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06-14-2016, 07:28 PM #1UnregisteredGuest
Q&A With 124
Ok ladies and gentlemen. I've been answering the same questions individually for some time now. I think it would be more effective if I answered them publicly for a change. So ask away. If I know the answer for a fact I'll tell you. If I'm making an educated or informed summation, I'll say so.
124
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06-14-2016, 10:08 PM #2UnregisteredGuest
Why were you let go?
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06-14-2016, 11:01 PM #3UnregisteredGuest
The first question is a good one. What was the deal with firing sim, and Magas. Or removing RA from narc?
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06-15-2016, 05:48 PM #4UnregisteredGuest
I’ll answer that categorically, and start with Magas. I have no clue why he was hired in the first place. I do know that he was fired because he was setting up shop for his personal LE training company at the gun range, and not doing what he was asked to do when he was hired. As I recall the final straw was the fact that the SRO grant required him to maintain certain statistics for reporting purposes. When the reporting period came around he had none of the stats, and was not familiar with the grant for which he was hired to oversee.
As for RA. I really don’t know why he was removed. I’ll tell you that most agencies rotate their narcotics guys every three to five years, as a practice. In this case it made sense to me, because they had a guy ready to step in who had a ton more (and better) experience.
Simeon’s is a long story, and goes back to 2010/11 when the Labelle Nights Bravo shift was GT, Mims, and Simeon. Kevin hated them all for some reason, and if you’ll notice Mims and Simeon are both gone. Kevin is still working diligently to do GT. After his legal problem in Charlotte County, Kevin vowed that Simeon would never return to duty. Even after the charges were dropped by the SAO, Kevin refused to put Simeon back on payed administrative leave. Kevin insisted that he was doing Simeon a favor by delaying the IA to give him time to resign, and even directed me to coerce Simeon to resign before the IA was started. (Simeon and I never had that conversation) The bottom line is that Kevin already knew that Simeon’s girlfriend was going to recant her initial statement from the night of the incident, and that the IA would clear him to return to duty as soon as the shooting investigation was completed and he passed his fit for duty evaluation. Fortunately, while he was preparing for the fight with the agency, Simeon received an offer to go do his dream job and cut his losses.
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06-15-2016, 05:56 PM #5UnregisteredGuest
[QUOTE=Unregistered;2629698]I’ll answer that categorically, and start with Magas. I have no clue why he was hired in the first place. I do know that he was fired because he was setting up shop for his personal LE training company at the gun range, and not doing what he was asked to do when he was hired. As I recall the final straw was the fact that the SRO grant required him to maintain certain statistics for reporting purposes. When the reporting period came around he had none of the stats, and was not familiar with the grant for which he was hired to oversee.
As for RA. I really don’t know why he was removed. I’ll tell you that most agencies rotate their narcotics guys every three to five years, as a practice. In this case it made sense to me, because they had a guy ready to step in who had a ton more (and better) experience.
Simeon’s is a long story, and goes back to 2010/11 when the Labelle Nights Bravo shift was GT, Mims, and Simeon. Kevin hated them all for some reason, and if you’ll notice Mims and Simeon are both gone. Kevin is still working diligently to do GT. After his legal problem in Charlotte County, Kevin vowed that Simeon would never return to duty. Even after the charges were dropped by the SAO, Kevin refused to put Simeon back on payed administrative leave. Kevin insisted that he was doing Simeon a favor by delaying the IA to give him time to resign, and even directed me to coerce Simeon to resign before the IA was started. (Simeon and I never had that conversation) The bottom line is that Kevin already knew that Simeon’s girlfriend was going to recant her initial statement from the night of the incident, and that the IA would clear him to return to duty as soon as the shooting investigation was completed and he passed his fit for duty evaluation. Fortunately, while he was preparing for the fight with the agency, Simeon received an offer to go do his dream job and cut his losses.[/QUOTE
I apologize. but I neglected to leave my trademark signature on the posts above.
124 (x2)
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06-16-2016, 05:46 PM #6UnregisteredGuest
Financially what is the biggest waste the S.O. spends money on? Where could the spend more and where could they spend less?
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06-15-2016, 05:16 PM #7UnregisteredGuest
Ultimately, for threatening to make a formal complaint to the board of directors of the CFA during the mock accreditation assessment. One of the assessors was profoundly unprofessional and incompetent. I voiced my frustration and promised to make that complaint and was gone less than an hour later.
In reality I was a thorn in Kevin Nelson’s side. After they ran Dale Williams off and I began to report directly to Kevin, I became exposed to his mistakes and asinine decision making. Being in the position I was in, I voiced my opinion about those mistakes and/or terrible decisions when I felt that they were detrimental to the agency, and more particularly my subordinates. Tactfully of course. The problem with that is that Kevin lacks the ability to “agree to disagree”. When he receives any resistance, no matter how delicately presented, he see it as an attack and you become the enemy. I always prefaced my disagreements with "I'm always going to do this your way" or "I've already done this your way but..." I knew for the last four or five months that I was there that it was only a matter of time before Kevin and I had our final disagreement.
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