Four Officers Gunned Down in Ambush

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  • sadaist
    TOASTMASTER GENERAL
    • Jul 2004
    • 11625

    #46
    Originally posted by Hardrock69
    YAAAAAY!

    The WORTHLESS PIECE OF SHIT IS DEAD!!!!

    :happy64:

    This makes me so happy. Now we will not spend a dime feeding, housing, providing medical care, etc... to this fuck. Not to mention the money spent on a trial. Plus, from what I understand anyways, this guy may have been treated like a hero in prison.
    “Great losses often bring only a numb shock. To truly plunge a victim into misery, you must overwhelm him with many small sufferings.”

    Comment

    • FORD
      ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

      • Jan 2004
      • 59610

      #47
      Originally posted by sadaist
      Plus, from what I understand anyways, this guy may have been treated like a hero in prison.
      Maybe not....

      He may have killed 4 cops, but he also raped a child. Pedobears don't make many friends in prison. Just ask Jeff Dahmer, or that priestophile from Boston who met a similar fate. Satan has their current phone numbers.
      Eat Us And Smile

      Cenk For America 2024!!

      Justice Democrats


      "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

      Comment

      • GO-SPURS-GO
        Sniper
        • Feb 2007
        • 907

        #48
        For this post, I'm glad the "groan" button is disabled.

        Originally posted by Satan
        And now, he's mine.........

        Any requests for tormenting this fucker?
        Well your unholiness, if he "really" was mentally ill, then please cut the dude some slack.
        https://www.facebook.com/warren.hammonds.58
        http://www.soundclick.com/bands/defa...bandID=1001063

        Comment

        • Nitro Express
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Aug 2004
          • 32942

          #49
          Originally posted by FORD
          Obviously this is someone who knew what they were doing. I don't think some little gang puke could pull this off. If you can just walk into some hole in the wall coffee shop and waste 4 trained and armed police officers before they can fire a single round in defense, odds are you have some sort of training yourself.
          I use to be a firearm instructor and we aren't talking about target shooting here. Anybody willing the pull the trigger could do 4 cops not expecting to be shot at close range no problem. Also, I shoot with cops and not all of them are that great with a pistol. Some are and some aren't. Many cops view their firearm as a necessary evil and do the minimum training and others are experts. Street cops are not FBI agents who are very good with their firearms.

          You also have to remember the shooter has the jump on them. After the first shot, the deafening noise and blast of the gun kicks in the adrenaline and causes the body to freeze. This buys more time to finish them off.
          No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

          Comment

          • Hardrock69
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Feb 2005
            • 21897

            #50
            Hey Satan, put him in the 'extra-extreme' pit of torment. I leave the specifics up to you, as you have only had since the creation of the human race to figure out the best ways to torment humans, and are therefore THE expert.

            Comment

            • ULTRAMAN VH
              Commando
              • May 2004
              • 1480

              #51
              Memories of four Lakewood officers bring tears, laughter
              Moving tributes to the four slain Lakewood police officers were delivered by co-workers, friends and their children at today's memorial service the Tacoma Dome.

              By Seattle Times staff
              MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES

              Police and fire vehicles line-up along 112th Street SW headed to McChord Air Force Base early Tuesday morning for the memorial procession for the four slain Lakewood Police Officers.
              The four fallen Lakewood officers

              Memories of four Lakewood officers bring tears, laughter
              Lakewood Police Officer Ronald Owens was always smiling

              Lakewood Police Sgt. Mark Renninger was devoted to family, dedicated to police work

              Lakewood Officer Tina Griswold was a 'ball of fire' in a tiny package

              Officer Gregory Richards: Loving family man was 'the golden boy'

              View In Attendance in a larger map Moving tributes to the four slain Lakewood police officers were delivered by co-workers, friends and their children at today's memorial service at the Tacoma Dome.

              Austin Richards, the 16-year-old son of Greg Richards, said his father viewed his job as an honor despite the stresses inherent to law-enforcement work.

              "He didn't become more hardened or angry, just more thankful," Richards said. "I guess you could say he didn't see the point in anger."

              In moments heart-wrenching and funny, Michael Villa described Sgt. Mark Renninger tracking a suspect without the help of a K-9 unit, twice guessing correctly which way the suspect had fled.

              "I remember thinking, 'Who is this guy? We don't need a K-9 unit. We have the man tracker on our crew,' " said Villa, now the assistant police chief in Tukwila.

              Tina Griswold was described by her friend as being a dedicated mother, good cook and as tough an officer — pound-for-pound — as could be found. "The fastest way to break up a bar fight was to throw Tina in the middle of it," said Pamela Battersby, Griswold's friend.

              Ronnie Owens' sister, Ronda LeFrancois, remembered her brother hamming it up in high school, break dancing on the kitchen floor and singing Barry Manilow songs.

              "You could never go anywhere with Ronnie without someone knowing who he was," said LeFrancois. Owens, she said, had been looking forward to watching his young daughter's first basketball season.

              After a 20-minute video full of snapshots of four officers' childhoods, weddings, family moments and on-the-job events, Gov. Chris Gregoire said the state would honor their memory by continuing to support law enforcement.

              "We will remember them today. We will remember them always. We owe these children — all nine of them — a future that is safe and secure," said Gregoire.

              The eulogies were delivered on a stage surrounded by four flag-draped caskets and a crowd of nearly 20,000 law-enforcement officers, who watched mostly in silence, except for moments of applause and laughter.

              The memorial service began as officers from around North America crisply saluted the families — including the nine children — of the slain officers as they were seated for a service expected to last more than three hours.

              The memorial was preceded by a procession of about 2,000 law-enforcement vehicles, red-and-blue lights flashing, that began at 10:05 a.m. It crawled along a somber, 10.3-mile route from McChord Air Force Base to the Tacoma Dome.

              The procession, which took three-and-a-half hours, was so sprawling that the tail end was still at the base at 1:30 p.m., a half-hour after the memorial was scheduled to begin. The service began more than an hour later than planned.

              Gregoire had called it "the darkest day in the history of law enforcement in Washington."

              The enormous contingent represented more than 300 agencies and thousands of law-enforcement officers, among them an estimated 600 from British Columbia, 100 each from Chicago and New York, and others from Boston, Bozeman, Mont., Salem, Ore., and every corner of Washington state. FBI Director Robert Mueller planned to attend.

              One of last vehicles in the procession, from the Delta Police Department near Vancouver, B.C., flew Canadian and U.S. flags side by side.

              Lakewood police Sgt. Mark Renninger and Officers Tina Griswold, Gregory Richards and Ronnie Owens were gunned down by Maurice Clemmons on Nov. 29 at a Pierce County coffee shop. It was the worst attack on law enforcement in the state's history.

              About 19,200 law-enforcement officers had been anticipated at today's memorial, making it the biggest such event in state history.

              Bryan Tearson, assistant chief of Central Pierce Fire and Rescue, said planning for the memorial began at about 10 a.m. Nov. 30, little more than 24 hours after the shooting. He said more 100 police, fire, emergency-management and public-works staff from around the Puget Sound were involved in planning.

              With so many law-enforcement and political leaders gathered, there were extensive security preparations, including sweeps of the Tacoma Dome beginning last night. Heavily armed SWAT team members patrolled the perimeter of the arena, while camouflaged snipers were in position on the roof.

              After leaving McChord Air Force Base under a bright, sunny sky, the long line of cars stopped at the Lakewood police station, where several hundred people gathered outside in 23-degree cold. A large American flag hung from crossed fire ladders erected by the University Place Fire Department.

              "We're here to respect the officers and to show our support," said Everett police Officer Gregory Sutherland, 37, a 15-year veteran who was waiting to join the procession. "There's a real sense of commonality, even with people you don't know. Because of the profession, this is the ultimate sacrifice these guys made."

              The procession was joined there by a motorcade of hearses and limousines carrying the fallen officers and their families as well as four Lakewood police cruisers, each with a black band over the front door in the officers' memory.

              Hundreds lined a stretch of South Tacoma Way in the punishing cold to observe the funeral procession. Some held flags others held signs, officers saluted as cars passed, some people took photos and videos, some stood with their hands over their hearts and some stood and wept quietly. Officers touched their hands to their car windows as they passed.

              Roxanne Clouse, barely able to speak without weeping, said she "wanted to be a part of this, support the ones who are here and let them know they all matter. I'm here to feel the cold for those that can't."

              The sight of the four hearses brought home the tragedy for some of the onlookers. Eileen Melberg, who works at a law firm along the route, said seeing the flag-draped coffins made her gasp. "This isn't a picture. This is a person who should still be alive."

              Josh Warner, a military police officer from Fort Lewis, said he used to have coffee with Renninger and Owens. Owens, he said, responded earlier this year to a domestic-violence call involving a family friend and spent hours helping her fill out paperwork.

              "He was the kind of officer who would go above and beyond," Warner said. "They will be missed very much."

              Across the street from the McChord gate where the procession began, Jerome Wahl, 33, sat with a table of coffee and cookies for officers and a 4-foot sign reading, "Comfort Design supports the Lakewood Police Department and their families."

              "I live in the area; I do all my shopping in Lakewood," said Wahl, service manager for the window and door company across the street. "We appreciate the Police Department in everything they do and we are deeply saddened by this tragedy that happened right here in our back yard."

              Seattle Times staff writers Marc Ramirez, Jack Broom, Lynn Thompson, Christine Clarridge, Maureen O'Hagan, Mark Rahner and Jonathan Martin contributed to this report.

              Comment

              • Hardrock69
                DIAMOND STATUS
                • Feb 2005
                • 21897

                #52
                I saw a piece on the news about this. Thousands of people lined the streets of Tacoma to pay their final respects. I surely would have been there if I had lived in the area.

                Comment

                • BITEYOASS
                  ROTH ARMY ELITE
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 6530

                  #53
                  This scumbag is dead and so is Huckabee's political career! YIPEE!!!

                  Comment

                  • FORD
                    ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                    • Jan 2004
                    • 59610

                    #54
                    Originally posted by Hardrock69
                    I saw a piece on the news about this. Thousands of people lined the streets of Tacoma to pay their final respects. I surely would have been there if I had lived in the area.
                    This memorial went on literally all day too. And it was (and is) fucking cold here right now. Just finally broke single digits - a whole 11 degrees at the moment.

                    At least these people froze their asses off for a good cause. And the memorials aren't done yet............

                    The Bob Rivers Show with Bob Spike and Joe
                    Eat Us And Smile

                    Cenk For America 2024!!

                    Justice Democrats


                    "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                    Comment

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