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Showing posts with label officer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label officer. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Texas executes man convicted of killing police officer

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
By Jim Forsyth

SAN ANTONIO | Thu Oct 27, 2011 8:54pm EDT

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - Texas on Thursday executed by lethal injection a man who shot dead his wife on the day she tried to leave him, and killed a police officer who came to the home to check out a domestic disturbance call.

Texas officials said Frank Garcia, 39, gunned down Jessica Garcia in 2001 after she tried to leave her abusive husband. He killed police officer Hector Garza, 49, when he arrived at the home to check out a disturbance.

Garcia told police he aimed for Garza's head because he knew officers wear bullet-proof vests, detectives told reporters shortly after Garcia's arrest.

The Garcias' 5-year-old daughter witnessed both murders, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Frank Garcia shot Garza first, three times, and then shot his wife six times. He also shot and wounded his wife's uncle, according to the Department.

Shots he fired outside the house damaged a nearby elementary school, according to the Texas Attorney General's office. Garcia gave a formal statement in which he admitted intentionally killing his wife and Garza, the attorney general's office said.

Evidence presented in the trial showed that Jessica Garcia had once sought help from a battered women's shelter, according to the attorney general's office.

Bexar County District Attorney Susan Reed, who prosecuted the case, attended the execution in Huntsville, Texas, according to a spokesman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Earlier in the week, she called the murders "a huge tragedy."

"If there was ever a poster child for the death penalty, this is the case," Reed told Reuters. "Hector Garza, a fine officer; Jessica Garcia, a woman who is trying to leave an abusive situation, and this huge tragedy happens to all of them."

Several dozen San Antonio police officers traveled to Huntsville and were present outside the prison unit during the execution, said Jason Clark, a Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman.

The San Antonio Police Department said in a statement on behalf of Garza's family that the officer was a devoted husband and father committed to protecting his community.

"Though the execution does not bring complete closure to Hector's family, as we all miss him dearly, it comforts us to know that Frank Garcia will never destroy another family," the statement said.

Garcia prayed aloud at length in his final moments alive, Clark said.

"Thank you, Yahweh, thank you, Jesus Christ, hallelujah, amen, and thank you, warden," were his final words, Clark said.

Garcia's execution was the 12th this year in Texas, which has executed more than four times as many people as any other state since the United States reinstated the death penalty in 1976, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

As of Wednesday there had been 38 executions this year in the United States, according to the Center.

Texas last month abolished the long-held tradition of allowing condemned inmates to order what they want for their last meal. Instead, they receive what other prisoners are served.

(Writing by Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by Greg McCune and Jerry Norton)



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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Source: Ex-NYPD officer detained at the airport in Kansas City

Published September 11, 2011| Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Missouri - a former New York City police officer was arrested Sunday in the main of the Kansas City Airport, after detected security officials suspicious elements in his luggage, a local official with knowledge of the situation told Associated Press.

The official, who spoke the PA provided anonymity because he was not allowed to share the details with the media, said that the man had worked for NYPD for a short period, more than ten years ago. The fear of security arrived Sunday morning on the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11.

The man was arrested at 09: 30 at the checkpoint of Southwest Airlines at Kansas City International Airport. Transportation security officers who detected suspicious items in his bag requested to consider, and he was detained when he refused, said of the airline and law enforcement officials.

The suspicious elements tested negative for the explosives, according to a statement of the Transportation Security Administration. A bomb squad and sniffer dogs bomb remained on the scene Sunday afternoon, and passengers were being testing.

The spokesman for the FBI Bridget Patton refused to say which was carrying human, but she said that the bomb squad used a force of the water at high pressure to disrupt the package, allowing evidence to be preserved.

The man has the airport security guard, she said.

TSA has published a statement confirming that the area around the control point has been evacuated "out of" an abundance of caution. TSA officials did not respond to calls asking for more details, Sunday. Laura Brown, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, referred questions to the TSA.

"It was chaos," said Jim Johnston, 56, an engineer of Portland, Oregon, went to Nashville, Tennessee, for businesses. "Katherine can't says that anything, except that he's afraid." "They took us to a Hall under construction and we waited it y 10-15 minutes, while trying to find what they were going to do with us."

The man was arrested as the ceremonies were password at the national level after the terrorist attacks of September 11. Four planes hijacked by nineteen men to is killed on the Pentagon, the World Trade Center and a field in Pennsylvania, killing around 3,000 people.

Early indications were that the incident does not appear to be related to terrorism, but the investigation is ongoing and no there was no official decision, according to an official of the application of law, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the current probe.

Parking for the parts of the terminal which have been closed and terminal where Southwest is located has reopened Sunday afternoon, said Patton. Passengers at the busy airport had been rerouted through control of a security, creating long lines and concern among some that they don't miss their flights.

Other that the delays caused by the closure of the point of control for a few hours, no flights were affected, Southwest, spokesman of the said Chris Mainz.



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