As you can see
from the Courant article below, input is solicited from the public.
Cop's wife on psycho CT police
on steroids?
Empire Targets the Citizenry:
Paul Craig Roberts
Sturmtruppen Training Video
HEIL, HEIL STATE POLICE!!!
America's Injustice System is Criminal- Paul Craig Roberts
Home of the Chocolate Burger
Hartford is "Jiggaboo Junction"
FBI fags sting Blacks with "TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD"
Corrupticut's Human Rights Abuses
Rell got what
she is most afraid of.
Rell's Rule: WHEREAS,
my
children are criminals, you are going to jail !!
Governor Rell's kid is a criminal;
Officers threatened
Chill, Steve. Rell's a brainless sicko
SvenVonErick
Steve captures other Corruptivictims
stories on YouTube
STATE
TROOPER PERJURY
State Troopers' 100 Club
ADD MORE PSYCHOPATHS
Cops
Order Murder
Meatgrinder State
Chief State's Attorney Shows Up Drunk at Corrupt Judges
Hearing
Hero Thrown in Jail, No trial.
Raping Retarded People
Reporting
to the VA investgators about the non-accreditation of the CT State Trooper
Psychopaths Club:
VTec dead and the incompetence of psychiatry (additional complaints about State
Troopers)
The Saraceno Case and the Chief State Prosecutor's
CRIMES...
The Governor's kid is a criminal, but the officers were
threatened to back off....Corrupt CT State Police (complaints)
Using DCF as a weapon, State Prosecutor Messameno
Corrupt CT State Police (complaints)
CRIMES OF CORRUPTICUT
VIKING VIDEO and AUDIO
INTERVIEWS- False Arrests Are Common in the Corrupticourts
CORRUPTICUTS HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES
Corrupticut- More children in jail than anywhere
else in the world An international disgrace.
http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-ctcspaccredit0418.artapr18,0,2619426.story
State Police To Be Assessed For
Reaccreditation
By TRACY GORDON FOX Courant Staff Writer
April 18 2007
A team of assessors that will determine whether the Connecticut State Police
should be reaccredited has been briefed on the recent turmoil within the
agency's internal affairs division, and how the department responded to it,
state police said.
"Our life is an open book," said Lt. J. Paul Vance, a state police
spokesman. "They are aware of it and reviewed all the information. It is a
review of the entire agency in full."
The state police was first accredited in 1988, the second law enforcement
agency in Connecticut and the third state police agency in the country to
receive International Law Enforcement Accreditation, a voluntary recognition
process that measures law enforcement excellence. The department has earned
accreditation every year since.
But this year may be the most tumultuous year since the department has been
accredited. It recently went through an entire management change, bringing
on a new commissioner and a new colonel, following a scathing report by the
New York State Police on the state police internal affairs division.
The 168-page report by the New York State Police and the Connecticut
attorney general's office, released in December, outlined misconduct and
improper influence in cases against troopers that involved domestic
violence, sexual assaults, drunken driving and larceny. The internal affairs
unit has since been revamped, with all complaints going to a centralized
division.
"We're not hiding anything," Vance said. "It really is a complete overview,
including internal affairs. We simply have to present all the facts. We
believe we live up to the standards and excellence."
One of the assessors, Don Pike of the Prince George's County, Maryland,
police department, said Monday that the management changes and the internal
affairs report would be among the factors they look at.
"We take into account quite a few issues, including those issues," Pike
said. "Some of the accreditation standards relate to internal affairs."
But how those issues are judged is up to the full 21-member commission. "We
are simply the eyes and ears of the commission," Pike said.
In order to gain reaccredited status, the state police must comply with 446
standards. The assessors, who are from the Virginia State Police, the
Jacksonville Sheriffs Department in Florida, and the Maryland Police
Department, will review written materials, interview people and visit
barracks and units within the state police, Vance said.
Once the assessors complete their review of the agency, they report back to
the full Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, based in
Virginia.
Anyone wishing to offer comments to the commission about the state police's
ability to meet the standards for accreditation can write the commission at
10302 Eaton Place, Suite 100, Fairfax, VA 22030-2215, or call 800-368-3757.
Contact Tracy Gordon Fox at tfox@courant.com.
Copyright 2007, Hartford Courant |