Monday, January 21, 2008

Come on is this how the city deals???

1 Student tasered for wearing a baseball cap vs 2 Wife beater


1 [url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZ2R6nGR9-g&feature=related[/url]

2
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e71w8yAMAyU&feature=related[/url]


or a village people cop not wanting a guy to sit down or .....
well you will see ....http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FRnh9f1NnU&feature=relate

Tuesday, January 15, 2008




    Video

  • A memorial service is held on Camp Pendleton for Stryker, an Oceanside Police Department police dog who died trying to stop a man from jumping off the Coronado Bay Bridge.
    Media प्लेयर


Default Several hundred people, 120 service dogs bid goodbye to Stryker

""The guy who jumped off the bridge needs to be charged with murder of an officer."" Some are saying. .. MUDER! they should have had a HUMAN deal with the "sucide victim" but no they send a DOG name STRIKER to attact the man and they both went over the bridge.
Dog Gone it....... Then played AMAZING GRACE oh my god!
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CAMP PENDLETON – Oceanside police Officer Kedrick Sadler's deceased partner had only one flaw: He liked to chew on the seats in the back of the cruiser.

Other than that, Stryker, a K-9 dog killed in the line of duty, was an ideal companion. At a memorial service yesterday, the 6½-year-old Belgian Malinois was eulogized as a model public servant, even if, as one officer said, “he didn't wear a uniform and wore his hair any way he wanted.”

The service had its unusual moments. One speaker noted the benefits of working with a partner who wasn't ashamed to go to the bathroom in public.

Like a memorial service for a human being, however, the ceremony was infused with an acute sense of agony over the loss of a dear friend.

Stryker died during a Dec. 31 police stand-off with a drunken-driving suspect, Cory Byron, who had led police on a car chase from Oceanside to the San Diego-Coronado Bridge. Police sent Stryker to subdue the suspect, but he and the the 75-pound dog went off the bridge together. Byron, 27, survived the 200-foot drop and is in custody. Stryker died despite efforts by paramedics to revive him.

Sadler, 33, who had been paired with Stryker for more than a year, began to cry as he addressed a crowd that included several hundred people and at least 120 service dogs from law-enforcement agencies around the county. A few mourners also brought along their pet dogs.

“Life, whether it be man or beast, has value,” Sadler told the mourners, some of whom sat in bleachers set up on a grassy field near the base's Paige Fieldhouse.

“To Stryker, thank you and I salute you today, my friend,” Sadler said.

Eventually, they decided a public memorial service was the most fitting thing to do.

A bugler played “Taps.” A bagpiper played “Amazing Grace.” A detective read a poem, “Guardians of the Night,” about a service dog's relationship to his human partner. “Trust in me, my friend, for I am your comrade,” the poem began. “I will protect you with my last breath.”

Before the service began, retired nurse Joy Kerkhoff placed a white rose underneath a large photograph of Stryker, which showed the dog sitting upright at attention, staring into the camera.

Kerkhoff, 68, drove to the base from her home in Imperial Beach so she and her golden retriever, Molly, could attend the service.

“Stryker knows we're here,” she said, crying gently as her golden retriever wagged its tail.


HOWARD LIPIN / Union-Tribune
Oceanside police Officer Kedrick Sadler became emotional during the service.
No one can recall the last time one of the department's service dogs was killed in the line of duty. With the loss of Stryker, the department now has four K-9 officers. In the days after Stryker's death, officials were unsure how best to honor his memory. http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/n...#sosd_comments
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