Saturday, August 28, 2010

Fremont police officer shot in Oakland

Saturday, August 28, 2010

(08-27) 20:42 PDT OAKLAND --

A Fremont police officer was critically wounded in a shootout Friday with an alleged gang member in East Oakland, who then stole a car at gunpoint and fled, authorities say.

The officer, a six-year veteran of the force whose name has not been released, suffered gunshot wounds to the pelvis and groin during the exchange at 2:38 p.m. near the corner of Auseon and Bancroft avenues. He underwent surgery at Highland Hospital late Friday.

"We're all on pins and needles - he's hour to hour," Fremont Police Chief Craig Steckler said.

Dr. Javid Sadjadi said the officer had lost a significant amount of blood. He said the officer was in critical but stable condition and had suffered "rather extreme injuries - it's really touch and go."

Wave of violence
The shooting was the latest in a string of violent crimes in Oakland in the past few days. Six people were killed in a one-week span, including 13-year-old Jimon Clark, a recent middle school graduate who was shot to death Wednesday night on a street near his East Oakland home.

Jimon was killed on Bancroft Avenue near 61st Avenue, about a mile and a half northwest of where the officer was shot Friday.

Witnesses and police described a wild scene Friday after the officer and a colleague from Fremont tried to arrest Andrew Barrientos, 20, who was wanted for a string of crimes including attempted carjacking, resisting arrest and an alleged attack on the mother of his young child on Aug. 12.

'Gangster' tattoos
The officers spotted Barrientos, who police said has "Decoto Gangster" tattooed on his forearms, outside a residence on Auseon Avenue.

Barrientos fled through the neighborhood of 1920s-era bungalows, exchanging shots with the officers as he ran, until he got to a mini-market about a block away, at 86th and Bancroft avenues, police said.

The fugitive tried to carjack a man's Acura in the store's parking lot and shot at the driver when he sped away, shattering the car's glass, police said. The driver was cut by the glass but wasn't shot.

Then the gunman carjacked another motorist and drove off in a dark-green, four-door Mazda 626, with a California license plate of 4MJE548.

Police described Barrientos as Latino, 5-foot-7 and 240 pounds, with close-cropped hair. He has ties to Union City, San Leandro, San Jose and Oakland. In addition to the tattoos on his arms, the word "Decoto" is tattooed on the back of his neck.

Chief Steckler said both his officers had fired on the gunman but apparently did not hit him.

Market has video
The carjackings were captured on surveillance video taken at the mini-market, said Sayez Aldahmi, 18, whose family runs the Arrwa 1 Stop Market. The man whose Mazda was stolen had just walked out of the store.

"The guy was OK," Aldahmi said.

A nearby resident, Tarente Randler, 21, said he had been inside his home when he heard eight or nine shots, followed by the sound of sirens.

"The next thing, about 20 cops came," he said. "They picked the (wounded) cop up and put him in a car."

He said the officer had been in plainclothes.

Steckler said the officer is in his 30s and has young children. Friends and family were at the hospital, he said.

"This is unusual for my department," Steckler said. "I have never seen an officer shot in the 19 years I have been chief."

The officer was in East Oakland working as part of the southern Alameda County major crimes task force, which targets local gangs. Fremont police had alerted Oakland that they were going to be looking for Barrientos in the city but had said they did not need any assistance, Oakland officials said.

Chronicle staff writer Peter Fimrite contributed to this report. E-mail the writers at nasimov@sfchronicle.com, jberton@sfchronicle.com and jvanderbeken@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Monday, August 23, 2010

Retired Pa. Officers Could Work Part Time

BY JOE SMYDO
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


When Lakewood, Colo., police Detective Alex Jameson decided to come out of retirement and rejoin the force on a part-time basis about two years ago, the arrangement suited everybody.

Detective Jameson got back into a game he missed. The department got eyes it otherwise would have done without. And the people of Lakewood got an old hand to take a new look at cold cases.

"There's no learning curve with him," department spokesman Steve Davis said. "He's familiar with the cases. He's familiar with the people. He's familiar with the geography of the city. There's no ramp-up time."

Pittsburgh police Cmdr. Catherine McNeilly says departments nationwide have rehired retirees on a part-time basis, and she'd like Pittsburgh to consider doing the same. At her suggestion, state Rep. Chelsa Wagner, D-Brookline, has introduced a bill to let retired officers across Pennsylvania return to work 800 hours annually without jeopardizing their pension benefits.

Currently, Ms. Wagner said, a full-time officer cannot retire and go back to work part-time for the same department. She said the law is silent on whether a retired officer may work in another department.

Ms. Wagner said her proposal would be a boon to financially strapped municipalities, which wouldn't have to provide health benefits to retirees. She said it's too bad Pittsburgh couldn't tap some of its own retirees in September when it hired hundreds of out-of-town officers on a temporary basis for the G-20 summit.

Cmdr. McNeilly has documented other departments' efforts to deploy retired officers because of budget cuts -- financial problems so severe in some cities that they've had to sell off police horses and helicopters, curtail minor investigations or disband special units. One city, Mesa, Ariz., has hired civilians to perform minor investigations because they're paid less than police officers.

Despite its own financial problems, Pittsburgh hasn't had to take such drastic steps. But Cmdr. McNeilly, who heads the Zone 3 station in Allentown and the department's planning and intelligence unit, said there's no reason to let retirees' talent go to waste.

Cmdr. McNeilly said some officers, after a few years of retirement, decide they aren't ready to give up work or need a part-time job to supplement their pensions. She said it makes sense to capitalize on the retirees' experience and expertise, while giving them an opportunity to make extra money.

"To me, it seems like a can't-lose proposition all the way around," she said.

Cmdr. McNeilly isn't suggesting that retired officers be put back on regular street duty.

Rather, she's suggesting they be assigned to monitor surveillance cameras, man the front desks at police stations, staff the property room, perform confidential clerical work, take reports over the telephone, transport mail from station to station, work missing-person cases, run background checks on police recruits, teach courses at the police academy, operate the citizens police academy, help with traffic control and serve as community liaisons. If retirees filled those roles, she said, more full-time officers could be freed for street duty.

Cmdr. McNeilly said retirees also could be deployed for special events, such as the Pittsburgh Marathon, First Night and major athletic events.

City Councilwoman Theresa Kail-Smith, who chairs the public-safety committee, said she'd like to consider Ms. Wagner's proposal if it becomes law. She said she's always interested in bolstering the city's force of about 900.

Cmdr. McNeilly, estimating the average officer's age to be about 45, said a possible spate of retirements also might spark the city's interest in the idea.

City officials didn't respond to a request for information about possible retirements. But in its most recent annual report, the police department said the average length of service for a commander was 26.9 years; for a sergeant, 17.7 years; for a detective, 16.1 years; for a regular officer, 11 years.

In Lakewood, Detective Jameson didn't take the place of another full-time officer. If he hadn't returned to duty, the cold-case unit would have operated without additional help, Mr. Davis, the department spokesman, said.

Mr. Davis said Detective Jameson has indicated that he's interested in returning to retirement. The search is on, Mr. Davis said, for another retiree to replace him.

McClatchy-Tribune News Service