Hernando Sheriff Richard Nugent offers his official goodbye
At the start of his speech, Hernando’s top cop for one more day said he would try not to get emotional. He failed. “You guys have been,” Sheriff Richard Nugent began, his voice breaking slightly. He paused for a moment and cleared his throat, ” … my whole life.” “You will be sorely missed,” he said. “But you know, nothing stays the same.”

Sheriff Richard Nugent speaks to his command staff in the Emergency Operations Center at the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office on Thursday morning. Nugent choked up but kept his composure while thanking his staff for their service.
First elected in 2000, Nugent addressed the upper ranks of Sheriff’s Office for the last time Thursday morning. About 50 people — corporals and above, as well as civilian supervisors — gathered in the training room of the Emergency Operations Center for a regularly scheduled quarterly meeting.
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Donor backs K9 unit for Danville police
The Danville Police Department now has a K9 unit on all three patrol shifts because of the generosity of a resident.
Department of Public Safety Director Larry Thomason said Lesko, a three-year-old German shepherd, started his full-time duty with the police department last week.
Lesko is nationally certified in narcotic and other police work and has been partnered with Danville police Officer Joshua Webb.
Thomason said Lesko will be used to combat drug activities, track in search situations where an offender is being pursued and help in aggressive situations.
The $10,500 donation was made in September, Thomason said. According to Thomason, the donor – who wanted to remain anonymous – explained that he wanted to give back to the community, because it had been good to him and that he wanted to assist the K9 program as past donors have.
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New York State Police to begin using Tasers
The New York State Police will now be using a less-lethal safety tool that troopers will have available when confronting violent individuals.
State Police recently completed training in the use of Taser Electronic Control Devices and earlier this month troopers began a pilot program with some troopers carrying ECDs during each shift.
This safety equipment consists of 142 Taser model X-26 ECD units obtained through funding from the New York State Trooper Foundation.
Under the pilot program, a few troopers in each patrol area will have an ECD unit to assist other troopers in their area in the event of a violent or escalating confrontation.
Extensive testing and scrutiny, medical experts and independent governmental reports have concluded ECDs are among the safer use-of-force alternatives to subdue violent individuals who could harm law enforcement officers, innocent citizens or themselves.
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DeWitt Police Officers win Fire Rescue Award
Four police officers have received this year’s Fire Rescue Award from the Red Cross, after the arson at Springfield Garden Apartments last January. Officer Chase Bolodeau spotted the flames while on routine patrol, and after calling in the alarm began evacuating apartments. Three other officers arrived–Mike Kurgan, Frank Vito and Randy Andrews, to help with the evacuations, and, in part, used one of their SUVs under a window and standing on the roof to get the leverage and height they needed for the rescue.
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Veteran pilot provides eye above Santa Clara County for sheriff’s deputies
Rob Heyde spent more than 10 years working as an engineer for computer giants Hewlett-Packard and Apple. But when manufacturing jobs began moving out of the valley, Heyde’s career path went from high-tech to high in the sky above Silicon Valley.
Heyde, 56, now spends three nights a week hovering above Santa Clara County and providing a bird’s-eye view for cops on the city streets below. Since 2002, Heyde has served as the primary pilot for the Santa Clara County sheriff’s helicopter Star One, patrolling the skies with a sheriff’s deputy from 1,500 feet.
“I never planned on flying for a living,” said Heyde, who earned a pilot’s license while a student at Oregon State University.
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Canine team works high-profile crime cases
Talk about Blue’s Clues.
In a matter of 10 days, a Suffolk police dog named Blue and his handler, Officer John Mallia, successfully discovered abandoned human remains in separate, prominent cases in Suffolk: the four still-unidentified bodies wrapped in burlap and dumped as long as two years ago off Ocean Parkway in Gilgo Beach, and Nicole Tessa, of Patchogue, who was found in the woods near her home.
Whether they’re searching for cadavers or hidden criminals, the duo takes their job seriously, always striving to train and bond and hone their craft.
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Somers Point police welcome K-9 Ozi
City Council appointed another member to the ranks of the Police Department Wednesday, Dec. 22, and this one will be working without a salary.
Ozi (pronounced Ozzie) was appointed to the K-9 Corps of the Somers Point Police Department to work alongside his handler, Officer Richard Dill.
Council President Sean T. McGuigan welcomed Ozi, a German shepherd, to the city at the meeting.
“I’m sure that if his performance is anything half of what our other dog is doing for us, it’s a great addition,” McGuigan said. “I’d like to congratulate Officer Dill in accepting that position and that responsibility. I appreciate it as a councilman as well as a citizen of this city. I look forward to Ozi’s tenure here and I think it’s an excellent addition.”
Police Chief Salvatore Armenia thanked council for the resolution and thanked two individuals who gave large donations making the purchase of a K-9 possible.
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Non-profit group helps fund County K-9 vests
A nonprofit group is donating more than 29 hundred dollars to pay for bulletproof vests for County Police dogs.
New Castle County Pride President Richard Przywara Wednesday announced his group’s giving the money because police dogs are often the first officers whose lives are at risk in dangerous situations.
