Mom turns in teen sons who allegedly shot at cop: 'I don't play no games'



Two teenage boys are in custody, charged with a serious crime, thanks to a principled mom who wants her children held accountable for their actions.

Around 4:30 on Tuesday morning, a police officer attempted to pull over a red vehicle with no lights for driving erratically down the interstate near Holly Springs, Mississippi, about 40 miles southeast of Memphis, Tennessee. Rather than comply, an individual inside the red vehicle fired two shots at the officer, striking the police cruiser once. The officer, thankfully, was not injured in the incident.

"It was dangerous for the officers and any other pedestrian and anyone that was on that interstate at that time," said Holly Springs police Chief Darryl Bowens. "That was a very dangerous situation."

A Marshall County deputy later spotted the red vehicle and reported seeing suspects abandon the car and then run into the woods. The suspects' images were soon afterward captured on a Ring home camera.

Police released those images to the public and by Wednesday morning, barely 24 hours after the shooting, had received a tip from a reliable source: the boys' mother. The woman, who did not want her identity revealed, claimed she saw the pictures and immediately recognized the suspects as her 17- and 18-year-old sons.

"I was like, 'Are you serious? Oh, hell no,'" she said. She then marched her sons over to the police station.

"I don't play no games with them," she continued. "If you're going to do the crime, you're going to do the time — plain and simple."

Despite the apparently damning evidence against them, the boys insisted to their mother that they were not involved in the shooting. She told WMC that the allegations against them are "very shocking" and she hopes they will be exonerated. "My child does not get in trouble. He don’t bother nobody. They don’t do nothing. All they do is play games. This is very new," she said.

The boys, whose names have not been released, have been charged with aggravated assault of a police officer. Police have also interviewed a third person of interest in the case but have not charged him.

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Thug with 21 prior arrests accused of gunning down NYPD officer during traffic stop: 'Same bad people doing bad things'



NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller was gunned down Monday evening while conducting a routine traffic stop in Queens.

The suspected shooter and his wing man are both career criminals. One of the thugs reportedly has at least 21 previous arrests and walked free in 2021. The other was last arrested in April 2023 on gun charges but cut loose.

"April of 2023," Mayor Eric Adams reiterated during a press conference Monday night. "Less than a year, gun charge, he's back on the street. This is what you call — not a crime problem — a recidivist problem. Same bad people doing bad things to good people. Less than a year he's back on the streets with another gun."

Officer Diller, 31, and his partner pulled over Lindy Jones, 41, and Guy Rivera, 34, near 19-19 Mott Avenue in Far Rockaway, Queens, around 5:50 p.m. on Monday.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said the officers asked Rivera to exit the gray Kia SUV, which was stationary in front of a bus stop.

"He was given a lawful order numerous times to step out of the car and he refused," said Kenny.

Police indicated that when Diller approached the vehicle, Rivera, seated in the passenger seat, brandished a firearm, then took aim. The suspect opened fire, striking Diller in the gut beneath his bullet-resistant vest.

Despite catching lead, Kenny indicated Diller "stayed in the fight and was trying to unarm the person that had just shot him."

"The gun hit the ground and as the perpetrator was still reaching for it, this cop was able to grab it, although he was still shot," added Kenny.

Diller's partner reportedly returned fire during the exchange, successfully hitting Rivera in the back.

Melissa Morgan, a witness who saw the shooting unfold less than two blocks away from the NYPD's 101st Precinct station house told the New York Daily News, "It happened so fast."

"The police officer fell on the floor and the other officers dragged the two guys out of the car. I was running for cover," continued Morgan. "It's unbelievable."

"We need a bus here ASAP!" an officer reportedly roared into his radio. "We have an officer shot!"

The NYPD shut down the Van Wyck Expressway to rush Diller to the Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, where he later succumbed to his wound.

Diller was on the force for three years. The New York Times reported that Diller was thrice recognized for "excellent police duty."

Police Commissioner Edward Caban stated, "Tonight this city lost a hero, a wife lost her husband, and a young child lost their father."

"We struggle to find the words to express the tragedy of losing one of our own," continued Caban. "The work that Police Officer Jonathan Diller did each day to make this city a safer place will NEVER be forgotten."

— (@)

Rivera, on the other hand, is expected to survive.

Rivera, who has 21 arrests under his belt, was released from a New York Prison in 2021 after serving a five-year stint for criminal possession of a controlled substance, reported the New York Post. Rivera's parole ended in 2023. He previously did time from 2011 until 2014 for a first-degree assault charge.

Jones was arrested last April but swiftly set loose again on New York City. Jones reportedly has 14 prior arrests and was convicted of attempted murder and robbery in 2003.

A weapon was recovered from the scene and nearby streets were cordoned off as police conducted their investigation.

Below is the firearm recovered at today's officer involved shooting in the confines of the @NYPD101Pct.
— (@)

Adams called the shooting a "senseless act of violence," stressing that the shooter had a "total disregard for the safety of this city."

Adams stressed the incident made the moral binary abundantly clear: "It is the good guys against the bad guys. And these bad guys are violent, they carry guns, and the symbol of our public safety, which is that police uniform, they have a total disregard for."

"These attacks on New York City police officers have to end right now," said Patrick Hendry, the president of the city's Police Benevolent Association. "We have a family upstairs right now that’s devastated. We have police officers in this hallway who have lost a brother. It has to end now."

— (@)

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Suspect fleeing drug bust on motorcycle meets his demise after cop hurls cooler into him, sending him flying



An NYPD police sergeant is in hot water after putting a fleeing suspect on ice.

The department noted in a statement that 35-year-old Sgt. Erik Duran, a 13-year veteran with the Narcotics Borough Bronx, has been suspended from duty without pay following a Wednesday incident in which a man attempting to flee from the police on a motorcycle wound up dead.

The New York state Attorney General's Office is now leading the investigation into possible wrongdoing.

Undercover narcotics officers executed a drug bust in the University Heights section of the Bronx in hopes of capturing drug traffickers in the area, reported the New York Times.

According to officials, the 30-year-old decedent, Eric Duprey, sold drugs to one of the officers. After the exchange was made, plainclothes and undercover officers swooped in to make the arrest.

However, before police could cuff Duprey, he jumped onto a motorcycle and sped off.

Surveillance cameras captured footage of Duprey whipping perilously down a sidewalk near the corner of 190th Street. The fleeing suspect careened toward a group of roughly 10 people seated around a table as well as Sgt. Duran.

Duran reportedly grabbed a plastic cooler from the table and hurled it toward the motorcycle.

A witness told the Daily News that Duprey "was on the bike, moving north when the cops started chasing him. ... Then he took a U-turn and was riding on the sidewalk. ... The cop then took my cooler, which was filled with soda cans, water bottles, and hit him."

The sergeant's aim was good, and the suspect's handling was poor.

After being struck by the cooler, the fleeing suspect lost control, then went flying into a tree. The motorcycle carried on into a metal barricade and a Jeep Cherokee.

Officers immediately called for medical assistance, which arrived just after 5:30 p.m.. Duprey was pronounced dead minutes later.

Duprey reportedly had at least two previous arrests, including an open felony assault case from last summer and a drug case in March.

Orlyanis Velez, Duprey's widow, indicated that he left behind two children, ages 5 and 3, whom she has yet to tell about their father's death.

Duprey reportedly also had a third child, age 9.

"Officers are supposed to be protecting people, not killing people for no reason," said Velez.

— (@)

The Times indicated that Duran's suspension has been criticized inside the department.

One high-ranking officer said that Duran "had attempted to make a lawful arrest" and that the sergeant's use of the cooler could "be equated to closing the door and stopping from leaving."

It appears that the hasty suspension may have been intended to put a damper on protests or worse.

An internal departmental memo obtained by the New York Post said, "We had an incident in the Bronx with narcotics that is high potential for unrest."

The memo further recommended that officers keep their protective gear and batons handy.

Sgt. Duran's lawyer Andrew Quinn indicated that his client would be exonerated, stating, "There is much more to this situation than the brief, 10-second video clip shows."

"What is undisputably clear is that the deceased, who was intent on evading arrest for selling drugs to an undercover officer, was speeding on a motorbike in an incredibly dangerous manner down a crowded sidewalk, jeopardizing the life and safety of everyone there," added Quinn.

Duran has reportedly been recognized by the force 38 times for excellent and meritorious police service.

NYPD says sergeant who threw object at suspect, killing him, is suspendedyoutu.be

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'Recipe for disaster': Democrat mayor wants to lower standards for LAPD's police recruits and oust officers with so-called extremist, 'right-wing' ties



Los Angeles' Democrat mayor is taking a cue from other leftist-run cities in the West, seeking to drop standards for new police recruits whilst forcing out officers accused of having extremist ties, albeit of a purportedly rightest variety.

Mayor Karen Bass recently told the Los Angeles Times that she desires big changes at the Los Angeles Police Department, prioritized in this order: "crime reduction, personnel reform, alternative response and community policing."

While she would like to see more detectives join up and take advantage of California's red-flag laws in order to remove guns from Americans, staffing the LAPD is a department-wide problem, with 600 of the force's 9,200 officers expected to retire or leave in the next year, a departure rate 20% higher than is customary.

National Police Association spokeswoman Ret. Sgt. Betsy Branter Smith noted in October that Los Angeles was among the cities suffering severe staffing issues after the anti-police rhetoric of 2020. Bass admitted amidst the BLM riots that "defund the police" was "one of the worst slogans ever."

According to a summary of her public safety goals obtained by the Times, Bass now wants to bring in "more diverse candidates" and more candidates in general.

The pursuit of warm bodies will have the personnel department increase the number of new recruits and lateral hires by 500 a year, "including innovative recruitment strategies targeting non-traditional talent such as social workers, teachers and nurses."

One provision in Bass' summary of goals says a deputy mayor will work with a "third party" to "evaluate the personnel process and identify obstacles to entry for recruits who fail to qualify for training."

To accommodate classically unqualified candidates, recommendations aimed at removing obstacles to recruitment will be considered, especially those in relation to "ethnic groups disproportionately left out of new officer training."

Tom Saggau, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Protective League, expressed concern that in the LAPD's apparent rush to onboard new recruits, it was effectively lowering job standards. By lowering the mental and physical fitness requirements for recruits, the LAPD could face worse problems than dwindling numbers.

Saggau told Fox News Digital, "We think that particular provision or that goal or that idea is dangerous."

"If you have police officers that can't make minimum qualifications or attained minimum standards, for instance, there are recruits that have been in the academy that just can't score the minimum requirements for a physical fitness test," added Saggau. "One hundred is the maximum score, 50 is acceptable. There are folks that are scoring under 10. That's just dangerous."

London, England, under leftist Mayor Sadiq Khan is similarly endeavoring to drop standards for its police, but in its case, explicitly in hopes of meeting diversity quotas.

TheBlaze previously reported on a recent police assessment that London's Metropolitan Police has dropped its standards and in some instances accepted applicants who could not competently read or write in English. Some recruits also happened to have significant criminal histories.

Saggau said the City of Los Angeles' willingness to set a lower bar for prospective recruits is "just a recipe for disaster."

Despite the apparent dearth of interest in joining or staying on the much-maligned force and the city's corresponding desire to drop standards, Bass is keen on pursuing an ideological purge via Police Chief Michel Moore, reappointed on Jan. 31.

Among those apparently fit for termination are officers with alleged links to "right-wing" domestic extremist groups. There is reportedly no mention of candidates or existing officers having to be identified, disciplined or terminated if they had left-wing terrorist ties (e.g., to Antifa, Black Panthers, Jane's Revenge).

Saggau told Fox News Digital, "We [LAPPL] think it ought to be right-wing, left-wing, foreign and domestic. ... We think that there are more organizations that members of law enforcement should not be associated with, other than the narrow group that was listed in that document."

Data from the Justice Department will reportedly be utilized when conducting this ideological purge.

It is unclear whether conservative Catholics on the force would be subject to termination or discipline in light of the recent revelation that a FBI field office in Richmond, Virginia, suggested a link between "radical traditionalist Catholic ideology" and violent extremism.

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Pennsylvania coroner resigns after he tries to meet up with a ‘15-year-old boy’ for sex: report



Bradford County coroner Tom Carman has resigned, according to various reports, just before he was publicly exposed for trying to meet up with what he believed was a 15-year-old boy for sex, reports say.

What are the details?

According to WNEP-TV, Carman's abrupt resignation "seemed to come out of the blue."

Then, the station reported, more information emerged surrounding the ex-coroner's personal business.

"Musa Harris, who calls himself the Luzerne County Predator Catcher, allegedly confronted Carman [on video] at a convenience store in Kingston," the station noted.

Harris shot video of his interaction with Carman at the convenience store after he reportedly spoke with him online while posing as a 15-year-old boy.

Carman, according to Harris, was expecting to meet the "boy" for sex following a lewd conversation when he encountered Harris instead.

According to WENY-TV, the video streamed live to YouTube just one day before Carman's resignation.

The video, according to WENY, "purportedly shows a man, recording himself with a camera outside of a Valero gas station in Kingston, Pennsylvania — about an hour from Bradford County near Wilkes-Barre."

"Inside, Carman appears on video to be buying a cup of coffee," the station continued. "When Carman exits the building, the man confronts Carman asking, 'Are you here to meet somebody?'"

Carman then responded that he was at the convenience store to buy a cup of coffee.

"[T]he man recording the video claims to have Carman's picture, and said 'Let's talk about why you're here right now. You know I keep all screenshots on everything?'" the station continued in its report. "Carman is then seen walking away from the man and getting into his SUV, while the man follows and accuses of Carman of being a cop, and threatens to call the police."

The videographer erroneously believed that Carman was a police officer.

Before pulling away, Carman can be heard telling the man recording, "I didn't send you anything inappropriate, and I didn't say I would meet you."

(Content warning: Rough language):

#cop #pedomon www.youtube.com


What else?

A news report from WETM-TV reported that Carman is under investigation in Luzerne County over the video.

Bradford County Commissioner Daryl Miller said that the video "puts Bradford County in a bad light."

"However, I will say, most people working within the county go about their business in a fashion to serve the public that we're hired to serve."

In its report, the station added that it "reached out to Carman and County Commissioner Daryl Miller but has not heard back at this time."

"When calling the Coroner's Office 18 News was directed to the Bradford County 911 Center and was told that Carman was not available," the report added. "A message was left on Carman's cellphone after repeated calls for comment."

No charges have been filed against Carman at the time of this reporting.

WETM reports that Carman's vacancy will be temporarily filled by the Chief Deputy Coroner James Bowen until Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) appoints a replacement.

Idaho Cop Suspended For Viral TikTok Mocking LeBron James’ Police Threat

Deputy Nate Silvester made a video mocking the Los Angeles Lakers player and pretending to ask him for advice on policing.