Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 15 of 15

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #11
    MW
    MW is offline
    Senior Member MW's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    25,717
    William wrote:

    This was not just a "drive-by shooting", at this hour of the morning, and upon a police officer, this was a planned assassination.
    I agree, and there is absolutely no indication that illegal aliens had anything to do with it.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts athttps://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #12
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    11,242
    Good comment, AmericanMe. I think the people who don't speak English should hire a translator at their own expense. Silly of me, as it seems that according to news reports, LA and Miami have already adopted Spanish as their official language. Haitian-Creole is a secondary language in South Florida because of all the sugar cane workers. A few school districts even have published "helping your children with homework" guides in all three languages. If you can't speak English, how are you going to help that child?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #13
    Senior Member concernedmother's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    955
    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lapl...fs-deputy.html


    Quick Links: Cuba. Current affairs. Immigration. Mexico.
    « Why you should care about what happens to 51 Mexican nationals on death row | Main | In Colombia, a painstaking effort at closure »

    Sheriff's deputy shot to death guarded highly dangerous inmates
    A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy gunned down Saturday outside his boyhood home in Cypress Park had been assigned to guard the most dangerous inmates in the county, including members of the notorious Mexican Mafia gang, authorities said Sunday.

    Los Angeles police and sheriff's officials said the prospect that Deputy Juan Abel Escalante was killed because of his work at the jail remained one of three possible motives. Investigators were also considering the possibility that neighborhood gang violence or a personal grudge were behind the killing, report Stuart Pfeifer and Tami Abdollah.

    Detectives from LAPD's robbery-homicide division were investigating the killing with the assistance of detectives from the sheriff's homicide division and the jail's gang unit. Sheriff Lee Baca said Escalante's assignment put him in touch with members of the Mexican Mafia, a gang known to direct street crime and violence from behind prison walls.




    Photo: Juan Abel Escalante, 27, a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy, was a father of three with more than two years' service in the department. He was a military veteran who a neighbor said served in Iraq.

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...tory?track=rss

    By Stuart Pfeifer and Tami Abdollah, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
    August 4, 2008
    » Discuss Article (185 Comments)

    A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy gunned down Saturday outside his boyhood home in Cypress Park had been assigned to guard the most dangerous inmates in the county, including members of the notorious Mexican Mafia gang, authorities said Sunday.

    Los Angeles police and sheriff's officials said the prospect that Deputy Juan Abel Escalante was killed because of his work at the jail remained one of three possible motives. Investigators were also considering the possibility that neighborhood gang violence or a personal grudge were behind the killing.



    Sheriff's deputy shot dead outside his... Photos: Photos: Deputy shot dead in...Video: Video: Off-duty sheriff's deputy killed in drive-by attack

    "As of right now, all of those possibilities are on the table," said Los Angeles Police Department Deputy Chief Sergio Diaz.

    Escalante, 27, was shot to death outside his parents' home about 5:40 a.m. Saturday as he left for work at the downtown Men's Central Jail. He was assigned to the "high power" unit, where dangerous inmates -- many of them violent gang members -- are housed in single-man cells, Diaz and Sheriff Lee Baca said.

    Detectives from LAPD's robbery-homicide division were investigating the killing with the assistance of detectives from the sheriff's homicide division and the jail's gang unit. Baca said Escalante's assignment put him in touch with members of the Mexican Mafia, a gang known to direct street crime and violence from behind prison walls.

    "Until we can verify anything, it has to be looked at. In a homicide of this kind, with a person who's from a neighborhood that's had some difficulty with gangs, you can't rule anything out, particularly that," Baca said.

    Witnesses said they saw a white, four-door car approach Escalante shortly before gunfire erupted. The deputy, his wife and their three children were living with his parents while preparing to purchase a home in Pomona.

    At Men's Central Jail on Sunday, deputies wore black bands across their badges and dress uniforms with black ties in remembrance of their fallen colleague.

    "They're not taking it well," said Sheriff's Sgt. Ron Bottomley, who supervised Escalante for the last year. "It's a very sober situation. We're a family. He had two families. He was a great family man, and he had a family here. Just like his family is grieving him, so are we."

    A small memorial for Escalante was set up near his parents' home at the corner of Thorpe and Aragon avenues.

    Bouquets of flowers surrounded about a dozen candles that were arranged in the shape of a cross. White roses and blue carnations were left with a simple note: "In memory of Deputy Escalante."

    Cypress Park, a blue-collar neighborhood northeast of downtown, has had a history of gang warfare. Earlier this year, a shooting outside an elementary school near Escalante's home touched off a fierce gun battle between gang members and police in nearby Glassell Park.

    Escalante had been considered a local success story because he grew up in a neighborhood plagued by gang violence and was pursuing a career in law enforcement.

    "He was this close to moving out of that neighborhood," said Bottomley, moving his thumb and index finger millimeters apart, "and getting into, for him, his dream home. It would be his first home. We're talking weeks away. He was so happy everything was going well. . . . Now are they going to have that dream home? In a matter of seconds, everything was taken away from him."

    Many of the 800 employees at Men's Central Jail have been touched by Escalante's death.

    "He was the cream of the crop, and that's what really hurts," Bottomley said, his eyes red and tearing up. "You've got three kids that are going to have to grow up without a dad.

    "He was close to everybody. He was one of those outstanding guys that there wasn't a person in the jail that [could] say anything bad about him. He was a good, fair man, an outstanding deputy. He was fair with the inmates but firm. If I gave him orders to do something, he was saying, 'Yes, sir' before I could finish it."

    Escalante, an Army reservist, was a 2 1/2 -year department veteran. Most deputies for their first assignments work in county jails for several years before they are transferred to patrol duties.

    "We always try to be prepared for everything, but one thing we cannot be prepared for is when you lose somebody," Bottomley said. "And through all of it, you have to stay professional and do your job. But you know, we're all human. In some aspects we have to be more than human. . . . You still have to come in the next day and do your job, and a part of you has been torn away."

    One sheriff's deputy, who asked not to be identified because he had not been given authorization to speak to the media, said guards at Los Angeles County jails often confront fear that inmates may try to harm them outside jail walls.

    "You never talk about your family, where you live, your hobbies," the deputy said. "Most guys don't wear wedding rings. You don't want to give the bad guys ammo to be able to say, 'I know the name of your wife, your children.' "

    It wouldn't be difficult for gang members or former inmates to follow deputies home from Men's Central Jail, the deputy said.

    "They know where you work. They could just post up on the driveway and wait for you to leave," he said.
    <div>"True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else."
    - Clarence Darrow</div>

  4. #14
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    65,443
    Two Suspects Arrested in Murder of Sheriff's Deputy


    Maya Sanchez, KTLA News

    December 14, 2008

    LOS ANGELES -- 'Even if you just heard the shots. I heard them. You know, if I could have ran out there 5 minutes earlier I would have. But I couldn't and I know somebody saw. I know somebody heard.'

    It was that impassioned plea for information from Celeste Escalante that investigators say helped them crack her husband's murder.

    L.A. County Sheriff's Deputy Juan Abel Escalante was gunned down Aug. 2, outside his parents Cypress Park home where he lived with his family. It happened in the pre-dawn hours, as the deputy headed to work at the Men's Central Jail, where he was a jailer.

    This weekend, Celeste Escalante seemed calmer, standing quietly as L.A.P.D. officials announced two arrests.

    'Information gathered from numerous sources formed the basis for search warrants and probable cause arrest warrants. Detectives obtained those warrants and served them yesterday Friday, Dec. 12, late in the afternoon,' said Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton.

    Two suspects -- Guillermo Hernandez, 20, and Carlos Velasquez, 24 -- were arrested and booked on murder charges. They are being held without bail.

    Although investigators wouldn't comment further, the Los Angeles Police Protective League, an advocacy group, says the suspects are gang members.

    Escalante was shot at close range in the head, a type of slaying sometimes seen in gang cases. It was not revealed whether the assailants knew he was a deputy because he was in plain clothes.

    Detectives have been looking more closely into gang activity in the neighborhood where the 27-year-old deputy grew up and lived.

    They were especially interested in the long-running feud between the notorious Avenues Gang and rival Cypress Park gang, whose territory includes the northeast Los Angeles neighborhood where Escalante was killed.

    After the shooting, the LAPD flooded the streets of northeast L.A. with undercover detectives with hopes of gaining street intelligence about the slaying. They were hoping to make inroads into the Avenues gang, which for generations has been a source of crime in the area.

    Also, police now say the suspects may not have acted alone. Investigators are searching for more suspects who may have been involved in the murder of Escalante.

    'We are still seeking additional information and I would encourage anybody who has that information that might contribute to this case to come forward with it,' said Chief Bratton.

    Officials hope the allure of money -- the $95,000 reward -- will yield more arrests.

    Detectives are promising to elaborate more next week on the case. For now, Escalante's family is likely feeling some relief, that the justice system their loved one believed in, is indeed working.

    www.ktla.com
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  5. #15
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    9,455
    We have gang bangers murdering innocent civilians, police officers and anyone else they can point a gun at and yet Tony Vilareconquisa and his puppet, police Chief Bratton, refuse to repeal Special Order 40 and or support Jamiel's Law!

    Both of these traitors, through their inaction and support of sanctuary policies, have proven to be a danger to the citizens of Los Angeles and should be removed from office! Their policies amount to the aiding and abetting the furtherance of crimes committed by these gang bangers!

    LA IS OUT OF CONTROL WITH GANGS AND THESE TRAITORS ARE DOING NOTHING!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •