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Mexican convicted of murder for ramming U.S. Coast Guard officer
Rueters ^
| Wed Feb 5, 2014
Posted on 02/06/2014 7:41:51 AM PST by artichokegrower
A jury convicted a Mexican man of murder on Wednesday for ramming his suspected smuggling vessel into a U.S. Coast Guard inflatable boat, killing an officer on board off the coast of Southern California in 2012, prosecutors said.
(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: aliens
One of Obama's "Dreamers"
To: artichokegrower
Will John Kerry go to bat for him?
2
posted on
02/06/2014 7:49:42 AM PST
by
2ndDivisionVet
(Jealousy is when you count someone else's blessings instead of your own.)
To: artichokegrower
These sailors are the last line of defense. In combat every day. May they be safe, and come home every night. And for those that served thank you, for those that died, a bowed head and prayer.
3
posted on
02/06/2014 7:50:34 AM PST
by
King_Corey
(www.kingcorey.com -- OpenCarry.org -- http://defcad.org/)
To: King_Corey
History repeats its self:
Maritime Musings > August 2010 Coast Guard executes convicted murderer by Dennis Bryant Aug 17, 2010, 7:00AM EST On August 17, 1929, the US Coast Guard conducted its first and only execution James Horace Alderman had been convicted in federal court in Miami of the murder of two Coast Guardsmen and one Secret Service agent. Alderman was a notorious smuggler of alcoholic beverages a rum runner during the heyday of the Prohibition Era. He called himself the King of the Rum Runners in South Florida. In some ways, he was a miniature Al Capone. To many in the area, he was a folk hero, supplying booze that was withheld by the federal government. He dispensed equal parts of charity, corruption, and violence throughout the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area, while smuggling liquor from the Bahamas to South Florida. On August 7, 1927, the 75-foot Coast Guard patrol boat CG-249, based in Fort Lauderdale, was transporting Secret Service agent Robert Webster to the Bahamas to investigate reports of counterfeit US currency. Half-way across, the patrol boat encountered a speedboat headed the other direction. Boatswain Sydney Sanderlin, the officer in charge of the patrol boat, directed the speedboat to halt. The speedboat, operated by Alderman and with an accomplice onboard, tried to flee. Alderman ignored the first warning shot, but stopped when the patrol boat fired its machine gun. Sanderlin sent one of his crew onboard to check the situation. The crewman quickly found 20 cases of liquor stashed in the engine space. Sanderlin ordered Alderman and his accomplice onto the patrol boat, after checking to ensure that they were unarmed. While Sanderlin went to the bridge to call his headquarters for instructions, Alderman asked a crewman for permission to go back aboard the speedboat to retrieve his jacket; the crewman assented. Alderman retrieved not only his jacket, but also a pistol. When Alderman returned to the patrol boat, he shot Sanderlin in back, killing him instantly. Alderman then grabbed Sanderlins .45 caliber pistol. Alderman shot and severely wounded a second Coast Guardsman (he died four days later). Alderman ordered the remaining federal officers onto the speedboat and directed his accomplice to get the speedboat underway. When the accomplice experienced engine trouble, Alderman turned to inquire as to the trouble. The unarmed federal officers jumped him. Alderman shot the Secret Service agent, killing him instantly. He shot and wounded another Coast Guardsman, who survived. By then, the federal officers had overwhelmed Alderman. His accomplice gave up without a struggle. After a speedy trial, Alderman was convicted of three counts of murder in the first degree within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States and was sentenced to suffer death by hanging. His appeal to the US Supreme Court was denied, as was his request for clemency from President Herbert Hoover. The judge directed that Alderman be executed in the Broward County Jail in Fort Lauderdale. The County Commissioners, concerned about potential fallout from executing a local folk hero and about potential adverse impact on tourism, declined. The judge then ordered that the execution be performed at the nearest federal facility to the jail which happened be Coast Guard Base 6 in Fort Lauderdale. At 5:00 a.m., on Saturday, August 17, 1929, the US Coast Guard carried out the judges order, hanging James Horace Alderman from a hastily constructed gallows in the seaplane hangar, two years and ten days after he committed his murders.
4
posted on
02/06/2014 8:06:41 AM PST
by
dblshot
(I am John Galt.)
To: artichokegrower
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream until your dreams come true
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream until your dreams come true
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
Dream on
5
posted on
02/06/2014 8:16:48 AM PST
by
albie
To: artichokegrower
A senior chief (E-8) is not an officer, you dummies. AlJaReuters continues its 100% ignorance of the military.
6
posted on
02/06/2014 8:18:46 AM PST
by
pabianice
(LINE)
To: artichokegrower
Hey, messycan invaders were a problem before him. Jorge Busho betrayed us royally where these third world savages were concerned.
7
posted on
02/06/2014 8:26:24 AM PST
by
LouAvul
(In a state of disbelief as to how liberals destroyed America in a mere 40 years.)
To: artichokegrower
Well fair enough, I have a dream also and that dream is that the first part of the sentence for this miscreant be a blast from the past. KEELHAUL HIM!
8
posted on
02/06/2014 8:59:00 AM PST
by
Mastador1
(I'll take a bad dog over a good politician any day!)
To: Mastador1
“A senior chief (E-8) is not an officer..”
That is true but he IS still considered a “Petty Officer” and hence, the media just happened to leave out the word “Petty”.
9
posted on
02/06/2014 9:28:54 AM PST
by
DaveA37
To: Progov
Doesn’t matter what the rank was of the sailor killed.
He was doing his job. There should be an automatic DEATH penalty for ANYONE taking the life of our military people at any place, any time.
10
posted on
02/06/2014 9:31:15 AM PST
by
DaveA37
To: artichokegrower
How can the pang boat outmaneuver an inflatable? Did the “Officers” stop in front of the moving “vessel”?
11
posted on
02/06/2014 9:53:33 AM PST
by
SgtHooper
(If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.)
To: Progov
A senior chief (E-8) is not an officer.. That is true but he IS still considered a Petty Officer and hence, the media just happened to leave out the word Petty. A senior chief (E-8) is not an officer.. That is true but he IS still considered a Petty Officer and hence, the media just happened to leave out the word Petty
I think you meant to reply to pabianice.
12
posted on
02/06/2014 10:42:30 AM PST
by
Mastador1
(I'll take a bad dog over a good politician any day!)
To: pabianice
He is not a commissioned officer, he is in fact a non-commissioned officer.
13
posted on
02/06/2014 11:10:46 AM PST
by
Dedbone
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