9
September , 2010
Thursday
The Internet is swirling with rumors today that a gloppy mixture of oil and Corexit ...
Robert Byrd dead At Age 92 FoxNews.com June 28, 2010 Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the ...
Updated May 18, 2010 Treason Season at the State Department By Christian Whiton - FOXNews.com The Obama administration ...
Flu Vaccine Puts Kids at Risk Friday, May 22, 2009 9:48 AM By: Sylvia Booth Hubbard  Article ...
American Delegation To Attend Hiroshima Event August 4, 2010 FoxNews.com EXCLUSIVE: The son of the U.S. Air ...
I don't understand why this is not being widely reported in the Mainstream Media. ...
WARDAK PROVINCE, Afghanistan — As elections draw near in Afghanistan, it appears the Taliban ...
Update On Death Toll From Previous Volleyball Match Story FoxNews.com January 1, 2010 The attack was not far ...
This is probably one of the saddest things that I have heard of yet. ...
Felons Voting Illegally May Have Put Franken Over the Top in Minnesota, Study Finds The six-month ...
Oregon Prosecutor: No Sex Charges for Al Gore July 30, 2010 FoxNews.com Former Vice President Al Gore won't ...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The United States has long suspected that much of the billions ...
Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com North Carolina's governor is warning residents to take Hurricane Earl ...
Top Official Says Feds May Not Process Illegals Referred From Arizona FOXNews.com May 21, 2010 “I don’t ...
JERUSALEM -- A U.S. envoy's postponement of his Mideast trip appeared Tuesday to deepen one ...
Election 2010: Conservatives set to be largest party The Conservatives are on course to ...
Scott Brown Slams Kathy Griffin for Calling Daughters 'Prostitutes' July 16, 2010 FoxNews.com Reuters Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown ...
(CNSNews.com) – Christians in Pakistan’s flood-hit regions are doubly affected by the disaster as a ...
I thought this is what ACORN has been fighting?! If ACORN can't help these people...what ...
The Justice Department announced that four separate indictments were unsealed in the Southern District of ...

Archive for September, 2008

Obama Uses Dead Soldier to Get Votes!!

Posted by Chandler On September - 27 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

capt81ac6606c7744432a6a9011a1286c02dpresidential_debate_msts133What kind of person continues to disrespect a family’s wishes after they have expressed those wishes to him?!

You have to be one depraved individual to continue to wear and use the name on a bracelet after the family (specifically the parents of that person) asked you not to politicize your loved one!  This so pisses me off!

Is this what Barry Insane believes are service members are good for?  We are nothing but tools to you, sir?!

The parents of Sgt. Ryan David Jopek, killed in a roadside bomb in 2006, gave the bracelet to B. Insane so that “he would know Ryan’s name”, according to Sgt. Jopek’s mother.  They asked Barry to stop wearing the bracelet to politicize their son and to stop using their son’s name to talk about the war in Iraq.

I guess now we see Barry Insane’s real character.  Loser.

(Patdollard.com)

(NewsBusters.com)

Haditha Marine Sues Rep. Murtha for Slander!

Posted by Chandler On September - 27 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

“A Marine Corps lance corporal sued U.S. Rep. John Murtha for slander on Thursday, saying the Congressman damaged his reputation by saying Marines killed women and children “in cold blood” in Haditha, Iraq, in November 2005.”

Get some!

Here is the Murtha interview on Good Morning America with Charlie Gibson where he claims that there wasn’t an IED attack (that is false), there wasn’t a fire fight (also false), and that these Marines killed “in cold blood”.  Predator drone footage proved all of that to be a lie, Mr. Murtha.  Time for an apology!

(NewsMax.com)

8 of the State for September 27, 2008

Posted by Howie On September - 26 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Here is the Eight of the State for this week, September 27th, 2008:

1. Mark Rudd – Pay attention to me!  My friend is Barak Obama!
2. Shanghai Guan Sheng Yuan Food, Ltd . – The name alone makes me hungry!
3. Robert McCulloch and Jennifer Joyce -  Goons in suits for Obama ’08!
4. John DeStefano – A traitoruos turdbird and unfit for command!
5. American Automakers – You owe me four new cars for this!
6. Saturday Night Live – The real SNL died years ago.
7. Charles Rangel – Fruedian slip, sir?
8. W. Steven Flaherty – This guy listens to Radiohead too much.

The Blue Falcon of the Week

bluefalconThe Blue Falcon of the Week for this week, September 27th, 2008 is:

The Barak Obama Campaign!  Congratulations!

It would seem that there are some smart people working for Senator Obama these days (who said “goons” were dumb?!)

Some attorneys hired by the Senator to “protect” him legally have decided to attack TV stations playing attack ads against their employer.  Especially if the ad is true!

Some TV stations in Pennsylvania and Ohio received letters from Obama’s legal council stating that if they didn’t stop running some NRA ads, that they claimed were flase and misleading, that they would sue.  Never mind the fact that someone paid for the air time LEGALLY!

So what can we learn from all of this kids?  Apparently, Mr. Obama endorses banning guns, ammunition, and all dissenting speech against him.  Don’t say anything true about Barak Obama…like he was mentored to as a kid by Frank Marshall Davis, a known and outspoken communist and black supremist…like he is friends with American terrorists from the 60′s called The Weatherman Underground, William Ayers and Mark Rudd…like he was endorsed by Ahmed Yousuf of Hamas…and said in the first Presidential debate on Friday night, Sept. 26th, 2008 that Al-Qaeda started when we “invaded” Iraq!  HUH?!

(Pat Dollard.com)

Obama’s Connection to Freddie/Fannie

Posted by Howie On September - 26 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Owned!

The Second American Revolution

Posted by Chandler On September - 24 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Thomas Paine would give you a hug for this video.

Semper Fi!

Breaking: Weemer and Nelson’s contempt charges dropped!!

Posted by Howie On September - 24 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

nelsonSome really great news came from Riverside today regarding the Jose Nazario case, where two witnesses were found in contempt for not testifying against the Defendant.

ryan1Sgt. Ryan Weemer and Sgt. Jermaine Nelson were found in contempt of court back in August of this year for refusing to testify against their former squad leader, Jose Nazario.  The court set a late September sentencing hearing for the two.Jose Nazario was on trial for Manslaughter with special circumstance, the use of a firearm during the commission of a crime, for an incident that allegedly happened on November 9th, 2004 in Fallujah, Iraq.  Nazario was found not guilty several weeks ago.Sgt. Weemer and Sgt. Nelson still face court martials for murder.(Click ‘read more’ to see a copy of the request)Attorneys for PlaintiffUnited States of AmericaUNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTFOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIAUNITED STATES OF AMERICA,Plaintiff,v.JOSE LUIS NAZARIO, JR.,Defendant.)))))))))))EX PARTE APPLICATION FOR ORDERTAKING THE TRIAL SETTINGCONFERENCE REGARDING CONTEMPTAS TO WITNESSES JERMAINENELSON AND RYAN WEEMER OFFCALENDAR; PROPOSED ORDERThe United States of America, by and through its counsel ofrecord, the United States Attorney’s Office for the CentralDistrict of California, hereby applies to this Honorable Courtfor an order taking the trial setting conference regardingcontempt as to witnesses Jermaine Nelson (“Nelson”) and RyanWeemer (“Weemer”) off calendar. The witnesses refused to testifyin the above-entitled matter on August 22, 2008. The Court thenscheduled a trial setting conference regarding contempt pursuantto Rule 42 for September 29, 2008. In so doing, the Courtrequested and the government agreed to prosecute a contemptaction against witnesses Nelson and Weemer. After careful consideration of all the facts and circumstances in this matter, the government now requests that the Court take the trial setting conference regarding contempt proceedings off calendar in the interests of justice. Both witnesses are awaiting trial for murder in their respective courts-martial cases at Camp Pendleton, California. Thus, while the actions of the witnesses were unlawful and in direct violation of the Court’s orders in this case, the government submits that proceeding with a trial regarding contempt would not be in the interests of justice. The punitive effects of further contempt proceedings against these witnesses would serve little, if any, purpose in light of the severity of the charges the witnesses face in military court. Additionally, the criminal matter against defendant Jose Luis Nazario, Jr., has concluded, so no purposes related to the prosecution of this case would be served by proceeding with a contempt trial.DATED: September 19, 2008 Respectfully submitted,THOMAS P. O’BRIENUnited States Attorney

Gunny Popaditch book signings!!

Posted by Howie On September - 24 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Gunny Popaditch book signings!!
oam_flier_sandiego_bn

Mayor of New Haven, Conn flies Mexican flag!

Posted by Chandler On September - 23 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

day_laborers_swarming_vehicle2Mayor John DeStefano of New Haven, Conn. hosted the Elm City ID Card Family Day.  The Elm City ID Card was the first card in the nation to be specifically created to give to illegals aliens.  New Haven was the first city in the nation to issue ID cards to illegals.

Let me put this in perspective…(click ‘read more’ for video)
The US Immigration Support website quotes the following estimates on the number of illegals in the state of Connecticut, “FAIR Estimate: 55,000 (2005); USCIS/DHS Estimate: 39,000 (2003); Pew Hispanic Center Estimate: 70,000-100,000″.  They also referenced the Elm City ID cards.

“In August of 2007, New Haven Connecticut became the first U.S. city to issue identification cards to illegal immigrants. More than 100 people lined up outside City Hall to receive the largely debated cards. This issuing of identification cards comes in the midst of heated immigration debates. The cards, which are being offered to all of New Haven’s 125,000 residents—including some 10,000 to 12,000 illegal immigrants—are designed to open up many services such as banking to the immigrants, who face increasing crackdowns by communities across the United States.”

Title 8 of the US Code, Chapter 12, Subchapter II, Part VIII, § 1325 states “(a) Improper time or place; avoidance of examination or inspection; misrepresentation and concealment of facts

Any alien who
(1) enters or attempts to enter the United States at any time or place other than as designated by immigration officers, or
(2) eludes examination or inspection by immigration officers, or
(3) attempts to enter or obtains entry to the United States by a willfully false or misleading representation or the willful concealment of a material fact, shall, for the first commission of any such offense, be fined under title 18 or imprisoned not more than 6 months, or both, and, for a subsequent commission of any such offense, be fined under title 18, or imprisoned not more than 2 years, or both.”

So your first offense is a misdemeanor and your second offense is a felony.  This would mean that there are approximately 10,000 to 12,000 individuals who broke the law in New Haven, Conn.  By the Mayor’s actions in relation to the Elm City ID cards, one could draw the conclusion that the Mayor is knowingly adding and abetting people who have committed misdemeanors and quite possibly felonies.

United States Code Title 18, Part I, Chapter I, Section 3 states:

“Whoever, knowing that an offense against the United States has
been committed, receives, relieves, comforts or assists the
offender in order to hinder or prevent his apprehension, trial or
punishment, is an accessory after the fact.
Except as otherwise expressly provided by any Act of Congress, an
accessory after the fact shall be imprisoned not more than one-half
the maximum term of imprisonment or (notwithstanding section 3571)
fined not more than one-half the maximum fine prescribed for the
punishment of the principal, or both; or if the principal is
punishable by life imprisonment or death, the accessory shall be
imprisoned not more than 15 years.”

Thus the Mayor of New Haven, Connecticut is breaking the law and committing a misdemeanor himself!  But it gets better!

Knowingly scheming to allow the illegal aliens to stay in this country with full understanding that that is against US law and the accessory charge becomes a conspiracy charge.  A criminal conspiracy is defined as such “A criminal conspiracy exists when two or more people agree to commit almost any unlawful act, then take some action toward its completion. The action taken need not itself be a crime, but it must indicate that those involved in the conspiracy knew of the plan and intended to break the law. One person may be charged with and convicted of both conspiracy and the underlying crime based on the same circumstances.”

The Mayor of New Haven, Connecticut, John DeStefano, should be investigated for criminal activity related to the above laws (and so should the city council for that matter)!

Intel Brief on the Marriott bombing in Islamabad

Posted by Howie On September - 22 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

marriott-hotel-crater_afpDaveed is a friend of the show and has some amazing insight into the islamic world.  I thought that this article was vitally important and interesting read.

If you do not know Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, you should.  He wrote a book about his time as an Islamic militant entitled “My Year Inside Radical Islam: A Memoir”.

(Defend Democracy.org)INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING #001
September 22, 2008
_________________________

Marriott Hotel Bombing in Islamabad
_________________________

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross

What happened?

• The Incident: Surveillance video shows that around 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 20, a truck rammed into the security gate about 60 feet away from Islamabad’s Marriott Hotel and burst into flames. Hotel guards (unaware that the truck contained around 1,300 pounds of military-grade explosives, TNT, and aluminum powder) gathered around it, and one tried to put out the fire with an extinguisher. Then a second, massive explosion devastated the hotel.

• The Aftermath: As of this morning, at least 53 people are believed dead and 266 injured. Casualties include Czech ambassador Ivo Zdarek and two American service members assigned to the U.S. embassy in Islamabad.

What does it mean?

• Al-Qaeda’s Involvement: Intelligence officials believe that the bombing was the work of al-Qaeda or one of its close Pakistani affiliates, with Pakistani interior minister Rehman Malik blaming the Tehrik-i-Taliban. It certainly bears the hallmarks of an al-Qaeda operation, including being a mass casualty attack against a symbolic target at a symbolic time.

• Zardari Targeted?: This plot may have been aimed at new Pakistani president Asif Ali Zardari, who delivered his first address to a joint session of parliament earlier on Saturday. In the address, Zardari spoke of the need to “root out terrorism and extremism wherever and whenever they may rear their ugly heads.” As CNN is reporting, Zardari, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, and other Pakistani cabinet members were supposed to be at the Marriott for iftar (the meal breaking the Ramadan fast), but Rehman Malik says that “their planned dinner was changed at the last minute.” Obviously, the symbolic value of killing Zardari just after he delivers his first major address as president-in which he stresses the need to fight extremism-would have been enormous.

• Military or Intelligence Involvement: The attackers were able to obtain a large amount of military grade explosives. The bombing occurred in a secure area of Islamabad, and the hotel itself was particularly well-guarded because it had been attacked twice before (in 2004 and 2007). The peripheral facts suggest that members of Pakistan’s military or intelligence services (Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI) may have been involved in the plot-just as rogue elements within these services were previously involved in Benazir Bhutto’s assassination and attempts against former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf. The presence of religious extremists within Pakistan’s military and ISI is a substantial problem-for Zardari, and for U.S. policy toward Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Future Implications:

• The Pakistan Safe Haven: Looming in the background is the safe haven that al-Qaeda has carved out in Pakistan’s tribal areas (which I most recently wrote about here). This safe haven enables the terrorist group to more effectively plan attacks, and to more effectively wage war against coalition forces in Afghanistan. The Pakistani safe haven will be one of the major challenges the next presidential administration faces in the “global war on terror.”

• FBI Role in Investigation?: The U.S. offered to send FBI agents to do forensics work on the Marriott bombing investigation. Some in the U.S. intelligence community were optimistic that Zardari would be more willing than Musharraf to allow outside investigators into Pakistan, for two reasons. First, Zardari is more concerned about infiltration of his own security services than Musharraf was. Second, Musharraf always wanted to protect the military from investigation and embarrassment, and Zardari doesn’t have the same institutional incentives. However, Rehman Malik has rejected this offer of assistance: “We don’t need any help; we reject it.”

For a pdf version of this Intelligence Briefing, click here.

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is the Director of FDD’s Center for Terrorism Research

8 of the State for September 20, 2008

Posted by Howie On September - 20 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Here is the Eight of the State for this week, September 20th, 2008:

1. Dos Palos High School – Time to close your doors!
2. Charlotte Dennett – She must have misplaced her brain after she took the bar!
3. Reggie Townsend – Who is this guy to complain?!
4. Steve Almond – “I can’t see how anyone who calls himself or herself Christian – or human, for that matter – wouldn’t be sorry.” Talk about lost!
5. Markham Robinson
6. Randi Rhodes – dumbass!
7. Julio Flores – Here we go again!
8. Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the American Civil Liberties Union Immigrants’ Rights Project – We need to bring back treason.

The Blue Falcon of the Week

bluefalcon1The Blue Falcon of the week for this week, September 20th, 2008 is:

Mr. John F. Boyd of the great state of Florida!  Congratulations sir!

It seems Mr. Boyd was arrested in Wilcox, AZ several days ago trying to smuggle illegal aliens into this country.  When stopped at a primary border checkpoint, BP dogs registered the presence of possible illegals in Mr. Boyd’s truck.  Upon further inspection, Mr. Boyd was indeed confirmed to be smuggling illegals and the Blue Flacon for this week!

So congrats go out to him and his daddy, Mr. Allen Boyd, Democrat Congressman from Florida for being passionate, caring people, who care more about others than their own fellow citizens.  Semper Fi!

(KVOA.com)

Somali Pirates Die from Iranian Nuke Materials

Posted by Howie On September - 20 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

somali-piratesThis is posted at patdollard.com by drillanwr and we at Chandler’s Watch thought it was worth pushing out there a little bit more!!  To read the complete story click on the link and go to Dollard Nation.
Howie

“Previous Related Post:  BUSTED – IAEA: Iran Tried To Refit Missile For Nuke

My chemistry and physics knowledge is limited to my honors college prep classes in high school, and gleaning random info over the years since.

However, I do know that if this suspicious material IS ‘radioactive’ in nature … it ain’t “low-yield” shit.

Nope, while it COULD be a bio or chem type agent, my money is on the fact that to see these sorts of immediate human physical reactions and death it doesn’t take a nuclear physicist to figure out that opening a container and soon after either dropping stone dead or suffering ACUTE “radiation-poisoning” like symptoms … it be high-yield nuke material, aye, Matey!.”

(Pat Dollard.com)

Former SEAL commander insults veterans!

Posted by Chandler On September - 16 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

How many of you saw this article in the US News and World Report? I thought that the article was generally good, except for the paragraph about former Navy SEAL Mike Lumpkin.

Lumpkin, the Democrat candidate for the 52nd Congressional District in California, is quoted as saying, “I was in Central and South America on counternarcotics operations when my opponent was in grade school,” he says. “I have a master’s degree in national security. I’m more than just a guy who stood behind a rifle.”

What the hell?! Are you that arrogant, sir? I don’t take kindly to being likened to a dumb lummocks “behind a rifle”. Is this how you treated the soldiers and sailors under your command? If it is, you are unfit, sir.

This is a slap in the face to ALL veterans that carried a rifle or served in the combat arms fields. In the Marines, WE ARE ALL BASIC RIFLEMAN FIRST!

What kind of man applies for a job by insulting the over 2 million veterans voters in the county in which he resides. This Marine perceives some mental issues that I believe preclude Mr. Lumpkin from being eligible for the office of U.S. Representative.

Update: Vets for Freedom issued a press release in support of Hunter for the comments that were made by Candidate Mike Lumpkin.
Vets for Freedom Stands by Duncan Hunter

Tuesday September 10, 2008

Contact: Josh Grodin
(202) 338-4070
media@vetsforfreedompac.org

(San Diego, CA), Last week, the war-time service record of our friend Duncan Hunter was challenged after his opponent stated that he was, “more than just a guy who stood behind a rifle.” Duncan, and thousands of other Marines, proudly served and sacrificed for their country, and their service should be honored rather than disgraced.

“As a proud California Marine and veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, it is disappointing to hear comments like this come from the mouth of a fellow veteran,” said Christopher Ahn with Vets for Freedom. “Thousands of Marines serve on the front lines of the War on Terror, and have proudly and gallantly fought for the Red, White and Blue. Duncan Hunter’s service speaks for itself – in his two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, he was hardly a man who simply ‘stood behind a rifle.’ Statements such as this dishonor the hard work and sacrifice that thousands bare every day.”

Vets for Freedom PAC, or VFFPAC is a Political Action Committee whose mission is to help candidates—mostly combat veterans—who believe in achieving success in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the overall War on Terrorism, get elected to the United States Congress and other Federal positions. Established by combat veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan on November 11, 2007, Veterans Day, VFFPAC will endorse and offer extended support through financial contributions and media assistance to federal candidates who support victory in the Global War on Terrorism.

For more information or to schedule interviews with Chris Ahn or other Iraq/Afghanistan veterans, please contact Josh Grodin at (202) 338-4070 or media@vetsforfreedompac.org.

Firefighters’ Developing Role in Counterterrorism

Posted by Chandler On September - 16 - 2008 2 COMMENTS

by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Kyle Dabruzzi

Introduction

The 9/11 attacks sounded an alarm in fire departments across the country: suddenly, they would need to decide whether they had a role to play in preparing for, and preventing, terrorist attacks. A growing number of fire departments concluded that they did, and are now leveraging their existing capabilities to enhance the effectiveness of local counterterrorism operations. State and local political leaders should encourage this trend; rather than relinquishing counterterrorism to local law enforcement and the federal government, they should seek to integrate their fire departments, which have unique capabilities for safeguarding the homeland, into overall security planning. Such integration should improve public safety across the board.911-firefighter1

Nationally, fire departments have impressive manpower and capabilities. According to the National Fire Protection Association, total employment in firefighting occupations was 1,141,900 in 2006, of which more than 823,950 were part-time volunteers.[1] Of the 30,635 fire departments in the United States, 4,052 are career departments, while 26,583 are mostly staffed by volunteers. Firefighters are frequently the first personnel at the scene of an accident or medical emergency, where they perform a wide range of vital functions. Locations range from residential neighborhoods to airports, chemical plants, grasslands, and forests.[2]

Many of the core competencies that fire departments draw on in responding to, mitigating, and preventing natural or man-made disasters can be directed toward preventing terrorist incidents. For example, the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY) enforces compliance with fire prevention codes and conducts more than 400,000 building inspections each year.[3] These activities put it in a unique position to notice signs that a violent attack is being planned.

Every firefighter is by law a “peace officer” and duty-bound to report anything unseemly that he or she comes across.[4] However, a role in intelligence-gathering beyond identifying actual and potential hazards would represent an expansion of fire departments’ traditional mission. With their access to private property, their contacts in the local community, and the levels of trust they enjoy there, firefighters can do more than simply identify prospectively, or respond to, situations posing physical danger. They can actually gather, make sense of, and report on circumstances that might hint at terrorist involvement and intent, helped in part by community networks they construct to recognize risks. But if they assume this new mission, they must be wary of encroaching on traditional law-enforcement functions, avoid violating citizens’ civil liberties and retain the trust they now enjoy. In any event, a new relationship with law-enforcement and intelligence agencies would have to be forged. There is every reason to think that fire departments can operate effectively within such constraints.

FIRE DEPARTMENTS’ CORE COMPETENCIES

At first glance, fire departments are focused on the core competencies of prevention, protection, and response to natural and man-made disasters and other emergencies. For example, in a recent strategic document, the FDNY identified its core competencies as fire suppression, pre-hospital emergency medical care, structural evacuation, search and rescue, dealing with chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear hazardous materials (CBRN/hazmat), life safety, decontamination, and arson investigation—all of which it characterizes as response-oriented.[5]

However, a closer inspection reveals that these core competencies also position fire departments to perform preventive functions. These include building community awareness, identifying signs of terrorist activities, information sharing, and providing relevant subject-matter expertise. Most career fire departments, for example, have teams of highly trained hazardous-materials and explosives experts. These firefighters can inform public-awareness campaigns focusing on signs of improvised explosive or incendiary devices, and they can develop programs to train fellow firefighters and public safety officers to notice warning signs. They can also improve pre-incident planning by articulating and listing potential threats in order of seriousness and likelihood, and aligning collective capabilities accordingly.

In exploring the application of a fire department’s core competencies to prevention-oriented counterterrorism, fire departments must guard against drifting into law-enforcement activities—namely, investigating crimes and apprehending criminals. This division of responsibilities should not preclude fire departments from strengthening their role in counterterrorism. As a general rule, to the extent that counterterrorism involves investigating and apprehending dangerous people, it is the province of law enforcement; to the extent that it involves identifying, preventing, and protecting against dangerous situations, it is the firefighters’.

COUNTERTERRORISM FUNCTIONS OF FIRE DEPARTMENTS

There are three broad ways in which fire departments can contribute to counterterrorism efforts: as intelligence collectors, users and sharers; as developers of community networks; and as organizers of joint planning, preparedness, and response.
FDNY’S STRATEGIC OUTLOOK ON INTELLIGENCE[6]
According to the FDNY, intelligence has a place in all three of its missions: prevention, preparedness, and response.[7] For example, advance intelligence (foreknowledge) can alert firefighters responding to an incident to the proximity of volatile chemicals or potentially dangerous activities already under surveillance. Familiarity with surroundings increases firefighters’ situational awareness, improves their operational efficiency, and increases the safety of first responders and the public. Intelligence can also tell fire departments where best to deploy their limited resources on the basis of where threats are most likely to arise. And intelligence can help departments anticipate an event and thereby improve its chances of preventing it.

Collectors of Intelligence

The FDNY has identified the following as ways in which it can produce operational intelligence. Many of them can also be adopted by fire departments across the United States. Increased coordination, integration, and communication with other public-safety agencies enhance a fire department’s ability to fulfill its core mission of protecting life.

* Access to venues. During the course of routine building inspections, arson investigations, and responses to fire and medical emergencies, fire department personnel enjoy access to buildings generally denied outsiders. These firefighters are passive collectors, who are positioned in the normal course of their duties to observe the signs of terrorist activity and, assuming that the firefighters are properly trained, to recognize them as such. When properly shared with local law enforcement and local and national intelligence centers, this information can fill critical intelligence gaps and generate leads. In addition, fire inspectors and fire personnel are often present to ensure public safety at high-profile events—such as athletic contests, political rallies, and concerts—that can be attractive targets for terrorists.
* Access to, and knowledge of, premises storing hazardous materials. Fire department personnel regularly inspect buildings and sites where hazardous materials are stored. Being familiar with such materials and their destructive potential, fire department personnel are in a privileged position to observe and report on suspicious or unusual conditions and to educate facility managers to do the same.
* Observation of suspicious activity. Firefighters may observe possible terrorist materials, such as equipment and planning documents, in the course of responding to an incident.
* Detection of possible weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Because many fire department units carry equipment, including radiation detectors, capable of identifying hazardous materials, fire departments can assist in discovering materials used in a WMD or dirty bomb. With proper training, firefighters and emergency responders can become alert to physical symptoms in humans that might indicate the occurrence of a biological or chemical attack.[8]
* Protecting critical infrastructure. Fire departments already play an important role in assessing critical infrastructure’s vulnerability to a variety of dangers, including terrorism. While police departments evaluate the security of structures, fire departments evaluate their physical integrity, unique operational challenges, and avenues of rescue and escape.

Users of Intelligence

Intelligence provided to fire departments can be a force and awareness multiplier in a heightened threat environment. Having access to intelligence about current threats allows fire departments to focus their limited resources on increasing their training and readiness for particular scenarios. The FDNY is, for example, the only agency with knowledge of the exact location and configuration of a fuel line at New York City’s John F. Kennedy Airport,[9] and for a long time it has been carrying out inspections of it and conducting drills for dealing with the consequences of a rupture. The department’s intelligence capability proved its value when it learned of the possibility that a suspected terrorist operation had targeted the line. The acquisition of this intelligence was followed by an arrest.

Intelligence Training and Sharing

The FDNY has conducted classes in identifying suspicious behavior and recognizing what might be indicators of terrorist planning.[10] Using faculty from the Combating Terrorism Center at the United States Military Academy, the FDNY has created a graduate-level executive-education program—the first of its kind in the nation—to educate fire and EMS officers (who are under FDNY supervision) about the threat terrorists pose to first responders and the cities they protect. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is currently testing a program with the FDNY in sharing intelligence information and training firefighters to recognize terrorist activity, with the hope of expanding the program to other jurisdictions if it is successful. According to a recent Associated Press article, when entering a private residence, FDNY firefighters now consider the implications of encountering an individual who is hostile, uncooperative, or expressing hatred toward or discontent with the United States, as well as the implications of encountering ammunition, firearms, surveillance equipment, training or flight manuals, chemicals that seem out of place, and the absence of furniture.[11] FDNY Chief Salvatore Cassano is quoted as saying that some terrorism-related information has been passed along to law-enforcement officers since terrorist training began three years ago.[12] The FDNY is part of the Joint Terrorism Task Force for New York, which is run by the FBI, and two fire marshals are assigned to the JTTF.[13] DHS has issued security clearances to several New York fire chiefs,[14] and a small number of firefighters have access to intelligence that is typically shared with the FBI, state and local law enforcement, and the Coast Guard.[15]

Key Innovations

The FDNY has launched a number of innovations incorporating intelligence into its operations. For example, the FDNY is now authorized to receive classified information as part of its Fire Department Operation Center.[16] In addition, in 2006 the FDNY created a Center for Counterterrorism and Disaster Preparedness containing four functional units: a strategic management unit for organizing and reporting preparedness activities and drafting FDNY strategic documents; a risk assessment and target hazards unit for gathering information on critical infrastructure and then developing profiles of buildings; an exercise design unit that designs and conducts exercises and then evaluates the hazards; and an emergency response-plans unit, which drafts and updates emergency response plans for all hazards.[17]

Intelligence Functions of Fire Departments

Fire departments can serve as both collectors and consumers of intelligence before, during, and after a terrorist attack. They may serve a collection function by reporting warning signs encountered during their normal routines. The modern firefighter is also a subject-matter expert who can use intelligence to assess the likelihood of a threat and to prepare a response in the event of an attack. Following an attack, firefighters are capable of classifying and distributing vital information to other first responders and then to appropriate agencies. Finally, fire departments may be involved in post-incident investigations leading to arrests or new prevention and response policies.

Of all these functions, the use of intelligence to prevent attacks is the least familiar to fire departments.

1. Preventive Intelligence

Fire departments’ ability to serve a preventive intelligence role comes from both the access to houses and other buildings they are afforded in the course of duty and from the relationship they enjoy with the local community. Firefighters may enter a building to conduct a fire inspection, for example, and come across something out of the ordinary. Charles Jennings, the deputy commissioner of public safety for the City of White Plains, New York, said that he believed most firefighters “would raise a flag” if they came across something suggesting terrorist involvement during the course of an inspection.[18]

With regard to generating, evaluating, and distributing passive intelligence, firefighters should:

*
Receive training and education in recognizing indicators of suspicious circumstances or people.
*
Transfer this knowledge to citizen volunteers and community groups.
*
Accept tips and leads from the community.
*
Share passively collected information with law enforcement in compliance with established mechanisms.
*
Avoid shifting from passive to active intelligence gathering.

In addition, fire departments can act as gathering points for tips and leads from the community. Members of the public may feel more comfortable reporting suspicious activities to the fire department than to the police, with which they sometimes have a more adversarial relationship. This is especially true of volunteer fire departments, which are, of course, staffed by local citizens. When the public reports something suspicious, more than just a counterterrorism purpose may be served: more communication may yield better public safety in general. For example, an unusually large accumulation of boxes that a community member notices and reports may have no relation to terrorism but could present a fire hazard.

To perform a preventive-intelligence role, fire departments must make their communities aware that they will accept information and pass it on to the appropriate authorities. Even if they decide not to serve as an alternative channel for community members who might be hesitant to contact law enforcement, fire departments at a minimum can direct community members to established tip lines (e.g., 888-NYC-SAFE, or the local FBI field office).

But to perform in these ways, fire departments must establish protocols for sharing the information that they receive with law-enforcement and intelligence agencies. The typical department, however, has neither developed a program for alerting the community that it can transmit pertinent information nor established mechanisms for relaying such information. For example, the Boston Fire Department’s public information officer stated that the department considers tips of this kind to be more appropriately handled by the police.[19] The District of Columbia Fire Department’s public information officer told us that the department views such tips as the province of law enforcement.[20]

Though such caution is understandable, firefighters do receive information from the public and observe all kinds of occurrences in the course of their normal duties. Frequently missing is the systemic capability to recognize what is important from a counterterrorism perspective, how to report it, and how to manage information in a multiagency context. The receiving agency, in turn, should have officers designated to accept and process information that the fire department transmits.

2. Subject-Matter Experts

As first responders, firefighters can provide operational intelligence to emergency-response agencies that have not yet arrived at the scene. They can determine the gravity of a situation and decide what resources are required, whether it be bomb squads, Hazmat teams, local law enforcement, or the FBI. They can also determine whether a situation has been stabilized, or if there is the risk of a “sucker punch” or follow-on attack.[21] Such real-time insight can save lives.

Firefighters are also professionals knowledgeable about structural engineering and hazardous materials. In a 2006 article in the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, Worcester district fire chief Frank Diliddo said, “The average firefighter nowadays learns about structural components, has a chemistry background and has a medical background. . . . All of these components put together make a smarter, more efficient firefighter to handle these situations.”[22] Much of this knowledge is useful in preventing and responding to terrorist attacks as well. For example, almost all fire departments require firefighters to be certified emergency medical technicians.[23] With this skill set, firefighters can be trained to recognize the first signs of a chemical, biological, or radiological attack.

Fire departments can also play an important role in the criminal investigation following a terrorist attack, especially if there was structural damage to a building or evidence of arson. In one such incident, in Arizona, the Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Rural Metro fire departments cooperated with the Phoenix Joint Terrorism Task Force in an investigation of an ecoterrorist who had been setting fire to luxury homes in a misguided effort to arrest suburban sprawl.[24] Similarly, in New York City, fire marshals work closely with the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force on threat analysis and complex incident investigations.[25] These marshals have full police powers and played an important role in the investigations following the attacks on the World Trade Center in 1993 and 2001.

Finally, as consumers of intelligence, fire departments can better prepare for the possibility of a terrorist attack. For example, fire departments can use threat intelligence to revise attack scenarios that are part of their training programs. Fire departments can also play a deterrent role by using intelligence to determine the size of potential terrorists’ presence at locations vulnerable to attack, such as large sporting events and political rallies.

3. Preventing Abuse of Intelligence by Fire Departments

Given the broad license that firefighters have to enter all kinds of buildings without a search warrant, the question arises: should firefighters actively serve as the eyes and ears of counterterrorism efforts—that is, go beyond their normal responsibilities of inspection and actually search for evidence of possible terrorist activity? None of the fire department officials whom we interviewed for this paper agreed with this idea: everyone felt that it would be best to tread lightly to avoid confusing fire departments’ public-safety mission with law enforcement.[26] A major reason that firefighters enjoy a less contentious relationship with the community than do police is precisely that they do not serve a law-enforcement function. Detroit’s deputy fire commissioner stated: “I don’t want our folks to be put in a position where they’re reporting something that … was really no problem in the first place.”[27]

Civil liberties advocates have already voiced concerns about increasing firefighters’ counterterrorism role. Mike German, a former FBI agent who is now national security policy counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union, said, “If in the conduct of doing their jobs [firefighters] come across evidence of a crime, of course they should report that to the police. But you don’t want them being intelligence agents. Do we want [communities] to fear the fire department as well as the police?”[28]

It is possible that some firefighters would exceed their charge in this area. All should be taught that they are not to serve as active intelligence gatherers who go out of their way to look for incriminating material but rather as passive collectors of information. It would be misguided and probably a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment for a firefighter to conduct a safety inspection of the home of a person whom the department had been told was a suspected criminal or terrorist, if the reason that a firefighter undertook the inspection was chiefly to circumvent the requirement of a search warrant. Fire safety officials with whom we spoke said that they take care not to use their powers inappropriately.[29] Firefighters can be trained to report information without skirting the law or jeopardizing community relations. At the same time, some could interpret their mission to be one of generating some minimum volume of findings, as professional intelligence agents are expected to do, even in the absence of legitimate grounds for suspicion. Although such evidence may not lead anywhere, simply reporting it could, in certain circumstances, amount to a violation of someone’s civil liberties. Department officials must make clear that heightened awareness is a goal, not an enforceable mandate.

Creation of Community Networks

Fire departments typically enjoy excellent community relations. Many of them keep their doors open around the clock, allow children to climb onto fire trucks when they are not responding to an emergency, and cooperate with local residents staging parades, fund-raisers, and school visits. This rapport with the community places fire departments in a unique position to build dialogue. Departments can teach citizens to recognize the signs of suspicious activity and encourage them to report them. Departments can also involve community members in the business of emergency response.

1. Involving the Public in Emergency Response

Community members can be involved in responding to and preventing catastrophes, whether natural or man-made, even when the latter are not the result of terrorism. The capacities of American citizens, if harnessed, can go a long way toward mitigating the impact of a catastrophe.

One such program is the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT). The CERT concept was developed by the Los Angeles Fire Department in 1985, was later adopted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and is now managed by the Citizen Corps within the Department of Homeland Security.[30] The program teaches citizens how to prepare for a disaster and serve as auxiliary responders when one occurs. This program has been adopted throughout the United States.

The program of Phoenix’s fire department is highly developed. As Deputy Chief John Maldonado explains, the Phoenix department would be overwhelmed by a major catastrophe because the city is so sprawling: “[W]e only have fifty-two stations in 550 square miles.”[31] Consequently, the department has focused on teaching community members how to assist it and themselves in disaster situations, and established CERT there for that purpose. If a major emergency strikes the Phoenix area, CERT members are expected to “give critical support to first responders, provide immediate assistance to victims, and organize spontaneous volunteers at a disaster site.”[32]

CERT members can take a train-the-trainer course (conducted by FEMA or the state training office for emergency management) and then conduct training sessions of over twenty hours in length for other volunteers, who upon completion become CERT members themselves. The training includes “disaster preparedness, disaster fire suppression, basic disaster medical operations, light search and rescue operations and terrorism awareness.”[33] Such CERT training may also cover past incidents, warning signs, how to communicate relevant information, and where it should be sent.

The value of CERT volunteers was demonstrated during the response to Hurricane Katrina, when the state of Arizona deployed a team of them to set up Phoenix’s Veterans Memorial Coliseum as a shelter to receive victims from Louisiana.[34] In what was dubbed Operation Good Neighbor, CERT volunteers helped transport and register evacuees and assisted in delivering meals to them. The Phoenix Citizen Corps Committee credits the mission’s relative success to CERT members’ familiarity with its command structure: “Although many church and volunteer groups helped with activities …, it was clear that CERT members had an understanding of how an incident is structured and assigned.”[35]

This level of understanding does not have to be limited to emergency response. These same volunteers can be trained to spot warning signs of an act of terrorism in the making, and report them.

2. Building Community Networks

The importance of community involvement extends beyond the capacity to respond to an incident. James Forest, director of terrorism studies at the United States Military Academy at West Point, has observed: “The current threat to America requires greater engagement with the public, as the necessary eyes and ears of the nation’s homeland security infrastructure.”[36] Two elements of increasing public involvement are expanding public knowledge of potential threats and ensuring that members of the public know how to report them to the appropriate authorities.

No one can observe everything with equal attention and comprehension. Therefore, the kind of awareness being emphasized will depend on a trainee’s vocation and background. For instance, mechanics would be in a position to notice vehicle modifications to accommodate a heavy load; counterterrorism training should make the mechanics suspicious and perhaps ready to report the modifications to the appropriate authorities. Likewise, the manager of a storage facility should be able to recognize suspicious items on premises; and distributors of chemicals, body armor, propane, ammonium nitrate fertilizer, weapons, or prepaid cell phones can usually tell when the purchasers of these items don’t seem like the people who would normally use them.[37]

Forest notes that “to be effective, the public must be equipped with the knowledge of where and why specific locations and activities may be a terrorist target, what is being done to protect those targets, and how they can help.”[38] Since fire departments are already involved in community education efforts, they are well-placed to build community networks.

WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK
Joint Planning and Preparedness

The city of White Plains is located in Westchester County, about 22 miles north of midtown Manhattan. Until 9/11, the White Plains police and fire services were largely disengaged from each other. However, after the 9/11 attacks highlighted “the hubris of this disengagement,” White Plains became committed to integrating them.[39]

One way that the city did so was by holding weekly Compstat meetings,[40] which were chaired by the commissioner of public safety and attended by senior commanders from the police and fire departments. In these meetings, “operational data of both bureaus is statistically analyzed and presented for review and comment.”[41] The agencies work together in these meetings “to seek solutions that are comprehensive, holistic, and utilize joint resources.”[42] While the police department may present the past week’s crime activity in statistical form, the fire department may present the techniques and methods it used to fight recent fires. Although the Compstat meetings are not geared toward the threat of terrorism per se, they are a forum for sharing working methods, and they represent an institutional process for jointly addressing challenges.

White Plains has also implemented a system of joint training and planning. Firefighters and police officers train each other in areas such as operations, CPR, awareness of weapons of mass destruction, and Hazmat transportation.[43] In 2004, White Plains police and fire performed together a full-scale hazardous-materials exercise in conjunction with the Con Edison Office of Emergency Planning and area ambulance services. The scenario involved a criminal apprehension, rescue of an injured non-ambulatory Con Edison employee in a hazardous atmosphere, and the use of protective equipment in isolating and decontaminating a substation.[44]

Joint Planning, Preparedness, and Response

As the Homeland Security Council’s 2007 “National Strategy for Homeland Security” stated, first responders “will always play a prominent, frontline role in helping to prevent terrorist attacks as well as in preparing for and responding to a range of natural and man-made emergencies.”[45] Fire departments and other law-enforcement and emergency-response agencies need to plan and prepare for terrorist attacks as an integrated body, particularly for the kinds of attacks likely to produce high numbers of casualties. Information sharing and joint training are critical.

Much has recently been written about the National Incident Management System (NIMS), under which unified command structures are created. A Department of Homeland Security fact sheet states: “NIMS establishes standardized incident management processes, protocols, and procedures that all responders—federal, state, tribal, and local—will use to coordinate and conduct response actions.”[46] NIMS calls for an incident command system as the standard response for all major incidents; interoperable communications systems; preparedness measures; an information-sharing system; and an integration center that can assess proposed changes to NIMS. What is perhaps missing from the recent discussion of NIMS is acknowledgment that NIMS’s principles and guidelines can establish standard operational procedures for dealing with nonemergency situations, not simply serious, discrete incidents.

The federal government mandated NIMS across the country after the 9/11 attacks. It is in turn based upon the Incident Command System (ICS), a methodology for coordinating multiple agency response situations, which was developed in California.[47] The ICS was a reaction to the complete breakdown in communication and coordination among firefighting agencies in California during the disastrous wildfires of 1970. Dana Cole, assistant chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, described those conditions: “[A]s fires burned across and out of one jurisdiction to another, individual jurisdictions were often ‘flying blind’ and forced to improvise management response with no clear organization of authority between departments, no predetermined rules for collective decision-making, and no coordination of even the most basic communications.”[48] This breakdown forced California agencies to “develop a template that would allow the emergency responders to create a temporary, ad hoc organization at an incident scene that could provide for consolidated management and incorporate in a coordinated manner the assistance that neighboring jurisdictions and departments offered.[49] By 1982, the ICS had been adopted as the centerpiece of a federal plan designed to improve coordination among federal and state agencies when large-scale emergencies arose.

In the tradition of local responsibility for coping with emergencies, the Arlington County, Virginia, Fire Department (ACFD) directed the emergency response to the attack on the Pentagon on 9/11. Following ICS procedures, Assistant Chief for Operations James Schwartz oversaw the efforts of his own department, as well as those of nearby fire departments, the Pentagon’s internal police force, the FBI, and FEMA. The ICS called for a clear chain of command, only one supervisor per responder, and a limited and specified span of control for every supervisor. It also called for the establishment of a single recognizable incident command post, incident bases for support activities, camps for storage, and staging areas, where responders and equipment could be located just before deployment.[50]

According to the Arlington County “After-Action Report on the Response to the September 11 Terrorist Attack on the Pentagon,” “Surviving seriously injured building occupants were rescued, and hundreds of additional potential victims escaped safely.”[51] The 9/11 Commission Report affirmed the ICS’s centrality to emergency rescue efforts, stating that the ACFD was able to overcome “the inherent complications of a response across jurisdictions because the Incident Command System, a formalized management structure for emergency response, was in place in the National Capital Region on 9/11.”[52]

It was crucial that multiple agencies had collaborated prior to the incident. The Pentagon police force, for example, had exercised with the ACFD, as had nearby fire departments. Fortuitously, the FBI representative to the Unified Team, the successor to the Unified Command, had been a New York City firefighter. Critical to the ICS’s success as well was the fact that it had created relationships of trust between response agencies, allowing for the kind of frank communication between decision makers that is necessary for avoiding major mistakes. Former Arlington County Police Chief Ed Flynn, whose department participated in the ICS-based response to the Pentagon attack, explained: “You are exposed in these situations. So … you need to know and trust each other so you can talk to each other frankly in a crisis without worrying about having to repair relations later.”[53] It is significant that the Unified Command had trouble coordinating with the Washington, D.C., fire department and the firefighters it sent on its own initiative. Unlike other nearby departments, it had not exercised with the ACFD.[54]

Preparedness is a continuous process involving all levels of government as well as nongovernmental organizations. Even at the local level, unity of command, joint sourcing and logistics, and multiagency collaboration need to be planned, practiced, and mastered. This involves developing guidelines, protocols, and standards for planning, training, personnel qualification, equipment, and communication.

Counterterrorism training, for example, should be standardized and open to a broad array of first preventers. Toward that end, the Manhattan Institute partnered with the Los Angeles Police Department in developing a pilot program for a National Counter-Terrorism Academy (NCTA). Launched in March 2008, the NCTA will educate first preventers about emerging threats in the new security environment and effective operational responses. The pilot program includes seventy students representing almost thirty agencies—including police, fire, federal agencies—as well as the private sector. Similarly, the state of New York has announced the opening of the New York State Preparedness Training Center, which is designed to coordinate training of firefighters and other first responders throughout the state in dealing with weapons of mass destruction and terrorism.[55]

New technologies can enhance education and training initiatives. For example, the Homeland Security Management Institute at Long Island University offers, via the Internet, a master’s degree in Homeland Security Management for public safety executives.[56] On the training side, the Entertainment Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon University is collaborating with the FDNY to develop a simulation called Hazmat: Hotzone[57] for teaching firefighters the techniques to deal with hazardous materials or terrorist attacks. Lieutenant Tony Mussorfiti stated that Hazmat: Hotzone can “create a scenario from scratch, run it in real time, and change things as we go. We can give [firefighters] complete sensory overload, the way it can get in real life, with all the sights and sounds.”[58]

CONCLUSION

Successful domestic counterterrorism is best achieved by involving fire departments at the strategic as well as the operating level. While it goes without saying that not all fire departments are created equal—they have different resources, different kinds of relations with their communities, and different risk profiles—the following recommendations should broadly apply.

1. Become collectors, consumers, and distributors of intelligence. In following their normal rounds with a bit more attention to their surroundings and a heightened understanding of what they see, firefighters can vastly expand the reach of traditional intelligence and law-enforcement professionals. By consuming intelligence, fire departments acquire the raw material from which to distill training and planning scenarios and from which to provide expert advice on structural risks and hazardous materials. Finally, fire departments can develop the means and methods to share this information with law-enforcement and intelligence agencies.

2. Create community networks. Fire departments should take advantage of the excellent relations they enjoy with their communities by organizing volunteer emergency response programs and raising public awareness of how to recognize and report suspicious activity. Firefighters should also be trained in how to manage information from the local community and establish liaisons with law enforcement to ensure that any resulting information is properly investigated.

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA

Joint Training and Response

Charlotte is home to the Bank of America and Wachovia, two of the country’s largest commercial banks.[59] It is served by a major airport, two nuclear power plants, a major transcontinental pipeline, and a lake in the northern part of the county that supplies Charlotte-Mecklenburg County with water. In 2004, Charlotte had a population of approximately 625,000 and uniformed forces of about 1,000 firefighters and 1,500 police officers.[60]

The most noteworthy aspect of Charlotte’s emergency services is the degree of police and fire integration at the operational level. Referring to the city’s joint police/fire training academy, which was founded in the mid-1970s, a report issued by the Michaelian Institute for Public Policy and Management at Pace University states: “The recruits commingle frequently, encouraging good relations between the two divisions,” which are housed in the same building.[61]

The centerpiece of this cooperative model is called the Mobile Command Unit. It has employed since 1987 a joint-use incident command vehicle with chairs for police and fire, EMS and emergency management, and public works officials.[62] It also fields an Advanced Local Emergency Response Team (ALERT), which was “the first local task force that incorporated firefighters, law-enforcement officers, EMS, physicians, federal, and state partners into one response team.”[63] Emergency responders are issued a thousand-page book that lists all imaginable disasters and describes the responsibilities of each department. In addition, responders are equipped with a co-800 MHz radio system enabling all response personnel to communicate with one another in the event of an emergency or disaster.

3. Plan for disasters and prepare ways to respond. Proper planning and preparedness have a deterrent as well as a mitigating effect on terrorism. To begin with, terrorists are less likely to attack if they expect their efforts to be thwarted, or if injury to themselves, capture, and punishment are likely to result. Even if defensive planning merely delays or diverts an attack that is inevitable, firefighters have won for themselves more time to prepare measures that should reduce harm.

4. More closely integrate fire and police. These two uniformed services have distinct missions that suddenly overlap amid a crisis. Working backward from the kind of communication, coordination, mutual respect, and delineation and delegation of tasks needed at such times, fire and police need to embark on joint planning, training, and exercises without further delay.

Most of this paper’s recommendations address public safety issues that arise from natural disasters as well as man-made ones unconnected to terrorism. White Plains, New York, for example, has adapted its terrorism planning to such important public-safety issues as the relationship between safe housing and bar/cabaret enforcement and fire safety.[64]

Some fire departments have already taken the lead in adopting innovative programs that greatly enhance the safety of their communities. More departments need to become involved. Emergency response has been debated, deliberated, planned, and implemented at every level. So, too, should the role of fire departments in counterterrorism efforts. We do not know when terrorists will strike again, but taking steps now to deter them will push any such attack further into the future and diminish its impact.

Endnotes

1. National Fire Protection Association, “U.S. Fire Department Profile Through 2006,” Nov. 2007, http://www.nfpa.org/assets/files//PDF/FDprofilefactsheet.pdf.
2. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Fire Fighting Occupations,” in Occupational Outlook Handbook, http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos158.htm (accessed Mar. 16, 2008).
3. Fire Department City of New York, Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness Strategy (2007), p. 21 (hereinafter Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness Strategy).
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid., p. 15.
6. Much of the information in this section on the FDNY’s strategic outlook comes from its publication Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness Strategy, cited above.
7. Interview with Joseph Pfeifer, chief of Counter Terrorism and Emergency Preparedness, FDNY, and Michael J. Puzziferri, acting chief of Counter Terrorism and Emergency Preparedness, Jan. 31, 2008.
8. For a general discussion, see Graham Allison, Nuclear Terrorism: The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe (New York: Times Books, 2004); and Judith Miller et al., Germs: Biological Weapons and America’s Secret War (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001). See also “Hard-Won Lessons: Policing Terrorism in the United States” (July 2005), http://www.manhattan-institute.org/pdf/scr_03.pdf, pp. 13–17 (noting that one of the 9/11 hijackers sought medical attention in Florida for a leg wound that had some of the signs of anthrax infection).
9. Interview with Pfeifer and Puzziferri.
10. Ibid.
11. Eileen Sullivan, “FDNY Could Take on New Role as Anti-Terrorism Eyes of Government,” Associated Press, Nov. 23, 2007.
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.
15. Interview with Pfeifer and Puzziferri.
16. Sullivan, “FDNY Could Take on New Role as Anti-Terrorism Eyes of Government,” Associated Press, Nov. 23, 2007.
17. “FDNY Terrorism Preparedness Fiscal Year 2006,” n.d., from

http://www.nyc.gov/html/fdny/pdf/publications/annual_reports/2006/ctdp.pdf.

18. Telephone interview with Charles Jennings, deputy commissioner of public safety, White Plains, New York (interviewed by Kyle Dabruzzi, Oct. 11, 2006).
19. Telephone interview with Steve McDonnell, public information officer, Boston Fire Department (interviewed by Kyle Dabruzzi, Oct. 5, 2006).
20. Telephone interview with Alan Etter, public information officer, District of Columbia Fire Department (interviewed by Kyle Dabruzzi, Oct. 6, 2006). However, D.C.’s fire department does have liaisons with the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
21. FEMA/USFA/NFA, Emergency Response to Terrorism: Self-Study (June 1999), pp. 22–23.
22. Scott J. Croteau, “As Skills and Equipment Change, Mass. Firefighters’ Valor Remains Constant,” Worcester Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, Mass.), May 8, 2006.
23. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Fire Fighting Occupations.”
24. See testimony of Ray P. Churay, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI’s Phoenix division, Terrorism Preparedness, House Committee on Governmental Reform, Subcommittee on Government Efficiency, Financial Management and Intergovernmental Relations, Mar. 22, 2002.
25. Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness Strategy, p. 19.
26. E.g., telephone interview with Jennings (“It’s one of those ‘tread-lightly’ things where you don’t want this to turn into an issue where one minute a firefighter is doing a fire inspection, and then the next he’s performing a law-enforcement function”); telephone interview with Phoenix Fire Department deputy chief John Maldonado (expressing concern about undermining community trust) (interviewed by Kyle Dabruzzi, Oct. 11, 2006).
27. Sullivan, “FDNY Could Take on New Role as Anti-Terrorism Eyes of Government.”
28. Ibid.
29. Telephone interview with Etter; telephone interview with McDonnell (“We don’t go in and specifically look for things of that nature”).
30. “About CERT,” https://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/about.shtm (accessed Apr. 17, 2008).
31. Telephone interview with Maldonado.
32. Phoenix official website, “What is CERT?,” http://www.phoenix.gov/CERT/whatis.html (accessed Oct. 21, 2006).
33. Ibid.
34. The Newsletter of the Phoenix Citizen Corps Committee, vol. 1 (Sept.–Oct. 2005),

http://www.phoenix.gov/CERT/cert_1005.pdf.

35. Ibid.
36. James Forest, “The Role of Everyday Citizens in Homeland Security,” Nieman Watchdog (Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University), Sept. 6, 2006, http://www.niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ask_this.view&askthisid=00232. As noted in the Center for Policing Terrorism’s Safe Cities Series, “[t]he emphasis is not on encouraging people to become spies, but rather making them more aware of the signals they encounter in their normal daily activities. “Hard-Won Lessons,” p. 21.
37. See Bureau of Justice Assistance, “Warning Signs of Terrorist Events: Pocket Guide for Law Enforcement,” Institute for Intergovernmental Research (2007).
38. Forest, “The Role of Everyday Citizens in Homeland Security.”
39. Richard L. Lyman and James M. Bradley, “Integrated Police and Fire Services: The Public Safety Model in White Plains, New York,” in Building Sound Homeland Security Foundations: Enhancing Local Police-Fire Cooperation, ed. Brian J. Nickerson and Frank G. Straub, Pace University, 2004, http://www.pace.edu/emplibrary/emergencysummitproceed053106.pdf, p. 41.
40. Originally developed by the NYPD, “Compstat refers to a ‘strategic control system’ developed to gather and disseminate information on the NYPD’s crime problems and to track efforts to deal with them.” David Weisburd et al., “The Growth of Compstat in American Policing,” Police Foundation Reports (Apr. 2004), p. 2. It has since been adopted in a number of other jurisdictions.
41. Lyman and Bradley, “Integrated Police and Fire Services,” p. 41.
42. Ibid.
43. Ibid., p. 48.
44. Ibid., p. 49.
45. Homeland Security Council, “National Strategy for Homeland Security” (Oct. 2007),

http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/homeland/nshs/NSHS.pdf.

46. Department of Homeland Security, “Fact Sheet: National Incident Management System (NIMS),” http://www.dhs.gov/xnews/releases/press_release_0363.shtm (accessed Nov. 6, 2006).
47. Taken from FEMA’s COURSE: IS-100 – Intro to Incident Command System (ICS 100), “The Incident Command System,” http://emilms.fema.gov/ICS100G/index.htm.
48. Dana Cole, The Incident Command System: A 25-Year Evaluation by California Practitioners (submitted to the National Fire Academy as part of the Executive Fire Officer Program, 2000) (quoted in Pamela Varley, Command Performance: County Firefighters Take Charge of the 9/11 Pentagon Emergency (report for the Kennedy School of Government case program, 2003).
49. Varley, Command Performance, p. 7.
50. For more information on how the ACFD and federal agencies worked together immediately following the attack on the Pentagon, see Part 4 of The George Washington University’s Institute for Crisis, Disaster, and Risk Management’s July 2002 Report Observing and Documenting the Inter-Organizational Response to the September 11th Attack on the Pentagon, p. 12, found at http://www2.gwu.edu/~icdrm/publications/PDF/NSF911_finalJuly8-1.pdf.
51. Arlington County, After-Action Report on the Response to the September 11 Terrorist Attack on the Pentagon (n.d.), http://www.arlingtonva.us/departments/Fire/edu/about/docs/after_report.pdf, p. A-17.
52. National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, The 9/11 Commission Report (2004), p. 314.
53. Varley, Command Performance, p. 41.
54. Ibid., p.35
55. State Preparedness Center, http://www.security.state.ny.us/training/index.html (accessed Mar. 7, 2008).
56. See http://www.southampton.liu.edu/homeland/index.html (accessed Mar. 18, 2008).
57. Eric Sloss, “Videogame Technology Helps Train FDNY to Combat Terrorism, Hazmat Emergencies,” Carnegie Mellon Today, May 20, 2005.
58. Gloria Goodale, “In Case of Emergency, Play Video Game,” Christian Science Monitor, June 6, 2005.
59. Jerry Sennett and Jeffrey Dulin, “The Joint Incident Command Model of Charlotte-Mecklenburg, North Carolina,” in Building Sound Homeland Security Foundations: Enhancing Local Police-Fire Cooperation, ed. Nickerson and Straub,
pp. 1–2.
60. Ibid., p. 1.
61. Ibid., p. 2.
62. Ibid., p. 3.
63. Ibid., p. 5.
64. Lyman and Bradley, “Integrated Police and Fire Services,” pp. 42–45.

(Manhattan Institute.org)

Kevyn Major Howard

Posted by Chandler On September - 13 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Fueled by the Fallen is a non-profit organization developed to both honor and pay tribute to the United States Service Members who lost their lives fighting for the freedom of others. A moving monument, The Memorial Race Car Team has been created to epitomize their sacrifices. Funds will be raised in conjunction with the team and will be given to the families who have lost sons, daughters, husbands, and wives in the War on Terrorism. It is our mission to give back to the families of our fallen heroes and create awareness of those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the defense of freedom.

Kevyn was on the Sept. 13th show to talk about the Marines 63 Nova dragster and his motivation for creating an awesome moving memorial to fallen Marines.

8 of the State for September 13, 2008

Posted by Howie On September - 13 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Here is the Eight of the State for this week, September 13th, 2008:

1. Matthew Piers – You are just lucky that there was a bigger Blue Falcon than you this week!
2. Tirek Ibn Ziyad Academy – Glad I don’t live in Minnesota!
3. OPEC – A perfect time to back out of this corrupt organization.
4. Steve Cohen – 3 words Representative…Klu Klux Klan.  They were Democrats!
5. Jeremiah Wright – Now that is leadership! Hope for change…for his sake!
6. John Wester – Oh my God, not again!!
7. Russians – I guess it takes on to know one!  Communist that is.
8. Matt Damon – I think Team America, World Police had it right.

The Blue Falcon of the Week

bluefalcon2Here is the Blue Falcon of the Week for this week, Sept. 13th, 2008:

Congratulations are in order for the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans!!

ramoscompeanThey Blue Falconed their fellow Americans over a convicted Mexican drug dealer that was given sanctuary by the Bush administration.  I guess the 5th Circuit agree that the guy trying to shot the bad guy is really the bad guy.  That makes absolutely no sense to me.

Semper Fi, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals!

(NewsMax.com)

Press Release from Jeff Beatty

Posted by Howie On September - 9 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

JEFF BEATTY TO JOHN KERRY AND BARACK OBAMA: ‘GIVE LOBBYING MONEY BACK TO FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC’

Kerry and Obama not only mismanaged this latest financial crisis, but are among the highest recipients of lobbying money from the beleaguered  financial giants

BOSTON– Today, U.S. Senate candidate Jeff Beatty condemned John Kerry and Barack Obama for being among the top recipients of campaign contributions from lobbying efforts of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  Beatty is demanding that Barack Obama and John Kerry return these campaign contributions immediately.   This week, the U.S. government agreed to bail out Freddie Mac and Fannie Mea in an attempt to shore up the credit markets and strengthen the economy.  Taking these donations, even as Freddie and Fannie fell into crisis, shows that yet again Kerry and Obama are putting their own political interests above the needs taxpayers and citizens.

“By taking hundreds of thousands of dollars from these finance giants who are known  to game the system, John Kerry and Barack Obama are showing what Americans can expect if they are elected: politics as usual,” Beatty said. “This means that two of the U.S. Senate’s least productive lawmakers are among the top recipients of contributions from these two financial giants.  Well now, it’s the taxpayers who must foot the bill for this bailout and Barack Obama and John Kerry should not benefit by keeping these campaign contributions.”

According to OpenSecrets.org, between 1998 and 2008, John Kerry – one of the richest members of the U.S. Senate — accepted $111,000 in campaign contributions from the embattled financial mortgage giants, second only to Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT). Presidential nominee Barack Obama was third on the list of top recipients, accepting more than $105,000 in contributions.

“From voting for the war in Iraq to accepting six-figure contributions from Washington lobbyists, John Kerry has consistently shown poor judgment while refusing to be held accountable for his decisions,” Beatty said. “As a U.S. senator, I will draw on my experience to restore good judgment and accountability to our government.”

Beatty noted that his grass-roots campaign to defeat John Kerry has raised almost $1.5 million from almost 35,000 individual contributions.  The campaign also has 3,000 volunteers supporting its efforts to bring change to the U.S. Senate.

“Throughout his career, John Kerry has repeatedly put his own political ambitions ahead of the best interests of his constituents,” Beatty said. “The people of Massachusetts deserve a senator who will put their interests first.”

Milwaukee Brewers wear spanish uniforms at Sat. Padres game!!

Posted by Chandler On September - 7 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

What the hell are they trying to say about San Diego by wearing uniforms like these when they play here? Why would they do such a thing? Maybe we should petition the Padres to change their uniforms to say “Fathers”.  See the video below…

Update 2: Here is the press release from the Brewers Baseball team.  You should note how they marry the tribute of some of the greatest black American baseball players with that of hispanic baseball players.  I agree that the players that they mention in the release deserve to be mentioned, but not compared to what the players went through as part of the Negros Leagues.  Black baseball players were not allowed full rights, hispanic players have always been afforded full rights in baseball.

And, I guess it would not be “PC” to ask if there was a night specifically to honor white baseball players.  Do they do that every other night of the year?  I guess not.

Update: a friend contacted the Brewers organization for an explanation of their uniform choice. Here was the responce…
“The Brewers have hosted Cerveceros Day for the past three years with the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Wisconsin. The Chamber hosts a mammoth tailgate party, called Fiesta Tailgate, and the event features Latin-flavored entertainment throughout the ballpark. Cerveceros Day is a fun event that celebrates the history of Hispanics in baseball and in all walks of life throughout the Milwaukee area. Every year, the City of Milwaukee hosts ethnic festivals of all types that draw hundreds of thousands of people, and this is simply an extension of that. It is not intended to be a political event or statement in any way, and it has proven to be a very popular event with fans over the past three years. If you have any further questions, please let me know, thanks!

John

John H. Steinmiller
Milwaukee Brewers Baseball Club
Media Relations Manager
Office – 414-902-4470
Cell – 414-731-3038
john.steinmiller@brewers.com”

You know what? I really have to agree with the sentiments of my friend who contacted the team on this. He wrote in an email to me, “BTW, absolutely nothing wrong with honoring the Negro leagues where black players had to play in their own leagues, but equating that with Hispanic players who have always received full recognition and opportunities in MLB is deplorable.” I couldn’t have said it any better.

That is all.

Nick Popaditch

Posted by Chandler On September - 6 - 2008 1 COMMENT

Nick is a former Gunnery Sergeant who was wounded in April of 2004 during the first assault on Fallujah.  Nick wrote a book about his injuries and his courageous recovery.  “Once a Marine” chronicles the amazing fight of a man that prided himself a fighter and how he was truly tested beyond anything that he had ever imagined.  It is a story of true heroism.  You can read more about Gunny Popaditch at his website here.  Semper Fi!

8 of the State for September 6, 2008

Posted by Howie On September - 6 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

Here is the Eight of the State for this week, Sept. 6th, 2008:

1. Squirrels! – I guess the Indians are struggling for new players?!
2. Roberto Amaya Canchola – You can’t trust anyone nowadays!
3. Steny Hoyer – If he can’t help a cop, how are we expected to believe he will help us veterans?!
4. Code Pink – Hhhmm…Identity theft, nice!
5. Moonbats – Irrational and shrill, Hillary Clinton style!
6. Samuel Kent – You are not on here for the sex part sir!  You are on here for being investigated!
7. Mini-subs – because they’re small…and full of bad stuff.
8. Anarchists – This guy is totally, like you know, stupid and stuff.

The Blue Falcon of the Week

bluefalcon3Here is your Blue Falcon of the Week for Sept. 6th, 2008:

Congratulations are in order for Mr. J. Reece Roth of Knoxville, TN!

j-reece-roth-mug_t220Mr. Roth is a professor at the University of Tennessee.  Mr. Roth is also under federal indictment for passing secrets to two research assistants from China and Iran.  You see, in this country you just can’t do that.  Maybe someone should have told Mr. Roth that when he got his security clearance.

But then, maybe we shouldn’t be so hard on Mr. Roth.  It would appear by this statement, “The 70-year-old Roth testified last week that he didn’t break the law” that he got his clearance right after Moses.  Hhhmmm.  Do you think that this guy is really worried about going to jail at his age?

(NewsMax.com)

From trigger puller to author: The Gunny Pop story

Posted by Chandler On September - 6 - 2008 ADD COMMENTS

bookcover_onceamarineMy guest this week is going to be none other than Gunnery Sergeant Nick Popaditch!

Gunny Pop has written a forthcoming book called “Once A Marine: An Iraq War Tank Commander’s Inspirational Memoir of Combat, Courage, and Recovery”.  It is due to be released nationally on Sept. 15th.

The book chronicles his injuries that he suffered aboard his M1A1 tank “Bonecrusher” during the first assault on Fallujah in April of 2004, and all the way through his recovery.  It is an inspirational story of courage and fortitude.  I received an advanced copy of the book and I can honestly say that I couldn’t put it down.  A copy of this book should be in every American’s book shelf.  Get it, read it, be motivated by it.

You can pre-order your copy of “Once A Marine” today at Amazon.com.

Semper Fi!

NYT John Burns Warns About Making Haste In Iraq Withdrawal



 

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Chandlers Watch, The Radio Show, was born in 2007 by two Marines that wanted to fulfill their oath to defend this country against all enemies, both foreign and domestic and to preserve our Constitution. Today, we promote the Corps values and leadership principles, that the Marine Corps instilled in us, to the American people in an entertaining way.

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