Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Barry Cooper (born May 21, 1969) is an American drug reform activist, YouTuber and filmmaker. [1] Formerly a police officer in Texas, Cooper is best known for KopBusters, a series of online videos in which he attempts to document police misconduct, and Never Get Busted Again, a series of videos aimed at teaching citizens how to evade false arrest by the police. [2]
The police chief in a small town in central Mexico took his own life Friday as troops closed ... Later, they announced the arrest of a top police chief in the suburb of Ixtapaluca, to the east of ...
The husband of the owner and operator of the Bronx day care where a 1-year-child died of suspected fentanyl exposure has been captured by authorities in Mexico, multiple US law enforcement sources ...
The FBI agents in El Paso recently arrested a woman accused of taking part in a border smuggling group that sent fentanyl, cocaine and meth north to the United States and AK-47 rifles, grenades ...
The arrest was made without a single shot fired. [17] The security forces also confiscated US$100,000 he had with him at the moment of his arrest. [18] The following day, he was transferred to the SEIDO installations, Mexico's organized crime investigatory agency, in Mexico City to give his statement and be interrogated by law enforcement.
U.S. Border Patrol Agent Lonnie Ray Swartz was charged with second degree murder for the killing of José Rodríguez. There had been a number of similar incidents in the preceding decade, but this was the first time a US law enforcement officer was charged in relation to a killing that took part across the US–Mexican border.
A third arrest was made Friday in connection with a shooting outside an Albuquerque baseball stadium that killed an 11-year-old boy and prompted the New Mexico governor to issue a controversial ...
In July and August 1969, media listed Valdez as City Marshal of Chama, New Mexico. [3] In 1969, Valdez joined the New Mexico State Police. [4] After brief stints in Espanola and Chimayo, Valdez was transferred to Dulce. [1] In 1973, racer Bobby Unser publicly thanked Valdez and others who had helped fight flooding at his northern New Mexico ...