LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock S11E129, Man With Large Kitchen Knife Loses It As Officers Roll Onto The Scene! Government lawyer penalized in ICE investigation aftermath. Sheriff resigns after public intoxication arrest. UK cop hit with bottle over the head and nearly thrown off balcony by suspect. State House enforces agency cooperation with ICE officials. Man with large kitchen knife loses it as officers roll onto the scene! Texas authorities shocked by gruesome homicide investigation. Knife Attacks, Court Contempt, ICE Cooperation, and the Officer-Safety Debate Episode Summary Courts, Contempt, and an "Attorney as Hostage" Question The episode opens with Chip DeBlock introducing the LEO Round Table panel and previewing several law-enforcement stories. The first main topic concerns a Justice Department dispute over a federal court's contempt ruling against a government lawyer after ICE allegedly delayed the return of a migrant's personal property and identity documents. Chip explains that the court ordered the attorney to pay a daily personal fine until the property was returned, while the DOJ argued that civil contempt should only be used against someone who actually has the power to perform the required act. Randy Sutton questions whether a court can require a lawyer to pay personally for an agency's delay, while Travis Yates broadens the discussion into judicial accountability, immunity, and what he sees as a larger problem in the criminal justice system. A Sheriff Pleads Guilty and Steps Down The panel next covers the resignation of St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith after he pleaded guilty to second-degree battery and disturbing the peace through public intoxication. Chip describes the reported surveillance-video incident in which the sheriff allegedly approached a critic from behind, pulled him to the ground, and struck him while at a public restaurant. The discussion frames the story as an example of why law-enforcement leaders are held to a higher standard, especially when misconduct occurs in public and damages public trust. A Violent UK Balcony Attack Fuels a Policing Debate A major video segment focuses on a UK officer who was attacked while trying to stop a man from going over a balcony railing. Chip describes the officer reaching for the man, only for him to swing a glass vodka bottle and smash it over her head before trying to overpower her and throw her from the balcony. Randy notes the severity of the attack while acknowledging that the officer stayed in the fight. Travis uses the incident to criticize what he views as unrealistic de-escalation training and a mismatch between UK policing conditions and American policing realities. De-Escalation, Officer Safety, and Police Training The panel spends significant time debating de-escalation, ICAT, PERF, and the influence of UK policing models on American police training. Travis argues that some de-escalation programs have not delivered the promised reductions in force or officer injuries and cites a New Jersey example in which use of force rose after ICAT training. Randy adds concerns about British policing and free-speech enforcement, while Chip highlights Travis's Focus Certified training and Randy's National Law Enforcement Survival Summit as alternatives focused on officer survival and decisive action against violent subjects. North Carolina's ICE Cooperation Bill Becomes Law The episode then turns to a North Carolina immigration bill requiring state law-enforcement agencies to cooperate with ICE and restricting certain state-funded benefits for undocumented immigrants. Chip says the legislature overrode the governor's veto, allowing the bill to become law, and frames the vote as a positive development. Randy expresses surprise that North Carolina passed the measure, connecting it to broader national arguments over immigration, public benefits, and state cooperation with federal enforcement. A New York Knife Incident and Police Use of Deadly Force Another video segment examines a New York City grocery-store incident involving a man with a 13-inch kitchen knife. Chip explains that the man had allegedly been removed from the store after a dispute, returned with a knife, banged on the windows, and then confronted responding officers. The officers gave commands, tried to create distance, and fired when the man advanced with the knife extended. Travis says the officers had no other choice once the suspect kept closing distance with a deadly weapon, while Randy notes that similar knife cases have previously drawn political criticism. A Texas Homicide Case Closes the Show The final story describes a gruesome Texas homicide investigation in which a woman was accused of killing her boyfriend, dismembering him, and attempting to hide body parts in a dumpster and in tubs of wet concrete. Chip recounts how an anonymous Crime Stoppers tip led police to intercept a garbage truck and discover human remains, then search the shared residence and arrest the woman and later her father. The panel responds with dark humor while acknowledging the shocking nature of the allegations. The show closes with sponsor acknowledgments and thanks to Travis Yates and Randy Sutton.
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Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock-yhteisöön!