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jarhed123
11-01-2007, 05:01 PM
Seems like open season on us out there. BE CAREFUL and kiss the wife and kids before leaving for work!!!

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=3806217

SparkSVT
11-01-2007, 07:15 PM
http://odmp.org/officer.php?oid=19045


Philadelphia is a killing ground right now. P/O Cassidy died this morning after taking a bullet to his brain yesterday. The cops are being targeted by the thugs right now.

SparkSVT
11-01-2007, 07:17 PM
http://www.domelights.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=16393

ImEvil1
11-01-2007, 09:06 PM
Unbelievable...hope they get the guy soon.

SparkSVT
11-02-2007, 12:49 AM
http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=local&id=5737208


Philly cops are stopping EVERYONE looking for this guy. Here is a clip from our local news. Lots of tips coming in. This cop/family man/father of 3 children killer will be lucky if he makes it to trial. After shooting P/O Cassidy in the head he picked up Cassidy's gun and ran off with it. I hope he burns in hell.

Philadelphia is an absolute warzone.

FHP0665
11-02-2007, 08:20 AM
This (http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2007-07-18-police_N.htm?csp=34) speaks volumes about the SCUM that we have to deal with in society today. The "Wild West" mentality wasn't such a bad thing if you ask me. Sure you had your outlaw's, but the good outweighed the bad unlike now.

SparkSVT
11-04-2007, 10:41 AM
According to some insiders they now know who it is that killed P/O Cassidy. Philly SWAT has been hitting houses all morning and I would expect that the scumbag will be in custody or dead by this time tommorow if not tonight. I personally hope they kill him.

FHP0665
11-05-2007, 07:54 AM
For fear of offending someone, it will probably play out like most of the rest. He will get caught, probably stand trail sometime in the next year, and if lucky, get the death sentence where he will soak up as much of our tax dollars waiting for it to be carried out in the next 25 years. After all, unlike the officer, he still has rights...

*sarcasm off*

This is how ALL cop killers should end up! (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,216898,00.html)

I think the Sheriff made the best public statement I've ever heard in one of these cases:
"I suspect the only reason 110 rounds was all that was fired was that's all the ammunition they had," Judd said. "We were not going to take any chance of him shooting back."

Basically "We ran out of bullets"

SparkSVT
11-06-2007, 09:33 AM
THEY GOT HIM.


Suspected Cop Killer Caught in Miami9 a.m. news conference LIVE on 6abc.com!
by the Action News Team



PHILADELPHIA - November 6, 2007 - Police in Miami have caught the suspected killer of Officer Chuck Cassidy, according to sources. Security camera video showed John "Jordan" Lewis boarding a bus for South Florida during the weekend.


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Lewis was apparently arrested by U.S. Marshals and FBI agents at a homeless shelter in Miami around 7 a.m. this morning. It was about 10 blocks away from the bus station. Apparently, the bus driver was able to identify him and told authorities.

Police officials tell Action News they will be holding a 9 a.m. news conference at Police Headquarters in Center City.


According to investigators, the 21-year-old John Lewis purchased a round trip bus ticket in Wilmington, Delaware bound for Miami, Florida on Saturday night. Sources said when he arrived in Miami late Sunday night, he tried to cash the return ticket for cash. Lewis argued with the teller, who refused to refund his money.

The FBI had been searching Miami to try to find Lewis. Philadelphia police asked the FBI to add Lewis to its most wanted list.

Action News has also learned that Lewis worked at a Dunkin Donuts at Broad and Erie and at another one, part time, at Rising Sun and Roosevelt Boulevard, just a few doors from his mother's house.

Lewis' former co-workers that talked to Action News all said the same thing: they are stunned. He never struck them as the type of person who could kill someone.

"He didn't seem like the type of person that would do anything to nobody," said Tamara Hayes, a former co-worker.

"He was so nice," Kiani Clark said. "He was really nice. He didn't seem like the type that would hurt a fly."

Locally, investigators recovered two weapons during their search for Lewis on Monday, Commissioner Sylvester Johnson said.

Johnson told reporters during a late Monday afternoon news conference that the weapons were recovered while serving a warrant on an undisclosed location. Sources told Action News reporter Sarah Bloomquist Monday night that police positively identified one gun as Cassidy's 9 mm Glock service semiautomatic taken after the shooting. The second gun does not match one owned by Lewis' mother and missing, but tests are still being done to determine if it is the murder weapon.

Sources also told Action News that Lewis appeared in Philadelphia court last Friday for hearing in an unrelated case, but that was more than a day before Lewis was identified as a suspect.

Police also seized a vehicle as part of the investigation just before 7:00 Monday morning. It is a blue Mercury Grand Marquis. Police were planning to search the car for evidence linked to Cassidy's murder.


A viewing for family and friends of Officer Cassidy will be held tonight starting at 6:00 at Givnish Funeral Home at 10975 Academy Road. A second viewing for the public will be held at the Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul starting at 7:30 am Wednesday followed by a mass at noon. Burial will be private at Holy Sepulchure Cemetery in Cheltenham.

The department has established a trust fund for Cassidy's family. (Click here for details)

Cassidy's death marked the second death of a city police officer in 18 months. In May 2006, Officer Gary Skerski was fatally shot in the neck when a man robbing a bar fired a shotgun out the back door. The killer, Solomon Montgomery, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison.

(Copyright 2007 by Action News and 6abc. All Rights Reserved.)

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FHP0665
11-06-2007, 09:58 AM
Nice to hear but this is exactly what I mean...

"The killer, Solomon Montgomery, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison."

He still gets a chance while the officer does not... Amazing! And they wonder why people continue to do it.

ImEvil1
11-06-2007, 11:53 AM
Thanks for posting the story, Chris. Glad they got him.

jarhed123
11-06-2007, 01:53 PM
Too bad he did not put up a fight!!

SparkSVT
11-06-2007, 09:19 PM
Two Philadelphia Homicide Detectives left for Miami this morning to interview and possibly pick up the POS that killed Philadelphia P/O Charles Cassidy on Halloween day.

In one of the best symbolic gestures in recent history, the POS will be wearing Chuck's handcuffs when he's brought back to Philly.

I guess its the the next best thing to a pine box.

Rest in Peace Brother we will never ever forget you.

http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o170/CHPSTANG5305/OfficerCassidy.jpg

SparkSVT
11-06-2007, 09:25 PM
Here is the murdering POS. May he rot in hell.

http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o170/CHPSTANG5305/SHITBAG.jpg

SparkSVT
11-06-2007, 09:34 PM
Phila. police carry Cassidy's cuffs to Miami to secure officer’s alleged killer

By Barbara Boyer, Michael Matza, Joseph A. Slobodzian and Andrew Maykuth

INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
MIAMI – Philadelphia police detectives arrived on a flight this afternoon to collect John Lewis, the apprehended suspect in last week's killing of Police Officer Chuck Cassidy.

Observing a police tradition, the detectives tucked an extra item into their luggage: Cassidy's chrome handcuffs, which they plan to use to bring the suspect north to face prosecution here.

Miami police arrested Lewis at dawn today at a homeless shelter in downtown Miami, ending a dramatic multistate dragnet for the man wanted in Cassidy's killing.

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Sylvester M. Johnson said authorities were tipped off that Lewis was staying at the Miami Rescue Mission after local television broadcast photos of the 21-year-old suspect.

Lewis is accused of shooting Cassidy in the head when the officer walked in on an armed robbery Wednesday at a West Oak Lane Dunkin' Donuts. Cassidy died the next day.

"Now that the killer is in custody, the wheels of justice will begin to turn, and we will use all of our resources to bring this defendant to justice," District Attorney Lynne Abraham said in a statement.

Authorities this afternoon charged a cousin of Lewis' with obstruction of justice and hindering arrest. Police said Hakim Glover, 29, put Lewis on a bus for Florida on Saturday, allowing the suspect to escape only minutes before police closed in on his mother's house on Roosevelt Boulevard.

Miami Police Chief John Timoney, the former police commissioner in Philadelphia, said Philadelphia police alerted him yesterday afternoon after they learned that Lewis had fled to Florida. Timoney said he set up a task force to hunt down the fugitive and enlisted Miami television stations to broadcast a mugshot.

Terri Ramos, a spokeswoman for the homeless shelter, said a man now identified as Lewis arrived yesterday afternoon, saying he had just arrived in town on a Greyhound Bus. Ramos said the man called himself Akim Melvin Atwell, but he volunteered little else about his background or where he had come from.

Ramos said Atwell spent a quiet night at the 220-bed shelter and interacted with some of the 150 men now staying there.

Shortly after 6 a.m. today, Ramos said, a male staffer at the center saw Lewis' image on the morning news.

"He said, 'I think that's the guy I saw yesterday,'" Ramos said.

Ramos said the staffer - whom she would not identify - was struck by the hair plaits on the televised image of the suspect and the fact that Atwell's hair had a "wild look," as if he had recently loosened plaits in his hair.

While police were alerted, Ramos said the staff lured the suspect into the chapel on the pretense of attending morning prayers. When Miami-Dade police arrived, the man was told he was needed in the lobby.

"He went very submissively," Ramos said.

"I'm sorry," arresting officers quoted Lewis as saying.

Ramos said the shelter this morning was overwhelmed with television camera crews. "Now we're in the middle of a media frenzy," she said.

The arrest ends an extraordinary manhunt for the man who allegedly gunned down the officer during a botched armed robbery.

"In the city of Philadelphia, we do not stand for this kind of violence, nor do we stand for this kind of violence against our police department," Mayor John F. Street said at a news conference this morning."

"Law enforcement has no boundaries," Johnson said at the news briefing. He thanked federal authorities as well as Miami police for making an all-out effort to apprehend Lewis. He also thanked the media for publicizing the suspect's image.

"When a law enforcement officer is killed, it's the entire law enforcement community that suffers because of that," he said.

Lewis will face an extradition hearing in Miami before authorities can return him to Philadelphia.

Homicide Sgt. William Britt, who is among five detectives en route to Miami this afternoon, said Lewis likely would be returned to Philadelphia tomorrow at the earliest if he does not try to fight his extradition.

Cassidy's family, preparing for his funeral at noon tomorrow, expressed gratitude through a spokesman.

"We are extremely appreciative of the hard work of the Philadelphia Police Department during the past week and are grateful as well for the efforts of the police officers in Miami," the family said in a statement.

For elated Philadelphia police officers, who had worked around the clock searching for the suspect since Cassidy's shooting Wednesday morning, the news of the arrest came on the day that Cassidy's funeral visitation services are scheduled.

"This is the happiest sad day that I've had in a long time," said Sgt. Tim Cooney, a member of the task force created to catch whoever killed the 25-year police veteran.

"We worked long and hard on this," Cooney said, saying that the homicide task force had worked closely with officers in the 35th District, where Cassidy worked, and with North Division Detectives.

Homicide Detective Greg Singleton, another member of the task force, said exhausted investigators could finally take a break.

"I felt relieved that this guy was caught and we can finally put this thing to rest," said the detective.

The arrest caps an intensive manhunt that involved hundreds of Philadelphia police officers and federal law enforcement agencies.

Investigators were disappointed yesterday to learn that Lewis, an Olney High School dropout who had worked at other Dunkin' Donuts outlets, had managed to escape the city while police were hot on his trail. Today they charged his cousin, Glover, with helping the suspect to escape.

Police said they learned of Lewis' bus trip yesterday when they raid Glover's house on the 3800 block of North Franklin Street, where they recovered two guns - one of them the slain officer's 9 mm Glock semiautomatic.

Glover was initially uncooperative, authorities said. During questioning, he ultimately disclosed that he had taken Lewis to the bus station in Wilmington and that he had a ticket to Miami. But by that time, the bus had already arrived in Miami, at 10:45 p.m. Sunday.

Police did not know whether Lewis was in Miami or had disembarked at any of the numerous stops between Wilmington and Florida.

"We had FBI agents and law enforcement all over the place," said Philadelphia Homicide Capt. Michael Costello. "And we had them everywhere in between here and Miami."

Costello said others may be charged in connection with Lewis' run for freedom.

Before police were tipped off to Lewis' identity on Saturday, the suspect appeared to be conducting himself normally and in the open.

Rather than conceal himself in the days following Cassidy's killing, Lewis actually strolled into the Criminal Justice Center on Friday to attend a pre-arranged court hearing related to his arrest on June 14 on charges of drug possession, a court official said today.

While the city was on the lookout for a suspect with a spider web tattoo on his hand - police later abandoned that description after they identified Lewis – the suspect walked past dozens of law enforcement officers who were attending various hearings at the Center City complex.

After he was ordered to reappear in court in January and left the courthouse, Lewis literally slipped unscathed through the hall of justice.

Authorities confirmed yesterday through a bus driver that Lewis had taken a bus to Miami. Police said they had learned that a relative had purchased a bus ticket for the 30-hour ride to Miami over the weekend for Lewis.

Two handguns that police said were linked to the slaying were recovered yesterday afternoon from the house of Lewis' cousin, Glover. Although one was the officer's 9mm Glock semiautomatic, stolen when he was gunned down, the second was not the firearm reported missing by Lewis' mother, Lynn Dyches, a corrections officer in the Philadelphia Prison System. Police initially suspected that the mother's gun may have been used in the slaying.

"Lewis expressed a desire not to be captured," according to a federal affidavit filed in support of the arrest warrant, which was issued early Sunday.

Police as well as Lewis' relatives had put out a public appeal for him to surrender, and police said they had pressured Lewis' known associates to turn him in.

The warrant, which suggested that Lewis might intend to flee to Maryland, said that two witnesses identified the suspect. It also said that Lewis' family indicated he was "responsible" for Cassidy's killing.

Authorities had offered a reward, which grew in the last few days to $153,000, for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Cassidy's killer.

On Sunday, dozens of law enforcement officers raided a neighborhood close to the Dunkin' Donuts where Cassidy was shot. They searched an apartment complex at 70th Avenue and North Broad Street.

An informal memorial of flowers, stuffed animals and tributes continued to pile up outside the doughnut shop at 6620 N. Broad St.

The Dunkin' Donuts owner mounted a plaque at the memorial, noting that the shop would remain closed until after Cassidy's funeral tomorrow out of respect to the officer who regularly stopped in at the shop as part of his security rounds.

Contact staff writer Andrew Maykuth at 215-854-2947 or amaykuth@phillynews.com.

Inquirer writers Robert Moran, Dwight Ott and John Shiffman contributed to this article.

jarhed123
11-06-2007, 11:23 PM
It is always sad when one of ours gets shot down like this. It is worse for the families that have to deal with it for the rest of their lives. I am glad Miami was able to get this POS and I hope he falls hard several times as he walks up and down stairs. It sucks when they lose their balance.:rolleyes:

ImEvil1
11-07-2007, 02:22 AM
Great news, and a great tribute with the handcuffs.