Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Recruiters told to call cops on citizens protecting them

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Forever_frost
    replied
    Originally posted by YALE View Post
    ...if they feel threatened. It doesn't say what to do if they feel comforted.
    Not allowed to express that. Obama doesn't like the military protected, doesn't work with his game plan. If you want to cripple the military you hit it two ways. You gut it by numbers while changing the culture and filling it with gay and transgendered troops and illegals while also scaring new recruits away that may be interested in the old ways of God and Country and protecting the Republic. You turn it into a federal jobs plan that is keyed to affirmative action.

    Leave a comment:


  • YALE
    replied
    Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
    If they see citizens armed outside, they are to lock their doors, drop the blinds and call police. They aren't even to acknowledge we exist.
    ...if they feel threatened. It doesn't say what to do if they feel comforted.

    Leave a comment:


  • Forever_frost
    replied
    Originally posted by Magnus View Post
    Using my superpower of unbiased, unemotional reading and comprehension of an article, doesn't this mean that they aren't automatically required to call local law enforcement? It seems to me that they must feel threatened by Joe Dirt at the recruiting station before they are to call out.
    If they see citizens armed outside, they are to lock their doors, drop the blinds and call police. They aren't even to acknowledge we exist.

    Leave a comment:


  • CexMashean
    replied
    Originally posted by Article
    "Soldiers should avoid anyone standing outside the recruiting centers attempting to offer protection and report them to local law enforcement and the command if they feel threatened, according to a U.S. Army Recruiting Command policy letter issued Monday."
    Using my superpower of unbiased, unemotional reading and comprehension of an article, doesn't this mean that they aren't automatically required to call local law enforcement? It seems to me that they must feel threatened by Joe Dirt at the recruiting station before they are to call out.

    Leave a comment:


  • BP
    replied
    Gen. Milley was the III Corps commander during the last Fort Hood shooting, he knows first hand how vulnerable our soldiers are.

    Leave a comment:


  • helosailor
    replied
    What a load of horse shit.

    Meanwhile, a release from the Department of the Navy said simply "Fuck yeah! 'Murica!"

    Leave a comment:


  • sc281
    replied
    Par for the fucking course....

    Leave a comment:


  • Recruiters told to call cops on citizens protecting them



    Army to recruiters: Treat armed citizens as security threat
    By Travis J. Tritten
    Stars and Stripes
    Published: July 22, 2015



    230715APRECRUITphoto01_web
    Terry Jackson, a member of Operation Hero Guard, stands guard outside a U.S. military recruiting station in Cleburne, Texas, Tuesday, July 21, 2015.
    Rose Baca/The Dallas Morning News
    Related

    [Reserve Recruitment personnel stand outside at Highway 153 and Lee Highway on Thursday, July 16, 2015, in Chattanooga, Tenn. Former senior military officers are urging caution in the wake of calls to arm domestic servicemembers following last week's deadly rampage in Tennessee. Tim Barber, Chattanooga Times Free Press/TNS]
    Military says no to arming servicemen at US bases

    The Defense Department on Wednesday came out squarely against giving weapons to every service member on a domestic military installation despite a growing clamor in Congress for such a step in the wake of the Tennessee shooting rampage.
    [Gen. Mark Milley makes comments Tuesday, July 21, 2015, during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C., where members of the Senate Armed Services Committee considered his nomination to be the next Army chief of staff. Carlos Bongioanni/Stars and Stripes]
    US general: Some recruiting station soldiers should be armed

    The general tapped to be the next Army chief of staff said Tuesday that if legal issues could be resolved he thinks it would be appropriate, in some cases, to arm soldiers manning recruiting stations.
    [The American flag flies at half-staff at the White House in honor of the Chattanooga shooting victims on July 21, 2015. Sam Laney/Stars and Stripes]
    Obama makes it official: Flags at half-staff for Chattanooga victims

    President Barack Obama on Tuesday ordered flags across the country to be flown at half-staff for the victims of the Chattanooga shooting after mounting public pressure.
    [Republican presidential candidate Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker addresses a crowd at Giese Manufacturing, Sunday, July 19, 2015, in Dubuque, Iowa. Mike Burley, Telegraph Herald/AP]
    Gov. Walker issues order to arm Wisconsin National Guard

    Republican Gov. Scott Walker issued an executive order Tuesday authorizing Wisconsin National Guard personnel to carry firearms while on duty in the wake of an attack on a pair of military facilities in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
    [Several bullet holes can be seen in the windows of the Armed Forces Recruitment Center on Thursday, July 16, 2015, in Chattanooga, Tenn. Tim Barber, Chattanooga Times Free Press/TNS]
    More armed officers at SC National Guard facilities likely

    More officers will likely carry guns at National Guard facilities across South Carolina after a safety review prompted by last week's shootings in Tennessee, Gov. Nikki Haley said Monday.
    [Paula Proxmire, the mother of Navy sailor Randall Smith, who was killed in the attack on two military sites in Chattanooga, Tenn., is surrounded by mourners, protesters and television cameras on Sunday, July 19, 2015. Greg Jaffe/The Washington Post]
    Chattanooga killings spark fury, demands for government action

    Paula Proxmire was surrounded by screaming street preachers, angry protesters and unsettled mourners. Her son, Petty Officer 2nd Class Randall Smith had died from wounds suffered in a shooting rampage. Her son had been dead for barely one day. Around her people were screaming.
    Armed Colorado Springs combat veterans guard American flag

    A partially burned American flag was found early Tuesday on a statue at Colorado Springs City Hall, according to police.

    WASHINGTON — The Army has warned its recruiters to treat the gun-toting civilians gathering at centers across the country in the wake of the Chattanooga, Tenn., shooting as a security threat.

    Soldiers should avoid anyone standing outside the recruiting centers attempting to offer protection and report them to local law enforcement and the command if they feel threatened, according to a U.S. Army Recruiting Command policy letter issued Monday.

    Armed citizens — some associated with activist groups and militias — were standing vigil outside recruiting centers in Wisconsin, Georgia, Tennessee, Idaho and elsewhere this week, saying they want to provide protection to servicemembers barred from carrying firearms on duty. Four Marines and a sailor were killed by Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez, a 24-year-old Kuwait-born native of Tennessee, during an attack Thursday on a strip mall recruiting center and a Navy facility that is being investigated as an act of terrorism.

    Abdulazeez fired into the front of the recruiting station but there were no casualties. The five servicemembers were killed during an attack on the Navy Operational Support Center. A Navy officer and a Marine reportedly fired at the gunman, although it is unclear why they were armed. It is against Defense Department policy for anyone other than military police or law enforcement to carry weapons on federal property.

    “I’m sure the citizens mean well, but we cannot assume this in every case and we do not want to advocate this behavior,” according to the Army Command Operations Center-Security Division letter, which was authenticated by the service.

    Recruiters were ordered not to interact or acknowledge the armed civilians, who have been greeted by a mix of concern, indifference and gratitude by the public.

    “If questioned by these alleged concerned citizens, be polite, professional and terminate the conversation immediately and report the incident to local law enforcement …,” the command advised.

    As the incidents crop up around the country, police could be asked to confront the civilians with guns on the Army’s behalf.

    “Ensure your recruiters clearly articulate to local police the civilian may be armed and in possession of a conceal/carry permit,” it told the centers.

    The command said recruiters should also immediately fill out an Army security report.

    Kelli Bland, a spokeswoman for Army Recruiting Command, said the service has been increasing vigilance following the Chattanooga shooting and that local residents can help in other ways.

    “Local communities can support our security by reporting suspicious activity, particularly around recruiting centers,” Bland wrote in an email to Stars and Stripes.

    Concerned citizens began gathering at the centers shortly after the shooting in Tennessee, and governors in some states ordered recruiters to armories or to be armed for protection against potential terrorist attacks. Congress has also pushed for the Defense Department to lift its current policy.

    The founder and president of Oath Keepers, a Constitution activist group based in Las Vegas, issued a national call Tuesday to guard centers, while members were already guarding centers in Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma, president Stewart Rhodes told the Associated Press.

    Rhodes told the news service it’s “absolutely insane” that recruiters aren’t allowed to be armed.

    “They’re sitting ducks,” Rhodes said Tuesday. “They’d be better off if they were walking down the streets of Baghdad, because at least in Baghdad, they could move. Here, they’re stationary.”

    In Lewiston, Idaho, three men with a group known as “3 percenters” — a national alliance with members who prepare “for any situation, man-made or natural” — were standing watch outside a recruiting office this week, the TNS wire service reported.

    “They supported us, and now we’re here showing them that we support them,” said Matt Dillard, of Clarkston, Idaho, who was among the men.
Working...
X