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Three new police officers were added to the St. Albans Police Department during the May 21 City Council meeting. William Ty Barker, James Mathew Martin and Jeffery Brandon Perry were sworn into office with their family and friends in attendance. Barker came to the position with a background in law enforcement. He has served as a police officer with the communities of Ansted and Gauley Bridge. Barker was a member of the Central West Virginia Drug Task Force assigned to working drug and violent crime investigations. In addition to municipal policing, Barker has served as a deputy with the Nicholas County Sheriffs Department. He received his certification as a police officer from the West Virginia State Police Academy in 2006. Martin comes to the St. Albans Police Department from the West ...
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ACA Election
... Managers' Association, and the Kentucky Council for Crime and Delinquency. She has been recognized...Franklin County Municipal Court . Ohio . Cyndi Fowler began her career in cr...He also served as training specialist for the Texas Juvenile Probation Commis... presented on parole services at the Topeka Police Department annual in-service training. In 2003, Ca...
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POMPTON LAKES -- The borough council is considering repealing a residency requirement for police officers as it prepares to hire more cops, preferably out-of-work veterans who don't need to go through a costly training period.
An ordinance that would end the decades-old requirement that borough cops live in Pompton Lakes was introduced at a council meeting June 22. Joseph Ragno, the borough attorney, said he discovered a state statute that asserts that residency requirements for police are unlawful while he was reviewing municipal ordinances recently.
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- Frances M. Mccosh, Appellant, v. City of Grand Forks, a Municipal Corporation; Cyril P. O'Neill, In His Capacity As Mayor of the City of Grand Forks and Individually; James O. Clague, In His Capacity As Chief of Police and Individually; Ludwik Kulas, Thomas Hagness, G. Allan Pearson, Henry C. Wessman, Marvin W. Dehn, James F. Johnson, Richard Shea, Reuben Larson, Dennis Gustafson, Markus L. Dahl, Neome Bushaw, Joe H. Ford, Robert A. Hanson and Robert Wedin, Each As a Member of the Grand Forks City Council and Individually; Oliver Thomas, In His Capacity As Administrator of the N.D.C.L.E.C. and Individually; Ted Gladden, In His Capacity As Training and Standards Co-Ordinator of the N.D.C.L.E.C. and Individually; Jay Graba, In His Capacity As the Personnel Officer For the City of Grand Forks and Secretary of the Civil Service Commission and Individually; Thomas Longmire, In His Capacity As a Personnel Officer For the City of Grand Forks and Secretary of the Civil Service Commission In 1973 Through March 3, ..., 628 F.2d 1058 (8th Cir. 1980)
Elizabeth F. Maxwell, Fargo, N. D., for appellant.
Robert B. Hunter, Grand Forks, N. D., for appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court ...
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William Tucker Garvin was an assistant district attorney here in our office for fourteen years, until his retirement in 1966. He was an individual of courage and tenacity who was the first African-American assistant district attorney in our office. He was committed to public service and bettering his community - while serving as a trailblazer on many fronts," said District Attorney [Richard A. Brown]. "Like Bill Garvin, [Malcolm A. Smith] has been committed to public service. He has broken new ground in his role as an elected official and is an inspiration to others. He last month became New York State's first African-American Senate Majority Leader and Temporary President - and the first Democratic leader in almost 40 years.
William Tucker Garvin was born on November 28, 1898, in Sou...
... served as a chief aide to former City Councilman Archie Spigner, was a City Hall assistant to forme... to improve relations between civilians and police officers. In the aftermath of the Sean Bell shooti... Task Force was passed establishing the Municipal Police Training Council in the State Division of C...
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I want to thank Governor [David Paterson] for signing this bill into law, which seeks to punish those who utilize controlled substances or alcohol in facilitating sexual performances by a child, the most valuable and vulnerable among us," said Senator [Malcolm A. Smith]. "Controlled substances and alcohol can be used in a way that reduces or eliminates the victim's capacity for resistance.
"There is always a need to strive for better relations between police officers and the members of the communities they serve," said Senator Smith. "Recent events in New York City and in other metropolitan areas make clear that such efforts should be given priority attention to prevent events which may have tragic consequences and precipitate crises within our communities."
...The measure requires the Municipal Police Training Council to develop procedures to e...
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... Massachusetts Criminal Justice Training Council, long a tenant at Hillside, has voted to close the...The quasi state agency is the Municipal Police Training Council, which is made up of polic...
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...At her National Training School that stood high up on a hill in Washington,... United (CWU), and, later the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW), as well as members of their... engagement through membership on municipal boards as well as state and national government ag...; in addition, they actively responded to police brutality and repression by law enforcement author...
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... consequences for the SEC's ability to police our capital markets. So I'm pleased to have a rep... Corrupt Practices Act violations and municipal securities and public pensions. We adopted a flatt... to implement a new Certified Examiner Training Program that will establish technical training and... assist the Financial Stability Oversight Council in monitoring for potential systemic risk. We wil...
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The movement began in the early 1990s in Baltimore, where a community-labor coalition called BUILD mobilized a successful grass-roots campaign to pass the nation's first "living wage" law in 1994, requiring companies with municipal contracts and subsidies to pay employees decently. [...] more than 100 cities have followed suit. A coalition of unions, community organizations, immigrantrights groups, churches, tenant activists, and environmental organizations-led by the Figueroa Corridor Coalition for Economic Justice and the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (LAANE)-were ready when the developers pursued a second phase that included a 250,000-square-foot expansion of the convention center, two hotels, a 7,000-seat theater, restaurants, nightclubs, retail shops, and two apartment b...
... $100,000 in seed money for community job training. The Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency in...In 2003 and 2004, the Milwaukee City Council rejected a proposal by a coalition of labor, commu..., and the cost of increased traffic and police. Other California cities, including San Diego, Lon...