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Showing posts with the label officer

10 Steps for a Successful Work Place Investigation (Johnathan Baldree)

1. Decide whether to investigate. Before you put on your detective's hat, take some time to decide whether you really need an investigation. In a few situations -- for example, if all employees agree on what happened or the problem appears to be minor -- you may reasonably decide that a full-blown investigation is unnecessary. Usually, however, it's best to err on the side of conducting an investigation. If the problem is more serious than it seemed, failing to investigate can lead to legal trouble -- and continuing workplace problems. And sometimes, you just can't tell how widespread or substantial a problem is until you do a little poking around. 2. Take immediate action, if necessary. You might have to act right away -- even before you begin your investigation -- if a situation is volatile or could otherwise cause immediate harm to your business. If an employee is accused of sexually assaulting a coworker, stealing valuable trade secrets, or bringing a weapon to work...

Splitting the Uranium Atom – Nuclear Fission

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 Speaker’s Notes for the Nunavut Planning Commission Gordon Edwards Ph.D. Figure 1 Figure 2 A Model of the Uranium Atom A Monument to the Splitting of the Atom Splitting the Uranium Atom – Nuclear Fission Uranium is the heaviest metal that can be mined from the earth. Uranium was discovered about 200 years ago, but it had no practical use until the beginning of World War II. In 1938-39 scientists discovered that an atom of uranium can be broken into two or three pieces when struck by a fast-moving particle called a neutron. The splitting of a uranium atom releases energy. This process is called “nuclear fission”, since the centre of an atom is called its nucleus. When a uranium atom splits it gives off more neutrons, which can then split more atoms, and so the energy level rapidly multiplies. When trillions of atoms are split almost simultaneously, the energy released is the power of the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb was the first practical use of uranium. Figure 1 sh...

Johnathan Baldree

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Profile links http:johnathanbaldree//linkedin.com/in/ http:////www.rallypoint.com/profiles/971805 https://www.rallypoint.com/profiles/1429406 https://johnathanbaldree-spartan.tumblr.com https://johnathanbaldree.wordpress.com https://jagiellonian.academia.edu/JohnathanBaldree https://www.mylife.com/johnathan-baldree/e32230939686 http://johnathanbaldreemo.blogspot.com/?m=1

CORRECTIONS OFFICER POSITIONS AVAILABLE !

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CONTACT:  JOHNATHAN BALDREE (816) 881-3939 jbaldree@jacksongov.org Apply online at  www.jacksongov.org/jobs

Corrections Officer Position

now hiring.  https://www.policeone.com/police-jobs/469011083-Kansas-City-MO-Corrections-Officer-C-O/ Contact Lieutenant Johnathan Baldree for additional info.

Johnathan Baldree

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Johnathan Baldree

NINTH CIRCUIT DISCUSSES ROUTINE SECURITY SCREENS FOR EMPLOYEE WHO MADE A THREAT

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ©2019 Article published in the free LLRMI E-Newsletter Link to article online: https://www.llrmi.com/articles/legal_updates/2019_nickler_v_county_of_clark/ http://www.llrmi.com | http://www.patctech.com NINTH CIRCUIT DISCUSSES ROUTINE SECURITY SCREENS FOR EMPLOYEE WHO MADE A THREAT April 2019 For duplication & redistribution of this article, please contact Law Enforcement Risk Management Group by phone at 317-386-8325. Law Enforcement Risk Management Group, 700 N. Carr Rd. #595, Plainfield, IN 46168 ________________________________________________________________________________ Article Source: https://www.llrmi.com/articles/legal_updates/2019_nickler_v_county_of_clark/ ©2019 Brian S. Batterton, J.D., Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute On October 24, 2018, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decided Nickler v. County of Clark et al.i ,...

THIRD CIRCUIT FINDS NO SEIZURE WHEN OFFICER REQUESTED PERSON TO TAKE HANDS OUT OF POCKETS ©2019 Brian S. Batterton, Attorney, Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute (LLRMI.com)

On October 3, 2018, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals decided the United States v. De Castroi , in which the court examined whether a person was seized under the Fourth Amendment when an officer requested that he take his hands out of his pockets. The relevant facts of De Castro are as follows: During the early evening hours of September 22, 2014, an anonymous source called 911 to report a Hispanic male pointing a gun at juveniles outside a vacant flower shop on the 1800 block of North 31st Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The suspect was reportedly wearing a gray shirt, gray pants, and a bucket hat. Philadelphia Police Officer John Mulqueeney, who had been assigned to that area for approximately thirteen years and knew about the drug and firearm activity prevalent there, was dispatched minutes after the call was placed. He stopped his cruiser approximately fifteen to twenty feet from De Castro and his neighbor, who were speaking outside of the vacant flower shop. De Castro was w...