Police frequency
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America First! 🇺🇸

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moment British sisters are robbed at knife-point as they walk back to their hotel in Amsterdam - as police say 'it's not what you expect when you come to our city'
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An irate cyclist was caught on camera repeatedly swerving across the road to stop driver Sam England, 40, from overtaking him on the A4109 near Seven Sisters, Swansea.
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This is the moment a giant male puma invaded a family's garden and clasped the neck of a pet dog in its jaw for eight minutes.
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Death toll from massive earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia doubles to 832 amid desperate race against time to find survivors
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Terrifying footage, filmed from the metal roof of a house, shows large buildings and electricity pylons moving past after being ripped from their foundations.
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A woman was hit by the out of control drone as the family posed for the photo at a reunion in America. #losers
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The incredible moment a man casually scoops up Asian giant hornets in his HAND
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Terrifying footage, filmed from the metal roof of a house, shows large buildings and electricity pylons moving past after being ripped from their foundations.
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Hundreds are feared trapped in mud and 1,700 homes were 'swallowed up' on Sulawesi, Indonesia after tremors turned water-filled soil in to mush in a phenomenon known as liquefaction.
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This is the heart-pounding moment 22-year-old daredevil Nikita Deft, from Russia, fearlessly skipped on the very edge of the One Tower building in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
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footage shows a 13ft tiger shark BEACHING itself to eat a huge humpback whale carcass in Mozambique
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Incredible moment fearless eight-year-old girl tackles gunmen as they rob her parents in the Philippines
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Cowa-baaaa-nga dudes: The bizarre moment a sheep is seen 'surfing' on top of a speeding truck
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Crazy Ukranian pilot #fools UPD: The pilot was drunk
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A year after Vegas shooting, ATF emails reveal blame, alarm over bump stocks
Police frequency
A year after Vegas shooting, ATF emails reveal blame, alarm over bump stocks
Within hours of the worst mass shooting in U.S. history a year ago in Las Vegas, the federal agency in charge of regulating guns found itself under pressure to ban a rapid-fire device and penned in by legal boundaries that officials said prevented them from acting quickly, according to newly disclosed emails from inside the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Blame rained down on the ATF after gunfire showered concertgoers from a 32nd-floor room at the Mandalay Bay hotel Oct. 1, leaving 58 dead and more than 800 injured. Critics popped up everywhere – cable news anchors and politicians on both sides of the aisle, the National Rifle Association and Gabrielle Giffords’ anti-gun-violence group, and even from the ATF’s own ranks of current and former agents.
The focus was Slide Fire, a plastic add-on known as a “bump stock” that allowed Stephen Paddock to run through more than 1,100 rounds of ammunition in 10 minutes. Bump stocks were affixed to half of Paddock’s guns. Since 2010, up to 520,000 of the devices have been purchased in the USA, the Department of Justice reported.
The emails offer an unvarnished look inside the agency as it reacted to the tragedy. They help explain why, despite almost immediate bipartisan support for a ban and an endorsement several months later by President Donald Trump, bump stocks continue to be available in most of the country.
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It's the month of #Halloween. The most wonderful time of the year.