Mark Warner applauds new U S Park Police chief for establishing body camera program augustafreepress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from augustafreepress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
S.F. man arrested in Cliff House burglary, historic items recovered
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A mannequin wearing a sutro bathing suit as garde manger Carlos Sandhu-Gonzalez (left) makes croutons at Sutro s in the Cliff house in San Francisco, Calif., on Thursday, November 10, 2011. The bathing suit along with numerous other items stolen from the shuttered restaurant were recently recovered following a burglary.Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle
A San Francisco man suspected of breaking into the iconic Cliff House and stealing historic memorabilia in January, nearly one month after the restaurant announced its permanent closure, has been arrested and charged with burglary, authorities said.
National Park Service appoints first Black Chief of Police Anna Liss-Roy
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The National Park Service has named Pamela A. Smith as the new Chief of the United States Park Police, the agency announced on Feb. 25. Smith will become the first African American woman to lead the 230-year-old agency.
Smith is a 23-year veteran of the USPP, a full-service police force with jurisdiction in all federal parks.
“Chief Smith’s commitment to policing as public service and her willingness to listen and collaborate make her the right person to lead the U.S. Park Police at this pivotal moment in our country,” Shawn Benge, deputy director exercising the delegated authority of the NPS director, said.
African American woman named chief of United States Park Police for first time in agency s history wmar2news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wmar2news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Pamela Smith to become first Black woman to lead U.S. Park Police Elliot Henney and Tom Roussey (ABC7)
Pamela Smith to become first Black woman to lead U.S. Park Police
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The incoming chief of the U.S. Park Police pledged Thursday that officers in the DC area will wear body cameras by the end of the year, but she did not commit to releasing video of any incidents those cameras record.
Pamela A. Smith, whom the National Park Service says is a 23-year veteran of the U.S. Park Police, will become the first Black female chief USPP has ever had when she starts on Sunday.