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alp227

(32,004 posts)
Fri Sep 12, 2014, 01:39 AM Sep 2014

Lost Weapons Prompt Halt of Military Gear to Some Sheriff Departments

The San Mateo and Napa County sheriff’s departments are suspended from a federal program that provides hand-me-down military equipment to law enforcement agencies because the departments are unable to account for some missing assault weapons.

The departments are two of nine law enforcement agencies in the state currently suspended from the Defense Department’s 1033 program, according to documents provided to KQED by the California Office of Emergency Services, which facilitates the federal program in this state.

“A suspension is not like a school suspension, where it’s punitive, where you’re in trouble,” said Kelly Huston, deputy director with Cal OES. “It’s that we are not going to have you acquiring additional gear if you can’t account for that which you are already assigned.”

Huston said sometimes the weapons are stolen, or there’s a record-keeping problem that causes the law enforcement agency to lose track of equipment.


full: http://blogs.kqed.org/newsfix/2014/09/11/lost-assault-rifles-suspension-1033/

See also San Jose Mercury News, Bay Area police departments got millions in military surplus, records show

Law enforcement agencies throughout the Bay Area have received more than $14 million dollars worth of decommissioned military equipment, including grenade launchers, armored vehicles, and an 85-foot speed boat armed with machine guns, records show.

The acquisitions by local agencies include a $4.4 million fast patrol boat, given to the Alameda County Sheriff's office in 2005 to patrol the waterways around the Port of Oakland, a $685,000 mine resistant vehicle for the Antioch Police Department and an armored vehicle known as the MAMBA, which can withstand land mines and IEDs, for the city of Concord.

The acquisitions are part of the Department of Defense's 1033 Program, which since 1995 has given more than $5 billion worth of military surplus to police agencies across the country. Although the program has been in place for nearly two decades, information about what individual police agencies received was made available for first time last week by the California Office of Emergency Services, which oversees the program in the state.

The data was released amid growing concern over the militarization of local police departments in the wake of a shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Mo., and a strong law enforcement response to the protests that followed.
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Lost Weapons Prompt Halt of Military Gear to Some Sheriff Departments (Original Post) alp227 Sep 2014 OP
We need to make them sell this crap and use the money for schools. grahamhgreen Sep 2014 #1
sell it to whom? jberryhill Sep 2014 #4
Canada, France, Italy, UK, India, SA, Qatar, Kuwait, Japan... grahamhgreen Sep 2014 #8
Ah, okay, I was thinking some sort of auction attended by the local yahoo brigade jberryhill Sep 2014 #9
Yeah, lost. That's it. That's the ticket. merrily Sep 2014 #2
I for one say thank god the police have those land mine resistant tanks. dixiegrrrrl Sep 2014 #3
Drones for immigrants? What? nt alp227 Sep 2014 #5
lol And, those grenade launchers to target that high school football Live and Learn Sep 2014 #7
A couple of takeaways from this Sherman A1 Sep 2014 #6

dixiegrrrrl

(60,010 posts)
3. I for one say thank god the police have those land mine resistant tanks.
Fri Sep 12, 2014, 03:09 AM
Sep 2014

The IED problem is bad, and getting worse, in Contra Costa County, even tho the authorities have been keeping a lid on news about it.

I also support the idea of rocket launchers as a police tool, esp. for the problem of red light running in Cal.
and won't using them provide a lot more interesting photo op for those televised police chases on the freeways?

Hopefully California and other border states will be able to get their hands on weaponized drones soon to solve the pesky immigrant problem.

It's all good. I am surprised people don't understand the need to modernize even small town police depts.




Live and Learn

(12,769 posts)
7. lol And, those grenade launchers to target that high school football
Fri Sep 12, 2014, 06:22 AM
Sep 2014

player during a varsity game. How did we ever live without these weapons?


Sherman A1

(38,958 posts)
6. A couple of takeaways from this
Fri Sep 12, 2014, 06:17 AM
Sep 2014

1). The pentagon seriously needs to buy less stuff. Less stuff means less of it becomes surplus.

2). Military surplus should be given to the Reserves and the Guard as it has always been. Local police departments need equipment for policing not war fighting.

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