 |

12-27-06, 09:41 AM
|
 |
BANNED
|
|
Join Date: 12-03-05
Location: None of your business
Posts: 16,064
Rep Power: 0
|
|
Man lights himself on fire to protest religious based decision by school system
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) -- A man used flammable liquid to light himself on fire, apparently to protest a San Joaquin Valley school district's decision to change the names of winter and spring breaks to Christmas and Easter vacation.
The man, who was not immediately identified, on Friday also set fire to a Christmas tree, an American flag and a revolutionary flag replica, said Fire Captain Garth Milam.
Seeing the flames, Sheriff's Deputy Lance Ferguson grabbed a fire extinguisher and ran to the man.
Flames were devouring a Christmas tree next to the Liberty Bell, where public events and demonstrations are common.
Beside the tree the man stood with an American flag draped around his shoulders and a red gas can over his head.
Seeing the deputy, the man poured the liquid over his head. He quickly burst into flames when the fumes from the gas met the flames from the tree.
The deputy ordered the man to drop to the ground as he and a parole agent sprayed him with fire extinguishers.
"The man stood there like this," the deputy said with his arms across his chest and his head bent down, "Saying no, no, no."
The man suffered first degree burns on his shoulders and arms, Milam said.
Kern County Sheriff's Deputy John Leyendecker said the man had a sign that read: "(expletive) the religious establishment and KHSD."
On Thursday, the Kern High School Board of Trustees voted to use the names Christmas and Easter instead of winter and spring breaks.
|

12-27-06, 09:43 AM
|
 |
BANNED
|
|
Join Date: 12-03-05
Location: None of your business
Posts: 16,064
Rep Power: 0
|
|
|
We know this will be a heated discussion. That is okay. We will not lock this. No Alpha Hotels here please.
|

12-27-06, 09:55 AM
|
 |
Moderator
|
|
Premium Lifetime Member Verified LEO Site Moderator
Join Date: 12-04-05
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 8,708
Rep Power: 5860085
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Terminator
We know this will be a heated discussion. That is okay. We will not lock this. No Alpha Hotels here please.
|
How about Bravo Hotel?
__________________
No one has greater love than this, to lay down ones life for ones friends - John 15:13
"The Wicked Flee When No Man Pursueth: But The Righteous Are Bold As A Lion".
We lucky few, we band of brothers. For he who today sheds his blood with me shall be my brother.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ The opinions, beliefs, and ideas expressed in this post are mine, and mine alone. They are NOT the opinions, beliefs, ideas, or policies of my Agency, Police Chief, City Council, or any member of my department.
|

12-27-06, 10:01 AM
|
 |
BANNED
|
|
Join Date: 12-03-05
Location: None of your business
Posts: 16,064
Rep Power: 0
|
|
|
No Bravo Hotels either. Remember, in restraint, their's valor.
|

12-27-06, 10:32 AM
|
 |
Sergeant
|
|
Verified LEO
Join Date: 05-21-06
Posts: 1,077
Rep Power: 5395750
|
|
|
hmmmm not sure if I should comment, hate that the flag and the tree was burnt................and glad the liberty bell wasn't burnt........................
__________________
Any Post I make is my opinion only!
I do not have the authority or the permission to post for my Sheriff's Office.
|

12-27-06, 10:39 AM
|
 |
sheep
|
|
Premium Lifetime Member
Join Date: 06-11-06
Posts: 19,975
Rep Power: 4163975
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Terminator
We know this will be a heated discussion.
|
Pun intended?
|

12-27-06, 11:02 AM
|
 |
Sergeant
|
|
Verified LEO
Join Date: 05-21-06
Posts: 1,077
Rep Power: 5395750
|
|
|
"The deputy ordered the man to drop to the ground as he and a parole agent sprayed him with fire extinguishers." Thats good they helped this......hmmmmm person....hopefully they also got him mental help........
__________________
Any Post I make is my opinion only!
I do not have the authority or the permission to post for my Sheriff's Office.
|

12-27-06, 02:03 PM
|
 |
Enforcer General
|
|
Supporting Member Lvl 3
Join Date: 12-05-05
Location: Handbasket, enroute to somewhere hot.
Posts: 10,012
Rep Power: 6977641
|
|
He's luck to have only gotten 1st degree burns. I wonder how much hair he lost?
Poor tree
|

12-27-06, 02:10 PM
|
 |
BANNED
|
|
Join Date: 12-03-05
Location: None of your business
Posts: 16,064
Rep Power: 0
|
|
Can we, here at LEF, have a discussion about something controversial, like this, without all hell breaking loose. I guess we're one up on the competition already then.
|

12-27-06, 07:00 PM
|
 |
Bendy not Breaky
|
|
Join Date: 04-26-06
Location: San Diego
Posts: 6,177
Rep Power: 1401223
|
|
Meanwhile...the same school district is down to only 2 SRO's.
Quote:
By Ellen Thompson
Record Staff Writer
December 26, 2006 6:00 AM
STOCKTON - Teachers sometimes say they feel like police officers. David Lampkins is a sheriff's deputy who sometimes feels like a teacher.
Depending on the hour, he can be found meeting with students in the vice principal's office of Franklin High School, breaking up lunchroom scuffles and watching over the rush of cars and buses after school.
He is one of two San Joaquin County sheriff's deputies in area schools, remnants of the past decade, when most high schools and many elementary schools had officers on campus. Population growth meant many of the officers who used to be in schools were moved to patrol positions.
"He has a value beyond the school. People out here know him," Franklin High School Principal Scott Luhn said of Lampkins. That's the reason the Stockton Unified School District and Sheriff's Office agreed to split the cost to keep him on the east Stockton campus after a grant that paid his salary ended, Luhn said.
When he arrived at Franklin four years ago, Lampkins was overwhelmed. Now the soft-spoken deputy with a well-practiced stern expression feels differently: "I'm a fixture here."
Jesus Zapian, a senior at Franklin, agrees. But he figures Franklin without Lampkins would be worse off.
"If he wasn't here, there would be a lot more drama going on, more fights," he said.
More fights could mean the difference between coming to school or staying home for students such as Zapian.
"Sometimes I don't want to come to school because it's safer at home," he said.
He expects to graduate next year, he said.
Seeing freshmen through to graduation is the most important job, Lampkins said. Franklin had a 78 percent graduation rate in 2005, the most recent year for which records were available - below state and county standards.
Lampkins worries that gang fights are getting in the way of students' dreams. He estimates 400 of the school's 2,600 students are gang members, many of them joining as a way to keep the friends they grew up with.
"The problem is growing, I can tell you that," he said.
He will lead a community meeting at 6 p.m. Jan. 30 at Franklin to answer questions from parents and community members about gang activity in and around the school.
He's also working next month to help teachers feel more like teachers, and less like police, by sharing intervention tips to keep students on track to stay students, not criminals.
|
__________________
Molly Weasley makes Chuck Norris eat his vegetables.
Do not puff, shade, skew, tailor, firm up, stretch, massage,
or otherwise distort statements of fact. FBI Special Agent Coleen Rowley
|
 |
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
|