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Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Eric Matthew Frein Named as Suspect in Pennsylvania State Police Deadly Shooting

Pennsylvania State Police have named Eric Matthew Frein as a suspect in the deadly shooting at PSP Blooming Grove. He is armed and dangerous- Police say if you see Frein do not approach- Call State Police Immediately.
The Tip Line- number is 1-866-326-7256.
There's now a reward of up to 75-thousand dollars being offered for any information that leads to an arrest.

Source

11 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  2. Maybe it will be you or you're family member that gets it one day, Hopefully.

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  3. Anonymous Anonymous said...
    Maybe it will be you or you're family member that gets it one day, Hopefully.

    September 16, 2014 at 8:22 PM

    I/we have more chance being killed by a cop than a terrorist or criminal.

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  4. Which is lower than getting struck by lightening.

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  5. Anonymous Anonymous said...
    Which is lower than getting struck by lightening.

    September 17, 2014 at 2:19 AM

    Only in your mind. In 2013 cops killed 309 people according to a list I found, which does not seem accurate since LAPD kills one person a week on average. You do the math. As a bonus, I included how many cops were killed in a year. Not very many at all, especially when compared to citizens and their pets.

    AND, in 2009, 127 law enforcement officers died in the line of duty in the United States, but only 57 were murdered. The remainder died in vehicle and aircraft accidents, of heart attacks or job-related illnesses, or by other non-criminal means.


    According to the NOAA, over the last 20 years, the United States averaged 51 annual lightning strike fatalities, placing it in the second position, just behind floods for deadly weather.[4][5] In the US, between 9% and 10% of those struck die,[6] for an average of 40 to 50 deaths per year (28 in 2008).[7] The chance of an average person living in the US being struck by lightning in a given year is estimated at 1 in 500,000, while the chance of being struck by lightning in a lifetime is 1 in 6250 (estimated lifespan of 80 years).[8]

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  6. This guy was pissed at cops bad enough to go out and shoot them while they worked. I wonder what made him so angry at them that he resorted to such violent revenge. What could have been the perceived injustice that made him want to commit such a violent response? Although extreme, I'm sure there was a reason in his mind. We'll never hear it though. He is a dead man running. The cops have no intention of taking him alive. He will be killed regardless of whether he resists, or not. The only possible way he will survive to stand trial is if he publicly gives up through an attorney, with the media covering it.

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  7. 10:07 AM

    You are probably correct, the cops have to have their pound of flesh.

    They have an omelet to make.

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  8. They'll never pay a dime to anyone for his arrest. When they receive information as to his whereabouts, they will go straight there and kill him. There will be no arrest attempted, and no money will be paid to any informant.

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  9. I don't think he intends to be taken alive, 10:07.
    And "perceived injustice"?? There are enough REAL injustices - maybe his kid was gunned down because some cop couldn't tell the difference between an air gun and a rifle -- that he didn't NEED to make up any.
    Entropy. In full swing.

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  10. 11:46 AM: Perceived injustices are ALWAYS real injustices to the one who perceives them. Perceptions can be based on false assumptions, but they are never the less real to the person. With out the shooter's "story," everything else is just conjecture. And without knowing his story, you are just "making up" an injustice......

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