A four-year Tucson Police officer could lose her job for driving to work while severely intoxicated on Tuesday morning. Officer Lynsey Coutts was arrested after registering a BAC of 0.235, nearly three times the legal limit.
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Sterifab disinfects surfaces and even kills bedbugs. The only product registered with the U.S. EPA that kills bedbugs, lice, roaches, dust mites, bacteria, mold, mildew, viruses, germs, and fungus, this ready-to-use product is applied without dilution and dries very quickly.
Read More →Connecticut became the 17th state in the nation to legalize marijuana for various medical ailments, when the state legislature passed a bill early Saturday authorizing its use.
Read More →Pelican Products has been recognized by the National Institute of Packaging, Handling, and Logistics Engineers (NIPHLE) with the 2011 Corporation of the Year Award.
Read More →The town's police chief is coming under fire for escorting a maintenance worker who is also a registered sex offender to the school to make repairs to the kitchen sink.
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With so many law enforcement budgets reduced, Digital Ally is giving away a DVM-100 In-Car Video System, Laser Ally Handheld LIDAR and even an Event Recorder for your city's fleet. Enter code "PM03" to register for a chance to win these valuable tools.
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Hard-earned insight into the vagaries of the human mind can only take the average officer so far. As the psychological impairments of those he or she comes into contact with become more acute, it's less likely that an officer will be successful dealing with them.
Read More →Arizona legislation has passed the House that would allow law enforcement to arrest subjects for public drunkenness, reversing a 1974 statute that has tied the hands of officers.
Read More →Michigan would become the 45th state to allow residents to carry stun guns for self-defense if Gov. Rick Snyder signs a measure now circulating in the state's legislature. Wisconsin added its name to the list on Nov. 1.
Read More →The chief of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) police department told state legislators this week that only a fraction of his officers have been trained in crisis intervention methods that would help them deal with people who are mentally ill.
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