Home » 2011 » April (Page 5)

Covenant Security Solutions Wins Contract with Major Government Agency

Covenant Security Solutions Wins Contract with Major Government Agency












Fairfax, VA (PRWEB) August 25, 2008

Covenant Security Solutions (CHSS), a premier provider of total security solutions to agencies of the U.S. Government, was awarded a canine services contract by a major government agency.

“We are very pleased to continue our support to the United States government in protecting those people and assets that protect our great Nation,” said Robert Coe, President of the Covenant Security Companies. “We view these operations not as contracts but as missions that support our governmental infrastructure and that is a mission we take very seriously.”    

CHSS operates Covenant Farms Canine Training Center, a world-class training facility, located just outside of the National Capital Region in Northern Virginia, Covenant Farms provides a diverse range of canine acquisition and training services spanning the entire spectrum of canine capabilities for law enforcement, military and private security.

Covenant Security Solutions is part of the Covenant family of security companies, a leader in global security, training and assessments, and is recognized for innovative, cost-effective solutions to ensure the safety and security of the assets of the U.S. Government and government contractor organizations worldwide.

About the Covenant Security Companies

Headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, The Covenant Security Companies manages over $ 180 million in contracts in 23 states as well as globally, and employs more than 2,900 security personnel in over 62 locations. The company provides a wide range of high-quality protective force and technical security services through four operating companies: Covenant Aviation Security, Covenant Security Services, and Covenant Security International. Services include Protective Force Operations – Armed/Unarmed; Information Security Services; Industrial Security Services; Aviation Security Services; Emergency Preparedness and Planning; Security-Related Training; Investigations, Audits and Survey Services; Special Security Operations; Ancillary Services; Pre-Employment Screening; Drug Testing; FOCI Program Management; OSHA Safety; and Canine Operations.

For more information, contact Rob Coe at info@covenantsecurity.com

# # #









Attachments
























Vocus©Copyright 1997-

, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb, and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.







North Carolina Criminal Impaired Driving Checkpoint Articulable Suspicion Constitutionally Permissible Lawyers Attorneys

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA v. KAREN SEAGLE FOREMAN
SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

On 16 November 1996, defendant was arrested for driving while impaired (DWI), possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of cocaine. Defendant was subsequently indicted for the DWI charge. On 16 September 1997, defendant was found guilty of DWI in District Court, Craven County, and gave notice of appeal to the superior court. On 12 February 1997, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charge because there was no probable cause sufficient to justify the stop of her vehicle or in the alternative, to suppress any evidence obtained from the stop of defendant’s vehicle. The trial court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss or to suppress, and defendant was tried before a jury at the 23 February 1998 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Craven County. The jury found defendant guilty of DWI. On 25 February 1998, the trial court, inter alia, sentenced defendant to a suspended sentence of sixty days in jail with unsupervised probation for two years and revoked her license for one year. Defendant appealed to the North Carolina Court of Appeals.  On appeal, the Court of Appeals found no error.  In support of its decision, the Court of Appeals concluded that it was not constitutionally permissible for an officer to stop a vehicle which had made a legal turn away from a posted DWI checkpoint.

ISSUES:

Whether a legal turn away from a posted DWI checkpoint would justify an investigatory stop and whether it is constitutionally permissible?

DISCUSSION:

When an officer observes conduct which leads him reasonably to believe that criminal conduct may be afoot, he may stop the suspicious person to make reasonable inquiries.  In the instant case, the officer observed a “quick left turn” away from the checkpoint at the precise point where the driver of the vehicle would have first become aware of its presence. However, Officer Ipock did not stop defendant’s vehicle once it turned away from the checkpoint. In fact, we cannot conclude that Officer Ipock “stopped” defendant’s vehicle at any point. Defendant voluntarily parked in a residential driveway and remained hidden in the car until Officer Ipock approached the vehicle. Therefore, defendant was not “seized” by the police officer until at least that point. Based upon that series of incriminating circumstances, the Court concluded that the Court of Appeals correctly determined that Officer Ipock observed sufficient activity to raise a “reasonable and articulable suspicion of criminal activity.

There is no dispute that the DWI checkpoint in the present case met all the statutory requirements for an impaired driving checkpoint. The perimeters of the checkpoint were marked with signs stating that there was a DWI checkpoint ahead, and the signs were posted approximately one-tenth of a mile prior to the actual stop. The checkpoint was established with the intent to stop every vehicle briefly and to check for impaired drivers traveling on Neuse Boulevard within the vicinity of the checkpoint. Certainly, the purpose of any checkpoint and the above statute would be defeated if drivers had the option to “legally avoid,” ignore or circumvent the checkpoint by either electing to drive through without stopping or by turning away upon entering the checkpoint’s perimeters. Further, it is clear that the perimeters of the checkpoint or “the area in which checks are conducted” would include the area within which drivers may become aware of its presence by observation of any sign marking or giving notice of the checkpoint. Therefore, the Court held that it is reasonable and permissible for an officer to monitor a checkpoint’s entrance for vehicles whose drivers may be attempting to avoid the checkpoint, and it necessarily follows that an officer, in conjunction with the totality of the circumstances or the checkpoint plan, may pursue and stop a vehicle which has turned away from a checkpoint within its perimeters for reasonable inquiry to determine why the vehicle turned away.

Disclaimer:

These summaries are provided by the SRIS Law Group.  They represent the firm’s unofficial views of the Justices’ opinions.  The original opinions should be consulted for their authoritative content

 

The SRIS Law Group is a law firm with offices in Virginia, Maryland & Massachusetts.  The law firm assists clients with criminal/traffic defense, family law, immigration, civil litigation, bankruptcy & military law.  The law firm has Virginia offices in Fairfax County, Richmond, Virginia Beach, Loudoun County, Prince William County & Fredericksburg, Virginia.  The Maryland offices are in Montgomery County & Baltimore.  The Massachusetts offices are in Boston & Cambridge.  The New York office is in New York City.  The North Carolina Office is in Charlotte, NC which is in Mecklenburg County.  The California office is in Orange County, CA.

The law firm has more than 11 offices in Virginia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, California, North Carolina & India to serve the clients of the SRIS Law Group.

 

Article from articlesbase.com

More The Constitution Articles

As Through a Glass Darkly

Check out these Freedom of Information images:

As Through a Glass Darkly
Freedom of Information
Image by Wonderlane

Holographic Tree
Freedom of Information
Image by Wonderlane

nate&marcia_toss4
Freedom of Information
Image by ElectronicFrontierFoundation
EFF lawyers Marcia Hoffman and Nate Cardozo celebrate the arrival of two large boxes full of government documents relating to telecom immunity.

Freedom File w/e January 14, 2011

Judge Napolitano’s daily “Freedom File” this week: MD poloticians take resort trip on taxpayers dime; American kidnapped, tortured & stranded in Kuwait by the US; AK steals the homeless’ property; government pays researchers to play ‘World of Warcraft’; Texas police chief gives siezed property away as door prizes; cold medicine electronically tracked; Ill raises income tax 66%; Philly to ban outdoor smoking; WI police fine citizen for swear in public; Feds raid PA dairy farm looking for raw milk; government waste; NYC police beat woman over dog poo; defense spending; WA issues fine for baby that lived 1 hour & a NJ legislator tries to register bikes.

There is no law on income tax, it is only voluntarily.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Cybersecurtiy Securing Our Digital Future

The United States is one of the global leaders infiltrating technology into our daily lives and this technology adoption has transformed the global economy and connected people in ways never imagined. Children use the Internet daily to do homework, blog with their friends and teacher, and email their mom; it is second nature to them. My mom and dad can read the newspapers about their daughter on-line and can reach me anywhere in the world from their cell phone to mine. And people all over the world can post and watch videos and read our blogs within minutes of completion. I can’t imagine my world without this connectivity and I would bet that you cannot either.

Now consider that the same networks that provide this connectively also increasingly help control our critical infrastructure. These networks deliver power and water to our households and businesses, they enable us to access our bank accounts from almost any city in the world, and they are transforming the way our doctors provide healthcare. For all of these reasons, we need a safe Internet with a strong network infrastructure and we as a nation need to take prompt action to protect cyberspace for what we use it for today and will need in the future.

 

We are late in addressing this critical national need and our response must be focused, aggressive, and well-resourced. We now have a strong and common view of what is needed to achieve change. Ensuring that cyberspace is sufficiently resilient and trustworthy to support U.S. goals of economic growth, civil liberties and privacy protections, national security, and the continued advancement of democratic institutions requires making cyber security a national priority.

Protecting cyberspace requires strong vision and leadership and will require changes in policy, technology, education, and perhaps law. Conclusion outlines the beginning of a way forward in building a reliable, resilient, trustworthy digital infrastructure for the future.

There are opportunities for everyone—individuals, academia, industry, and governments—to contribute toward this vision. To accomplish our goals. It must begin with a national dialogue on cyber security and we should start with our family, friends, and colleagues.

 

 

Rosemarie Grabowski, A fellow PC user has always run her businesses from her home. So her computer is an important business tool that she relies on daily. Just a few of the reasons she is involved in the field of PC Security. Not just personal but two fold. She wants her computer to run as it should. For a free report that will show you exactly how to have your computer up and running hassle free and like new in a very short amount of time contact her at 308-687-6085 or www.topsecretfreereport.com/makeadifference-x or CHECK OUT MY BLOG FOR SOMEMORE TIMELY INFORMATION: http//mypcsafefreefromspyware.blogspot.com/

Article from articlesbase.com

More National Security Articles

Latest The Constitution News

Budget deal would free up Texas education money
The federal budget deal negotiated to avoid a government shutdown would remove the strings a Democratic congressman had attached to $ 830 million in funds for public education in Texas.
Read more on AP via Yahoo! News

Red-light camera protesters plan ‘Ban the Cam’ rallies across Brevard
Today, groups of protestors will criticize red-light traffic cameras as cash-generating, Big Brother-surveillance machines that violate the U.S. Constitution.
Read more on The Bay Bulletin

When did leftists develop such a keen interest in protecting freedom of religion?

Question by Uncle Benito: When did leftists develop such a keen interest in protecting freedom of religion?
This seems to be a new development. Most of the people who are now preaching to us about freedom of religion as it relates to the mosque controversy are the same ones who are usually yapping about a mythical freedom FROM religion.

What are the chances this newfound respect for the First Amendment will still be their guiding principle the next time Christians or Jews are the ones whose religious freedoms are the ones being threatened?

Best answer:

Answer by Reparations for 40 yrs so far
only when they find a religion that hates whites or america

What do you think? Answer below!

Could legalizing gay marriage cause a moderate risk to national security? In which countries?

Question by Scyllis: Could legalizing gay marriage cause a moderate risk to national security? In which countries?
Afghanistan is obviously the most obvious one, where the civil govt is unstable and only has tenous contro, with a lot of its support built on popularity– any other examples where such an act would estrange the gov’t from a segment of the population so much as to jeopardize a country’s national security interests?

Best answer:

Answer by vinny_says_relax
Theres no such thing as gay marriage.

Marriage is a man and a woman…If they allow gays to marry because they ‘love’ each other then you also have to allow brothers and sisters who love each other, someone who loves their dog can marry it, marry their mother as well, pervert it all they want.

Give your answer to this question below!

Nice Freedom Of Information photos

Some cool Freedom of Information images:

Step this way 1
Freedom of Information
Image by Paul Jacobson
I attended a privacy and freedom of information on the Internet workshop at the Constitutional Court this last week and here are some photos I took while I was there.

RELOAD ! THIS IS FOR THE .. Stop trying to scare the masses. They are already scared enough i

tool sciene www.uaff.info www.youtube.com earthquake.usgs.gov wwwppd.nrl.navy.mil www.intellicast.com www.woweather.com www.woweather.com www.atmos.umd.edu www.intellicast.com www2.nict.go.jp solarimg.org www.sky-map.org ssd.jpl.nasa.gov www.solarmonitor.org www.intellicast.com space.rice.edu spaceweather.com www.telescope.com www.zamg.ac.at sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov planetx-hercolubus-nibiru.blogspot.com www.japanquakemap.com www.emsc-csem.org earthquake.usgs.gov www.google.com www.nps.gov www.youtube.com english.cssar.cas.cn www-star.stanford.edu www.un.org www.solen.info sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov www.isthisthingon.org helioviewer.org earthquakescanada.nrcan.gc.ca www.fbodaily.com thisistheendoftheworldasweknowit.com www.thepeoplesvoice.org www.sunrisesunset.com www.weathermodification.com www.huffingtonpost.com www.sott.net maps.google.com www.weather.com showme.net earthquake.usgs.gov iswa.ccmc.gsfc.nasa.gov www.fox.com 6888comete.free.fr www2.nict.go.jp pixie.spasci.com pixie.spasci.com www.stormsurfing.com aurora.phys.ucalgary.ca highercalling88.com sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov www.hamqsl.com explore.dailymail.co.uk www.youtube.com volcanoes.usgs.gov folkworm.ceri.memphis.edu earthquake.usgs.gov aslwww.cr.usgs.gov earthquake.usgs.gov earthquake.usgs.gov www.fs.fed.us www.pnsn.org earthquakescanada.nrcan.gc.ca blogs.nasa.gov www.intellicast.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Former Delegate Pat McGeehan speaks on behalf of Mitch Carmichael for Governor, delivering a message of Life, Liberty, and Property.