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It remains to be seen whether the recruiting dilemma in the District will soon be fully solved-or if Mayor Bowser and Chief Contee will be saved by the court-but it is clear that there is a pressing need to have patrol officers working in the city on the Potomac. Judge Rules DC Vax Mandate Unlawful, Potentially Enticing New Police Recruits “Officers were able to gain access to the room and shortly after entry the suspect fired a gun at the officers." KY Officer Wounded in OIS, Suspect Later Dies While providing assistance and traffic control, he was hit by a passing vehicle Idaho Trooper Hit by Car, Critically InjuredĪround 8:30 a.m., an Idaho State Police Sergeant responded to a vehicle fire on the westbound lane of I-84. The pay package – which includes $30,000 bonuses for recruits who make a starting salary of $42,411– represents a massive injection of funding over the next three years. New Orleans Mayor Announces $80 Million Plan to Boost Police Department Suspects in Killing of Off-Duty TX Deputy Constable were Out on Bond for Murder Charges The chase for the suspect ended about two hours after the first of two reported shootings when Ontario's police watchdog says officers fatally shot the man, who had been tracked down to a Hamilton cemetery. Three safety initiatives were adopted by the Uvalde County Commissioners Court Monday, with the most expensive being a decision to open the bidding process for a new $300,000 communications tower.Ĭanadian Officer Ambushed and Killed During Training Uvalde County Buying Communications and Tactical Gear for Schools when the driver mistakenly went down a boat ramp on a foggy night. After they called, heavy rains swept through the area, leading to flash flooding.ĬO Deputies Rescue 2 Women from Car Crashed in Reservoir The lawyer for the centre produced in evidence previous front pages of the newspaper that dealt with sensitive issues, arguing that it was damaging Morocco's image abroad.CA Officers Rescue Family from Flash FloodĪccording to initial reports, the woman and her two children called the police asking for help with an unrelated issue. The plaintiff's lawyer said that it was in reality a political trial and the court was as a result invited to judge the newspaper's editorial line and opinions and not the object of the complaint. Lawyers for the two journalists said they would appeal.Įditor of Le Journal Hebdomadaire, Ali Amar, said that “at no time had the speeches focused on the alleged object of the libel.
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Jamai and Iraqi, already fined 50,000 dirhams (5,000 euros) in the criminal court were handed down the latest fines on 16 February by a civil court in Rabat which also ordered them to publish the grounds for the decision in three weeklies, Le Journal Hebdomadaire, Maroc Hebdo and El Ousboue.
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In the same way anything connected with the Palace or the Western Sahara is taboo.” "In exploiting a foreign-based fake NGO, the government is reminding journalists of the red lines they should not cross. After sentencing Ali Lmrabet to a ten-year ban on practising his profession and imposing fines totally 177,000 euros for libel on the weekly Tel Quel over a period of less than three months, it is the turn of Le Journal to pay the price for this policy of stifling the investigative press”. “The Moroccan authorities never give up and gagging newspapers and their journalists is their latest weapon", said Reporters Without Borders. The complaint that led to the sentence against the newspaper was laid by the European Strategic Intelligence and Security Centre (ESISC), after Le Journal Hebdomadaire published a report questioning the objectivity of a critical report carried out by this “institute” into the separatist Polisario. "With this disproportionate sentence - equal to 138 years of a minimum salary in Morocco - the courts are determined to silence one of the best independent publications in the Maghreb, where the press is too often under the control of the government,” said Reporters Without Borders. Reporters Without Borders voiced shock as managing editor Abubakr Jamai and sub-editor Fahd Iraqi, of Le Journal Hebdomadaire were fined three million and 50,000 dirhams (350,000 euros) for defamation, the highest ever slapped on journalists in Morocco.
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