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America First! 🇺🇸

US law enforcement news 🇺🇸

Los Angeles, CA 🇺🇸

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Raging bull flings a man into the air before trampling and injuring terrified revellers after breaking free at a traditional Spanish festival #losers #lol
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A dashcam in the vehicle behind captured the fruit spilling from the cargo truck on the Pacheco Pass, near San Jose, in California. #losers #wow
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A 30-year-old man was making a phone call while waiting for his train at Richmond Train Station in inner Melbourne about 8.45pm when he was attacked. Police hunting the attacker. #wanted
Forwarded from NYC Updates
#Brooklyn: Man Shot Dead Outside #BedStuy #NYCHA Houses, #NYPD Say

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Forwarded from /r/Pics
A photo i took of a random cop in Miami beach.
http://redd.it/a3oaik
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Terrible air crash in Ukraine. 2 dead and 3 injured.
Forwarded from NYC Updates
#Rockland: Route 304 Closed Due To Overturned Truck in #Nanuet

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“An image of GPS tracking of multiple wolves in six different packs around Voyageurs National Park shows how much the wolf packs avoid each other's range. Image courtesy of Thomas Gable”
http://redd.it/a3qdb4
Ecuador president: Enough guarantees for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to leave embassy, return to UK
https://t.me/police_frequency/6155
Ecuador’s president has ramped up pressure on Julian Assange to leave his country’s embassy in London, saying that Britain had provided sufficient guarantees that the WikiLeaks founder won’t be extradited to face the death penalty abroad.

Lenin Moreno’s comments in a radio interview Thursday suggest that months of quiet diplomacy between the U.K. and Ecuador to resolve Assange’s situation is bearing fruit at a time when questions are swirling about the former Australian hacker’s legal fate in the U.S.
“The road is clear for Mr. Assange to take the decision to leave,” Moreno said, referring to written assurances he said he had received from Britain.

Moreno didn’t say he would force Assange out, but said the activist’s legal team is considering its next steps.

Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy since 2012, when he was granted asylum while facing allegations of sex crimes in Sweden that he said were a guise to extradite him to the U.S.

But his relations with his hosts have soured to the point that Moreno earlier this year cut off his access to the internet, purportedly for violating the terms of his asylum by speaking out on political matters.
Assange in turn sued, saying his rights as an Ecuadorian – he was granted citizenship last year as part of an apparent attempt to name him a diplomat and ferry him to Russia – were being violated.

The mounting tensions has drawn Moreno closer to the position of Britain, which for years has said it is barred by law from extraditing suspects to any jurisdiction where they would face capital punishment.
But nothing is preventing it from extraditing him to the U.S. if prosecutors there were to pledge not to seek the death penalty.

Assange has long maintained the he faces charges under seal in the U.S for revealing highly sensitive government information on his website.
Those fears were heightened when U.S prosecutors last month mistakenly referenced criminal charges against him in an unrelated case.

The Associated Press and other outlets have reported that Assange is indeed facing unspecified charges under seal, but prosecutors have so far provided no official confirmation.
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The robber pushed the man under the truck. The phone has been stolen. Los Angeles, California.
mother, 46, sends her five-year-old son to his school nativity with a 'shepherd' costume from Amazon - only to discover it came with a blow-up SEX DOLL sheep #facepalm #lmao
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Baffled young cheetahs don't know what to make of huge tortoise that wisely stays hidden in his shell
https://t.me/police_frequency/6161
El Chapo's trial is shown video of dramatic raid on submarine laden with cocaine worth $100 million en route to Mexico - where drug kingpin's Sinaloa cartel would hide it in shoeboxes, oil tankers and even cans of jalapeno peppers to sneak it into the US

Dramatic video showing the capture of a cocaine-laden submarine by the US Coast Guard was shown during El Chapo's trial.
Jurors in Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman's trial at Brooklyn on Thursday watched footage of the seizure of 13,000lbs of cocaine – worth more than $100 million – off the coast of Guatemala in 2008.

US Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander Todd Bagetis told the court the daring raid was planned to happen at night to catch drug smugglers off guard, the New York Daily News reports.
It showed Bagetis and his team racing up on inflatable rafts and boarding the vessel armed with guns, flashlights and night vision goggles.

Four 'very angry' smugglers tried to get away by reversing the engines – and his crew were left 'hanging onto the exhaust pipe for dear life.'
After detaining the smugglers, Bagetis – who said he was seriously injured in the operation – said his team found 237 bales of cocaine, according to the New York Post.
But the packaging on some of the bales had torn and so he and his team were exposed to the drug through 'molecules in the air' or through skin contact.

Under cross-examination, Bagetis said he couldn't recall if El Chapo's name came up in any relevant report he reviewed.
Earlier in the week, former Colombian kingpin Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia, a key government witness, said he had invented the kind of submarine seen in the video to more discreetly transport his cocaine into Mexico and the US.

Prosecutors say the massive amounts of drugs and cash flowing back and forth across the U.S. border in the 1990s and early 2000s were documented in ledgers that looked like mundane business records.

Seeking to drive home the human toll of the violent drug trade, defense attorney William Purpura got Ramirez Adadia to confirm the ledgers also showed the expenses for murders for hire - $45,000 to have three people killed and $338,776 in another instance because, he said, so many hit men were involved.

The dead included a top lieutenant rubbed out in prison after his arrest merely because, Ramirez Adadia suggested, 'he knew a lot about my organization.'
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