Did I hear that right?
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  1. #1
    Unregistered
    Guest

    Did I hear that right?

    Hammocks was patched with Midwest, and D5000 asked the dispatcher "Are we caught up with calls?"
    She replied "Yes." And this Lieutenant actually said "Good job guys" on the radio. What's the 24 on this guy? I had to pinch myself to make sure I wasn't dreaming. A road lieutenant who backs his guys? Da f**k ?

  2. #2
    Unregistered
    Guest

    Oh Please !

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Hammocks was patched with Midwest, and D5000 asked the dispatcher "Are we caught up with calls?"
    She replied "Yes." And this Lieutenant actually said "Good job guys" on the radio. What's the 24 on this guy? I had to pinch myself to make sure I wasn't dreaming. A road lieutenant who backs his guys? Da f**k ?
    This site is to be anon since we all know how retribution is spread here. Just look at today's Channel 7 Carmel's special report ::

    http://m.wsvn.com/article.html#!/108...8721ad4fabeabd

    So please don't come on here and make yourself a Hero in your own mind!

    What you needed to say is that your so short staffed by your administrators and politicians that you can't handle a disaster if it happened. Patching up districts cause your politicians and administrators keep playing the shell game of stealing and misrepresenting Tax Dollars from the community. I would like to hear you say on the radio that your so short staffed stupid calls need to be dumped. At the end of the day you'll be saving millions in Gas Money.

    Oh, sorry I forgot the politicians don't want the county to save on Gas, that would cut profit out of the suppers pocket and millions in political Donations from them!

    Here Guys read up Just read up, check out the Campaigne Funds now and in the past. Or simple go on-line, here are some links to help out.

    Let's see, Local Mayor Race!

    Miami-Dade mayor raises nearly $900,000 in first quarter
    @doug_hanks

    Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez tapped large donors to bring in more than $200,000 last month for his reelection effort.

    The donations to a Gimenez political committee brings his first-quarter tally to just shy of $880,000, a record pace for an election whose primary is still 17 months away. And while there was early talk within the Gimenez camp of raising $1 million in the first quarter, the March report clearly demonstrates the financial advantage the incumbent brings to the 2016 mayoral race.

    Gimenez's committee, Miami-Dade Residents First, raised more in one day ($66,500 on March 30) than challenger Raquel Regalado, a school board member, posted for all of March ($48,310). Of the 53 checks Miami-Dade Residents First received in March, 21 were for at least $5,000.

    With the help of professional fund-raiser Brian Goldmeier, whose firm is so far earning $3,000 a week, Miami-Dade Residents First has collected $879,952 since the mayor began personally soliciting donors in mid-January, according to committee reports. In March, the committee brought in $208,000.

    Gimenez, in office since 2011, is running for his second full four-year term. He faces his first test in August 2016, a primary that would be the final vote if it remains a two-candidate race. Should any candidate not top 50 percent in the primary, the top two vote-getters head for a November run-off on Election Day. (In a two-person primary, the winner will have at least 50 percent of the vote.)

    The Gimenez camp is touting its candidate's fund-raising success as evidence of the uphill task ahead of Regalado as she tries to unseat a popular incumbent. Regalado, the daughter of Miami Mayor Tomás Regalado, is highlighting the money gap as proof of her grass-roots support, since she collected a string of $5 checks from residents after jumping into the race while Gimenez is soliciting companies doing business with the county.

    For March, donations to Miami-Dade Residents First topped out at $15,000 – the informal cap Gimenez’s finance team said they set for donors when fund-raising began in January. Three donors gave $15,000 in March, either with a single check or with smaller checks through related corporate entities, according to a Naked Politics review of the committee’s report.

    Of the top three, two have lobbyists registered with Miami-Dade: developer Chateau Group and Sunshine Gasoline Distributors, the company behind a large fuel operation in the county.

    The third $15,000 donor in March was a company linked to Miami's Capo family, which owns the Bimini resort where Genting operates a casino. The company, RJH Investments, does not employ county lobbyists, according to Miami-Dade records. Genting, a Malaysian conglomerate, has multiple lobbyists registered in Miami-Dade, where it hopes to build a waterfront Miami casino.


    Let's see State Pockets!

    http://classic.followthemoney.org/da...0&incy=0&so3=P


    And the Presidential Hopeful!

    http://www.floridabulldog.org/tag/su...-distributors/

    And they want body cam's on cops, they're the ones who should have cam's on them 24/7!

  3. #3
    Unregistered
    Guest
    D5000, stop coming on here and writing about yourself, the people that know you, know you are pathological liar. You had your Mommy take care of you career, now she is gone so your ass better start working like the rest of us.

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