Posted on 11/14/2005 7:24:57 AM PST by getmeouttaPalmBeachCounty_FL
DALLAS A newlywed police officer was killed early Sunday by a suspect he was chasing on foot, authorities said. Officer Brian Jackson and another officer went to investigate a disturbance complaint and chased a male suspect through alleys and between houses, Police Chief David Kunkle said. During the chase, the man fired at the officers, fatally wounding Jackson, Kunkle said. The suspect, Juan Lizcano, 28, was charged with one count of capital murder and was in police custody. Jackson, 28, was a five-year veteran of the Dallas police force and had previously served with the New York Police Department, Kunkle said. He had been married for just two months. Jackson was the first Dallas officer killed since Oct. 23, 2002, when an off-duty officer died in a traffic accident.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
On Ankarlo (570am KLIF - Dallas) this morning, he stated that the freak who killed this Police Officer is an illegal immigrant. I have not been able to locate any articles online that mention this. I believe Ankarlo.
For your Ping list.
For your Illegal Ping list.
Mr. Lizcano, a native of Doctor Arroyo, a small town in the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, lived off and on (in between deportations) with an uncle and a brother in Oak Cliff since he moved (illegally broke into the U.S.) to Dallas four or five years ago.
So much for giving scamnesty to the criminal illegal aliens that have been here for several years because they have "assimilated." Most don't, and are not about to. It's not part of their "culture."
I am very curious about the creep's "immigration" status. I apologize for my cynicism.
Here is an excerpt from the Dallas Morning News:
"Mr. Lizcano, a native of Doctor Arroyo, a small town in the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, lived off and on with an uncle and a brother in Oak Cliff since he moved to Dallas four or five years ago."
THE MONUMENT
I never dreamed it would be me,
My name for all eternity,
Recorded here at this hallowed place,
Alas, my name, no more my face.
"In the line of duty," I hear them say;
My family now the price will pay.
My folded flag stained with their tears;
We only had those few short years.
The badge no longer on my chest,
I sleep now in eternal rest.
My sword I pass to those behind,
And I pray they keep this thought in mind.
I never dreamed it would be me,
And with heavy heart and bended knee;
I ask for all here from the past,
Dear God, let my name be the last.
Your interpretation is exactly what I'm thinking!
I am so angry about this that no one is reporting whether he is here legally or not. AND...how he got here to begin with.
Time to use that express lane.
Another part of the Dallas Morning News:
Some of Officer Jackson's colleagues recalled Sunday an officer who loved and excelled at his job.
Gang unit Officer Frank Carcone said when the unit needed a liaison officer from central patrol, "We knew he'd be the right person for the job."
Officer Jackson was constantly feeding the unit tips he had gleaned from the street, he said. "He'd come up to our office at least once or twice a week and give us as much information as he could.
"From Day One, he just enjoyed police work and took pride in it. And he always wanted to learn everything he could. He was very dedicated," Officer Carcone said. "He went above and beyond.
"He'd stay late. He'd cover anybody. He was always looking to help everybody he could."
Sgt. Jon Jacob, a southwest patrol supervisor, said Officer Jackson was his first recruit when he became a field training officer. "He was anxious, eager and had tons of energy," Sgt. Jacob said. "He was just well rounded and well grounded."
Officer Kyle Land recalled the slain officer as compassionate, "one of those types of officers that knew his stuff. ... You knew that if something happened he would be there to help you out."
Sgt. Larry Lewis said Officer Jackson had volunteered to stay late Saturday to help homicide detectives canvass bars because they knew the victims in last Sunday's double slaying had been to bars in the area. In that case, Maria "Felix" Guzman and Matias Velasquez, 44, were shot and killed in front of her family's house on Fitzhugh Avenue between Tremont and Columbia streets in East Dallas.
"He was helping some of my guys just a few minutes before he went on that [fatal] call. He heard it dispatched and went down here," Sgt. Lewis said of Officer Jackson.
Sgt. Lewis said he saw Mr. Lizcano before he was jailed.
"He appeared very cool and calm and cold. No emotion whatsoever," he said. "I think someone told him [that the officer had been killed] and he just kind of shrugged," Sgt. Lewis said. "I think he was going to shoot anybody that got in his way that night."
Yes, local Dallas TV news, is also reporting this cop killer is an illegal.
Prayers for the Officer's family
I emailed someone in the Dallas area reporting on this story and the emailed response to my inquiry was they can't confirm the killer's status.
I am so freaking mad about this!!!!! BUILD THAT FREAKING WALL!
This is 5 or 6 police officers that we've read about in the last year lost to illegal aliens. We have a war going on within our borders, people. How do we get the Powers that be to realize this!???
Maybe we ought to keep a list in honor of the "Jenny Lopez's" in this country.
more info from TXCN & WFAA in Dallas....
http://www.txcn.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/tv/stories/wfaa051113_mo_officerdeath.59d1c6ee.html
Police mourn officer's shooting death
08:08 AM CST on Monday, November 14, 2005
From WFAA-TV Staff Reports
Officer Brian Jackson Across the force, Dallas police officers are grieving for one of their own after he was killed in a gunfight early Sunday morning.
Police said Officer Brian Jackson, 28, was shot under the arm in the 2400 block of North Henderson Avenue in East Dallas after he chased a gunman on foot who had reportedly threatened his ex-girlfriend and fired a shot in her home.
A homeowner said Juan Lizcano, 29, hid in his front yard on the 2400 block of Madera Street and then fired on the officer when he came through the front gate.
Two officers attempted CPR on Jackson, but by the time doctors at Baylor Medical Center had a chance to try and save his life, Jackson was already gone.
Also Online
Jackson spoke of job's danger
News 8 reports
Dallas police officer killed in shootout
He had been married just two months when he gave his life wearing the badge he earned five years ago.
As police continue to investigate further into the shooting, many of them also mourn the loss of their fellow officer. It was the first on-duty police fatality in Dallas since 2001, and the first on Chief David Kunkle's watch.
"He was a very kind, compassionate man who cared very deeply about his wife, his family and his job," Kunkle said.
Lizcano was arrested for the shooting, along with a friend, Jose Fernandez, who police found in Lizcano's car.
However, Fernandez is no longer in Dallas police custody after investigators questioned and released him.
Fernandez said he and Lizcano went out Saturday evening to a nightclub off Interstate 35 near Manana Drive.
WFAA-TV
Juan Lizcano sits in the back of a patrol car after he allegedly fatally shot Officer Brian Jackson. There, he said Lizcano became drunk and later pulled out a gun in his truck and said he was going to kill his ex-girlfriend.
He was with Lizcano when he said the suspect drove to his ex-girlfriend's home.
"He was jealous," Fernandez said. "He believed the woman was with another guy."
Fernandez said he tried to stop Lizcano from going inside the woman's house, but he wouldn't listen.
"I stayed in the truck, and then the police arrived," he said. "And they got me out of the truck and then I heard many gunshots."
This wasn't Lizcano's first violent run-in with the police. He was first booked in September for threatening to kill his ex-girlfriend with a knife. Six days later, he posed again for a mug shot for a charge of driving while intoxicated.
Finally, his latest mug shot was for the murder of Jackson.
Lizcano's friends said he was typically a nice guy, but would become violent when he started drinking.
"I didn't think he would ever do that," said friend Joe Gallegos.
Friends of Lizcano said he had worked as a landscaper and had been in the United States for the past two years as an illegal immigrant.
Bert Lozano, Carol Cavazos and Brad Hawkins contributed to this report
From the Raleigh, NC police dept. website: (read the names)
___________________________________________________________
Most Wanted Persons
The individuals on this web page are currently wanted by the Raleigh Police Department. If you have information concerning the current whereabouts of these subjects, please call the Raleigh Police Departments Detective Division at 919-890-3555 or call CrimeStoppers 919-226-CRIME. CrimeStoppers offers up to a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of wanted subjects. Some individuals listed in this section are believed to be armed and dangerous. Do not approach them. Notify the Raleigh Police Department, or police in your jurisdiction, if you see one of these subjects. You may also view a more complete listing of people who are wanted by the department.
Adriana Deloya Roman
Alfonso Montoya Hernandez
Andrew Lawrence Lewis
Cesar Estrada
Emelanio Sandoval Rojas
Fitzgerald Innocent
Gonzalo Garcia
Gregory Galberth
Jose Francisco Martinez
Jose Hernandez
Jose Ismael Bonilla-Yanez
Juan Armenta Perez
Juaquin Sanchez
Noel Monterrubio-Garcia
Phu Tan Nguyen
Shawnte Roy Williams
Tomas Serrano Garcia
Ugh. It's always the same, they always break more laws than crossing the border and don't get held for them until someone is dead.
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