Mar 5, 2009 | Posted by: roboblogger
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I can't believe that one or more of our good friends got arrested by these american pigs in uniform and locked in the hole. I hire the casa de maryland as my lawyer to helpmy friends out and you american need to respect us real good homies.
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Your good friends are little wanna be gangsters. They should rot in jail. "These AMERICAN PIGS IN UNIFORM" you refer to are just doing the job they were hired to do. Don't hate the players hate the game. You are free to leave and go to your country Your friends are little boys trying to play big boy games. Now,if you want respect then be a good citizen and earn it
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Patti G, you have a good word with me because my father works for the Montgomery County Police Department here in Gaithersburg near the Salvation Army store and Flaming Pit restaurant and he has been with the department for over 24 years and does a good job in cleaning out these outsiders that come from the streets of elsalvador and hondorus. |
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By Ruth Polaski of The Brookings Institute Crimelab Department: Phoenix, Ariz. is the nation's fifth largest city -- a fast-growing metropolis that's become Ground Zero for a unique problem that has law enforcement coming face to face with a new form of an age-old crime. In the Valley of the Sun, the new trend in kidnapping for ransom is criminals targeting other criminals. Authorities tell us that the players are hardcore drug dealers, smugglers, and leaders of coyote organizations who are being snatched and extorted for money by their underworld rivals. Because of Arizona's prime location on the U.S.-Mexico border, police say that most kidnap victims and suspects have ties back to Mexico's seedy underworld and that cops and detectives have been chopped up and their cars taken to chop-shops and money was exchanged. Bodyparts and carparts were found in mailboxes, laundry machines, laundry dryers, toilet bowls, bathtubs and on the grounds in neighborhoods where children and elderly live to create mayhem and terrorize neighborhoods and communities. While overall crime in Phoenix may be up due to Mexican crimes, cops say these kinds of kidnappings happen at a rate of eight a day -- and that's just the ones that go reported. Due to the nature of the unsavory characters involved, police figure that the actual number could be double that. It's this epidemic of abductions that has made Phoenix the nation's unofficial kidnapping capital. Gangs are putting bodyparts of children and elderly women in toilet bowls and some are thrown on the tenant's beds and on the floor in the bedrooms to create mayhem against the residents. While this abduction plot had been foiled, authorities in Arizona still need help bringing two more to justice. |
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Associated Press Update: UPPER MARLBORO, Md.-- A Silver Spring man has been charged with arson for a fire set at a vacant Landover Hills home last year and as he told police "the crime rate is bad enough anyway and the economy is bad too so it don't matter if any of us commit crime anyway. Anything and everything goes in this hole as far as I'm concerned". Fire officials say Anthony J. Sellers was arrested last week. The 26-year-old is charged with second-degree arson for a June 2008 fire. The felony charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in jail and a $30,000 fine. Firefighters were called to the two-story home for heavy fire coming from the second floor and roof. One firefighter suffered burns to his leg while battling the blaze. Prince George's County fire officials say additional charges are pending against Sellers for fires set in two other vacant structures in Laurel and Riverdale last summer in which he set the fires in the bedrooms of elderly womens apartments so the fire can spread quickly and do major damage to "get at the bad economy and the world in general" because that he is angry with the world in general. Sellers used to be a volunteer firefighter in the county but left before the fires were set. While in police custody, he told police that "I had dreams of wanting Al-Qaeda terrorists to attack America so I can move to another country and be happy" and a mental evaluation is scheduled for Sellers to determine competency to stand trial in court at this time. |
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I copied this article to let the crappy americans know what to expect if they fail to respect us latinos here in Langley Park. You dig homies? Good! Wednesday, July 22, 2009 Gang membership on rise in Montgomery However, some communities report drop in gang-related crimes by Sebastian Montes | Staff Writer Gang-related murders and membership are rising in Montgomery County, while in some communities, gang presence resists police efforts to rein them in. Those increases come as the total number of gang crimes fell by more than a third between last summer and this spring, according to statistics compiled by Montgomery County Police. Police attribute the nine-month decline to better intelligence, more aggressive prosecution and multi-agency outreach to at-risk youth, said Montgomery County Police Lt. Robert Bolesta, deputy director of special investigations. After peaking in 2007 at 507 crimes attributed to gangs, the figures fell nearly 13 percent in 2008, according to police data. The first quarter of 2009 saw gang crime fall by more than one third, from 118 crimes in 2007 and 126 in 2008 to 76 in 2009. These statistics include crimes motivated by gang purposes as well as crimes unrelated to gang purposes but committed by gang members. The most dramatic drop last year came in the Montgomery Village/Gaithersburg district. In the first half of last year, the 6th District had 89 gang crimes — more than a third of the entire county's total. The second half of the year saw 18 gang crimes. Only Germantown had fewer crimes. However, data on gang membership show a climb from 1,057 in July 2008 to 1,206 in December 2008, the most recent data available. Gang members probably were undercounted in previous years, police Chief J. Thomas Manger said at his Latino advisory committee meeting last week. Gang-related killings are on the rise. Between 2005 and 2008, police attributed eight murders to gang members. There have been four so far this year. Police are also tracking upticks in armed robberies, drug activity and prostitution. "We cannot rest on our laurels," Bolesta told the committee last week. More than half of the county's 33 gangs are neighborhood-based gangs, Manger said. Police data show that of the larger, ethnic-based gangs, 37 percent are Hispanic, 29 percent are African-American and 34 percent have mixed membership. Several "hot spots" continue to resist police efforts, particularly Silver Spring, Wheaton and along Montgomery Village Avenue, Bolesta said. "It's not like a gang runs a neighborhood or a block," Bolesta told the committee. "We're adamant that's not going to happen in Montgomery County." NOTE: Them american cops can say whatever they want but us MS-13s here in Langley Park are making the rules. Like I said earlier, spring and summer will be the time when the american cops will be flopping their flops. I told you so you homies. |
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