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Article Last Updated: 09/11/2005 01:55:07 PM
57 evacuees to Colorado have felony convictions
The Denver Post and 9News
Aurora police have found that 57 of 873 Hurricane Katrina evacuees in Colorado have felony criminal records, according to 9News.
Those offenses include assaults, theft, sex offenses and murder, said Aurora interim Police Chief Terry Jones.
"The community does not have to be concerned," Jones said. "We think people are safe because all of these evacuees have served their sentences. None of them are wanted in Louisiana, there are no warrants out for anyone's arrest, and no one has broken any laws at Lowry."
Robert Thompson of the Mile High Chapter of the American Red Cross said he hopes the records of the 57 evacuees don't have an impact on donations.
"It's the reality," he said. "These are people from all walks of life who are here, and there are people with pasts in the way of criminal activity and there are many who are not."
The Transportation Security Administration suspended some of its security regulations on evacuation flights, spokeswoman Carrie Harmon said.
"In this national emergency, we've had to make accommodations for the evacuees trying to get out who, through no fault of their own, do not have IDs," she said.
As a precaution, Harmon said, federal air marshals were on every flight. When power went out for two days at the New Orleans airport, the evacuees were screened with hand wands, Harmon said. During screenings, the TSA confiscated more than 82 firearms, 400 knives and 250 other prohibited items, such as razors and box cutters, she added. (NOTE: That's one hell of an arsenal for 873 people!)
When evacuees arrived in Denver without identification, Aurora police began collecting names and Social Security numbers to conduct background checks.
The Colorado Bureau of Investigation also is fingerprinting hurricane survivors who volunteer. The CBI hopes the fingerprints will stop the evacuees from becoming victims of identity-theft by people who may find their wallets in the hurricane debris, said spokesman Lance Clem.
Deborah Sherman of 9News and Felisa Cardona of The Denver Post contributed to this report.
Link
Makes you all kinds of warm and fuzzy welcoming these people into your midsts doesn't it!
57 evacuees to Colorado have felony convictions
The Denver Post and 9News
Aurora police have found that 57 of 873 Hurricane Katrina evacuees in Colorado have felony criminal records, according to 9News.
Those offenses include assaults, theft, sex offenses and murder, said Aurora interim Police Chief Terry Jones.
"The community does not have to be concerned," Jones said. "We think people are safe because all of these evacuees have served their sentences. None of them are wanted in Louisiana, there are no warrants out for anyone's arrest, and no one has broken any laws at Lowry."
Robert Thompson of the Mile High Chapter of the American Red Cross said he hopes the records of the 57 evacuees don't have an impact on donations.
"It's the reality," he said. "These are people from all walks of life who are here, and there are people with pasts in the way of criminal activity and there are many who are not."
The Transportation Security Administration suspended some of its security regulations on evacuation flights, spokeswoman Carrie Harmon said.
"In this national emergency, we've had to make accommodations for the evacuees trying to get out who, through no fault of their own, do not have IDs," she said.
As a precaution, Harmon said, federal air marshals were on every flight. When power went out for two days at the New Orleans airport, the evacuees were screened with hand wands, Harmon said. During screenings, the TSA confiscated more than 82 firearms, 400 knives and 250 other prohibited items, such as razors and box cutters, she added. (NOTE: That's one hell of an arsenal for 873 people!)
When evacuees arrived in Denver without identification, Aurora police began collecting names and Social Security numbers to conduct background checks.
The Colorado Bureau of Investigation also is fingerprinting hurricane survivors who volunteer. The CBI hopes the fingerprints will stop the evacuees from becoming victims of identity-theft by people who may find their wallets in the hurricane debris, said spokesman Lance Clem.
Deborah Sherman of 9News and Felisa Cardona of The Denver Post contributed to this report.
Link
Makes you all kinds of warm and fuzzy welcoming these people into your midsts doesn't it!