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liberalism + Socialism = Terrorism
Lieutenant Foster
Lieutenant Raymond E.
Foster, LAPD (ret.), MPA
EDUCATION &
PROFESSIONAL
TRAINING
Doctoral Student, Touro University International –
ABD, Winter 2006
MPA, Public Financial Management — California
State University, Fullerton
4.0 GPA (Member Phi Kappa Phi) - 2003
BA, Criminal Justice — The Union Institute —
1999
National Institute for Justice, Technology
Institute,
Washington, DC
Federal Emergency Management Agency, Incident
Command System
Federal Emergency Management Agency,
Terrorism for First Responders
POST Courses
West Point Leadership
Program
Instructor Development
Course
Middle
Manager
Watch
Commander
Supervisory
Development
|
POST Certificates Management Supervisor Advanced Officer Intermediate Officer Basic Officer |
CONSULTING SERVICES OFFERED BY
RAYMOND E. FOSTER
General police, law enforcement and criminal
justice
practices, policies and procedures. In both
government and the private
sector, organizational
development focusing on leadership and
change
management. Lieutenant Foster's most recent
project involved assisting
the Government of
Jamaica in developing a three year, nation-wide
anti-gang
strategy. You can read the final report at
www.gang-crime.com.
He is currently on
assignment in the Federation of Nevis and St.
Kitts,
assisting them with the refining of their
national security training curriculum.
SEMINARS OFFERED BY RAYMOND E.
FOSTER
-
Leadership
-
Career Development
-
Technology
-
Gang Crime
-
Organizational Development
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Books
Co-authored with Dr.
Andrew J. Harvey :
The book is used by:
• John Jay College of Criminal Justice • Union Institute and University • University of New Mexico, Anderson School of Business • Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board Executive Institute • Henderson Police Department (Nevada) • Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension • City of Santa Monica (California) |
Articles (If the article is
underlined, it is
hyperlinked to complete copy)
- De-briefing Suspects: An Analysis of the
- Crime Control Tactic of Gathering
- Criminal
- Intelligence from Arrested Person (LAPD
- Intranet, September 1999).
- Five Tactics for Taking Civil Service
- Examinations Hi-Tech Criminal Justice
- Newsletter (April 2004).
- Tailored Technology Mobile Government,
- September 2004.
- Crowded Airwaves? Airbeat Magazine,
- September 2004.
- Returning to the Scene of the Crime: High
- Definition Survey Technology and Law
- Enforcement Government Technology
- Magazine, March 2005
- Small Unit Leadership (Policeone.com, April
- 2006).
- The Strategy of Preparing for Promotion
- (Policeone.com, April 2006).
- Terrorism: Crime or Asymmetrical
- Warfare
- (Policeone.com, May 2005).
- National Response Plan: The Local
- Perspective (Law Officer Magazine,
- January/February 2006)
- Rethinking Command and Control (Law
- Officer Magazine, April 2006)
- Lessons Learned Overseas (Policeone.com)
- Police Technology and Counterterrorism
- (Policeone.com)
- Defining Terrorism (Policeone.com)
- Cop Cars: From Buckboard to Buck
- Rodgers, (Policeone.com)
- Homeland Security: A Needs Assessment
- (Policeone.com)
- Risk Communications (Policeone.com)
- Characteristics of a Terrorist Attack
- (Policeone.com)
- Terrorism Organizational and
- Communication Strategies ((Policeone.com)
- Terrorism, Safety and Situational
- Awareness
- (Policeone.com)
- Personal Protective Equipment
- (Policeone.com)
- Eleven Tactics for Oral Interviews,
- American
- Heroes News (2006)
- Jump Start Your Leadership, American
- Heroes News, 2007
- Defining Leadership, American Heroes
- News,
- 2007
- Morale: Whose Job is in Anyways,
- American
- Heroes News, 2008
- Michael Jackson and other Crime Scenes,
- American Heroes News, 2009
- My Supervisor is an Idiot, American Heroes
- News, 2009
- Leadership in Tough Times, American
- Heroes News, 2009
- The History of Policing, American Heroes
- News, 2009
- Michael Jackson and Other Crime Scenes,
- American Heroes News 2009
- Forget Everything you Learned in the
- Academy, American Heroes News, 2009
- My Supervisor is an Idiot! American Heroes
- News, 2009
- The Green Backpack, American Heroes
- News, 2010
- She Wolf, American Heroes News, 2010
- 10 Must do Actions Before your Patrol
- Shift,
- PoliceLink.com, 2010
- 10 Ways to Spot a Stolen Car, PoliceLink,
- 2010
- Law Enforcement on Twitter: Who’s
- Tweeting and What, American Heroes Press,
- 2011
- Lexicon of Law Enforcement Social Media
- Terms, America Heroes Press, 2011
Other
-
Editor, “Hi Tech Criminal JusticeNewsletter” 2003 to Present
-
Pre-publication reviewer Introduction toBiometrics (Prentice Hall, 2006) by SteveElliot
-
Technical Grant Reviewer, TechnologyTransfer to Rural Communities, Departmentof Homeland Security
-
Researcher & Expert Appearance, TheHistoryof Police Technology, History Channel
-
2006 Editor, Police Officer ExamLearningExpress, LLC
-
Forward, Technology and Law Enforcement:From Gumshoe to Gamma Rays, PraegerPublishing, Robert Snow (2007)
-
2009 Editor, California Highway PatrolExam, LearningExpress, LLC
-
2009 Editor, California Police Officer'sExam, LearnignExpress, LLC
-
2010 Editor, Police Exam for Dummies,
- 2010 Editor, Police Exam for Dummies,Northeast EditingYouTube™ for the Criminal Justice Educator,American Heroes Press, January 2014
Website Authored
Primary Blogs
Social Media
Downloads Available
|
Courses Taught
Media Experience
Partial Client List
|
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
UNION INSTITUTE AND UNIVERSITY
(Faculty Advisor, Instructor, Criminal Justice
Management Department Chair) 2004
– 2010
During service at University served as Presiding
Officer of the BS
Faculty Steering Committee,
Institutional Ad Hoc Assessment Committees,
Criminal Justice Management
Department Chair.
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY,
FULLERTON
(Instructor) 2004 - 2008
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY,
FRESNO
(Guest Instructor) Fall 2006
HI TECH CRIMINAL JUSTICE
2003 –
Present – Owner
The mission of this business is to provide
online resources for criminal justice
practitioners. Along with law enforcement
consulting services.
This is also the parent
company of
American
Heroes Press.
LOS ANGELES POLICE
DEPARTMENT
1980-2004
LIEUTENANT
(1997-- 2004)
Detective Support Division, Fugitive
Warrant
Section
Supervise 70 sworn and 5 non-sworn
employees.
Oversaw service of all adult felony
warrants;
the prosecution of foreign nationals in their
country of origin; and
the location and
apprehension of fugitives from other
jurisdictions;
Conduct international criminal
investigations at the behest of Interpol.
Liaison
between Interpol, foreign
consulates and
LAPD. Acting Commanding Officer —
coordinated all division
activities in absence
of superior
Central Traffic Division
Watch Commander—Bureau consisting of
110
sq.
miles with approximately I million
residents. Supervised the activities of 20
accident investigators and 44 motorcycle
officers. Acting Commanding Officer —
coordinated all division activities in absence
of superior
Pacific Area
Administrative Lieutenant reporting to Area
Commanding Officer — prepared and
reviewed all paperwork and documentation for
405 personnel. Watch Commander — directed
10 subordinate supervisors and 110
line
personnel. Responsible for basic patrol,
Venice Beach Detail and LAX
Substation.
Oversaw anti gang activities; responded to
tactical alerts; and
resolved all management
issues. Managed transition from flexible work
schedule
to standard 10/80; directed the
transition to new public complaint system;
and
facilitated transition to improved Community
Oriented Policing Model.
SERGEANT (1988-1997)
Internal
Affairs Group
Investigated allegations of misconduct
against
police officers.
Northeast Area
Patrol Sergeant, Administrative Sergeant —
conducted personnel investigations at
direction of Commanding Officer.
77th Area
Community Relations — supervised a staff of
8; responded to crisis situations throughout
the
community; and represented
Department
through numerous public speaking
engagements. Managed Explorer Post,
Business Booster Association, Police Clergy
Council, Reserve Police Officers,
Senior Lead
Officer Program, and Neighborhood Watch
Program. Participated in
numerous
community
related activities and events including Open
Houses,
Halloween activities and Christmas
basket distribution.
Patrol Adjutant —
directed
all front office
activities including writing
management papers, drafting management
correspondence, reviewing time slips and
handling all personnel functions.
Communications Division
Floor Supervisor supervised thirty 911
operators and 10 report takers.
Watch
Commander — managed emergency
allocation
of personnel citywide; and oversaw system
crises and breakdowns.
Southwest Area, 77th Area &
Northeast
Area
Field Sergeant
POLICE OFFICER (1980- 1988)
Newton Area . . . Southwest Area . . Central
Area
Foot beat officer, patrol officer and
training
officer
WEINGART CENTER
ASSOCIATION
(1986- 1990)
(One-stop Service
Center for Homeless -
Concurrent with LAPD Employment)
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS (Part-time
& Concurrent with LAPD)
Initially hired as Director of Security,
responsible for 18 security officers and a $1
million budget. Accountable for
the
management of security services provided to
in-house County agencies;
Advanced to
Director of Operations, in charge of 150
employees and a $3 million
budget.
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS /
COMMUNITY
ACTIVITIES
·
Member, Academy of Criminal Justice
Sciences
·
Member, International Association of
Chiefs
of Police (IACP)
·
Member, Author’s Guild
·
Rotary Club of San Dimas, Past
President
·
Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Phi Sigma –
Honors Societies
·
F & A.M Lodge No. 24, Mariposa,
California
·
Past Member LAPD Code One Toastmasters
(Past Vice
President)
·
Past Assistant Cubmaster, Boy Scouts of
America
·
Past Member, Peace Officer’s Association
of
Los Angeles County
·
Past Assistant Scoutmaster, Boy Scouts of
America
·
Past Chapter Advisor, Order of the Arrow –
Sunset Chapter, Navajo Lodge
AWARDS & HONORS
·
Police Medal for Heroism
·
Club, District and Regional
Toastmaster
Awards
·
Commendations for Outstanding
Performance
(over 200)
·
Numerous community letters of
appreciation
·
Recognized by southern California
Automobile Club for superior vehicle and
antitheft enforcement and safe driving
MILITARY SERVICE
·
United States Coast Guard Reserve
(1976-1983) Honorable Discharge
CONTACT INFORMATION
PMB No. 222
142 E. Bonita
Avenue
San Dimas, CA 91773
909.599.7530
editor@police-writers.com
Coignard picked up a red, wall-mounted phone in
the police department lobby and asked to speak
with an officer – for reasons that also remain
unclear.
The teenager may have been “wielding a knife”,
according to the mayor. Police say “they were
confronted by a white female who threatened
them” – after which she brandished some sort of
weapon, “made threatening movements toward
the
officers and was shot”. Motives on either side are
still relatively unknown.
What is clear, nearly a week later in Texas and six
months after police killings and community
relations starting coming under renewed scrutiny
across the US, is that another teenager has died
after being shot “multiple times” by local cops.
Three officers are on paid leave, the Longview
police told the Guardian. A preliminary autopsy
report has ruled the death a homicide.
And in the case of Kristiana Coignard, as in what
advocates and sheriffs agree constitute more than
half of US police killings each year, the victim
appears to have had mental health problems.
Call it “justifiable homicide”: FBI statistics
counted 461 encounters between police and those
they killed with the threat of violence in 2013.
Some have dubbed it “suicide-by-cop”, as about
one-third of such cases can be classified – in
addition to undoubtedly many more undercounted
deaths. The hacktivist collective Anonymous
prefers “trained to kill”.
Whatever you call the overlapping patterns of
police violence and brief encounters with young
and possibly unstable citizens, mental health
advocates insist the United States is “not keeping
track”.
“We’ve deputised America’s police to be mental
health workers,” Doris A Fuller, executive
director
of the Treatment Advocacy Center, told the
Guardian. “We’re asking cops to make a split-
second decision about whether someone is
actually a threat to them.”
On a Facebook page for the Longview police, a
user claiming to be Coignard’s uncle wrote that
“for quite a few years my niece suffered from
mental illness”.
The teenager was taking medication, seeing a
therapist and living with her aunt, Heather
Robertson, according to an interview with
Robertson at ThinkProgress. She told the website
that Coignard had struggled with depression and
bipolar disorder since her mother’s death when
she
was four years old. Robertson said her niece had
been “only violent with herself”.
“I think it was a cry for help,” Robertson said of
the incident in the police department lobby. “I
think they could have done something. They are
grown men. I think there is something they are
not telling us.”
There is video of the killing, Coignard’s aunt said
the police told her.
A Longview police spokesperson, Kristie Brian,
told the Guardian there are currently no plans to
make footage available to the public. She declined
to confirm the type of weapon Coignard allegedly
brandished but said the department expects to
release more details about the shooting later this
week. The Texas Ranger Division is investigating
the incident.
Brian said Longview officers “are trained in all
kinds of different situations”, including dealing
with people with mental health problems, and that
the county has a Crisis Intervention Team (CIT),
which sees specially trained officers dispatched to
urgent psychiatric situations. She said she did not
know whether the three officers currently on
leave had been CIT-trained.
Signboard is the third person – and the third
young person – shot dead by Longview police in
less than a year. No charges were filed by a grand
jury against three officers who killed a
15-year-old robbery suspect during a shootout last
March. A 23-year-old cook with a history of
making threats
died in August after a routine traffic stop went
away.
Three-and-a-half hours south, in Houston, the
2012 death of Brian Claunch had exemplified the
potential for tragedy when police with limited
training encounter a troubled individual in a
pressurised situation. Though Houston has a
widely praised CIT programme, two officers
without that experience were called to a care
home
one night when Claunch, a schizophrenic,
wheelchair-bound double amputee, started
behaving erratically.
Police said that he grew violent and cornered an
officer while waving a shiny object in their
direction. Matthew Marin shot the 45-year-old in
the head. The object proved to be a ballpoint pen.
In June 2013, a grand jury declined to bring
charges against the officer.
That year a police officer in Dallas was dismissed
from his job, and indicted by a grand jury in
2014,
after he shot a mentally ill man who was holding
a knife but standing still several yards away. The
encounter lasted less than 30 seconds from the
officers’ arrival to the gunfire.
A 2013 joint report by the Treatment Advocacy
Center and the National Sheriffs’ Association
found
that while no national data is officially collected
on fatal police shootings of the mentally ill,
“multiple informal studies and accounts support
the conclusion that ‘at least half of the people shot
and killed by police each year in this country have
mental health problems’.”
A third of “justifiable homicides”, the study
found, could be characterised as “suicide-
by-cop”, and many victims were not taking their
medications nor under close supervision by
mental health agencies.
Not unlike the larger call for more reliable
nationwide numbers to address all police killings,
advocates say a lack of firm data leads to a
standard of police responses to encounters with
the mentally ill that depends on officer training
and varies widely from department to department.
“We’re not keeping track of that, so we don’t
really have a handle on the situation,” said the
Treatment Advocacy Center’s Fuller, adding that
research indicated about half the US population
lives in counties served by CIT policing.
Ron Honberg, national director of policy and
legal
affairs at the National Alliance on Mental Illness,
said his organisation has called on the US justice
department to keep better track of deaths involving
police and the mentally ill. Outgoing attorney
general Eric Holder, whose replacement was
expected
to pass confirmation hearings on Wednesday in
Washington, recently called the lack of more
comprehensive police incident data “troubling”.
Honberg said the standard police response to
someone behaving aggressively is often to “come
in and
be very assertive, and that can be exactly the
wrong way to deal with someone who may be
having a
serious psychiatric episode” and may have a fear
of the authorities.
While better training and protocols are vital, he
told the Guardian, at their core the violent
encounters are “a manifestation of a broken
mental health system”.
Anonymous, in a video posted on Saturday, cited
Coignard’s death as the impetus for a new
operation
called Stop Lethal Force on Children.
“In 2014, we watched as police killed children
and
it started a army [sic] of angry Americans,” the
group said. “This teen girl’s death just put fuel on
that fire.”
Three cops, a 17-year-old and 'a cry for help':
why did Kristiana Coignard die?
Just after sunset last Thursday,
17-year-old Kristiana Coignard entered a
police
station in Longview, Texas, a small city two hours
east of
Dallas with a history of police violence not
all that different from the
rest of the United States
– but no less mysterious.
Coignard picked up a red, wall-mounted phone in
the police department lobby and asked to speak
with an officer – for reasons that also remain
unclear.
The teenager may have been “wielding a knife”,
according to the mayor. Police say “they were
confronted by a white female who threatened
them” – after which she brandished some sort of
weapon, “made threatening movements toward
the
officers and was shot”. Motives on either side are
still relatively unknown.
What is clear, nearly a week later in Texas and six
months after police killings and community
relations starting coming under renewed scrutiny
across the US, is that another teenager has died
after being shot “multiple times” by local cops.
Three officers are on paid leave, the Longview
police told the Guardian. A preliminary autopsy
report has ruled the death a homicide.
And in the case of Kristiana Coignard, as in what
advocates and sheriffs agree constitute more than
half of US police killings each year, the victim
appears to have had mental health problems.
Call it “justifiable homicide”: FBI statistics
counted 461 encounters between police and those
they killed with the threat of violence in 2013.
Some have dubbed it “suicide-by-cop”, as about
one-third of such cases can be classified – in
addition to undoubtedly many more undercounted
deaths. The hacktivist collective Anonymous
prefers “trained to kill”.
Whatever you call the overlapping patterns of
police violence and brief encounters with young
and possibly unstable citizens, mental health
advocates insist the United States is “not keeping
track”.
“We’ve deputised America’s police to be mental
health workers,” Doris A Fuller, executive
director
of the Treatment Advocacy Center, told the
Guardian. “We’re asking cops to make a split-
second decision about whether someone is
actually a threat to them.”
On a Facebook page for the Longview police, a
user claiming to be Coignard’s uncle wrote that
“for quite a few years my niece suffered from
mental illness”.
The teenager was taking medication, seeing a
therapist and living with her aunt, Heather
Robertson, according to an interview with
Robertson at ThinkProgress. She told the website
that Coignard had struggled with depression and
bipolar disorder since her mother’s death when
she
was four years old. Robertson said her niece had
been “only violent with herself”.
“I think it was a cry for help,” Robertson said of
the incident in the police department lobby. “I
think they could have done something. They are
grown men. I think there is something they are
not telling us.”
There is video of the killing, Coignard’s aunt said
the police told her.
A Longview police spokesperson, Kristie Brian,
told the Guardian there are currently no plans to
make footage available to the public. She declined
to confirm the type of weapon Coignard allegedly
brandished but said the department expects to
release more details about the shooting later this
week. The Texas Ranger Division is investigating
the incident.
Brian said Longview officers “are trained in all
kinds of different situations”, including dealing
with people with mental health problems, and that
the county has a Crisis Intervention Team (CIT),
which sees specially trained officers dispatched to
urgent psychiatric situations. She said she did not
know whether the three officers currently on
leave had been CIT-trained.
Signboard is the third person – and the third
young person – shot dead by Longview police in
less than a year. No charges were filed by a grand
jury against three officers who killed a
15-year-old robbery suspect during a shootout last
March. A 23-year-old cook with a history of
making threats
died in August after a routine traffic stop went
away.
Three-and-a-half hours south, in Houston, the
2012 death of Brian Claunch had exemplified the
potential for tragedy when police with limited
training encounter a troubled individual in a
pressurised situation. Though Houston has a
widely praised CIT programme, two officers
without that experience were called to a care
home
one night when Claunch, a schizophrenic,
wheelchair-bound double amputee, started
behaving erratically.
Police said that he grew violent and cornered an
officer while waving a shiny object in their
direction. Matthew Marin shot the 45-year-old in
the head. The object proved to be a ballpoint pen.
In June 2013, a grand jury declined to bring
charges against the officer.
That year a police officer in Dallas was dismissed
from his job, and indicted by a grand jury in
2014,
after he shot a mentally ill man who was holding
a knife but standing still several yards away. The
encounter lasted less than 30 seconds from the
officers’ arrival to the gunfire.
A 2013 joint report by the Treatment Advocacy
Center and the National Sheriffs’ Association
found
that while no national data is officially collected
on fatal police shootings of the mentally ill,
“multiple informal studies and accounts support
the conclusion that ‘at least half of the people shot
and killed by police each year in this country have
mental health problems’.”
A third of “justifiable homicides”, the study
found, could be characterised as “suicide-
by-cop”, and many victims were not taking their
medications nor under close supervision by
mental health agencies.
Not unlike the larger call for more reliable
nationwide numbers to address all police killings,
advocates say a lack of firm data leads to a
standard of police responses to encounters with
the mentally ill that depends on officer training
and varies widely from department to department.
“We’re not keeping track of that, so we don’t
really have a handle on the situation,” said the
Treatment Advocacy Center’s Fuller, adding that
research indicated about half the US population
lives in counties served by CIT policing.
Ron Honberg, national director of policy and
legal
affairs at the National Alliance on Mental Illness,
said his organisation has called on the US justice
department to keep better track of deaths involving
police and the mentally ill. Outgoing attorney
general Eric Holder, whose replacement was
expected
to pass confirmation hearings on Wednesday in
Washington, recently called the lack of more
comprehensive police incident data “troubling”.
Honberg said the standard police response to
someone behaving aggressively is often to “come
in and
be very assertive, and that can be exactly the
wrong way to deal with someone who may be
having a
serious psychiatric episode” and may have a fear
of the authorities.
While better training and protocols are vital, he
told the Guardian, at their core the violent
encounters are “a manifestation of a broken
mental health system”.
Anonymous, in a video posted on Saturday, cited
Coignard’s death as the impetus for a new
operation
called Stop Lethal Force on Children.
“In 2014, we watched as police killed children
and
it started a army [sic] of angry Americans,” the
group said. “This teen girl’s death just put fuel on
that fire.”
- In the US, the National Suicide Prevention
- Hotline is 1-800-273-8255 and the Trevor
- Project’s Lifeline is 1-866-488-7386.
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Party Network © LLC UCC 1-308.ALL
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Party Network Copyright 2015 CQ-Roll Call,
Inc. All materials herein are protected by
United States copyright law and may not be
reproduced, distributed, transmitted,
displayed, published or broadcast without the
prior written permission of CQ-Roll Call. You
may not alter or remove any trademark,
copyright or other notice from copies of the
content. © All Copyrights reserved By
Patcnews The Patriot Conservative News Tea
Party Network
Patcnews The Patriot Conservative News Tea
Party Network © LLC UCC 1-308.ALL
RIGHTS RESERVED WITHOUT
PREJUDICE All copyrights reserved By
Patcnews The Patriot Conservative News Tea
Party Network Copyright 2015 CQ-Roll Call,
Inc. All materials herein are protected by
United States copyright law and may not be
reproduced, distributed, transmitted,
displayed, published or broadcast without the
prior written permission of CQ-Roll Call. You
may not alter or remove any trademark,
copyright or other notice from copies of the
content. © All Copyrights reserved By
Patcnews The Patriot Conservative News Tea
Party Network