Police frequency
73.7K subscribers
65.9K photos
81.5K videos
5 files
74.9K links
America First! 🇺🇸

US law enforcement news 🇺🇸

Los Angeles, CA 🇺🇸

X (Twitter) : https://x.com/FrequencyPolice

Collaboration: @PoliceFrequency_bot

Donate: bc1qlj6skhrn3n30ke0taadvhycpednas833x5l87h
Download Telegram
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Instant karma! Vandal is smacked in the face by brick after he tries smash car window in Brandon, Durham, UK. 🤣 #LMAO #losers
Turkey's commandos moved against Kurdish fighters last night after the artillery and air force pounded northern Syria with a barrage of shelling, sending thousands fleeing. Video footage released by Turkey's Defence Ministry shows 'hero' commandos moving through fields under cover of darkness and firing rounds after Operation Peace Spring was launched on Wednesday afternoon. The invasion has been widely condemned around the world. Terrified residents were seen fleeing on foot, by car and piling rickshaws high with their possessions as they left their homes - a grim echo of how they sought refuge from the Islamic State only a few years before. Trump - who ordered American troops out of the area - said Turkey's incursion into the area was a 'bad idea' and said that Washington 'does not endorse this attack.'💥😱
Washington Wizards security confiscated protesters' 'Free Hong Kong' signs on Wednesday, marking the second consecutive day such placards were seized at an NBA arena amid the embattled league's growing tensions over China. Protester Jon Schweppe posted videos on Twitter showing three associates dressed in 'Free Hong Kong' T-shirts having their signs confiscated by Capitol One Arena security at Wednesday night's game against the visiting Guangzhou Loong-Lions of the Chinese Basketball Association. Security also confiscated a sign from the group reading, 'Google Uyghurs,' which is a reference to an aggrieved minority in western China. In a statement, the Wizards insisted that the team was not taking a stance on the issue, but merely executing a long-standing policy. 😳 #NBA #WTF???
Vaping death toll rises to 28: Panic over e-cigarette use across the US continues as New York City sues online stores for selling to children and Washington bans flavored vapes. Mysterious vaping illnesses have claimed the lives of 28 people in the US with the first state deaths reported in Texas, Utah and Massachusetts. Additional deaths have been confirmed in California and Georgia, bringing their respective death tolls to three and two. On Wednesday, New York City officials announced the city has has sued nearly two dozen online e-cigarette retailers, accusing them of selling their products to underage New Yorkers. The lawsuit filing comes just one day after a Bronx teenager's death became the state's first linked to the mysterious vaping illness that has struck over 1,000 Americans. Meanwhile, Washington states 120 day ban on flavored vaping products took effect on Thursday, following suit with Michigan, New York and Massachusetts. 🌬☠️ #vaping
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
“I just want my cigarette right now.” 👮🏻‍♂️ #lol
For the first time in decades, women allowed to attend FIFA soccer matches freely in Iran. The 2022 World Cup qualifier between the Iranian national team and Cambodia at Tehran’s Azadi Stadium marks a decades-long push by Iranian women to be able to watch soccer matches, something hard-liners in Iran’s Shiite theocracy oppose. Iran allocated 4,000 tickets for women in a stadium that seats about 80,000 people, keeping them separated from men and under the protection of female police officers, USA Today reports. ⚽️
This week, the lights went out for hundreds of thousands of residents in San Francisco’s Bay Area — the most widespread intentional outages in California history — on the say-so of utility company Pacific Gas & Electric. Outages like the one California experienced this week — which threatened as many as 800,000 customers, or at least 2 million people, since a “customer” might be an apartment building — aren’t just an inconvenience. For people who rely on medical equipment that requires power, an outage can be life-threatening. More than 32,000 of PG&E’s customers facing blackouts have special energy needs because of medical conditions. And people with limited incomes may not be able to buy food to replace the stuff that rots in their unpowered fridges, the Verge reports. 🌒