About five residents remained when Grand Forks police served the eviction notice. Written By: Matt Henson | 11:16 pm, Apr. 22, 2021
GRAND FORKS Late afternoon on Thursday, April 22, a judge signed a restraining order telling the remaining residents at the condemned Ambassador Motel it was time to leave.
Minutes later, police showed up at the motel along with city workers who cut all the utilities to the building.
Ambassador tenet Angela Kramchuck was caught off guard when the police showed up around dinner time, saying it was time to leave. Officers have been really nice not pushing us knowing we have nowhere to go, she said.
(Grand Forks, ND) A pair of businesses in a bit of hot water after telling tobacco to minors last week.
The Grand Forks Police Department’s Education and Outreach Bureau, along with area under-age buyers conducted tobacco compliance checks April 15th. These tobacco compliance checks were done in compliance with SYNAR grant funding through the Grand Forks Public Health Department and the ND Department of Health.
The Police Department uses under-age buyers from the community who are under 18 years of age, even though the current Federal Law prohibits sales of tobacco products to buyers under 21 years of age.
The officers and under-age buyers checked 17 businesses within the city of Grand Forks that had tobacco licenses that were issued by the state of North Dakota. Of the 17 businesses that were checked there were two failures. These two failures had a citation issued to the clerk that sold the tobacco product. The store will also face an administrative sanction.
Pair of Grand Forks Businesses Sold Tobacco to Minors am1100theflag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from am1100theflag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Letter: Rob Port s vision is blurred on police
Unless you are willing and able to badge up and head straight towards the threat in defense of others with courage and discipline, you should perhaps not be so judgmental of those who do. It s easier to be a keyboard critic than the tip of the spear!
Written By:
Lt. Grant Schiller (retired), Grand Forks Police Department | 9:00 am, Apr. 17, 2021 ×
I agree cops are not the military; however they are mutually similar in their sworn mission to defend the Constitution, the rule of law and to the protection of citizens of our great nation. Beyond an individual s right to self-protection, it is the police who are our first line of defense. The military will not respond to your 911 call for a man with a gun, the fatal accident, sexual assaults, home invasion, etc., but the police will.
Police in both Fargo and Grand Forks are trained every year in the use of their taser. Written By: Kevin Wallevand | 10:24 pm, Apr. 13, 2021
FARGO Every year, Sargent Mike Sanden is responsible for training 185 sworn Fargo Police officers who get tested and certified to carry a taser. Our officers are mandated by policy to carry their taser and duty gear in a certain way so, for us, our duty weapon will always be on our strong side, Sanden explained.
After the fatal shooting in Brooklyn Center, there is so much talk about how the officer confused her service weapon for a taser.