BREAKING NEWS From Denver!!!
TRUMP JUST Did Something HUGE!
Although New Year's Eve is supposed to be a joyous occasion throughout the world.
A Colorado Deputies family won't be celebrating tonight.
Douglas County Sheriff's Office has now confirmed that Five deputies and two other
people were shot in Douglas County Sunday morning.
One of those five deputies has now died from his wounds.
The fallen deputy has now been identified as 29-year-old Zackari Parrish.
Who is survived by his young wife and two small children.Officials confirmed that Parrish
was hit multiple times.
And later added that he was a good kid who loved his job more than any other and that
they are deeply saddened by the loss of Zackari.The other deputies who were shot were identified
as Mike Doyle, 28, Taylor Davis, 30, and Jeff Pelle, 32. and Castle Rock Police Department
Officer Tom O'Donnell, 41.
Parrish leaves behind two very young girls and a wife who are all reportedly having an
exceptionally hard time dealing with the 29-year-old's sudden death, as anyone can imagine.
Parrish left the banking industry to pursue his dream of helping others through police
work, a very noble aspiration even realizing the risks.
Newly into his role as a police officer, he was murdered in the line of duty.
His hometown is working to raise funds for his medical, funeral, and surviving family's
living expenses, just hours after a senseless thug took Parrish from his family.
You can read more about why this is especially heartbreaking here, as well as help if you're
able, as a cause close to President Trump.
Luckily all the other deputies and victims are expected to survive, and the shooter was
killed at the scene.The Hill Reports:
Katie Pavlich: Obama's anti-police ideology
Katie Pavlich: Obama's anti-police ideology As President Obama starts to wind down his
tenure in the White House, with just a year and a half to go, he's focusing on federalization
of local police forces in the name of "justice."
Attorney General Loretta Lynch will be his go-to on this project, just as Eric Holder
was before her.
The goal, according to the White House and Department of Justice, is to take a close
look at police practices across the country to ensure minorities, in particular African-Americans,
aren't unfairly singled out for police scrutiny.
But Obama's long record shows he isn't necessarily interested in police brutality;
instead, he holds an anti-police ideology.
It all started way back in 2009 when Obama, before he knew all of the facts, accused the
police of "acting stupidly" after his friend, Harvard Professor Henry Gates, was
briefly arrested for breaking into his home.
"I don't know, not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played,"
the president said at the time.
"But I think it's fair to say, No. 1, any of us would be pretty angry; No. 2, that
the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that
they were in their own home; and, No. 3 … that there's a long history in this country of
African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately."
This was a look at Obama's perspective on the police — take a glance at the White
House visitor log, the president's consultants and the people he nominates, and you'll
get a clear picture of how anti-police he really is.
So-called civil rights activist and race-baiter the Rev. Al Sharpton has been to the White
House nearly 100 times since 2009 and regularly provides consultation on race issues to the
president.
Obama and Holder went out of their way to participate in events for Sharpton's National
Action Network and proudly displayed his logo behind them during speeches.
"You know, actions speak louder than words.
You put Al Sharpton next to you, you just told everyone, 'I'm against the police,'
" former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said recently.
He's right.
The president's stoking of racial flames in Ferguson, Mo., and Baltimore, actions also
taken by Sharpton, further proves this point.
When Obama announced he was going to normalize relations between the United States and Cuba
in December, he did so without requiring the Cuban regime to release convicted cop-killer
Joanne Chesimard, now known infamously as Assata Shakur.
Chesimard, who is on the FBI's Most Wanted list with a $1 million reward, escaped from
prison in 1979 and fled to Cuba.
She was convicted in 1977 of murdering New Jersey state trooper Werner Foerster during
a traffic stop.
She used Foerster's weapon to shoot him twice in the head.
When New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie made an official request earlier this year to have
Chesimard returned to the U.S. to finish her sentence, the Cuban regime responded by saying
it has the right to protect "persecuted criminals."
The White House has done nothing to get her extradited as part of new relations.
But the most prominent example of Obama's anti-police ideology came last year when he
nominated Debo Adegbile to head the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice.
Adegbile voluntarily took on the case and cause of America's most notorious cop-killer,
Mumia Abu-Jamal, 30 years after he was convicted of murdering Philadelphia police officer Daniel
Faulkner.
Abu-Jamal shot Faulkner, who was just 26 years old, multiple times, including in the face.
Keep in mind that it's the DOJ Civil Rights Division that investigates and brings lawsuits
against police departments and officers around the country.
In February 2014, six major law enforcement organizations representing more than 1 million
law enforcement officers across the country, including the Fraternal Order of Police, sent
scathing letters to senators and Obama opposing Adegbile's nomination.
Adding insult to injury, it was later revealed these organizations weren't consulted before
Obama put Adegbile up for the position.
Maureen Faulkner, Officer Faulker's widow, was also left in the dark.
Adegbile's nomination was such an affront to justice, the rule of law and the law enforcement
community he was voted down by the Democrat-controlled Senate, 52-47.
Regardless, the White House called his failed confirmation a "travesty."
"The Senate's failure to confirm Debo Adegbile to head the Civil Rights Division
at the Department of Justice is a travesty based on wildly unfair character attacks against
a good and qualified public servant," the president said last year when the vote failed.
When Obama's time in office finally ends on Jan. 20, 2017, don't be surprised if
he issues a pardon to Abu-Jamal on his way out, solidifying an underreported anti-police
legacy.
What a difference a year can make.
Just last year we had a president in the White House who hated the police.
President Barack Hussein Obama made it very clear at every turn that he had severe disdain
for law enforcement.
I guess it must have stemmed from his days with his "Shoom Gang" where he was an
avid pot smoking bum.
He accused officers of acting "Stupidly" and fueled the fires of Black Lives Matters,
while at the same time promoting lawlessness and anarchy in the name of a fake narrative
of Social Justice
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