Positive LEO

We focus on the positive in Law Enforcement

Police officers walk to save on gas

Thanks to MichiganLiberal.com for pointing out the latest in what seems to be a trend for police departments facing high fuel bills — walking.

According to the Jackson Citizen Patrol, police there will walk or bike at least one hour per day as part of an effort to bring down spending on fuel.

Earlier this year the city of Manistee assigned all officers to two hours of foot patrol each day, in hopes of reducing department fuel consumption by 20 percent.

“About 90 years ago we started on horse patrols,” said Michael Moorman, president of the Michigan State Police Troopers Association, the union that represents state troopers. “Because of the distances we have to travel, foot patrols are just not feasible for the state police.”

Increasing foot patrols may be a sensible option for larger municipalities that have defined downtown areas — places like Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Royal Oak, Moorman said. It won’t be an option, however, in cities that have evolved out of urban sprawl, he added — places like Livonia, Farmington Hills, and Southfield.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , | No Comments Yet

State trooper from area to appear on TV show

Steven Oliver, a Denton County resident and Texas Department of Public Safety trooper, is set to be featured on Crisis Point, a new series on TruTV — formerly CourtTV.

This episode of the series will be broadcast locally at 10 p.m. Sunday.

Oliver will appear in a segment called “Pursuit Ends With Shots Fired,” which focuses on his involvement in a high-speed pursuit that ended in a standoff with an armed suspect.

For more information, visit www.trutv.com .

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , , | No Comments Yet

Loads of overtime leave sheriff’s deputies drained

SANTA CRUZ — Sheriff’s deputies are working more and making more, a lot more — tens of thousands of dollars in overtime each year for dozens of employees.

But money isn’t necessarily buying happiness at the county’s top law-enforcement agency, where staffing shortages now mean mandatory overtime shifts and deputies have begun to complain of fatigue and worse.

Read entire story here.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , | No Comments Yet

New troopers graduate from NJ State Police academy

TOMS RIVER — Sttorney General Anne Milgram and State Police Superintendent Col. Joseph R. Fuentes today presented 161 badges to New Jersey’s newest state troopers during graduation ceremonies at the Rittacco Center.

“Today you are joining an organization with a rich history of serving the public, upholding the rule of law and showing great valor in the service of protecting communities,” Milgram told the graduating troopers. “As a member of the New Jersey State Police, you will confront difficult, sometimes dangerous challenges — the kind of challenges that remind us that being a trooper is not a job, but rather a calling.”

Read entire story here.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , , | No Comments Yet

When “pros” drink, these cops drive

It’s 1 a.m., and George Anderson has been roused from bed by a phone call asking him to go to work.

HOWARD LIPIN / Union-Tribune
Chappie Hunter, a driver for Safe Ride Solutions, held the door for Amanda Barger as she, Kiersten Withrow and their husbands left the Bargers’ Scripps Ranch home for the final round of the U.S. Open.

Not for his day job as a police sergeant for the San Diego Unified School District, but for his other gig, as a chauffeur of sorts.

Anderson is one of several local cops who moonlight for Safe Ride Solutions, a members-only, DUI-prevention car service that puts off-duty or retired police officers in the driver’s seat.

Read entire story here.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , | No Comments Yet

Cops: “Hypermiling” often risky, illegal

(CBS/AP)

Police and automotive experts say over-the-top attempts by some drivers to boost their gas mileage could be endangering them and other motorists.

The AAA and Connecticut State Police are warning against extreme measures in “hypermiling,” a practice in which unusual techniques are used to boost vehicles’ mileage.

They include rolling through stop signs to avoid braking, turning off a car’s engine or shifting into neutral to coast down hills, over-inflating tires to decrease rolling resistance against pavement, and other techniques.

One action that authorities say is particularly dangerous is called “drafting,” tailgating big rigs in hopes of cutting wind resistance and being pulled along in a truck’s wake.

“Every one of them is illegal,” Connecticut State Police spokesman Trooper William Tate said of the “hypermiling” techniques.

“But more importantly, they’re extremely dangerous. Every one of them is the cause of accidents,” he said.

Most accidents on secondary roads are caused by drivers who don’t obey traffic signals, such as stop signs or traffic lights, Tate said. Most highway crashes are caused by tailgating and unsafe lane changes, which are often related, he said.

“Following a tractor-trailer too closely, you don’t have the ability to see beyond it as you would when following a passenger vehicle,” Tate said. “You’re risking your life, and the lives of motorists behind you.”

On The Early Show last month, leading hypermiling advocate Wayne Gerdes extolled its virtues to, among others, CBS News correspondent Bianca Solorzano.

He stressed to Solorzano Monday that rolling through stop signs and driving right behind big rigs are NOT part of his way of hypermiling.

“What we recommend,” he says, “is staying in the right hand lane, following the speed limits and, as cars go around you, they create a low pressure zone across the entire roadway, and that’s called the traffic-side draft. And it does give you another 15 to 20 second boost as the lower pressure area you’re coming through helps you along.”

At times, says Solorzano, Gerdes does shut off his engine to coast downhill, but on his Web site, CleanMPG.com, he teaches that it’s illegal in certain places. And he emphasizes that it’s an advanced technique that needs to be practiced in a remote area, and that law enforcement officials continue to insist that shutting off your engine is a dangerous practice.

Police have been told to be on the lookout for hypermilers, Solorzano adds.

Fran Mayko, a spokeswoman for AAA Connecticut Motor Club, says “hypermiling” has been around for a while, but that it has drawn more attention as gas prices have jumped and drivers are seeking ways to boost their mileage.

This is the first time AAA has issued a warning about it, she said.

“These folks who are extremists, apparently they get 70, 80, 90 miles a gallon,” she said.

She said drivers should stick to tried-and-true mileage boosters: keeping up with routine maintenance, ensuring tires are properly inflated, keeping unnecessary weight out of the car and driving at the posted speed limit.

According to the U.S. Department of Energy, gas mileage typically decreases rapidly at speeds above 60 mph. Every 5 mph that a driver goes above 60 mph is like paying an additional 30 cents per gallon of gas, according to the government.
AAA said the average price on Saturday for regular unleaded gas nationwide was $4.07 per gallon, up $1.10 from the same time last year.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , , | No Comments Yet

State Trooper out of hospital following rollover

A New York State Trooper is out of the hospital Sunday evening following a rollover accident in his State Police SUV on the New York State Thruway Saturday night.

The New York State Police say Trooper Timothy Brennan was chasing a motorcycle last night near the Manchester exit. Both the trooper and motorcyclist lost control the suspect then ditched his bike and ran away.

Police are still looking for motorcyclist. Firefighters tell us they used the Jaws of Life to get Brennan out of his car. It took the Manchester Fire Department about 30 minutes to extricate him. Shortsville Ambulance transported him to Strong Hospital for contusions and cuts to his head.

He was released Sunday morning.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , | No Comments Yet

Trooper recovering at home after motor accident

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) – An Indiana State Trooper is recovering at home after he was hit while helping a motorist on the side of I-465.

“It’s fortunate that no one was seriously injured,” Indiana State Police Trooper Justin Hobbs said.

Read entire story here.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , , , | No Comments Yet

Caught with hand on phone? No excuses

I cannot believe they’re outlawing talking on the phone BUT texting is still legal till January ‘09! That’s ten times worse than talking on the phone. And who are they kidding by allowing hands free phone use?  It’s no less safe. People are still trying to do two things at once.

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The new hands-free cell phone law may force California drivers to change their behavior more than any new road rule since seat belts became mandatory two decades ago.

But don’t expect to see a major crackdown by police and the Highway Patrol Tuesday when the new law takes effect. Cops from San Jose to Marin tell the Mercury News they don’t plan to saturate city streets and highways to hunt for cell phone abusers.

Read entire article here.

June 30, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , , | No Comments Yet

State Trooper aids stork

A state trooper was conducting a routine traffic stop on Saturday night when he found himself helping deliver a baby.

Trooper J.L. Thorpe made the stop at N.C. Highway 42 and N.C. Highway 50, near the Wake-Johnston county line, around 10 p.m.

A couple driving by stopped and waved him over. The woman’s water had broken 10 minutes earlier, and she knew the baby was on its way, Thorpe said.

Three minutes later, Thorpe said, he was holding a baby girl.

The baby was two weeks early, but she and her mother are doing fine at WakeMed, Thorpe said.

June 29, 2008 Posted by PositiveLeo | Uncategorized | , , | No Comments Yet