing gang members two years ago;
- engaged in a series of violent, “follow-home” robberies that targeted customers of South Bay banks; and
- participated in numerous narcotics sales near schools and playgrounds.
“This area is desirable to the gang because it is close to Skid Row, where there is a large and vulnerable customer base of drug addicts and mentally ill persons,” according to the indictment.
Out of 72 defendants named in the federal indictment, 48 were arrested this morning. Two more people were arrested on local charges, meaning that a total of 50 were arrested today. Seventeen defendants named in the grand jury indictment were already in custody on unrelated charges.
Authorities are continuing to search for eight defendants, including one who faces local charges.
All 72 defendants named in the racketeering indictment face mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years in federal prison if they are convicted. Many of the defendants face potential sentences of life without parole.
An indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty in court.
The investigation into the Broadway Crips was conducted by agents and officers with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Los Angeles Police Department. Considerable assistance was provided during this investigation by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the Torrance Police Department, the Buena Park Police Department, the El Segundo Police
Department, the San Bernardino Police Department, and the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office.
Additionally, several agencies provided substantial assistance during this morning’s takedown, including the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, the Hawthorne Police Department, the Pasadena Police Department, the Inglewood Police Department, and the Los Angeles Fire Department.
Operation Gremlin Riderz is a result of a partnership between the FBI and the Los Angeles Police Department under the auspices of the FBI’s Task Force on Violent Crime in the city of Los Angeles.
This task force is one of dozens of such partnerships throughout the United States, known as Safe Streets Task Forces, funded for the purpose of assisting local police in identifying and addressing violent crime in America.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Murder Books: Inside The LAPD's Homicide Library
The FBI web page offers a piece on their efforts to upgrade the LAPD's homicide records.
In a room at a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) facility, thick binders—most filled with more than a thousand pages of paper—are stacked in boxes on and under tables and piled from floor to ceiling. Each binder represents a murder victim.
Dubbed “murder books” by the LAPD, they hold the contents of individual homicide investigations, from witness statements and crime scene photos to autopsy reports. The FBI is helping to turn these paper-only books into a digital homicide library that will benefit investigators as well as the families of victims.
The project will take nearly 5,000 murder books going back to 1990 and digitize them for use in a system that will be fully searchable so that LAPD detectives—as well as FBI analysts and investigators—will be able to cross-reference and compare information in every case, something not currently possible.
“Not only will this help solve cases,” said LAPD Det. Cheryl Nalls, who is administering the project, “it will bring healing to the families of victims.”
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2014/march/the-gangs-of-los-angeles-part-4-the-homicide-library/the-gangs-of-los-angeles-part-4-the-homicide-library?utm_campaign=email-Daily&utm_medium=email&utm_source=fbi-top-stories&utm_content=303272
Note: The above photos were released by the FBI.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
FBI: The Fight Against Gangs In Los Angeles, The Gang Capital Of The World
The FBI web site offers a two-part series on combating the gangs of Los Angeles.
At 5 a.m., the command post in our Los Angeles Division was buzzing with activity. It would be a day of reckoning for nearly two dozen members of MS-13, the violent street gang that over the years has brought drugs, murder, and misery to countless Los Angeles neighborhoods.
Before the sun came up, teams of FBI agents and their partners from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) began making arrests. In short order, the large video monitors in the command post started to show the words “in custody” next to the images of the subjects—many of whom were wanted on federal drug charges and were the gang’s leaders, or “shot callers,” in the parlance of the street.
Los Angeles — often referred to as the gang capital of the world—it was just another day for the men and women of the FBI who work to protect the community from hundreds of area gangs. But locking up these criminals is only part of the story. Together with our law enforcement and community partners, the Los Angeles Division is taking a leadership role in the fight against gangs with innovative programs designed to bring healing as well as justice to neighborhoods ravaged by violence and intimidation.
“You can’t arrest your way out of the gang problem,” explained Robert Clark, an assistant special agent in charge in our Los Angeles Division. “Looking at the statistics prior to 2007 and in the seven years since I’ve been here,” he said, “there’s been upwards of a 300 percent increase in arrests, but the gang problem still exists.”
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2014/february/the-gangs-of-los-angeles-part-1
And you can read part two of the series via the below link:
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2014/february/the-gangs-of-los-angeles-part-2-operation-save-our-streets/the-gangs-of-los-angeles-part-2-operation-save-our-streets?utm_campaign=email-Daily&utm_medium=email&utm_source=fbi-top-stories&utm_content=299211
Note: The above photo was released by the FBI.
Monday, February 17, 2014
Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch Character Returns In November 2014 in "The Burning Room"
Michael Connelly's web site announced that his popular LAPD detective character Harry Bosch character will return in November in the novel The Burning Room.
You can read about the upcoming crime novel via the below link:
http://www.michaelconnelly.com/novels/burning-room/
You can also read an earlier post on the Harry Bosch mini-series on Amazon via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2014/02/michael-connellys-crime-thriller-bosch.html
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Michael Connelly's Crime Thriller "Bosch" Appears On Amazon
I just watched the pilot episode of Michael Connelly's crime thriller Bosch free on Amazon.
I liked it and I hope to see more of the series.
Colette Bancroft at the Tampa Bay Times offers a review of the online series.
How well does the pilot episode of Bosch translate bestselling author Michael Connelly's tough but beloved series character to the screen?
As a longtime fan of the 18 novels about the hard-boiled Los Angeles homicide detective, I would say: Nailed it.
Connelly, who lives in Tampa but sets his fiction amid the sweet dreams and mean streets of L.A., had major involvement in the development of this potential series about Hieronymous "Harry" Bosch, and it shows in every frame of the hourlong pilot. From the casting of Titus Welliver (The Good Wife, Deadwood) as Bosch to the atmospheric portrayal of the city, the pilot captures the tone and details of Connelly's fiction, which has sold many millions of books worldwide.
It's unusual for an author to have so much input into a screen version of his books. Also unusual is the show's venue and the direct importance of audience input. The pilot is one of 10 available now for free viewing through Amazon Instant Video (see box), and everyone who watches Bosch becomes part of a focus group that could greenlight the series. The more viewers who watch and rate it, the better the chances that more episodes will be made for Amazon Studios.
After watching the pilot, I'm rooting for it — I want more.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.tampabay.com/features/media/review-amazons-bosch-pilot-captures-michael-connellys-iconic-detective/2164410
Bosch is streaming now for free on Amazon Instant Video (USA). You can watch the episode via the below link:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00I3MPDP4?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=Influencer&utm_campaign=Bosch
You can also read my interview with crime writer Michael Connelly via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2010/04/killers-cops-and-crime-reporters-q-with.html
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Happy Birthday To Joseph Wambaugh
Happy 77th birthday to Joseph Wambaugh, former LAPD Sgt and author of classic police novels like The Choir Boys and classic true crime books like The Onion Field.
You can read my Philadelphia Inquirer review of Joseph Wambaugh's Hollywood Station via the below link:
http://home.comcast.net/~pauldavisoncrime/pwpimages/Hollywoodstation.jpg
You can also read my Washington Times review of Joseph Wambaugh's Harbor Nocturne via the below link:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/apr/20/book-review-harbor-nocturne/?page=all#pagebreak
And you can read my interview with Joseph Wambaugh via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/11/semper-cop-interview-with-novelist.html
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Operation Thumbs Down: Dozens Of Members Of Violent Street Gang Charged With Narcotics And Weapons Violations Following Joint Investigation In Los Angeles
The U.S. Justice Department and the FBI released the below information on August 29th:
LOS ANGELES—Over 800 hundred law enforcement officers and agents served dozens of arrest and search warrants this morning in Operation Thumbs Down, an 18-month investigation that targeted members and associates of the Rollin’ 30s Harlem Crips, a South Los Angeles street gang that ranks among the Los Angeles Police Department’s top targeted street gangs, announced André Birotte Jr., the United States Attorney in Los Angeles; Bill Lewis, the Assistant Director in Charge of FBI in Los Angeles; Charlie Beck, the Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department; and Mike Feuer, the City Attorney in Los Angeles.
Thirty-five defendants currently charged with federal and state violations are in custody following this morning’s Operation Thumbs Down, an investigation initiated in 2012 to identify and target high-level members of the Rollin 30s Harlem Crips, a gang known for violence in the community it claims as its territory. Several remaining defendants charged at either the state or federal level were already in custody on unrelated charges or are considered fugitives currently being sought by task force members. The investigation was dubbed Thumbs Down by the task force in reference to hand gestures used by this gang, including two thumbs pointed upward, representing the “H” in the word “Harlem.”
The Rollin 30s Crips is a known multi-generational violent gang that operates primarily in South Los Angeles and has ties to other gangs with whom they are known to have violent disputes. The Rollin’ 30s is composed of three factions, known as “cliques” or “sets,” identified as The Avenues, Denker Park, and 39th Street. Each clique claims different geographical territories within the gang’s overall claimed territory, and has its own respective leaders or "shotcallers," who direct the gang’s criminal activity. Law enforcement estimates there are between 700 and 1,000 Rollin 30s gang members. During Operations Thumbs Down, task force members targeted these “shotcallers” within the Rollin’ 30s’ criminal enterprise.
Twenty-one defendants were named in federal indictments returned by a grand jury in United States District Court in Los Angeles. The federal indictments charge the defendants with a variety of narcotics and weapons violations, including: possession of cocaine base (“crack”) with intent to distribute; conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine base (“crack”); felon in possession of a firearm; maintaining drug-involved premises; and unlicensed dealing in firearms.
Those charged federally are listed below:
- Stephen Bayliss, aka “Iceberg”—30, currently in federal custody
- Michael Byars, aka “Wanetti”—55, Inglewood
- Jesus De La Hoya, aka “Jesse”—40, Mira Loma
- Anthoney Edwards, aka “Three Leaf”—23, currently in state custody
- Frank Fisher, aka “Boons”—23, Los Angeles
- Rayeisha Glenn, aka “Ray Ray”—35, Los Angeles
- Kenneth Green, aka “Gin”—36, Los Angeles
- Kevin Green, aka “Young Watt”—31, Los Angeles
- Jovan Harris, aka “Headache”—34, Los Angeles
- Clavern Luckett, aka “Uncle D”—38, Los Angeles
- Gary Luckett, aka “Uncle Gary”—39, Los Angeles
- Kelly Martin, aka “Cartoon”—43, Compton
- Don Mosley, aka “Whino”—34, currently in state custody
- Edward Norwood, aka “Polo”—33, Los Angeles
- Brandon Robertson, aka “BK”—31, Los Angeles
- Alan Ross, aka “Big Choo”—37, Los Angeles
- Darlene Sebatta—38, Los Angeles
- Ernest Sluch, aka “E-Rocc”—47, Los Angeles
- Jason Thurton, aka “CT”—35, Long Beach
- Emerie Tims, aka “Mac”—34, Long Beach
- Moses Williams, aka “Termite”—34, Los Angeles
Crime statistics indicate there have been 29 homicides within the past five years in the gang’s territory, which incorporates the neighborhood between Jefferson Avenue, Martin Luther King Avenue, Normandie Avenue, and Crenshaw Avenue. In addition, approximately 1100 robberies and 1075 assaults have been reported in the 1.5 square mile area that comprises the gang’s claimed territory. The Rollin 30s Harlem Crips is also suspected of committing a series of residential or “knock-knock” burglaries, referred to by the gang as “floccin.” Police departments in multiple counties throughout Southern California are investigating members of the Rollin 30s Harlem Crips in connection with these robberies.
Throughout the investigation and prior to today, task force members arrested 60 Rollin’ 30s gang members and associates for state violations, seized 32 firearms, and seized in excess of 10 kilograms of rock cocaine.
Nineteen of the 21 federal defendants are in custody and two are considered fugitives. Three of the federal defendants were already incarcerated on unrelated charges and are expected to be transferred to federal custody.
Many of the federal defendants face mandatory-minimum prison terms ranging from five to 10 years, depending on the quantities of narcotics alleged and individual criminal histories, and maximum penalties of 20 or 30 years in federal prison. Federal defendants arrested today will make an initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles this afternoon.
This case is the result of an investigation by members of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Task Force on Violent Gangs, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Los Angeles Police Department; the United States Attorney’s Office; and the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office.
Multiple agencies assisted the task force during this investigation and today’s operation, including the United States Secret Service; the Department of Child and Family Services; the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development-Office of Inspector General; the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department; the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; the Los Angeles County Department of Probation; and agencies that participate on the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Agency (HIDTA).
The federal defendants will be prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office. The defendants arrested for violations of California state law will be prosecuted by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.
Additional information about violent street gangs across America can be found at http://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/2011-national-gang-threat-assessment
An indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty in court.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Michael Connelly's Novel Approach To Crime In LA
Los Angeles magazine offers an interview with crime writer Michael Connelly.
When I first started writing him, I was a newspaper reporter in Los Angeles, and I made it my business to visit one police station a day. So I was seeing a high number of detectives as I was formulating this character. I would say about half of them rubbed off on me.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.lamag.com/crimeinla/2013/07/25/michael-connellys-novel-approach-to-crime-in-la
You can also read my interview with Michael Connelly from a few years back via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2010/04/killers-cops-and-crime-reporters-q-with.html
And you can read my Philadelphia Inquirer review of Michael Connelly's Nine Dragons via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/10/michael-connellys-detective-harry-bosch.html
Monday, February 25, 2013
Unfit For Duty: LAPD Officer Says Christopher Dorner Was No Superhero Or Martyr
Jack Dunphy, the pseudonym for a Los Angeles police officer and writer, offers his take on Christopher Dorner, the former LAPD officer who went on a murder spree, in The City Journal.
First and most important, Dorner’s problem was not that he was “entirely crazy”; he was evil, a term rarely heard in the discussion of his crimes. Given Hill’s academic position, it is most likely a term absent not only from his own vocabulary, but also from that of virtually everyone with whom he interacts regularly.
Second, how is it that Dorner’s online manifesto is more indicative of his mental state than the heinous acts he is believed to have committed? That he could describe his grievance with the Los Angeles Police Department with some coherence shouldn’t obscure the fact that in this now infamous document, Dorner threatened the lives of police officers and their families—and then went out and made good on the threat, murdering the daughter of the retired police captain against whom he held a grudge, as well as her fiancĂ©. Yes, Dorner had “a plan and mission”—the first act of which was to murder two people having nothing to do with his grievances.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
http://www.city-journal.org/2013/cjc0222jd.html
Labels:
Christopher Dorner,
crime,
Jack Dunphy,
LAPD,
murder,
The City Journal
Thursday, February 7, 2013
California ManHunt: SWAT Team Searching For Ex-Cop
The Los Angeles Times reports on the manhunt for a former LAPD officer cop killer.
Fatigue-clad officers scoured the mountainous terrain near Big Bear after a burning pickup truck was found that may belong to a fugitive ex-Los Angeles police officer wanted in connection with a series of shootings that have left three people dead and two wounded.
The mountain community locked down schools and closed the nearby Bear Mountain Resort as television helicopters hovered overhead, showing footage of a SWAT team walking through the woods, rifles drawn.
A law enforcement source told The Times that the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department had deployed a team to the site of the truck as a precaution. Investigators were searching for a vehicle identification number on the charred truck to see if it belonged to the suspect, Christopher Jordan Dorner, 33.
... Dorner, who was fired from the LAPD in 2009, is suspected of shooting three police officers, one of whom died, in Riverside County early Thursday.
Dorner also is suspected of killing a couple in Orange County earlier this week who were found shot in a car. One of the victims was the daughter of a former LAPD captain named in the purported manifesto.
Dorner was believed to be carrying multiple weapons, including an assault rifle.
You can read the rest of the story via the below link:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2013/02/swat-team-searching-big-bear-mountain-for-wanted-ex-cop.html
Sunday, December 16, 2012
A Brit Review Of Joseph Wambaugh's Harbor Nocturne
Alison Flood at the British newspaper the Guardian offers a Brit review of Joseph Wambaugh's novel Harbor Nocturne.
It's very hard not to fall for a novel in which a fight between Iron Man and Spider-Man ends up with the former writhing in pain on the ground, Marilyn Monroe, "aka Regis the plumber in another life", screaming and Captain America calling 911. Joseph Wambaugh is back on familiar ground with his fifth novel about the cops of the Hollywood Station, Harbour Nocturne, and lucky us.
A former LAPD detective sergeant – he quit when his fame began intruding on his work – Wambaugh reveals on his website that he ran out of his own material to mine for his fiction 30 years ago. He began collecting fresh stories from serving officers, and in the front of Harbour Nocturne, the author thanks 51 of them "for the terrific anecdotes and great cop talk". From the costumed street characters who hustle tourists in front of Grauman's Chinese theatre to the police officer who lets a Gypsy off a ticket to avoid a curse, and the child lying dead while his mother and grandmother watch television, Harbour Nocturne's stories of real-life policing are odd, tragic, hilarious – always compelling.
You can read the rest of the review via the below link:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/dec/16/harbour-nocturne-joseph-wambaugh-review
You can also read my earlier review of Harbor Nocturne, which appeared in the Washington Times via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/04/joseph-wambaughs-new-cop-novel-harbor.html
Sunday, December 2, 2012
LA Times Video Chat With Crime Writer Michael Connelly About Harry Bosch and 'The Black Box'
Carolyn Kellogg the Los Angeles Times offers a video interview with crime novelist Michael Connelly about his new crime thriller The Black Box and his LAPD character Harry Bosch.
Bestselling author Michael Connelly joined the Los Angeles Times for a video chat on the publication day of his new mystery, "The Black Box."
In the book, set in present day, LAPD Detective Harry Bosch investigates a cold case: a murder committed during the 1992 Los Angeles riots. That was the same year readers were introduced to Bosch in Connelly's first book, "The Black Echo."
In the interview, Connelly talks candidly about what it's been like writing Harry Bosch stories for 20 years. It's less about plot, he explains, than character. In recent books Bosch's daughter Maddie has become a part of his life, expanding his emotional range to include the responsibilities and worries of a parent.
You can read the rest of the piece and watch the interview via the below link:
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/jacketcopy/la-et-jc-michael-connelly-video-chat-20121127,0,1071256.story
You can also read my interview with Michael Connelly froma few years ago via the below link:
http://pauldavisoncrime.blogspot.com/2010/04/killers-cops-and-crime-reporters-q-with.html
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