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Civilian assistant police chief is suspended for some bonkers behavior.
https://wjla.com/news/local/montgomery-county-police-department-civilian-assistant-chief-carmen-facciolo-suspended-leave "Elrich explained that he created the civilian assistant police chief as part of his overall goal of reimagining policing. The position was designed, in part, to help penetrate the so-called blue wall of silence and improve community relations." "Elrich said he remains open-minded about Facciolo's employment ahead of Wednesday's briefing on the matter. “He understood what we were trying to do. I mean, he wasn’t coming in thinking he was going to be a chief of policing, but he was going to play a role in lubricating relationships between the community, and that was the most important thing to us is having somebody who understands what we are looking for. So, it was not the kind of command structure that you would get from a normal chief, my other chiefs in the department. It was a different relationship and he got it," Elrich concluded." That was yesterday. So more has come out now about what he did. https://www.fox5dc.com/news/montgomery-county-suspends-assistant-police-chief-carmen-facciolo Sources described multiple issues with Facciolo's actions while on the Montgomery County Police Department but tell FOX 5 one of the most recent issues was a potentially problematic response to a cardiac arrest emergency call the civilian assistant chief involved himself in last week. Those sources told FOX 5 the department is looking into whether Facciolo may have acted inappropriately both during and after that emergency call. "Looking into the emergency call, FOX 5 learned the Montgomery County Fire Department also responded to this emergency. A fire official told FOX 5 the cardiac arrest incident happened last Thursday, June 2. The call was believed to be for someone suffering a heart attack at the Connecticut Ave. senior living facility called the Five Star Senior Premier Residences of Chevy Chase. Sources tell FOX 5 among several allegations made into Facciolo's actions that day, is a claim that after joining the call, he directed a crew to stop working on patient so he could do so. There's also a claim he may have asked someone to take his photo while performing the work. Sources also noted issues with what happened after Facciolo left the call." And the son of the patient is calling out Elrich personally. https://twitter.com/Paul_M_Becker/status/1534735883575996416?s=20&t=_DKTCW-KxY3XRAucS0rCsw |
| The Hans Riemer campaign is pretty sad. |
Oh no. He’s incompetent too. |
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She was old. She probably would’ve died anyway. |
| She was 92 and was already dead. Pretty hard to bring back a 92yo. In general when first responders arrive on scene they do take over CPR. Having said that, driving lights and sirens to DE is downright wrong and he should be fired for ordering someone to do that. It’s a huge safety issue. |
A civilian assistant chief is not a first responder. |
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Add this to the Andrew Kleine ethics violations.
And the failure to hire a Health Officer. |
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The woman was dead when her heart stopped working- which was long before any attempt was made to bring her back to life. She was already dead. |
IMO Elrich and his appointments are opposites sides of the same Trump and his appointment coin. Elrich's gotta go. |
It’s honestly gross, but typical of Riemer campaign supporters, to try to turn this woman’s death into a campaign issue against Elrich. There are a lot of actual and real issues that one could point to and instead is this disingenuous and frankly disgusting crap? Is this who Hans Riemer is? |
So that makes his behavior okay? Wait get my photo she's dead? |
Obviously it was not okay, which is why he’s facing consequences. What does it have to do with Elrich? |
He appointed him. |
Okay? It's not like he was the COO of the county Economic Development Corp. and embezzled tens of millions of dollars. Appointed guy doe something dumb and faces appropriate consequences, that's how life works. Unless your name is Casey Anderson, then apparently there are no consequences for breaking the law. |