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Dec 13 2008

Most Wanted is Back!

I apologize for the Most Wanted list being down folks!  I was in a K9 training school for the last 4 weeks so it was hard for me to update the entries.  Additionally, the content here on the blog has been slow too.

Anyway, I am back!  So, keep checking in here for updated content.  The weather is supposed to get interesting tomorrow so perhaps I will have some crazy stuff to share with y’all. :)

Be sure to check the Most Wanted list…it’s gotten quite large.

Morgan County’s Most Wanted

Nov 01 2008

Driving on Ice

Well, it’s November 1st, and it was in the 70’s again today.  All this warm weather is beginning to make me wonder if it’s ever going to get cold and snow!  I for one cannot wait for subzero temperatures to descend upon Morgan County in order to get rid of the flys that all seem to want to find their way indoors.  Maybe there is global warming?  Although the report of snow blanketing the British House of Commons in London on October 22nd for the first time since 1922 makes me wonder.  The British House of Commons were gathered on that day to pass legislation to combat global warming, ha ha…

Anyway, I am confident that we will see winter conditions soon which translates to icy roads.  I found this article on the ‘net about driving on ice and thought it would be of benefit to motorists:

The best advice for driving in bad winter weather is not to drive at all, if you can avoid it.

Don’t go out until the snow plows and sanding trucks have had a chance to do their work, and allow yourself extra time to reach your destination.

If you must drive in snowy conditions, make sure your car is prepared (TIPS), and that you know how to handle road conditions.

It’s helpful to practice winter driving techniques in a snowy, open parking lot, so you’re familiar with how your car handles. Consult your owner’s manual for tips specific to your vehicle.   more…

Oct 20 2008

Fighting Crime in Your Neighborhood

Some tips from Sheriff Crone:

Before an incident happens:

1. Get to know your neighbors - watch out for each other.  Find someone you can trust and look out for each other.

2. Make yourself crime resistant - locks, lights, and dogs.

3. Are you going to be gone?  Don’t make it look that way but also have someone check on your place.  Call your sheriff’s office.  Do they do vacation house checks?

4. Neighborhood watch/ Ranch watch

5. Talk to your local sheriff’s office about crime prevention.

During An Incident:

1. Does a vehicle or person or a situation look out of place?  Does your gut tell you something isn’t right?  Trust your instincts!

2. Call 911 or at least your local sheriff’s office non-emergency phone number (program it in your cell phone).  Call NOW, not when you get home.  Stay on the phone if you can.

3. Be a good witness!  Description of the location, vehicle(s) and persons.  If they move, call back or provide us with a direction of travel.

Confronting Someone:

1. Confrontation is NOT advised; that’s what YOU pay US for!

2. If a person or vehicle leaves the scene, AND YOU CAN DO IT SAFELY FROM A DISTANCE, continue to provide a direction of travel.

3. IF you confront - have someone else call first.  Get the calvary coming!  Make sure we know who YOU are!

4. If you take a gun - make sure we know who YOU are!

5. If law enforcement confronts, YOU, do EXACTLY what you are told to do - we can argue who the good guys are later.

After the Incident

1. Prosecute if there has been a crime committed.  It is a crime to trespass.  It is a more serious crime to trespass on agricultural property!

2. If the word gets out you call the cops and prosecute, the word will get out you are not someone to mess with.

Employees

1. Consider doing a Colorado Bureau of Investigations check on EVERYONE (https://www.cbirecordscheck.com/CBI_New /CBI_newIndex.asp) 

Pros - Gives you a “heads up” about potential problems (drugs, burglars).

Cons - Costs you a few dollars ($6.85 for each name).  Only checks Colorado; no other states - and no juvenile or warrant records.

2. Take a good facial photograph when you hire them - attach it to their personnel file.  Buy an inkpad and “roll” a fingerprint on their application. 

3. Write down a description of the vehicle they are driving - make/color/license plate.  Better yet, snap a picture with your phone.

 

 

 

 

Sep 25 2008

Updated Most Wanted List

Be sure to check out our Most Wanted List updated today.  Give us a call if you have seen or know where any of these folks are at.

Sep 24 2008

Update on Klotzbach

Mr. Klotzbach is in custody.

Sep 09 2008

Most Wanted

Please check our most wanted list, particularly the last entry for Darryl Klotzbach.  He walked away from his community corrections sentence at the Colorado Department of Corrections.  He is considered a prison escapee and is reportedly in the Morgan County area.  If you see him, contact us at 970-867-2461.

I am headed out the door to see if I can track him down as we speak…

 

Darryl L. Klotzbach:

Klotzbach

Sep 09 2008

Blog Comments

If you read our blog on a regular basis, feel free to leave comments.  That way I don’t feel like I am talking to myself.  ;)

Sep 04 2008

Coyote Rescue

Today, I received a call from a citizen who asked for help with an animal control problem.  Apparently, her dogs had chased a coyote into a 6 foot window well and it couldn’t get out.  She told me that she had placed a ladder in the well in hopes that it would find its way out and had to leave for work.  When she arrived at work, she placed a call to our office asking for help getting the critter out of her window well.

When I arrived at the house which happens to be 17 miles south of Fort Morgan, I immediately saw what window well she was talking about because of the ladder protruding out of it.

I walked up and looked in the well, and Mr. Coyote was still down there.  He was playing the “I’m not here” game and was huddled up in the corner.  I knew he was alive because I could see him breathing and he was moving to try and re-position himself.

Anyway, I placed a call to my co-worker on duty, Deputy Vince Iovinella.  When he arrived, our plan was going to be to place a dog pole on the coyote and slide him up the ladder.  For those of you who don’t know, the purpose for dog poles is to keep unpredictable animals at a distance to protect the handler from bite injury.

So, a short photo essay of our effort:

Here is a shot of the window well with the ladder protruding out:

Here is Mr. Coyote in the bottom of the window well pretending that no one can see him hiding there:

I remove the ladder and he still pretends that he does not exist.  He was breathing so I knew he was alive:

Here is where we slid Mr. Coyote up the ladder on the catch pole.   Once the coyote was at the top of the ladder, I loosened the catch pole.  Mr. Coyote decided he was going to shoot back down into the well:

We did get him up out of the well on the second attempt.  Here’s a quick picture before we let him go.

Job well done, Deputy Iovinella!

 

Our concerns that he may be sick or injured were put to rest as we let him go:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Aug 26 2008

School Has Started!

And with that, we can expect quite a few yellow busses on the roadway in the morning and afternoon hours.

So, I want to take a moment and remind you all that we need to be alert to busses coming to their stops and letting off children.

Per C.R.S. 42-4-1903, when you see a bus and you are driving on a “highway, road, or street,” and “upon meeting or overtaking from either direction any school bus which has stopped,” you ”shall stop the vehicle before reaching such school bus…”  Simply put, if the bus has it’s flashing red lights and/or it’s stop sign extended, you need to stop!  Failing to do this is a class 1 traffic misdemeanor which means, if you get a ticket for this, it’s an automatic trip to the county court judge.

Some may ask, “What if the bus driver doesn’t report me; they won’t give me a ticket then, right?”

Well…

If a school bus driver observes a motorist disregarding its signals to stop, they are REQUIRED BY LAW to report the violator to their dispatch center which in turn notifies law enforcement.  So, if you do disregard a school bus and its signals, you  will get a ticket.

So please be aware of the big yellow bricks with the school busses on the roads; the law is intended to protect our children getting off. :)

Aug 20 2008

The Corn is High

You probably don’t need me to tell you this, but that corn out there is getting mighty tall!  I thought I would take a moment to just remind you all that tall corn can be quite a traffic hazard. 

“How?” You may ask…

Well, corn stalks can certainly create visibility problems at intersections in the county.  During the winter, you can see cars coming from quite a distance, but this time of year, the corn makes it impossible to see oncoming traffic when you are sitting at an intersection.

Just be careful when you proceed from an intersection with corn-related visibilty problems because the motorist coming towards the same intersection from your right or left may not take the same advice.