Devildoc
Verified Military
Even in our little meaningless state of North Carolina there have been gatherings about this whole thing in Louisville.....
This is a useful insertion that should help prevent other posters from continuing to conflate PPOs with Postal Inspectors.However, I do feel it necessary to correct some misunderstandings vis a vis the Postal Police in order that everyone can sing from the same sheet of music.
First, while the Postal Police are a division of the Postal Inspection Service, Postal Police Officers are not Postal Inspectors. Inspectors are 1811 Criminal Investigators; Postal Police Officers are 0083 Police Officers. Inspectors are plainclothes investigators; postal cops are uniformed LEOs. In this way, they function much like Secret Service Special Agents and the USSS Uniformed Division. There are 1200 Postal inspectors; I'm unsure of the number of postal cops.
I would say he did. My corrected quote, which you didn't use, is the following:I would say he didn't remove anything from them. He simply clarified their authority under the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act and brought their assignments back into alignment with the law.
This is an accurate description of what happened, and constitutes a removal of these authorities as recognized by Congress in 18 USC 1306(c).President Trump's Postmaster General, Louis Dejoy, removed all law enforcement authority from Postal Police Officers outside of real estate owned or leased by the US Postal Service.
PPOs not only conducted off-site patrols but increased those patrols within the last two decades, on admission from the actual authorities on the practice: PPOs and the Postal Service itself.As you say, BINGO. The only time I have seen a postal police officer off-site has been when they're getting coffee, or securing mail from a truck that was in an accident, blown up mailbox, etc.
18 USC 1306(c)
Locksteady said:
This is an accurate description of what happened, and constitutes a removal of these authorities as recognized by Congress in 18 USC 1306(c).President Trump's Postmaster General, Louis Dejoy, removed all law enforcement authority from Postal Police Officers outside of real estate owned or leased by the US Postal Service.
All things being equal, you don't think an official document signed by sworn peace officers is more meaningful than "anonymous sources?"
No word on LMPD officer condition...FBI Louisville SWAT responded to assist....
Officer shot at Brook Street and Broadway
Thank you for checking - it indeed was a typo. The correct code is 3061, which you were also considerate enough to include in your post, and I appreciate you doing that as well.Are you sure you're citing the right statute? That one reads, "Whoever knowingly violates section 5136A [1] of the Revised Statutes of the United States, section 9A of the Federal Reserve Act, or section 20 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both. "
I ran through several different interpretations of 'property', how it is used within the Postal Service, and how specifically it seems to be interpreted in the context of this part of the code.Not really, because they never had the authority to begin with. The fact that they were doing it is irrelevant.
Assuming the above holds, agreed.The fact that they were doing it is irrelevant.
This beautifully illustrates the disparity in the way that different leaders within the agency understand the range of authority given to PPOs.Even the Deputy Chief Postal Inspector admitted he didn't know if they had jurisdiction outside the post office, and that's quite telling.
Given that they've apparently been exercising law enforcement powers outside of USPS real estate for 50 years now, I think it's safe to say that that mojo is not a thing in practice, considering how sparingly that multiple USPS-adjacent people on this very thread have even encountered them to the point of openly doubting they even practiced in that capacity.Frankly, you don't want postal police officers acting as municipal cops. That would be bad mojo.
She had not been in EMS since 2017
I know she was an an ER technician; I know where I'm at that requires maintaining at minimum EMT-B with IV cert.
I'd still probably call her an EMT/EMS worker for the sake of simplicity.
Ya know...we can (and do) use pretty much any language we want here, but referring to someone who was killed the way she was, and from many reliable accounts someone who really was trying to better herself as, “a fuckin' crack dealers bitch who held on to his stash....”^She was a fuckin' crack dealers bitch who held on to his stash....
Whichever dipshit wrote this article can go fuck themselves. Breonna Taylor didn’t deserve to get killed.
I don't see any issues with the way the article was written. It's simply a synopsis of the report that many of us here saw a few weeks ago.Whichever dipshit wrote this article can go fuck themselves. Breonna Taylor didn’t deserve to get killed.