Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Sunnyside- two suspects sought in shooting - pics


The Sunnyside Police Department is seeking information leading to the arrest of Richard Bermudez, 27, and Crystal Navarro, 24, both of Sunnyside.

The pair is wanted for assault with a firearm after police were called to the 800 block of Ismo Loop last night (Sunday) that occurred just before 10 p.m.

According to police reports Bermudez and Navarro walked up to Nick Medelez, who was standing at the location of the incident. One of the suspects had a gun and fired a shot, missing the victim's head. A second gunshot was fired into the air.

Medelez was not treated for minor injuries he sustained at the scene.

Bermudez is believed to have been driving a 1999 Volkswagon Passat, license plate number 307-YJI. Navarro, say police, was a passenger in the vehicle.

Bermudez is considered by police to be armed with a large semi-automatic handgun used in the incident.

Anyone with information leading to the whereabouts of the suspects is asked to call the Sunnyside Police Department at 836-6200.

http://www.dailysunnews.com/DSNNews10.shtml

Monday, February 8, 2010

Outlook- horses shot

Bob Story

Yesterday (Sunday) at approximately 9 a.m. the Yakima County Sheriff's Office was alerted to a shooting incident in which four horses were shot.

The incident occurred in the area of Hudson and Price roads near Outlook. One horse was discovered to be dead and another was seriously injured. He was not suspected to survive the shooting.

Two other horses were both shot one time apiece, according to the sheriff's report. Those animals are expected to survive their wounds.

Deputies believed the shooting occurred sometime Saturday night, leaving two more horses uninjured.

Yakima County Sheriff's Sergeant Robert Udell said, "The malicious and senseless shooting of the animals greatly affected the horse owners. Not only did the act result in a monetary loss to the owners, but there is a personal loss that cannot be quantified."

He said all the horses were valued as riding horses and have been used with youth groups.

The crime is being investigated as vandalism and cruelty to animals.

Any information leading to suspects in the investigation can be directed to the Yakima County Sherriff's Office by calling 509-574-2500.
http://www.dailysunnews.com/DSNNews12.shtml

Yakima- man shot in shoulder

YAKIMA, Wash. -- A 24-year-old man was shot in the left shoulder early Monday in the 300 block of South Sixth Street, police say.

Officers went to the area about 12:30 a.m. to check on a report of gunfire. They found a number of bullet casings on the ground but no victim, according to a news release from the Yakima Police Department.

But a gunshot victim arrived soon after at Yakima Regional Medical and Cardiac Center. Police said he told them he'd been shot at the Sixth Street scene but was otherwise uncooperative. It was not clear whether the incident was gang-related.

The injury was not life-threatening, authorities said.

Tips about the case may be reported to detectives at 509-575-6200.

http://www.yakima-herald.com/stories/2010/02/08/man-shot-in-shoulder-in-yakima

Friday, February 5, 2010

Sunnyside- shots fired on Grandview Ave

On February 5, Sunnyside police reported calls of 'shots fired' on the 300 block of Grandview Ave. No arrests are believed to have been made.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Gangs on Twitter and Facebook

LOS ANGELES (AP) - When a gang member was released from jail soon after his arrest for selling methamphetamine, friends and associates assumed he had cut a deal with authorities and become a police informant.

They sent a warning on Twitter that went like this: We have a snitch in our midst.

Unbeknownst to them, that tweet and the traffic it generated were being closely followed by investigators, who had been tracking the San Francisco Bay Area gang for months. Officials sat back and watched as others joined the conversation and left behind incriminating information.

Law enforcement officials say gangs are making greater use of Twitter and Facebook, where they sometimes post information that helps agents identify gang associates and learn more about their organizations.

"You find out about people you never would have known about before," said Dean Johnston with the California Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, which helps police investigate gangs. "You build this little tree of people."

In the case involving the suspected informant, tweets alerted investigators to three other gang members who were ultimately arrested on drug charges.

Tech-savvy gangsters have long been at home in chatrooms and on Web sites like MySpace, but they appear to be gravitating toward Twitter and Facebook, where they can make threats, boast about crimes, share intelligence on rivals and network with people across the country.

"We are seeing a lot more of it," Johnston said. "They will even go out and brag about doing shootings."

In another California case involving a different gang, much of the information gathered by investigators came from members' Facebook accounts. Authorities expect to make arrests in the coming months.

"Once you get into a Facebook group, it's relatively easy," Johnston said. "You have a rolling commentary."

And gang members sometimes turn the tables, asking contacts across their extended networks for help identifying undercover police officers.

It's hard to know exactly how many gang members are turning to Twitter and Facebook. Many police agencies are reluctant to discuss the phenomenon for fear of revealing their investigative techniques.

Capt. Walt Myer, director of the Riverside County regional gang task force, said gang activity often "mirrors general society. When any kind of new technology comes along, they are going to use it."

Representatives from Twitter and Facebook say they regularly cooperate with police and supply information on account holders when presented with a search warrant. Neither company would discuss specifics.

Gang use of Twitter and Facebook still lags behind use of the much-older MySpace, which remains gang members' online venue of choice.

The Crips, Bloods, Florencia 13, MS-13 and other gangs have long used MySpace to display potentially incriminating photos and videos of people holding guns and making hand gestures. They also post messages about rivals.

Last week, officials in Riverside County, east of Los Angeles, announced the arrest of 50 people in a crackdown of a Latino gang they say was engaged in drug sales and hate crimes against black residents. Prosecutors say some of the evidence was pulled from MySpace and YouTube, including rap videos taunting police with violent messages.

While some members are wising up to the police attention such postings can bring, gang information remains publicly viewable online.

Dozens of Facebook accounts are dedicated to the deadly MS-13 gang, with followers from around the globe. At one site, a video displays pictures of dead members of the rival 18th Street gang, and some users have left disrespectful comments.

The toughest part about tracking someone on Twitter is finding the alias or screen name they are posting under. And many tweets are nonsensical or pointless, so cutting through the clutter can be difficult.

"It's tricky," said Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy David Anguiano. "If you find out what they go by, you are good to go."

Anguiano tracks the online activity of graffiti vandals - the so-called tagging crews that sometimes morph into gangs. They post tweets saying they are heading out to spray paint and sometimes post links to photographs of their work.

Often, they cannot resist bragging about their handiwork, and the electronic trail they leave is frequently used as evidence.

"They talk about it too much," Anguiano said. "You want the fame so you've got to go out there and talk about it. That's when your mouth gets you in trouble."

http://www.kimatv.com/news/national/83347512.html

Sunnyside- man stabbed, uncooperative

Last night (Monday) at approximately 8:20 p.m. a man was brought into the Sunnyside Community Hospital emergency room with a stab wound to his back. The hospital alerted the Yakima County Sheriff's Office of the incident.

The victim's girlfriend told deputies the pair had been at a residence on Fordyce Road. The man was in a bedroom there with an unknown subject when his girlfriend heard screaming. She told deputies she rushed to her boyfriend's aid to discover he had been stabbed. When she questioned him, he would not tell her who stabbed him and why. She rushed him to the emergency room shortly after, according to Yakima County Sheriff's Chief of Detectives Stew Graham.

He said the deputy investigating the incident was also unable to get the victim to disclose the name of the suspect. The deputy's report says the victim kept saying, "I'm too weak to talk."

Also since yesterday deputies have been alerted to two motor vehicle accidents.

Just after 8 a.m. yesterday multiple vehicles were involved in a crash at Glade and Alderdale roads near Mabton. Two tow trucks were called to the scene and injuries were reported.

Another accident was reported shortly before 8:30 a.m. in the area of Yakima Valley Highway and Sunnyside Road near Sunnyside. The vehicle at the scene was abandoned. Further details were not available.

Yakima County Sheriff's deputies have since yesterday received from Lower Valley residents a report of a safe found in a field, a suspicious activity call, a report of a runaway and a DUI call. Two stolen vehicles were recovered, as well.

http://www.dailysunnews.com/ARCHIVES/Story.aspx/17727/man-stabbed-unwilling-to-name-suspect

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Union Gap police shoot armed suspect


UNION GAP--Police officers shoot an armed gunman in the line of duty.

Union Gap Police Chief Robert Almeida tells KNDO officers were dispatched to the 3800 block of Second Avenue shortly before 11:00 a.m. Sunday. The situation was initially described as a domestic incident, but Almeida was unable to immediately confirm that.

According to Almeida, two male officers shot at the suspect, an armed juvenile, hitting him once in the midsection. The suspect was taken to a local hospital; his condition was not immediately available.

Almeida declined to identify the officers, but said they will be placed on administrative leave until the investigation is completed. Placing officers on leave after a shooting is standard procedure.

Watch KNDO tonight at 6:00 or 11:00 p.m. for more information.

http://www.kndu.com/Global/story.asp?S=11909673