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Processing the crime scene
Processing the crime scene
Crime scene research paper
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INTRODUCTION: This case involves suspect Terrell Wilson gaining entrance into Okuno Agencies Office located at 35 N. Arroyo Parkway. Once inside the business, Wilson stole a Phillips Heart Defibrillator, serial #A17I-00442, valued at $1,300.00. Wilson left the scene in an unknwon direction. On 11/08/17, Wilson was contacted for an unrelated reason and was found to be in possession of the stolen Phillips Heart Defibrillator, serial #A17I-00442. Wilson was arrested PC 496 – Receiving Stolen Property. LOCATION DESCRIPTION: The incident occurred at 35 N. Arroyo Parkway #240 (Okuno Agency). Okuno Agency is a Financial Advisory Firm located on the second floor of the building. 35 N. Arroyo Parkway has controlled access and requires a key to enter …show more content…
The defibrillator was placed in the hallway, on the wall, inside of a case. Solis said the last time she saw the defibrillator was on 11/06/17, at approximately 9:30 am. When Solis returned to work on 11/07/17, at approximately 10:00 am, and noticed the defibrillator was missing. Solis noticed that the stairwell door had been compromised, but she does not know when. The door that was compromised is located at the bottom of stairs that leads into the basement of the building. The door/hallway can be accessed from Union Street, and Solis believes whoever stole the defibrillator entered from there. Solis said the company desires prosecution if a suspect is arrested. Solis had nothing further to add. Solis told me this is the second time their defibrillator was stolen from the building. Solis informed me she is in the process of reviewing video surveillance and would email me the video surveillance. On 11/08/17, Solis emailed me the video surveillance of the incident. I reviewed and uploaded the video surveillance into to VeriPic as evidence. In the video, I saw a male, dark complexion, wearing a long sleeved shirt, light colored pants with black shorts underneath. The suspect was pushing a mountain style bicycle. The stolen defibrillator case can be seen dangling from the bicycle
On March 24, 2016, officers were dispatched to a scene where a male subject was trying to gain entry into a vehicle using a hammer. Upon arrival officers made contact with a male subject who was later identified as Keith Hunt, the defendant, and the victim. The victim explained to the officers she was standing near the trunk of her vehicle when Mr. Hunt approached, He attempted to keep into her vehicle without permission; so she confronted the defendant and tried to secure her vehicle. Mr. Hunt demanded she give him the keys and her wallet. The victim stated the defendant had a hammer in his hand and was threatening her with it while he was telling her to hand over the property. They began to struggle over the keys and the victim screamed
Bermudez told me the purse did not belong to her. I asked Bermudez what was the can she dropped and she said, “I was drinking. The can belongs to me.” I asked Bermudez if there is anything illegal inside of the purse that I needed to know about and she said, “No.” I told Bermudez to sit in the backseat of my vehicle and she complied. I approached and grabbed the salmon colored purse I saw Bermudez drop. Laying on the ground next to the salmon colored purse was 1 24oz Black Berry Steel Reserve Alcoholic beverage (half full). I grabbed both of the items and returned to the hood of my vehicle. I searched the purse and found several large blue trash bags inside. I searched the trash bags and found 1 used methamphetamine pipe. I asked Bermudez if the methamphetamine pipe belonged to her and she said, “No.” I asked Bermudez if she uses any drugs and she said, “No. I found that
On 5/6/18, at approximately 0709 hours, I responded to the area of Colorado Blvd. and St. John Avenue regarding an investigation of a subject who jumped from the Colorado Blvd. overpass. Pasadena Police Dispatch advised the victim was F/B wearing a blue sweatshirt and blue jeans and the RP could see her down on the freeway under the Colorado Blvd. overpass.
Michael “Meeko” Thompson has spent more than two decades locked away in the Chippewa Correctional Facility. Michael was arrested for selling three pounds of cannabis to an undercover officer. He had prior drug offenses, but no history of violence. When his house was raided after his arrest, a few antique firearms and one usable firearm were recovered. Despite the fact that the antiques did not fire and the one that did was owned by Michael’s wife, he was convicted of felony possession of a firearm along with his cannabis charges. This was his fourth offense which labeled him a habitual offender, and he was sentenced to 40-60 years in prison. He could have been sentenced to as little as five years. Notably, even the Michigan Supreme Court
Dwayne and Felix breached their duties to comply with the voluntary undertaking to the best of their ability by leaving Vicky on her own after they initiated administering aid and were aware she had suffered injury. Because they did not wait until Vicky was being adequately taken care of by emergency personnel and left her by the roadside after calling 911 for the ambulance they breached their duty.
Stacy walked to the above business and was told by Molina that an unknown male suspect stole her cellular telephone. Molina reportedly pointed at the suspect and told Stacy, “That’s the guy.” Stacy told me that he recalled speaking with the unknown suspect prior to Molina advising him of the above incident. Stacy immediately began running after the suspect. Stacy ran south on Los Robles Avenue and saw the suspect continue riding his bicycle onto eastbound Villa Street and out of sight. Stacy flagged down Officer Banuelos and advised him of the incident. Officer Banuelos advised units of the incident and conducted an area check for the suspect but was unable to locate
These programmers communicate with the pacemaker via wireless radio frequency as well as telemetry to make device adjustments and monitor device functions. Physician programmers require no authentication to program pacemaker devices [15]. This is true for all pacemakers. The lack of required authentication is a point of concern because of the potential for risk. As was mentioned, pacemaker manufacturers warn of prolonged exposure to cellphones, metal detection systems, and other electrical devices for risk of misinterpretation by the pacemaker. The electrical impulses these devices emit could be read by the pacemaker as a heartbeat which could cause the device to malfunction or fail [17]. Deliberate attacks on pacemakers have been tested and provide troubling results. Within a 50-foot proximity, an attacker can deliver a lethal 830v jolt to a user’s heart from a laptop [13]. On the hard drives of two pacemaker devices both encrypted and unencrypted data was found by researchers for the technology research company WhiteScope. The researchers found that one unnamed pacemaker device stores unencrypted PHI such as patient and physician names, treatment data, and, most concerning, patient social security number [15]. This information can be collected and sold through black market
On 04-29-16 at approximately 0951 hours, I was dispatched to 120 W. Bellevue Drive regarding a grand theft auto report. Upon my arrival, I contacted Victim Richard Henry Garcia, who told me the following:
On Tuesday, 08/02/2016, I, Deputy Stacy Stark #1815, received a telephone call from the victim, Cara M. Morrison (F/W, DOB: 09/27/1989). Morrison called to report she went to Midwest Cash located at 1200 W. Main St. Carbondale, Illinois to pawn another television she owned for cash. While at Midwest Cash, she recognized her stolen television advertised for sale. Morrison did not have the serial number of the television she reported stolen on 07/29/2016, so she was unable to verify to the clerk the television was hers. Morrison remembered she used the stolen television for collateral at a local cash loan business in the past. Morrison went to the cash loan business and was able to retrieve the identifiers on her television, including the serial number. The day Morrison was returning to Midwest Cash to verify the television was hers, she brought along her boyfriend, Rodney J. Tully (M/W, DOB: 05/26/1988). Prior to arriving at Midwest Cash, Tully told Morrison they were
I was dispatched by communication to a reported Assault with a Deadly Weapon at 133 Industrial Way, San Jose/ Brother’s Inn (Men’s homeless shelter). I arrived at the shelter 1035 hrs. While I reached to the location, I saw a victim man, who is very badly injured on his face, and two other mans (Manager and client) in the Day Room of shelter. I also observed all the furniture in the day room was all turned over. I also advised communication to response a fire/ambulance for treatment of victim. I went to the victim ask for is identification and statement about the happened. After taking V-Rush statement, transported him to the county hospital by fire/ambulance EJ7 for health treatment. Then, I start getting more information about the incident from Witness’s. First, I contract with the shelter Manager and obtained his identification and statement regarding the incident. Second, I went to Client and obtained his identification and statement regarding to what happened. Both (Manager and client) were separated at the time of the interview. After the interview, I advise the communication to look for suspect at St. James park (1st St. & St.) and for his record check. I took 2 photos of the victim full body and 3 photos of injuries by point them. I also took 4 photos of the day room of shelter. All this photos was booked into the county jail later as police
What I wanted to talk about today is this life save device called a automated external defibrillator. It has become the number one way to resuscitate a person who has had a cardiac arrest unwitnessed by emergency medical services and who is still in persistent ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia. Many people have played a big role in creating this device to become more efficient, smaller and easier to use for the general public. Here are just to name a few that played a part in the creation for this device: Claude Beck, James Rand, Paul Zoll, and Frank Pantridge. The first use of a defibrillator on a patient was in 1947 on a 14 year old boy. Claude Beck was performing a open-chest surgery when the boy went into fibrillation. Beck manually massaged his heart for 45 minutes until the arrival of the defibrillator. The defibrillator he used during surgery was made by James Rand and had silver paddles the size of large teaspoons. In 1956, Paul Zoll performed the first successful external defibrillation with a more powerful defibrillator. A major breakthrough in emergency medicine occur in 1965. At the time a majority of coronary deaths occurred outside of the hospital setting since defibrillator required a main power source and were only available in hospitals it made them pretty much useless in saving lives outside of a hospital setting. Frank Pantridge often referred to as the Father of Emergency Medicine, made the first portable defibrillator in 1965. This device was power by a car battery and weighted approximately 70 kg (155 lbs). By 1968 he was able to create a defibrillator that was safer to use and only weighted 3 kg (6-7 lbs). It was argued that their was a possibility of misuse of the device if given to a unt...
On the above date, time and location, while at the front desk, the writer was approached by a resident name Min Park of unit 3909 stating that after using the sauna a couple days ago, that she developed a skin reaction on leg from using the sauna. She asked the writer how often the sauna gets cleaned and the writer informed her that it is cleaned on daily basis. Min Park informed the writer that she would like an incident report to be made. The writer informed her that she will write an incident report on the matter. There is nothing to else report and this report was done for management’s awareness.
The nurse confirmed patient identification, asked subjective questions focusing on chief complaints, performed a focused assessment, obtained medication list, baseline vitals, and assessed the patient’s past medical history. She asked the patient questions such as previous hospitalization/surgery, metal implants, allergies, health history, sleep apnea, and alcohol/tobacco use. The nurse told the patient the doctor would be with her shortly. The nurse reported to the doctor regarding the patient and obtained orders for treatment from the doctor. The nurse then started an IV line and hung an IV solution bag of normal saline because the patient was experiencing abdominal pain. The nurse also administered pain medications and the patient was ready to be discharged. The nurse gave discharge instructions and made sure that the patient had a ride
First responders play a crucial role in the establishment of a crime scene. Upon arriving at the scene, the first responders have checked for living victims and have rendered aid. It’s important to create a perimeter around the crime scene (this can be altered if additional evidence is found outside the initial crime scene). Only emergency personnel should enter and exit from the central entry point to control contamination, by creating an exit point; it helps avoid any excessive traffic through the crime scene. By secure the scene to ensure that no evidence is misplaced or damaged, or otherwise compromised. Do a cursory check of the crime scene to obtain any transient evidence and secure any weapons found at the scene (in this case it was already at the scene with the suspect). Crime scene analysts and investigators communicate with first responders and are quickly briefed on the situation, and now a more thorough search can be conducted.
I had just gotten hired by the New York City Fire Department, I was working the morning shift when a call when out for a fire in a taxpayer with possible people trapped. Since I was on the ladder company our primary job was to find the possible trapped victims. We got on the road and immediately could smell the smoke, then dispatch came over radio and said police are on location reporting a 10-75,which is a working fire, and could see visible people trapped. Captain Merk yelled to the back “prepare to go in.” We arrived on scene and we could here people yelling about someone trapped on the 2nd floor. My partner and I entered structure thru the back and proceeded up the stairs. We made our way thru the hallway checking every door we came upon. We got to the end of the hallway and could hear someone screaming and coughing from the last door on the left hand side. We made our way into the room and my partner and I started searching for the victim. Over the radio we could hear the battalion chief calling for the 2nd alarm; the fire was getting worse. We kept searching our area but couldn’t hear the screaming or coughing anymore as we sped up our search we made our way into the bathroom and there she was laying on the floor by the window. My partner and I picked her up and started making our way out of the building. We made it to the bottom of the stairs when the floor started to give way. We fell to the ground and I could feel something pop in my knee. As we regained our composer we stood up with the victim and made our way to the front of the buildings where EMS was waiting. The Emt’s took her, put her on oxygen, put her on the stretcher, and loaded her in the ambulance. I told the Ems supervisor that when I fell I felt something pop in my knee. He told me to get in the ambulance that was about to leave. I got into the back with the girl I had just rescue…how ironic. On our way to the hospital the girl had started to regain consciousness and started to come back around. Of course she was scared and didn’t know what was going on.