Delaware cop severely beaten after being forced to respond to dangerous scene alone. Police nab suspect, decry lack of law enforcement funding.



Authorities arrested a 30-year-old suspect in connection with a brutal attack on a Delmar, Delaware, police officer.

The suspect also reportedly attacked two elderly neighbors in what is believed to be a related crime.

The attack comes as the department suffers a lack of funding and available resources for police and law enforcement officials.

What are the details?

Police arrested Randon Wilkerson early Sunday morning after he reportedly bludgeoned a police officer during what a law enforcement source told Blaze Media was a blindsiding sneak attack.

A news release from the Delaware State Police said the incident unfolded following a call over a fight in a house in Delmar's Yorkshire Estates community.

Wilkerson, the DSP reported, was reportedly fighting with other residents of the home and destroying property, which prompted the initial call. Dispatchers soon received a second phone call reporting that the elderly victim and his wife had been attacked by the same suspect.

Following the initial call, Cpl. Keith Heacook of the Delmar Police Department arrived on the scene and was believed to have immediately met with a physical confrontation.

A source — who has worked in local law enforcement for more than two decades and requested anonymity — told Blaze Media that the incident unfolded in horrific fashion after Heacook arrived at the scene around 5:15 a.m. local time.

According to the source's understanding, a missed 10-minute welfare check triggered dispatchers to send more officers to the scene to check on Heacook.

When a Wicomico County Sheriffs Office Deputy and a Delaware State Trooper arrived at 5:50 p.m, the source said that the two reportedly discovered an unconscious Heacook in a pool of blood, having apparently been bludgeoned with his own baton, which was missing from its holster.

The source told Blaze Media that Heacook — who was believed to have been overpowered — was repeatedly hit so violently that there was a dent in the officer's forehead.

The source added that six other people in the home reportedly witnessed the attack on the officer. None of the witnesses, according to the source, called authorities over the attack, and instead locked themselves in an upstairs room of the home. One of the witnesses reportedly said that they saw Wilkerson "throat-stomping" the officer during the attack.

Officers from the nearby Laurel Police Department soon arrived on the scene and began assisting in performing first aid on Heacook until emergency medical services arrived on the scene, according to the DSP news release. The source told Blaze Media that Heacook had neither a pulse nor was breathing when his fellow officers arrived on the scene.

"There was blood everywhere," the source added.

Officers discovered the suspect at a home across the street from where Heacook's unconscious body was left, having reportedly attacked an elderly couple with an object the source believed to be a glass bottle. The elderly woman, whom the source identified as a dementia patient, was said to have lost several teeth during the attack as well as a fractured orbital. Both elderly victims suffered significant injuries as a result of the attack and were transported by ambulance to area hospitals. The female victim was later transported to Shock Trauma in Baltimore as well.

The source told Blaze Media that the suspect was believed to have fled to the elderly neighbors' home in search of a gun, presumably to either finish off Heacock or perhaps confront responding officers. The suspect, the source said, was unable to find a gun, and reportedly jumped from a second-floor window. The DSP reported that officers discovered Wilkerson walking on the rear of the elderly victims' property and was taken into custody without incident.

Heacook was ultimately transferred to the Shock Trauma Unit in Baltimore, Maryland, for treatment of a traumatic brain injury and other injuries. He continues to fight for his life at the time of this reporting.

Authorities charged Wilkerson with terroristic threatening, attempted murder, burglary, two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony, and one count of third-degree assault.

He was booked into the Sussex Correctional Institution on $451,000 cash bond following his arraignment. The source told Blaze Media that Wilkerson had been arrested more than 30 times since 2010. Indeed, a search in the Maryland Judiciary Case portal returned at least 38 arrests in Maryland alone, including arrests for assault, burglary, theft, trespassing, and more.

The Delaware State Police are handling the investigation with the assistance of other local and state law enforcement.

"Corporal Keith Heacook is a 22-year veteran and has been employed with our department since 1998," PIO Master Cpl. Gary Fournier said in a statement. "He is a husband, son, brother, and father. Keith is fighting for his life right now and he needs your prayers along with the elderly couple who were also injured. Members from the Delmar Police appreciate the outpouring of community support as we continue to move forward. We appreciate the support from the Delaware State Police, Wicomico County Sheriff's Office, Maryland State Police, and all other agencies who responded and are assisting with this investigation."

The source told Blaze Media that Heacook — who he described as a good police officer, a "very gentle man," and a person who never even raised his voice — was close to retirement.

The Bank of Delmarva has a designated account named "The Community" for anyone who wishes to donate to Heacook and his family. For more information on how to donate, you can contact the bank at 410-548-7892 or 800-787-4542.

What else?

A Monday WMDT-TV report highlighted the vast concern in what many area residents and lawmakers say is major underfunding for the local police following Heacook's attack.

WMDT's Jordie Clark wrote, "Although it's not uncommon for smaller municipalities to only have one officer on duty, the addition of another officer or even quicker back up was needed in the situation, according to officials. Some even say, the outcome of this fight could have been very different if other officers had been there."

Maryland State Delegate Carl Anderton — who is also former mayor of neighboring Delmar, Maryland — told the station, "This is what happens when you're allowed to have single officer shifts, and we should never be in this situation."

Jamie Leonard, president of Delaware's Fraternal Orders of Police, added, "The problem with a place like Delmar outside of the fact that they have this kind of two-state leadership, is that their pay is low."

"You have to increase funding somehow, that funding and that trickle-down can't just be used to hire more police," Leonard added, "you have to provide a competitive wage to the officers that are already there."

Delmar, which straddles the Delaware-Maryland state line, is forced to "strategically place officers" since they have "more space to cover," Clark adds.

Delmar, Delaware, Mayor Karen Wells told the station that few people are even applying to be officers in the area this days.

"Quite frankly, who would want to be a police officer right now," Wells said. "That's the hardest thing I think we're facing."

Anderton added, “After [Heacook recovers] I think it's up to the two mayors Delmar, Maryland, and Delmar, Delaware, to come together and figure out how they're going to move the department forward."

Wells said, "We will have to look into what we can do to make sure that this doesn't happen again. I mean that's all there is to it."

VIDEO: Thug sneaks up on detective, whacks side of his head with stick, causing gash, in brazen, broad-daylight attack



A New York City detective was in the middle of doing paperwork amid a robbery investigation in Queens on Monday when cellphone video caught a man sneaking up on the detective and whacking the side of his head with a long, plastic stick, resulting in a head wound, police told the New York Post.

What are the details?

The Detectives' Endowment Association shared video on Twitter showing the uniformed officer standing outside the crime scene on a sidewalk covered in broken glass.

The detective was facing the building, and his head was down as he focused on filling out paperwork just before noon when the suspect snuck up from behind him and lowered the boom, police told the paper.

The detective immediately reacted in pain, holding the side of his head, as the suspect slowly retreated down the street.

"What happened?" one person is heard asking on the clip as another uniformed officer — joined by a second individual — chases the perp.

Welcome to NYC!Even as our Detectives investigate crimes they’re attacked by emboldened criminals, who have quick… https://t.co/ihwY0c08cg
— Detectives' Endowment Association (@Detectives' Endowment Association)1619476769.0

No motive was immediately provided for the attack, the Post said.

"Welcome to NYC!" the Detectives' Endowment Association wrote in its tweet. "Even as our detectives investigate crimes, they're attacked by emboldened criminals who have quickly realized there are no consequences for law breakers in our city. The DEA is calling for this violence to be fully prosecuted as we look to file civil charges."

What happened to the suspect?

Akeele Morgan, 25, was arrested near the scene of the attack, police told the Post.

Morgan, who's from the Bronx, was charged with assault, criminal possession of a weapon, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct, the paper said.

The New York Daily News said the suspect was awaiting arraignment in Queens criminal court.

DEA President Paul DiGiacomo on Monday added to the Daily News that the suspect "needs to be prosecuted fully for his actions," and that the union may file a civil action against him.

"If there's anyone wondering why this happened, they can ask their elected officials who have created a city of no consequences for criminality," DiGiacomo also told the Daily News.

What happened to the detective?

The detective was taken to New York Presbyterian-Queens Hospital, the Daily News said. He suffered a gash to his head and a whip mark, the Post reported, citing his union.

'In Defense of Looting' author tells Twitter followers to 'ATTACK' police — yet her account is still active



The author of "In Defense of Looting" — which argues that "stealing goods and destroying property are direct, pragmatic strategies of wealth redistribution" — told her Twitter followers to "ATTACK" law enforcement Sunday, noting that "this is not the time for defense, respectability, reorganization. We gotta take what we got and throw it at the motherf***ers."

Yet Vicky Osterweil's Twitter account — while having shifted to protected status in the wake of publicity over her words — was still active Tuesday morning despite her apparent violation of Twitter's policies.

What did she say?

Conservative author and Antifa expert Andy Ngo pointed out Osterweil's tweets Monday, saying she was "inciting violence & terrorist attacks through her Twitter account."

Image source: Twitter, redacted

"My shrill a** self thinks there's only one thing to do. ATTACK," she tweeted. "This is not the time for defense, respectability, reorganization. We gotta take what we got and throw it at the motherf***ers, because at the moment those two pincers (anti-trans, anti-protest) are deeply unpopular."

Minutes later Osterweil added another tweet:

Image source: Twitter, redacted


Ngo added that Osterweil soon "locked down" her Twitter account "so that she cannot be reported for inciting violence & terrorism."

It appeared she had a few things to say about Ngo as well:

Image source: Twitter

What was the reaction?

More than a few folks didn't take too kindly to Osterweil's words:

  • "People like her will talk and act tough right up until the bullets start flying at them," one commenter remarked.
  • "She is a nasty despicable human!" another user declared.
  • "People like her end up medicated on a psych ward if they and we are lucky," another user noted.
  • "We see the problem here," another commenter said. "But Twitter let's [sic] their violent rhetoric go on without any redeeming social value."

Anything else?

Osterweil's suggestion to "ATTACK" police coincided with far-left U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) telling Minnesota protesters Saturday to "get more confrontational" if the verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial doesn't go their way.

In the aftermath, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) promised to bring action against Waters if Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) doesn't act. And it appears that Pelosi will not.

The judge in the Chauvin trial blasted Waters for her "abhorrent" comments, and while Judge Peter Cahill said that they could lead to the overturn of the trial if the defense chooses to appeal the verdict, he didn't grant a mistrial Monday.

Assault suspect wanted after cops spar with violent militants at homeless encampment. Video appears to show police being abused at will.



Police in Bellingham, Washington, said Monday they're looking for an assault suspect in connection with a mass standoff at a City Hall tent encampment late last month, KGMI-AM reported.

Police also released bodycam video of the standoff, which shows the suspect shouting at and attempting to spit at officers, the station said. She appears to show up — her eyes covered by goggles and her head covered — just after the 2-minute mark.

"You f***ing disgust me!" she yelled before spitting at cops:

A larger male ally soon led her away as she continued to scream, "Lemme at 'em! Lemme at 'em!"

Oh, but this individual appeared to be far from the only troublemaker. The video shows police being abused pretty much at will by the militant leftists.

What else?

In one scene another woman appears to spit at officers:

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Then she appears to do it a second time. In the second spitting photo, she appears to be accompanied by the suspect police are after — who this time is dressed in purple:

Image source: YouTube screenshot

And at one point a cop firmly told a green-haired woman to 'stop!' after she continually rammed into him. Her comrades just laughed at the order.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

During most of the 10-minute video, leftists — besides the spitting — attempted to keep police from advancing on the encampment and consistently push, hit, threaten, and taunt them.

Here's the clip. Content warning: Language:

Body Cam: Bellingham Police clash with Black Bloc Anarchists at City Hall. 2021-01-28youtu.be

What's the background?

Bellingham officials ordered the removal of the homeless encampment ahead of schedule Jan. 28 after reports of possible violence by "outside agitators" from Portland and other cities.

Officials said public workers were being harassed and that the growing encampment was engulfing the city buildings.

Bellingham Police Department Chief Flo Simon said there were as many as 100 tents in the encampment on city property. Police had responded to calls in relation to the encampment in recent weeks that involved attacks with a baseball bat, a hatchet, and sticks. Simon also said a propane tank ignited a fire at the site.

Several arrests were made amid the skirmishes, and there were reports of some assaulted officers.