Oklahoma State Trooper Pulls Over Ambulance with Patient Inside and Scuffles with Paramedic

June 17th, 2009

Ambulance Pullover Defended

By The Associated Press

June 16, 2009

Oklahoma City — An Oklahoma state trooper who pulled over an ambulance with a patient inside and then scuffled with a paramedic had every right to make the stop because the vehicle did not have its emergency lights and sirens on, an attorney said Monday.

Trooper Daniel Martin, center, argues with a paramedic after he stopped the ambulance.
Trooper Daniel Martin, center, argues with a paramedic after he stopped the ambulance.

Gary James, an attorney for Trooper Daniel Martin, also said that the trooper is not the “ogre” he has been made out to be.

Interest in the May 24 incident has soared since authorities released video over the weekend that was taken by the dashboard camera in Martin’s patrol car. The video shows paramedic Maurice White Jr. repeatedly telling Martin he has a patient in the back and wants to go to the hospital.

James said Martin had a legal right to pull over the ambulance for failing to yield the right of way when the patrol unit tried to pass it moments earlier. He also said White escalated the situation by challenging the trooper.

Another trooper arrived, and the ambulance was eventually allowed to continue to a hospital, where the patient was treated and later released.

The local district attorney declined to file charges against either Martin or White. Martin has been placed on paid leave during the Oklahoma Highway Patrol’s internal investigation.

Associated Press. “Ambulance Pullover Defended.” The Denver Post. 16 Jun. 2009. <http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_12597418 >

Mountain Lion vs. Three Toy Chihuahuas

June 16th, 2009

Sometimes I read newspaper articles that just make me want to say, “Hmmm…”

Who knew toy chihuahuas were so fierce?

Mountain Lion Killed after Chihuahua Showdown

Desert Sun Wire Service

June 15, 2009

A mountain lion that got inside a family’s garage and squared off with three chihuahuas was shot and killed by a game warden as he tried to prod the animal into leaving the property, authorities said today.

“It became a public safety issue,” said Kyle Orr, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish & Game. “Wardens are trained for these situations and make decisions on a case-by-case basis. This animal acted aggressively and needed to be dispatched.”

The encounter with the cougar was reported Saturday morning at a home on San Ignacio Road in Sage, east of Temecula, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

Amalee Spray, 23, said she was sleeping when she heard her three toy chihuahuas — 2-year-old Lina, and one-year-old pups Abby and Gita — barking outside around 9 a.m.

She said the dogs did not respond when she called them, so she went out to investigate — and saw the mountain lion in her garage, backed into a corner by the feisty chihuahuas.

“This thing was huge,” Spray said Sunday. “Really big. Full grown.”

The young mother, who is 5-foot-3, said the female cougar would have come up to her waist if she’d gone anywhere near it.

Lina, Abby and Gita refused to back off and continued barking and growling at the big cat, keeping it occupied, even after sheriff’s deputies arrived.

“When they saw the dogs they said, ‘These little things?’ When they saw the mountain lion their jaws dropped,” Spray said. “They radioed, ‘This is a full-size mountain lion and it is not happy to see us.’”

The animal became tired and stretched out in the garage, according to Spray.

She said after nearly 45 minutes, a Fish and Game warden arrived.

According to Orr, the officer tried to “haze” the cougar, shooting it several times with rubber bullets in an attempt to dislodge it from the garage and scare it away from the immediate area.

“The mountain lion exited the garage and began to move away from the home, but turned and crouched and advanced on the warden,” Orr said.

He said the officer blasted the cougar with a shotgun, killing it on the spot.

Orr did not comment on whether there was any consideration given to trying to tranquilize the animal.

A freelance news photographer attempted to speak with the officer moments after the shooting, but the warden left the scene without stopping, leading to some uncertainty, initially, about what had occurred. Orr said the warden took the animal with him and it will be disposed of later.

Spray said none of her dogs were hurt in the encounter. She said it was only the second time since moving to the remote location with her husband more than six years ago that she had seen a mountain lion.

“Mountain Lion Killed after Chihuahua Showdown.” The Desert Sun (Palm Springs, California). 15 Jun. 2009. <http://www.mydesert.com/article/20090615/NEWS10/90615015/-1/RSS01>

Cop Runs Over Woman Sunbathing on Florida Beach

June 13th, 2009

One thing I never miss seeing on the beach is a woman sunbathing. ;-)

Cop Runs Over Woman Sunbathing on Florida Beach

Associated Press

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Jacksonville Beach, Florida — A rookie police officer was suspended for seven days for running over a woman sunbathing on a north Florida beach.

An internal affairs investigation released Wednesday by the Jacksonville Beach Police Department concluded that Officer Lewis Keller was negligent and at fault for the May 1 accident.

Keller was making a U-turn in his sport utility vehicle when he rolled over 41-year-old Anne Marie Giffin of Jacksonville. Investigators said Keller and another man lifted the SUV off Giffin while other people pulled her out.

Giffin was treated for a broken pelvis and ribs, along with head and spinal injuries.

Keller told investigators he didn’t see Giffin lying in the sand, but Chief Bruce Thomason concluded that Keller wasn’t driving safely.

Associated Press. “Cop Runs Over Woman Sunbathing on Florida Beach.” Fox News. 11 Jun. 2009. <http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,525806,00.html>

One Less ’69 Pontiac Firebird

June 12th, 2009

It breaks my heart just reading about this.

Classic Car Crushed by Firetruck outside Evergreen
Treasure gone in seconds flat

By Kevin Vaughan, The Denver Post

June 11, 2009

When Shelbi Vickery went out to her father’s driveway outside Evergreen, the vintage car could barely be seen.
When Shelbi Vickery went out to her father’s driveway outside Evergreen, the vintage car could barely be seen.

Driving home, fighting off the shock, Bill Vickery tried to imagine what his sweet 1969 Pontiac Firebird would look like with a 48,000-pound firetruck sitting on top of it.

Then he pulled into the driveway next to his mountainside home outside Evergreen, and it looked just about exactly as he imagined it would.

Bent. Twisted. Crumpled.

“It’s gone everywhere with me since I was 16,” Vickery said Wednesday afternoon, staring at the remains of his pride and joy. “It’s basically spent two-thirds of my life with me.”

The relationship, however, is over.

The car, with its chrome Cragar wheels and vinyl top, was parked in exactly the wrong place at exactly the wrong time, and now, after providing 40 years of automotive pleasure, it’s headed for the scrap heap.

Bill Vickery and his daughter, Shelbi, and granddaughter Dominique examine the wreckage of his 1969 Firebird after an Evergreen firetruck crushed it. The wheels, engine and transmission survived, but not much else.
Bill Vickery and his daughter, Shelbi, and granddaughter Dominique examine the wreckage of his 1969 Firebird after an Evergreen firetruck crushed it. The wheels, engine and transmission survived, but not much else.

“It’s not fixable,” Vickery said, a sense of resignation in his voice. “It’s gone. This . . . is . . . gone.”

The trouble started around 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

Vickery, a low-voltage electrician, was in Vail, working on a new resort hotel. His daughter, Shelbi, was at home, eating lunch and watching television with her own two young daughters, when she heard a noise outside, as if a trash truck hit a bump in the road. She didn’t think much of it at first.

But then she looked out the window and saw a neighbor running down the driveway. She walked out of the family’s home just in time to see a firefighter climbing out of a water truck that was sitting askew in the driveway.

“Are you OK?” she asked the firefighter. He was.

In that first confusing moment, she couldn’t quite comprehend what had happened. And then she realized.

The truck, driven by an Evergreen Fire Rescue firefighter, had been on the road up the hill from the family’s home when something went wrong. Apparently moving to the right on the narrow paved road to make room for a truck heading in the other direction, the driver dropped a tire off the asphalt.

With no shoulder to support the rig, it tumbled down the hill and into the Vickery family’s driveway. The tanker toppled trees and clobbered a camper before landing, right-side-up, atop the Firebird and a Honda all-terrain vehicle. The truck also hit a one-car detached garage, inflicting a still-undetermined amount of damage to it.

The firefighter, Michael Weege, 45, was transported to a hospital, where he was checked out and released.

Colorado State Trooper Gilbert Mares said a decision about citing Weege in the accident is pending. He disputed initial reports suggesting that the pavement on the road gave way.

“The road was not determined to be a contributing factor (in the crash),” Mares said.

In the meantime, Shelbi spent several minutes trying to get her father on the phone before finally reaching him.

“Dad,” she told him, “you need to stay calm, but something really bad happened.”

She spent several minutes talking him through the incident. His response told her that he was stunned: “Huh. OK. I’m on my way home.”

During the drive, all Vickery could think about was what he would find when he got home.

Vickery was 16, a student at Golden High School, when he bought the Firebird from its original owner. It was 1980, and near as he can recall, he paid about $1,200 for the ride.

“I stole it,” he said.

He drove it and tinkered with it and eventually went through every part of the car. He shelled out $12,000 on machine work and parts for the 350-cubic-inch engine. By 1985, he had given it new livery — bright lime green with gold metallic flakes.

He cruised with it on Sundays and showed it in car shows and ran it at Bandimere Speedway. He spent what he now estimates to be somewhere between $30,000 and $40,000 restoring it. He vowed to only sell it if he could buy a 1967 Corvette.

“You just don’t see these ’69 Firebirds. There’s not too many of them left,” he said.

Wednesday afternoon, Vickery still struggled to digest what had happened. Listing the parts that were salvageable was easier than listing the things that were broken: The chrome wheels. The left-front fender and driver’s door and window. The grille and headlights. The P-O-N-T-I-A-C between the tail lights. The rear bumper. The engine and transmission.

The rest of it was crushed. Even the back seat and the dashboard showed the effects of the crash.

Vickery said fire officials have told him they will cover everything. But even at that, the car can’t be repaired.

“The only way to salvage it is to replace it,” said Vickery, who estimated the car was worth $30,000 to $40,000, not accounting for the sentimental value.

So, will he rebuild? Will he take the parts he can salvage, find another Firebird, and put together a new car?

Maybe he will.

Or maybe he’ll find that ’67 Corvette — and years of new memories.

Vaughan, Kevin. “Classic Car Crushed by Firetruck outside Evergreen.” The Denver Post. 11 Jun. 2009. <http://www.denverpost.com/ci_12565202>

It’s Expensive to Park in Boston!

June 12th, 2009

Just for comparison, the Median Sales Price for a home here in Beaumont, California 92223 was $201,494 for the period from March 2009 to May 2009 (source). The Average Price per Square Foot was $94.

In Desert Center, California 92239 the Median Sales Price for the same period was $60,000 (source). You could buy five houses in Desert Center for the price of the Boston parking space.

$300,000 Price Sets Record — For Parking

By Megan Woolhouse, Globe Staff

June 11, 2009

Housing prices may be down, but the cost of a coveted parking space is up. Way up.

An unidentified buyer yesterday paid $300,000 for a private parking space in the Back Bay, making it the most expensive parking space in Boston, according to Listing Information Network, which tracks the city’s real estate market.

Debra Sordillo, the Coldwell sales agent who brokered the deal, said several residents at 48 Commonwealth Ave. engaged in a bidding war for the space, driving the asking price of $250,000 up to the record-breaking $300,000. The winning bidder did not want to be identified, she said.

The price is more than what many people pay for a house, but Sordillo said prime parking spaces near the Public Garden are in short supply.

“There’s only so many parking spaces in the city,” said Sordillo. “And in this part, there’s very few.”
In the last year, parking spaces in the Back Bay and Beacon Hill have fetched an average selling price of $134,000, Listing Information Network said. A year earlier, the average cost of a parking spot in those areas was $127,000. The number of parking space sales has also increased in the last two years, from 18 in 2007 to 26 last year.

The owners who sold yesterday’s record-breaking parking space live in the historic brownstone at 48 Commonwealth, a multi-unit building prominently located on the corner of Commonwealth Avenue and Berkeley Street. Sordillo said they are also attempting to sell their posh two-bedroom unit with direct elevator access. The $2.5 million price includes a parking space in the building’s underground garage.

The $300,000 space came with few amenities other than the prime location; it is outdoors and uncovered.

The previous record for an open-air parking space was set in 2006, when a buyer paid $250,000 for a space behind 31-33 Commonwealth Ave.

Woolhouse, Megan. “$300,000 Price Sets Record — For Parking.” The Boston Globe. 11 Jun. 2009. <http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2009/06/11/300000_price_sets_record___for_parking/>

Police Kill “Threatening” Miniature Dachshund

June 12th, 2009

“[The cop] was surprised by a growling dog running through the yard directly at him from the rear, leaving him with just seconds to consider his options.”

The options, according to the chief: running to the squad car, distracting the dog or using pepper spray, a baton or firearm.

“Shooting a dog which is actively presenting a threat to an officer is within the department’s policy.”
— Police Chief Philip Broadfoot

Danville Police Shoot, Kill Growling Miniature Dachshund

June 11, 2009

Danville — Danville’s police chief says one of his officers acted properly by shooting and killing an 11-year-old miniature dachshund that ran at him while growling.

Killer, who died Monday night after being shot once, was described as “just a little house dog.”
Killer, who died Monday night after being shot once, was described as “just a little house dog.”

Neighbors said Killer, who died Monday night after being shot once, was a sweet, mild-mannered dog.

“He just kind of walked up and down the neighborhood and didn’t bother anybody,” said Jenine Edmunds, who lives on the same cul-de-sac as Killer’s owners, Tawaiin Harper and his family. “He was just a little house dog.”

Police Chief Philip Broadfoot declined to name the officer who shot and killed the dog while serving two outstanding warrants to a neighbor.

As the officer returned to his car, “he was surprised by a growling dog running through the yard directly at him from the rear, leaving him with just seconds to consider his options,” according to the a release from Broadfoot.

The options, according to the chief: running to the squad car, distracting the dog or using pepper spray, a baton or firearm.

Broadfoot said the dog lunged at the officer and attacked him.

“Shooting a dog which is actively presenting a threat to an officer is within the department’s policy,” according to the release.

Harper said he drove home from work to try to comfort his wife and two children after they called to say Killer had been shot to death by the officer.

The officer’s supervisor, a lieutenant, “was very, very remorseful,” Harper said. “He kept apologizing. And he said, ‘I know apologizing can’t bring the dog back, but I just don’t know what to say.’ ”

Harper said friends and neighbors have asked if the family will get another dog.

“You can’t replace Killer. He’s one of a kind. I’m still trying to soak it in because the dog had been with us so long. He was a family member. They took a family member away.”

— Media General News Service

“Danville police shoot, kill growling miniature dachshund.” Richmond Times-Dispatch. 11 Jun. 2009. <http://www.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/state_regional/article/DOGGAT11_20090611-071201/273228/>

Weiner Dog Trivia

Dachshunds can be standard or miniature size. Standards range from 16-32 pounds, while Miniatures weigh 11 pounds and under.
— From the “Dachshund” page on the American Kennel Club website.

Both Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy, from Hanna-Barbera cartoons are weiner dogs.

The name Dachshund is German and literally means “badger dog.”

Racism is Alive and Well in America

May 31st, 2009

I could not believe this when I read it. This has to be one of the most racist things I’ve read in a long time.

The “Empowerment Experiment”? Would white people pledging to avoid black-owned stores and only buy from other white people be considered empowerment? Or would it be considered racist?

‘Buy Black’ Becomes Movement
One-Year Pledge: A couple’s experiment to patronize only black-owned businesses catches on.

By Errin Haines, The Associated Press

Saturday, May 30, 2009

It’s been two months since 2-year-old Cori pulled the gold stud from her left earlobe, and the piercing is threatening to close as her mother, Maggie Anderson, hunts for a replacement.

It’s not that the earring was all that rare — but finding the right store has become a quest of Quixotic proportions.

Maggie and John Anderson, of Chicago, vowed four months ago that for one year, they would try to patronize only black-owned businesses. The “Empowerment Experiment” is the reason John had to suffer for hours with a stomach ache and Maggie no longer gets that brand-name lather when she washes her hair. A grocery trip is a 14-mile odyssey.

Maggie Anderson, right, talking with Michael Hill, has begun a movement with her husband John in which people pledge to only patronize black-owned businesses for one year.
Maggie Anderson, right, talking with Michael Hill, has begun a movement with her husband John in which people pledge to only patronize black-owned businesses for one year.

“We kind of enjoy the sacrifice because we get to make the point … but I am going without stuff and I am frustrated on a daily basis,” Maggie Anderson said.

So far, the Andersons have spent hundreds of dollars with black businesses, from grocery stores to dry cleaners. But the couple still hasn’t found a mortgage lender, home security system vendor or toy store. Nonetheless, they’re hoping to expand the endeavor beyond their Chicago home.

Plans are under way to track spending among supporters nationwide and build a national database of quality black businesses. The first affiliate chapter has been launched in Atlanta, and the couple has established a foundation to raise funds for black businesses and an annual convention.

Now, the Andersons are following up with 4,000 people who signed up for the experiment on their Web site to gauge their commitment and set up online accounts to track their spending. Hundreds have also joined the experiment’s Facebook page, Maggie Anderson said.

There are 1 million black businesses in the United States accounting for more than $100 billion in annual sales, according to the National Black Chamber of Commerce. The latest U.S. Census numbers report that blacks have more than $800 billion in expendable income each year.

The Andersons track their spending on their Web site and estimate about 55 percent of their monthly spending is with black businesses for things like day care, groceries, car maintenance and home improvements.

One of the businesses highlighted by the Empowerment Experiment is Brenda Brown’s Atlanta wine boutique, a shop with a growing black clientele. She said the project can help overcome the problems many black consumers lament.

“When we were a community of black folks who could not go to the white stores, our community of black stores flourished,” Brown said. “When we were given the opportunity to go into the white store, it was like nothing else mattered anymore and we wanted to go to the white store, regardless of what the black store provided. We could have the same or better products if we supported (black businesses) in the same way.”

Haines, Errin. “‘Buy Black’ Becomes Movement.” Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA). 20 May 2009.
<http://www.pe.com/business/local/stories/PE_Biz_S_buyingblack31.45022d2.html>

California Banning Big Screen TVs?

May 30th, 2009

More government knows best…

The state of California, in it’s endless quest to micromanage peoples’ lives, is now considering banning big-screen TVs.

State Considers Ban on Big Screen TVs

By Brian Joseph, Sacramento Correspondent

March 23, 2009

In their continuing quest to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, state regulators have uncovered a new villain in the war on global warming: your big screen TV

Couch potatoes, beware.

The California Energy Commission is considering a proposal that would ban California retailers from selling all but the most energy-efficient televisions. Critics say the news standards could take 25 percent of televisions off the market — most of them 40 inches or larger.

“The larger the television, the more at risk it is of being banned unnecessarily in California,” said Douglas Johnson, senior director of technology police for the Consumer Electronics Association.

Association officials say the standards are not only unnecessary –  because the federal government already regulates energy efficiency through the voluntary Energy Star program — but also ill-timed. The last thing our economy needs now is products taken off the market, they say.

Furthermore, they say that with a weak economy, consumers are going out less and watching TV more.

“This is really about regulating entertainment, not energy use,” Johnson said.

Poppycock, says the commission.

Affordable big screen TVs will still be available under the new standards, spokesman Adam Gottlieb said. In fact, he said the regulations will save you money.

The commission calculates that if you buy televisions meeting the proposed standards it’ll cut your annual energy use by — drum roll, please — $18 to $30 per television per year.

“I don’t know anyone who doesn’t like to save money,” Gottlieb said.

Gottlieb said the commission is exploring the regulations to reduce the strain on the energy grid and to avoid building new power plants.

Televisions are the fastest growing consumer appliance in California. Californians are buying bigger TVs, and more of them. If something doesn’t happen, televisions are going to devour a bigger and bigger piece of the state’s power grid, which means we’ll need more power plants. More power plants mean more greenhouse gas emissions.

“Consumers aren’t aware of the hidden cost of powering these things,” Gottlieb said.

Gottlieb insisted that the regulations wouldn’t eliminate big screens from California stores. But the commission’s own draft report says TV energy use is “proportional to the screen size.” And there’s no doubt the regulations will limit energy use.

So if you’re in the market for big screen TV, now might be the time to buy. The regulations are expected to be approved this summer.

Want to weigh in? Email the Energy Commission with your comments at appliances@energy.state.ca.us.

Joseph, Brian. “State Considers Ban on Big Screen TVs.” Orange County Register. 23 Mar. 2009.
<http://taxdollars.freedomblogging.com/2009/03/23/state-considers-ban-on-big-screen-tvs/12993/>

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I’m here!

May 23rd, 2009

I finally took the plunge and started a blog. Now the big question is: Will I update it fairly regularly or will in gather dust in some obscure corner of the Internet?

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