Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
RELATED STORIES
 
Merlino says family punished for others' mob ties
 
Camden County judge seriously hurt in bike accident
 
Reader: Racism underlies rage at Obama
 
Open call for canine stars
 
5 area schools win U.S. Blue Ribbon honors
 
New Pa. public-records law: lots of requests ... & lawsuits
 
Will Madoff portrait make ex-con rich?
 
Activists drawn by Obama's visit
 
Housing Authority relents, won't evict ailing woman, 78
 
ACORN shows 'pimp' and 'pro' the door here
 
Obama in Philly, fundraising for Sen. Arlen Specter
 
Blockbuster may shutter 960 stores
SnapGlow.TV: Modern Gems Galore!


Operation Falcon nets targeted fugitives

Police Officer Ashley Hoggard was on patrol in North Philadelphia June 13 when he heard gunshots. Hoggard and his partner, Officer Michael Alexander, rushed to Broad and Somerset Streets, where they found a crowd gathered in front of the Franchise Sports Bar.

More shots erupted as the officers stepped out of their cruiser. Hoggard caught a bullet in his left shoulder. Also hit were several civilians. All survived.

Within the week, three suspects in the shooting were in custody.

The suspects - Lawrence Peel, Dwayne Robinson, and Barry Fleming - were snared in a monthlong dragnet cast by dozens of federal and local law enforcement agencies.

Dubbed Operation Falcon and led by the U.S. Marshals Service during June, the annual sweep netted 338 fugitives in the region. It also cleared 358 warrants, acting U.S. Marshal John Patrignani said.

Nationwide, the operation led to the capture of more than 35,000 fugitives, Patrignani said.

Officials lauded the regional success of the operation at a news conference yesterday.

"The impact of this operation can't be overestimated," U.S. Attorney Michael Levy said. "It's about getting the worst of the worst offenders off the street."

Nearly 100 federal, state, and local law enforcement officers were sworn in as special deputy U.S. marshals before the operation began, allowing them to cross traditional lines of jurisdiction to track down and arrest targeted fugitives.

Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne M. Abraham called the local effort "a national model."

"We feel better," she said, "because this makes our city safer."

Abraham also decried the city's bail system, saying it needs to be fixed.

"Bail in Philadelphia is almost universally ignored. It's a joke," she said. "We have about 20,000 people who are wanted on bench warrants. When a person is arrested, charged, and allowed out on bail, very often he just doesn't show up."

 


Contact staff writer Sam Wood at 215-854-2796 or samwood@phillynews.com.

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Spotlight Deal
Northern Liberties 19123
Spotlight Deal
East Falls 19129
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Camden 08102
Spotlight Deal
Rittenhouse Square 19103
SEARCH RENTALS
Daily Headlines
Subscribe now! Daily Headlines Newsletter

Philly.com news columnists