LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

LEO Round Table, June 16, 2026

45 min · 16. juni 2026
episode LEO Round Table, June 16, 2026 cover

Beskrivelse

S11E117, Trump Nominates Jay Clayton To Be The Director Of National Intelligence Trump nominates Jay Clayton to be the Director of National Intelligence. Former officer acquitted in fatal crash that killed two people. Cop accidentally shot during horseplay incident. Teen fatally shot after charging at officer with a knife. Patel fires analysts who created controversial "Catholic Extremism" memo. Officer caught from multiple angles struggling to get through window. Sergeant charged with stealing camera gear worth $10K. 6. Six-Paragraph Summary A Solo Host Sets the Law Enforcement Table Chip DeBlock opens the episode by explaining that he is hosting solo while the regular panelists are traveling, teaching, attending conferences, or otherwise unavailable. He introduces the show’s law enforcement perspective, sponsor support, streaming partners, social media presence, and the goal of helping listeners understand current news from a policing viewpoint. Intelligence Leadership and Political Fallout The first major topic centers on President Trump’s reported move to nominate Jay Clayton for a permanent intelligence leadership role after controversy over a temporary pick. DeBlock explains his view of the nomination, discusses the political dispute over Section 702, and frames the change as a better direction than the previous temporary appointment. A Fatal Crash, an Acquittal, and Civil Consequences The episode then turns to the case of former Warren police officer James Burke, who was acquitted after a fatal 2024 crash that killed two people. DeBlock discusses the reported speed of the patrol car, the intoxication evidence involving the other driver, the disputed turn, the jury’s decision, and the continuing civil lawsuits, while emphasizing the distinction between tragedy and criminal liability. Horseplay, Firearms, and a Pasadena Shooting Accident A video-based segment focuses on a Pasadena Police incident in which one officer accidentally shot another during horseplay in a police parking garage. DeBlock describes the dashcam footage, the officers’ unsafe handling of firearms, the injury to the officer’s shoulder, the department’s discipline, and the lesson that even joking behavior with weapons can create serious danger. Teen Mental Crisis and a Deadly Knife Encounter The show also covers a Fraser, Michigan, incident involving a 15-year-old boy who was shot and killed after charging officers with a knife during a domestic dispute response. DeBlock walks through the earlier police contact, the return to the grandmother’s home, the ineffective Taser attempt, the crossfire concerns, and the difficult questions surrounding forced entry, containment, mental crisis, and officer-created risk. FBI Accountability, Viral Officer Video, and Closing Stories In the later portion of the episode, DeBlock discusses FBI personnel actions connected to a controversial Catholic extremism memo and broader accountability issues. He also comments on a Culpeper officer falling from a window during a welfare-check entry attempt, a New Jersey sergeant charged in connection with missing journalist camera gear, and closes by promoting law enforcement support resources, sponsors, and the next live show. 7. SEO Keywords / Key Phrases law enforcement news, police accountability, officer-involved shooting, police crash acquittal, intelligence nomination, Section 702, police training, domestic dispute response, FBI memo controversy, police body camera video

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

20 episoder

episode LEO Round Table, June 19, 2026 cover

LEO Round Table, June 19, 2026

LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock S11E120, Comprehensive Terror Plot Thwarted At The White House UFC Event! Comprehensive terror plot thwarted at the White House UFC event. Over a dozen ANTIFA members indicted for conspiring to injure Federal officers. Two people receiving charges following violent dispute at drive-thru. Armed suspect fatally shot following pursuit through apartment complex. Woman fatally shot after trying to enter home with knives. Teen armed with gun shot by officer during confrontation. Explosive Drone Plot, Violent Resistance, and Police Survival Lessons A White House Event Becomes the Center of an Alleged Plot The episode opens with introductions, sponsor acknowledgments, and a rundown of the stories under discussion before moving into the alleged plot targeting a White House UFC event. The host describes how a 19-year-old Ohio suspect came to law enforcement attention after his parents reported concerns about weapons purchases, tactical gear, ammunition, and plans to meet people he had contacted online. The transcript presents the alleged plan as involving explosive drones, crowd panic, and snipers positioned near an evacuation route. Online Extremism, Encryption, and the Limits of Capability Sheriff Mark Crider discusses the alleged plot from an investigative perspective, noting that the case appears to have begun with family reporting rather than an undercover FBI operation. He emphasizes that the central question is whether the suspects had the actual technical ability, equipment, drones, explosives, and coordination needed to carry out the alleged plan. The panel also discusses how social media, encrypted messaging, and online communities can give relatively unsophisticated people access to more sophisticated organizing tools. Federal Charges Against Antifa Members in Minneapolis The show next covers federal indictments against 15 people described in the transcript as affiliated with Minneapolis-based Antifa groups. The host frames the charges as part of a broader federal response to violence directed at federal officers, while Dr. Travis Yates criticizes what he views as political minimization of violent protest activity. Sheriff Crider connects the discussion to local and state policies that restrict cooperation with ICE, arguing that safer jail transfers could reduce street-level confrontations. A Drive-Through Dispute Escalates Into Hot Grease and Stabbing The episode then turns to a Detroit fast-food incident in which two sisters allegedly confronted a worker over a wrong drive-through order. The host describes prosecutors’ claims that the sisters went behind the counter, chased the worker, threw pots and pans, hurled hot grease, and that one sister later used a knife thrown by the worker to stab her. The panel uses the story to discuss how hot grease or boiling water can cause serious bodily injury and how such threats should be evaluated in use-of-force situations. Miami Shooting Video and Pre-Attack Indicators The panel reviews a Miami police video involving undercover officers pursuing a wanted suspect who ran through an apartment complex while armed with a gun. Dr. Yates argues that public discussion should more directly acknowledge the danger of running from police while armed. The conversation then shifts into Yates’s work on pre-attack indicators, his FocusCertified.com training program, and his claim that officer assaults have increased sharply while law enforcement has lacked a validated system comparable to those used by other professions. Suicidal Woman, Body Camera Limits, and Teen With a Gun The final segment covers two additional body camera incidents: a suicidal woman in Illinois who entered a home with knives while officers and an elderly family member were inside, and a Miami-Dade deputy shooting a 15-year-old who was running with a gun. The panel discusses the difficulty of moving a noncompliant or confused person quickly, the importance of obeying police commands during dangerous scenes, and the limits of body camera footage compared with what an officer may see in real time. The show closes with sponsor mentions and acknowledgment of the Wounded Blue.

19. juni 202645 min
episode LEO Round Table, June 19, 2026 cover

LEO Round Table, June 19, 2026

LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock S11E119, Gunman Opens Fire On Unsuspecting Officer Leading To Gunfight In The Woods! Trump's deal opens Straight of Hormuz but Israel is at odds. Prosecutor indicted after emailing secret docs to personal email. Man shot after holding knife on other individual. Gunman opens fire on unsuspecting officer leading to gunfight in the woods. Traffic Stops, Tactical Choices, and the Consequences of Split-Second Police Decisions Foreign Policy, Force, and Uncertain Diplomacy The episode opens with the host introducing the law enforcement panel and then moving into a discussion about a reported U.S.-Iran memorandum involving the Strait of Hormuz. The host frames the issue around possible regional stability, energy flow, and Israel's stated refusal to withdraw from areas it says are necessary for security. The panelists respond with skepticism toward Iran and a strong preference for military pressure rather than reliance on diplomatic assurances. A Legal Breach and the Question of Intent The panel then discusses a Florida prosecutor accused of renaming and emailing sealed special counsel files to a personal account. The host emphasizes the alleged intentionality shown by changing file names, while the panelists focus on motive, trust, and accountability. They argue that the alleged conduct, if proven, should carry serious consequences because it involved restricted justice-system materials and deliberate concealment. An LAPD Knife Encounter Raises Tactical Questions The first major video segment covers an LAPD response to a reported burglary call that became a violent knife encounter inside a residence. The host describes officers entering after hearing screams, finding one man in a diaper, and then locating two men struggling over a knife. The panelists strongly criticize the delay in using lethal force, arguing that the victim was actively fighting for his life and that less-lethal tools were inappropriate once the knife threat was clear. Less-Lethal Tools Versus Immediate Deadly Threats The LAPD discussion turns into a broader critique of modern policing tactics. The panelists argue that officers sometimes rely too heavily on Tasers, 40-millimeter launchers, or other less-lethal options even when a suspect presents an immediate deadly-force threat. Their core point is that officers must recognize when a situation has passed the point of de-escalation and requires decisive action to protect victims and officers. A Traffic Stop Turns Into a Shooting, Chase, and Manhunt The second video segment examines an Ohio traffic stop in which a rear-seat passenger allegedly produced a gun, shot an officer, fled in the vehicle, exchanged gunfire with responding troopers, and eventually ran into the woods. The host walks through the sequence of the stop, the body-camera view, the chase, the stop-stick attempts, the later gunfire, and the final search aided by air support and a police canine. The panel highlights warning signs during the stop, including the suspect's behavior and hand movements. Training, Backup, and the Warrior Mindset The closing discussion focuses on training deficiencies, officer survival, and the dangers of treating traffic stops as routine. The panelists stress that every vehicle stop carries unknown risks and that officers must consider backup, positioning, cover, and weapon handling under stress. Randy Sutton closes by connecting the discussion to The Wounded Blue's mission, describing an injured Mississippi deputy and promoting the National Law Enforcement Survival Summit as a life-saving resource for officers.

19. juni 202647 min
episode LEO Round Table, June 17, 2026 cover

LEO Round Table, June 17, 2026

S11E118, President Trump Announces End To War And Peace Deal With Iran President Trump announces end to war and peace deal with Iran. Polling data shows sharp decline in pride for America. Officer fired over horseplay incident caught on video. Suspect who pulled shotgun on officer fatally shot. Six-Paragraph Summary A Law Enforcement Panel Opens With Sponsors and the Day’s Topics The episode begins with Chip DeBlock welcoming listeners to the law enforcement talk show and introducing guest Dr. Joel Schultz, a retired police chief joining from Colorado. The host gives sponsor acknowledgments and explains where viewers can find the live and produced versions of the show. He then previews the episode’s topics, including claims about a reported Iran peace agreement, a poll showing declining American pride, a Pasadena police horseplay shooting, and several officer-involved shooting videos. A Skeptical Conversation About Iran and a Claimed Peace Deal The first major discussion centers on a Tampa Free Press article reporting that President Donald Trump announced a completed peace agreement with Iran and the lifting of a naval blockade. Chip expresses distrust toward Iranian officials and uncertainty about whether any agreement will hold. Dr. Schultz adds that market reactions may show optimism, but he remains skeptical because of Iran’s internal factions, regional tensions, and the possibility that separate actors could still provoke a renewed conflict. Declining National Pride and Concern Over American Institutions The conversation shifts to polling data suggesting that only about one-third of Americans say they are extremely proud to be American, a sharp decline from earlier decades. Chip highlights partisan differences in the poll and connects the trend to Americans’ trust in institutions and media sources. Dr. Schultz reflects on patriotism, the bicentennial, institutional loyalty, Juneteenth, and the need to recognize both America’s flaws and its progress. Both speakers describe the decline in national pride as disappointing and alarming. Pasadena Police Horseplay Shooting Sparks Accountability Debate Chip revisits a Pasadena Police Department incident in which one officer shot another during what was described as horseplay involving firearms. He explains the video sequence, including one officer allegedly pointing his weapon before another officer returned the gesture and discharged his gun through a windshield, striking the first officer in the shoulder. Dr. Schultz strongly criticizes the framing of the incident as horseplay, arguing that the behavior should be treated as criminal negligence and that the department should review its safety culture. Practical Jokes, Professionalism, and Police Culture The Pasadena discussion leads both men into stories about practical jokes in police work. Chip recalls a cap-gun prank from his early days as a rookie officer and says his squad eventually stopped the behavior. Dr. Schultz shares a story about being sent to a supposed man-with-a-gun call that turned out to involve a wooden statue, using the example to reinforce his dislike of police pranks. The discussion ties those stories back to professionalism, officer safety, and the seriousness required when firearms are involved. Sacramento Shotgun Call Raises Tactical and Psychological Concerns The final major segment focuses on a Sacramento-area incident in which a deputy responded to a woman-in-distress call and eventually faced a suspect who pulled out a shotgun. Chip criticizes the deputy for allowing the suspect access to the weapon, losing visual control, and letting the suspect use the patrol vehicle for cover. Dr. Schultz analyzes the deputy’s response through the lens of police mindset, cognitive dissonance, and training, arguing that the deputy appeared more comfortable following procedure than taking command of a lethal threat. The episode closes with mentions of The Wounded Blue, LEOAffairs.ch, and the show’s sponsors. SEO Keywords / Key Phrases law enforcement accountability, police use of force, officer safety, police training, firearms safety, national pride, Iran peace deal, tactical response, police bodycam analysis, law enforcement culture

17. juni 202645 min
episode LEO Round Table, June 16, 2026 cover

LEO Round Table, June 16, 2026

S11E117, Trump Nominates Jay Clayton To Be The Director Of National Intelligence Trump nominates Jay Clayton to be the Director of National Intelligence. Former officer acquitted in fatal crash that killed two people. Cop accidentally shot during horseplay incident. Teen fatally shot after charging at officer with a knife. Patel fires analysts who created controversial "Catholic Extremism" memo. Officer caught from multiple angles struggling to get through window. Sergeant charged with stealing camera gear worth $10K. 6. Six-Paragraph Summary A Solo Host Sets the Law Enforcement Table Chip DeBlock opens the episode by explaining that he is hosting solo while the regular panelists are traveling, teaching, attending conferences, or otherwise unavailable. He introduces the show’s law enforcement perspective, sponsor support, streaming partners, social media presence, and the goal of helping listeners understand current news from a policing viewpoint. Intelligence Leadership and Political Fallout The first major topic centers on President Trump’s reported move to nominate Jay Clayton for a permanent intelligence leadership role after controversy over a temporary pick. DeBlock explains his view of the nomination, discusses the political dispute over Section 702, and frames the change as a better direction than the previous temporary appointment. A Fatal Crash, an Acquittal, and Civil Consequences The episode then turns to the case of former Warren police officer James Burke, who was acquitted after a fatal 2024 crash that killed two people. DeBlock discusses the reported speed of the patrol car, the intoxication evidence involving the other driver, the disputed turn, the jury’s decision, and the continuing civil lawsuits, while emphasizing the distinction between tragedy and criminal liability. Horseplay, Firearms, and a Pasadena Shooting Accident A video-based segment focuses on a Pasadena Police incident in which one officer accidentally shot another during horseplay in a police parking garage. DeBlock describes the dashcam footage, the officers’ unsafe handling of firearms, the injury to the officer’s shoulder, the department’s discipline, and the lesson that even joking behavior with weapons can create serious danger. Teen Mental Crisis and a Deadly Knife Encounter The show also covers a Fraser, Michigan, incident involving a 15-year-old boy who was shot and killed after charging officers with a knife during a domestic dispute response. DeBlock walks through the earlier police contact, the return to the grandmother’s home, the ineffective Taser attempt, the crossfire concerns, and the difficult questions surrounding forced entry, containment, mental crisis, and officer-created risk. FBI Accountability, Viral Officer Video, and Closing Stories In the later portion of the episode, DeBlock discusses FBI personnel actions connected to a controversial Catholic extremism memo and broader accountability issues. He also comments on a Culpeper officer falling from a window during a welfare-check entry attempt, a New Jersey sergeant charged in connection with missing journalist camera gear, and closes by promoting law enforcement support resources, sponsors, and the next live show. 7. SEO Keywords / Key Phrases law enforcement news, police accountability, officer-involved shooting, police crash acquittal, intelligence nomination, Section 702, police training, domestic dispute response, FBI memo controversy, police body camera video

16. juni 202645 min
episode LEO Round Table, June 15, 2026 cover

LEO Round Table, June 15, 2026

LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock S11E116, Cop Loses Control Over Taser During Struggle Leading To Shooting On Video Trump asks judge to reject bid to stop UFC fight at the White House. Officer resigns after shooting unarmed naked man. Shootout with gunman leads to one officer and gunman injured. Sheriff charged with stealing campaign signs. Cop loses control over taser during struggle leading to shooting on video. When Tasers, Pursuits, and Politics Collide in Policing A Law Enforcement Panel Opens with Politics, Sponsors, and a Full Case Lineup The episode begins with host Chip DeBlock introducing the Leo Roundtable panel, including Dr. Travis Yates and Andrea Cassell. The opening also includes sponsor acknowledgments, platform information, and a preview of the stories to be discussed. The planned topics include a proposed White House UFC event, a Louisville officer resignation after a shooting, a San Francisco pursuit shootout, an Indiana sheriff accused of stealing campaign signs, a Baltimore taser-related shooting, and several additional policing stories. A White House UFC Event Becomes a Flashpoint for Political Frustration The first discussion centers on a legal challenge to a planned UFC event connected to the United States’ 250th birthday celebration. Chip describes the suit as an example of political opposition interfering with a public celebration, while Travis frames the issue as part of a larger problem of political tribalism. Andrea adds that she sees the controversy as part of a broader decline in national pride and says she believes Americans should be able to celebrate the country’s history despite political divisions. Louisville Shooting Raises Questions About Distance, Threat Perception, and Career Consequences The panel then reviews the resignation of a Louisville Metro Police Department officer who shot an unarmed naked man after responding to an assault call. Chip explains the difficulty of judging distance and timing from video, especially when an officer may fear losing control of a weapon during a close encounter. Travis argues that the shooting should not automatically be treated as criminal because use-of-force decisions must be judged by what the officer reasonably perceived in the moment. Andrea focuses on the realities of public scrutiny, limited experience, and the uncertainty a newer officer may face after a controversial shooting. San Francisco Pursuit Shootout Highlights Cover, Reaction Time, and Officer Survival The San Francisco segment examines body-camera footage from a pursuit that ended in a shootout involving robbery suspects. Chip summarizes the vehicle pursuit, crash, exchange of gunfire, injured officer, injured passenger, and arrest of the driver. Andrea questions the officers’ positioning and the decision to move away from available cover, while Travis emphasizes that pursuits are one of the strongest precursors to violence and that officers must prepare for rapid escalation before shots are fired. Campaign Signs, GPS Trackers, and the Indictment of an Indiana Sheriff The next major story involves Jennings County Sheriff William K. “Kenny” Freeman Jr., who was indicted after a campaign sign theft investigation. Chip explains that a candidate placed a GPS tracker on a sign, which allegedly led investigators to a dumpster on the sheriff’s property. Travis says the story reflects long-running political misconduct that is now easier to expose because of modern tracking technology. Andrea, speaking as someone from Indiana, calls the incident an embarrassing moment and suggests the sheriff may have failed to adapt to the realities of current technology and accountability. Baltimore Taser Struggle Sparks Debate Over Warnings, Weapons Confusion, and Hands-On Control The final main discussion centers on Baltimore body-camera and street-camera footage showing officers struggling with Trevin Newton before an officer shoots him after losing control of a taser. Chip argues that the situation may have unfolded differently if both officers had gone hands-on sooner instead of relying on the taser. Travis criticizes repeated verbal warnings before taser deployment and says time is not on the officer’s side once force is justified. Andrea expresses concern about an officer having both a taser and firearm out during a chaotic struggle, warning that such conditions increase the risk of weapons confusion and poor tactical outcomes.

15. juni 202645 min