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Friday, July 12, 2019

Gang-Like Secret Society Within The L.A. County Sheriff's Department


For years I have been talking about corruption in law enforcement except within the Los Angeles Police Department. This is a very uncomfortable subject for everyone. As the sister of an LAPD Officer, Frank Jerry Seviane (Serial No. 32809), I was severely harassed, verbally abused and terrorized by my own brother for many years over jealously, greed and revenge. The revenge started when I reported the attacks and his past personal and financial relationship with Federal Prisoner Colin Nathanson. And it escalated to a very dangerous degree in 2018 because the LAPD repeatedly remained complicit and even covered up for him by ignoring evidence, falsifying documentation and manipulating investigation results. When I felt that my safety, security, freedom and very life were in jeopardy, I started openly writing about it in the public domain.

Unfortunately, here is another story of corruption in law enforcement except within the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Jacqueline Sebiane

FBI INVESTIGATING TATTOOED DEPUTY GANGS IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT

By Maya Lau and Joel Rubin, Los Angeles Times
JulY 11, 2019 | 10:00 AM

The FBI is investigating a secret society of tattooed deputies in East Los Angeles as well as similar gang-like groups elsewhere within the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, multiple people familiar with the inquiry said.

The federal probe follows allegations of beatings and harassment by members of the Banditos, a group of deputies assigned to the Sheriff’s Department’s East L.A. station who brand themselves with matching tattoos of a skeleton outfitted with a sombrero, bandolier and pistol. The clique’s members are accused by other deputies of using gang-like tactics to recruit young Latino deputies into their fold and retaliating against those who rebuff them.
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In interviews with several deputies, FBI agents have asked about the inner workings of the Banditos and the group’s hierarchy, according to three people with close knowledge of the matter who spoke to The Times on the condition that their names not be used because the investigation is ongoing.

In particular, the sources said, agents have been trying to determine whether leaders of the Banditos require or encourage aspiring members to commit criminal acts, such as planting evidence or writing false incident reports, to secure membership in the group.

The agents also have inquired about other groups known to exist in the department, which has nearly 10,000 deputies and polices large swaths of the sprawling county. They have asked for information about the tattoos and practices of the Spartans and Regulators in the department’s Century station, and the Reapers, who operate out of a station in South Los Angeles, according to the sources.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said he could not comment when asked about the FBI probe Wednesday. An FBI spokeswoman also declined to provide any information.

The inquiry marks the return of federal law enforcement authorities tasked with digging around in the Sheriff’s Department, which has been beset by episodes of corruption and mismanagement in the last several years.

In 2011, the FBI secretly opened an investigation into reports of inmate abuse by deputies working in the county jails. The sweeping probe involving an inmate who served as an undercover informant upended the insular department, sending several deputies to prison for beatings and cover-ups. Former Sheriff Lee Baca, his second-in-command and other senior staff were convicted of conspiring to obstruct the FBI.

The current investigation appears to have been spurred by a group of deputies who in March filed a legal claim against the county accusing Sheriff’s Department officials of failing to address a hostile work environment in the East L.A. station. The deputies say Bandito leaders, who are alleged to control key elements of station operations, put others’ lives at risk by not sending backup to help on dangerous calls, enforced illegal arrest quotas and carried out other forms of harassment.

The claim, a precursor to a lawsuit, focuses on what deputies say was an unprovoked attack by members of the Banditos during an off-duty party in the early morning hours of Sept. 28 at Kennedy Hall, an event space near the station.

The altercation started when four Banditos began harassing a rookie, according to the claim. Two other deputies said they intervened; one was struck repeatedly in the face, while the other was punched and kicked multiple times before being choked and losing consciousness, the claim says.

The lawmen accused in the claim — Deputies David Silverio, Gregory Rodriguez and Rafael Munoz, and Sgt. Mike Hernandez — were placed on paid administrative leave after the incident. The Sheriff’s Department presented a criminal case involving the four men to the district attorney’s office on June 19.

Greg Risling, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office, said Wednesday that charges have not been filed and that the case remains under review. He declined to comment when asked whether federal officials have asked his office to hold off on the prosecution.

Villanueva has repeatedly downplayed the significance of tattooed deputy groups in his ranks, calling them a “cultural norm” and a source of intergenerational hazing among lawmen. He said there is nothing wrong with the clubs as long as they don’t promote misconduct.

Still, he acknowledged the pervasive influence of the Banditos at the East L.A. station, saying they “ran roughshod” over the previous captain and dictated where deputies would be assigned, enabled by the weak leadership of past administrations.

He said that his first act upon taking office Dec. 3 was to bring in a new captain, Ernie Chavez, to quell the Banditos situation.

“Chavez identified the problem and the problem players, and he’s been doing a commendable job of sifting through them to get the station up and running to serve the community,” Villanueva said.

Last month, Villanueva announced a new policy that specifically bars department members from participating in any groups that promote conduct that violates the rights of other employees or the public. The policy says such groups often organize under a symbol or tattoo and increase the risk of civil liability to the agency.

He said the 1st Amendment prevents him from barring deputies from getting tattooed, but he said having matching ink is a “dumb idea” because of potential lawsuits in “today’s litigious society.” He advises those with the coordinated tattoos to get them removed, if they can.

The sheriff claims he transferred from the station 36 people who were associated with the Banditos or were otherwise identified as problematic. But Chavez, in an interview Wednesday, said that the 36 transfers simply reflect the general group of deputies who left the station since January and that the departures were voluntary, some because of promotions. He said he did not know how many people allegedly tied to the Banditos were transferred.

Villanueva said he thinks there is no longer a hostile work environment at the East L.A. station.

“Now that it’s been broken up and scattered, I’d say yeah, it’s over,” he said.

Vincent Miller, an attorney for the deputies who filed the claim about the Banditos, said any changes at the station have been cosmetic and have failed to abolish the toxic work environment there. He said the department has not held the problematic deputies accountable and that some of his clients have suffered ongoing emotional stress because of the situation, prompting him to file additional grievances in the case.
“The captain and everyone else at East L.A. station knows they haven’t transferred 36 deputies, and the real number is just six,” Miller said. “We specifically filed the supplemental claims very recently because the cop gang problem has not been fixed.”

Though reports about cliques of law enforcement officers occasionally surface across the country, no agency has received more public scrutiny for them than the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

The secretive groups have been entrenched in the department for decades. Defenders say the cliques are harmless fraternities, likening them to close-knit groups in the military. But time and again, the deputy clubs have come under fire for promoting aggressive tactics and an us-versus-everyone mentality.

A watchdog panel in 1992 pressed the Sheriff’s Department to address the problem. Two decades later, a blue-ribbon commission sharply criticized the department for turning a blind eye and allowing the groups to use excessive force against people in the county jails and on the streets.

The Times reported last year that a new tattooed club of lawmen surfaced at the Compton station after a deputy there admitted under oath to having ink of a skeleton holding a rifle. The deputy — who was accused of excessive force in the fatal shooting of an unarmed man — said as many as 20 of his colleagues have the same tattoo.

The county recently reached a $7-million settlement in a lawsuit after attorneys for the slain man’s family said the shooting was driven by the hard-charging policing of inked deputies.

In a separate case last year, a Palmdale station deputy admitted in a deposition to having a tattoo of a skull in a cowboy hat that matched the ink of several other lawmen at his station.

More recently, internal documents showed that Deputy Caren Carl Mandoyan — who was fired for domestic violence and dishonesty and later was rehired by Villanueva — acknowledged having a tattoo as a member of the Reapers.

Villanueva said Wednesday he does not believe there are problems with deputy groups at any other stations.

The alleged attack by Banditos on fellow deputies echoed a 2010 incident in which a clique of deputies from a high-security floor in Men’s Central Jail brawled with other deputies at a Christmas party. Sheriff’s Department officials accused the group of using gang-like hand signs and said jailers tried to “earn their ink” by breaking inmates’ bones.

The recent allegations are not the first against the Banditos. In 2014, the county paid a female deputy assigned to the East L.A. station $1.5 million to settle a lawsuit in which she claimed she had been physically and mentally harassed by some of the clique’s 80 members after refusing to go along with their “traditions and initiation rituals.”

At the time, then-interim Sheriff John Scott announced that he would share the results of an investigation into claims of bullying by the Banditos. The probe, however, has remained confidential.

Source: Los Angeles Times.

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Violation Of A Physician's Code Of Ethics And Code Of Conduct

What has the world come to when you can't even trust your doctor?  Criminals belong in jail; point blank, period.

UCLA Health has created a website to provide information and resources to patients following the charges against former UCLA employee, Dr. James Heaps.


INFO ON THE INVESTIGATION OF DR. JAMES HEAPS

Health and well-being is our mission, starting with safety. At UCLA Health we are advancing our organization's policies and practices to prevent and take action against sexual misconduct. That starts with maintaining open dialogue with our patients.

SITUATION


Dr. James Heaps was employed at UCLA Health as an obstetrician-gynecologist from February 2014 to June 2018. He completed his internship and residency in that field and a fellowship in gynecologic oncology at the School of Medicine from 1983-1989. From 1990 to January 31, 2014, Dr. Heaps' private practice was independent from UCLA Health, but he had privileges at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, and from 1989 until 2018, he served on the Medical School faculty. During his internship, residency, and fellowship, and extending until June 2010, Dr. Heaps was a consulting physician for UCLA Student Health.

In 2018, UCLA investigated Dr. Heaps for sexual misconduct and improper billing practices. We reported him to the Medical Board of California, and the US Department of Health & Human Services Office of Inspector General (“OIG”), and law enforcement. We also informed Dr. Heaps that his employment was being terminated, after which he announced he was retiring.

INFORMATION RESOURCES




Media Inquiries: UCLA Health Media Relations

QUESTIONS & ANWSERS

What were the misconduct complaints against Heaps?

The complaint that triggered our investigation and ultimately Dr. Heaps' termination was of inappropriate and medically unnecessary touching and communications during a gynecologic procedure. Through the investigation and since then, we also have become aware of similar allegations by three other patients of Dr. Heaps, and we substantiated allegations of billing irregularities and violation of our Sexual Violence and Sexual Harassment policy.


For what period of time was Dr. Heaps employed by UCLA?

Dr. Heaps was employed by UCLA as an ob-gyn from 2014 to 2018. Dr. Heaps did his internship and residency in obstetrics and gynecology and a fellowship in gynecologic oncology at UCLA School of Medicine from 1983 to 1989. From 1990 to January 31, 2014, Dr. Heaps' private practice was independent from UCLA Health, but Dr. Heaps had privileges at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, and from 1989 until 2018, Dr. Heaps served on the UCLA Medical School faculty. During his internship, residence, and fellowship, and until June of 2010, Dr. Heaps was a consulting physician for UCLA Student Health.


Were any of Dr. Heaps’ former patients UCLA students?

Yes. Dr. Heaps worked on a part-time basis at the UCLA student health center from approximately 1983 through June of 2010. He may also have seen students by referral at his private practice prior to 2014 and then as a UCLA Health employee from 2014-2018.


What steps is UCLA taking?

Sexual harassment or sexual violence against anyone is unacceptable. We are deeply sorry that a former member of our staff violated our policies and standards, our trust, and the trust of his patients. Because we know we can and must do better, in March 2019, we initiated an independent review of our institution's response to sexual misconduct in clinical settings. The review is examining UCLA’s response to such conduct and whether our policies and procedures to prevent, identify and address sexual misconduct are consistent with best practices and reflect the high standard of patient care we demand of ourselves. Based on the findings of the review, we will identify and implement necessary changes across all of UCLA’s clinical sites. Our process will be guided by the principles of transparency, accountability, fairness and devotion to our patients.

If you are a former patient of Dr. James Heaps and want to report improper behavior, or are in need of support services, please contact the patient assistance hotline at (888) 961-9273.



Source: UCLA Health


Sunday, July 7, 2019

USA vs. Netherlands 2019 - Team USA All The Way


Match: U.S. Women’s National Team vs. Netherlands
Date: July 7, 2019
Competition: 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup; Final
Venue: Stade de Lyon; Lyon, France
Kickoff: 11 a.m. ET (5 p.m. local)

LYON, France (July 7, 2019) – A sellout crowd of 57,900 fans that thundered “USA” chants throughout the game turned up at Stade de Lyon to witness the U.S. Women’s National Team claim its record fourth FIFA Women’s World Cup title with a 2-0 triumph over 2017 UEFA Women’s Euro champions the Netherlands. Megan Rapinoe, who was awarded the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player and the Golden Boot as its top scorer with six goals and three assists in 428 minutes played, opened the scoring for the USA in the second half, and Rose Lavelle, who was awarded the Bronze Ball, scored the USA’s second goal of the Final, as the USWNT authored another entry in the history books as the highest scoring team in Women’s World Cup history with 26 goals scored. The world title makes the USA only the second nation to successfully defend a World Cup crown. 


U.S. head coach Jill Ellis, who is now only four wins short of becoming the winningest coach in USWNT history, made two changes to the USA’s starting XI, returning Rapinoe to the forward line alongside Silver Boot winner Alex Morgan (six goals, three assists in 490 minutes played) and offensive dynamo Tobin Heath after she sat out the England match with a strained hamstring, and drafting Samantha Mewis into midfield alongside defensive stalwart Julie Ertz and the all-around brilliant Lavelle.  


The U.S. was methodical in its approach to the game, attacking the flanks of the Dutch defense early and often in an effort to spread the field and create chances for its plethora of attacking talents. Despite dominating 60 percent of possession in the first half, the U.S. initially had some difficulty with a packed-in Netherlands squad as neither team recorded a shot on goal in the first 20 minutes. However, as the half wore on, the USA found set pieces we’re a profitable avenue for generating shots on goal, ultimately ending the half with four on target that forced Netherlands goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal to make as many save in the opening 45 as she’d had to make in the entirety of any previous match in the tournament. 


Veenendaal, who was awarded the Golden Glove as the tournament’s best ‘keeper, showed why she had been given that distinction beginning in the 27th minute when she batted away a blistering volley from Ertz. She then parried a point-blank header from Mewis before recovering to claw a Morgan redirection back as it rolled toward the goal line moments later in the 37th minute. Veenendaal brilliantly denied Morgan a second time in the 40th minute when the U.S. forward curled a left-footed drive toward the bottom right corner. 

After being held without a touch in the USA penalty area for nearly the entire opening 45 minutes, the Dutch conjured a late flurry of offense but was unable to truly trouble Alyssa Naeher in the U.S. goal as the USWNT defense cleared away the Netherlands three crosses into the box. 


At halftime, veteran defender Ali Krieger entered the game for right back Kelley O’Hara who was withdrawn after suffering a knock in the final moments of the first half. 


Krieger proved an assured deputy as the U.S. continued its dominance in the second half, finally finding the crucial breakthrough near the hour mark. A long ball over the Netherlands defense for Morgan resulted in Stefanie van der Gragt missing an attempt to clear the ball and instead kicking Morgan with a high boot. French referee Stephanie Frappart consulted a replay after the Video Assistant Referee contacted her and duly awarded the U.S. a penalty kick. 


After Veenendaal made the first move, Rapinoe sent the spot kick into the lower right side of the goal to give the USA the 1-0 lead and become the oldest player (34 years and two days) to score in a World Cup final, breaking Carli Lloyd’s record set in the 2015 edition of the tournament. 


Eight minutes later Lavelle gave the USA much deserved breathing room with a fantastic strike into the lower right corner after carrying the ball from midfield to the edge of the Netherlands penalty area. 


The 2-0 score line in favor of the U.S. forced the Netherlands forward which opened up the game and played into the American’s preferred style of counterattacking as Heath, Morgan and Dunn all drew impressive stops from Veenendaal over the final 20 minutes. 

Naeher and the U.S. defense did their part at the other end, limiting the Netherlands to four second half shots, only one of which was on goal. 

The USA’s historic World Cup title triumph that was celebrated by thousands of fans across France and the United States who attended matches and tuned into games in record numbers throughout the tournament comes 33 years and a continent away from the U.S. Women’s National Team first ever program win, a 2-0 result against Canada in Blaine, Minnesota on July 7, 1986. 

Source: The United States Soccer Federation, Inc.

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Born In The USA



Freedom is EVERYTHING. Respect and cherish your freedom. Uplift and uphold each and every past and present member of the United States military who fight and fought for your right to be free. To all Americans, love, protect and take care of our country. Obey the laws and conduct yourself in a respectable manner.

 Jacqueline Sebiane (born in the USA)

Ownership Statement: The written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane which is deemed and construed to be original is the sole and exclusive property of the author, Jacqueline Sebiane.  All right, title and interest in and to the intellectual property rights of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane shall vest solely in the author.  Any unauthorized use or duplication of the written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane, or any portion thereof, is expressly prohibited.  

Friday, June 28, 2019

ELDER ABUSE ALERT – LISBETH “LIZ” SEBIANE AKA LIZ SEVIANE

This posting is directed to my estranged sibling Liz Sebiane. When I say estranged, I mean persona non grata to the millionth power. It is also a public safety alert, a tip-off to law enforcement (i.e., the LAPD, the L.A. County Sheriff, the San Bernardino Sheriff and the Upland Police), to San Bernardino County District Attorney Jason Anderson, to Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey and to Adult Protective Services in both Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County.

Liz, or are you using a different name again? The fact that you go by so many aliases (i.e., Lisbeth Sebiane, Liz Seviane, Lizabeth Seviane Bermudez, Lizbeth Seviane Bermudez, Lizbeth Maria de la Trinidad Sebiani, etc.) is very suspicious. Exactly what is your real name as stated on your “Costa Rican” birth certificate? Your last name was definitely never legally Bermudez as that is the surname of the married man you had a child with over 40 years ago who is still married to his wife and was arrested for human trafficking while he was in an inappropriate relationship with you.
  
So “Liz” it came to my attention that on June 24, 2019 you once again illegally accessed my elderly mother’s personal health information by making an intentional material misrepresentation to a health care worker to induce that worker into disclosing my mother’s private test results to you. For years you have persistently and illegally been infiltrating the health care system holding my mother’s records (and legally bound to the HIPPA Privacy Rule) through fraud to gain illegal access to her medical records and personal health information as part of a very sinister scheme for personal financial gain. For years you have been misusing my mother’s health care system as a platform to propagate a falsehood to advance your scheme for personal financial gain repeatedly lying to doctors and health care workers because you know that they are mandated reporters. For years you have been using my poor elderly mother as a pawn to try and get at her real estate even using my late elderly father, who by no mistake, suspiciously died at your home in Upland, California USA. For years you have filed false police reports, false elder abuse reports, lied to police officers, lied to detectives and lied to social workers; all to bump me off so you could take advantage of my mother and go after her real property. In collusion with and under the tutelage of your dishonest LAPD brother, Frank Jerry Seviane (Serial #32809) whose own motives were greed and revenge, you have, for years, used the L.A. County Sheriff as a surrogate for illegal activity to gain access to our residence to steal our personal belongings under the guise of a “welfare check” and other swatting style calls to the police. You’ve stolen money, mail, documents, prescription drugs, cherished photographs, jewelry, credit cards, driver’s licenses and both of my parents Social Security Cards; always by running a ruse on my elderly mother and the L.A. County Sheriff.  Twice by deception you took my elderly mother out of her home and held her against her will, forced her to go to an unethical lawyer who you used to try to blackmail me and caused her significant financial damage. You have unnecessarily subjected my mother to interrogation and investigation grossly violating her privacy and personal peace in a total disregard for her debilitating health issues. With your filthy lies, you methodically caused a rift in between her and her other children and all of her other familial relationships causing her great pain and isolation.

Your ongoing attempt to assume a forced fiduciary of my mother to take financial advantage of her and especially to take her real property has been thwarted by me.

I believe 100% that you hastened my late father’s death to clean out his Costa Rican and American bank accounts, collect on a life insurance policy and attempt a hostile takeover of his other assets; including his real property. For years before his traumatic brain injury you and your boyfriend Richard Diaz took advantage of my elderly father’s vulnerabilities (namely his declining health) to set yourself up financially. You went after his assets and real property in Costa Rica while he was still alive and even listed yourself as the only child of my father and mother with the Costa Rican government. And in order to do that you fraudulently obtained a Cedula (# 105720016) and falsely registered as a permanent resident of Costa Rica when, in fact, you are a permanent resident of the USA and living in Upland, CA. After my father’s severe ischemic stroke, you muted my mother and took over at the hospital with a suspicious, unofficial document (that you clearly composed and forged with my father's signature) then failed to get him therapy so he would remain paralyzed and unable to eat, drink or talk. Without my mother's consent and against her wishes, you then methodically transported him almost 60 miles away from his legal residence so he would die at your home. You prevented my mother from being alone with my father on his death bed because you were afraid of what he might say to her with what slight words he could utter in his weakened, dying state. And when he died, in collusion with your other two siblings, LAPD Officer Frank Jerry Seviane (Serial #32809) and Ana Lorraine Seviane Wilson Giras, you lied to the funeral home stating he only had three children eliminating me so all three of you could sign off on a cremation against my wishes to burn the evidence of my father's remains before an autopsy could be conducted. You then methodically put your name on my father’s death certificate, refused to give my mother custody of his ashes and refused to give her a copy of his death certificate. Then, with his death certificate, original Social Security Card and original CA Driver’s license (both that you stole) and, I'm sure, other forged or fraudulent documents, you proceeded to facilitate the disappearance of all of my father’s financial assets leaving my elderly mother broke with little resources to survive. And low and behold, immediately after my father’s untimely death, you and your daughter Dyeana Lorraine Bermudez (who also goes by numerous aliases including Dyeana Seviane) suddenly came into financial wealth of an unverifiable origin. https://jacqibone.blogspot.com/2020/12/shining-law-enforcement-spotlight-on.html You then made a trip to the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder and made an unsuccessful fraudulent attempt to take my father’s interest in my mother’s real property. And since that time, you have relentlessly harassed me and my mother pulling scheme after scheme in an attempt to get at what is now our property by proper legal process.

I am telling you right now that the jig is up. Your reign of terror is over. You WILL be held legally accountable for your crime spree. That is a promise.

Jacqueline Sebiane

Ownership Statement: The written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane which is deemed and construed to be original is the sole and exclusive property of the author, Jacqueline Sebiane.  All right, title and interest in and to the intellectual property rights of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane shall vest solely in the author.  Any unauthorized use or duplication of the written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane, or any portion thereof, is expressly prohibited.  


Thursday, June 27, 2019

El Segundo PD Crime Stoppers Public Service Announcement

Below is a crime stopping Public Service Announcement by the El Segundo Police Department. I am passionate about exposing people engaging in corrupt acts and criminal activity. I am passionate about seeking justice for the innocent victims of crime and corruption. Thank you for your hard work El Segundo PD.



A recent wallet theft from a local grocery store has prompted ESPD to send out a PSA regarding theft.
Imagine you have loaded up your grocery cart and leave your purse or wallet unattended in the cart for a second while you reach for an item. What you don’t realize is that someone has been watching you waiting for the chance to steal your purse/wallet. While your back is turned, the criminal will quickly grab your purse/wallet and leave before you even know what happened. Criminals watch for this and react quickly to remain undetected. Before you are even done shopping, the criminal has already left and is using your credit card in other stores to make illegal purchases.These thieves also target you while you are eating at a restaurant. Purses hung over the back of chairs are easy targets for these criminals. The crook will sit down near you and slyly reach into your purse to steal the wallet.Please watch the short clip below that captured a thief doing this at restaurant in El Segundo.

Always remember…See Something, Say Something!

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Beth Chapman Has Passed Away; Prayers For Duane "Dog" Chapman


Sunday, June 23, 2019

Good People, Good Vibes, Good Things; Bad People, Bad Vibes, Bad Things



Have you ever felt the sting after your voluntary or involuntary brush with a bad person or bad group of people? Has your life or life circumstances ever been impacted by the malfeasance or ill will of others? 

My life has been severely impacted by the dysfunctional nuclear family I was born into. My estranged siblings are a dysfunctional mess still seething in childhood jealousy and now greed for their quest in what they ignorantly and incorrectly perceive as a right to an inheritance. My connection to them is involuntary; consanguineous only. There is a reason for the saying... "you can pick your friends but not your family." Long ago I felt that sting I reference in the paragraph above and I disassociated from my ugly siblings completely. Nevertheless I have been the subject of their fixation and vicious attacks. And as you have read, one is a wayward cop, LAPD Officer Frank Jerry Seviane (Serial #13809), who has, for years, resorted to illegal tactics in collusion with his other two siblings for revenge, greed and to cover up his past association with Federal prisoner Colin Nathanson. My siblings have never won the battle nor the war that they collectively created in their sick minds. They only strengthened my character and my resolve to use my story to help other victims of sibling abuse and domestic abuse.

So, I say this from experience, my friends, be alert and aware enough to recognize people who do not have your best interest in mind and run, don't walk, away from them. Only surround yourself with good, decent people who uplift you, treat you with respect and have your best interest at heart.

Jacqueline Sebiane


Ownership Statement: The written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane which is deemed and construed to be original is the sole and exclusive property of the author, Jacqueline Sebiane.  All right, title and interest in and to the intellectual property rights of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane shall vest solely in the author.  Any unauthorized use or duplication of the written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane, or any portion thereof, is expressly prohibited.  

Saturday, June 22, 2019

DIRTY LAPD Detective Ryan Caplette Caught In The Act


There are so many “wolves in sheep’s clothing” working as cops at the Los Angeles Police Department. And my estranged brother, LAPD Officer Frank Jerry Seviane (Serial #32809), is one of them. His past personal and financial involvement with Federal Prisoner Colin Nathanson of South Africa, a con man convicted of defrauding investors out of approximately $55 Million through a fraudulent investment scheme, was and is a disqualifier for Officer Seviane’s current employment as a peace officer for the LAPD. However, I will resume with that subject matter in future postings. For now, the spotlight is on LAPD Detective Ryan Caplette; a 42 year old man of Torrance, CA USA who has been employed with the LAPD since 2008. Caplette was recently caught and arrested, while off-duty, for secretly filming men in a public restroom. Since there is a reasonable expectation of privacy in a public restroom, the affected parties’ legal rights to privacy were violated as it is logical to assume that the affected parties did not give Caplette consent to film them. And it is fairly obviously that Caplette was collecting this video footage for some nefarious purpose.

Below are some details to the story by NBC News

EVIDENCE SUPPORTS ALLEGED FILMING BY OFF-DUTY DETECTIVE IN ANGEL STADIUM BATHROOM, POLICE SAY

By Eric Leonard and Phil Drechsler Of NBC Los Angeles

Published Jun 19, 2019 at 4:16 PM | Updated at 6:16 PM PDT on Jun 19, 2019

Police in Anaheim said Wednesday investigators have found video evidence that backs up allegations an off-duty LAPD detective, who also serves as a department chaplain, was making video recordings inside a men's room while attending a baseball game at Angel Stadium.

Detectives obtained a search warrant for a portable electronic device that contained the recordings, Anaheim Police Sgt. Daron Wyatt confirmed.

Evidence that supports the bathroom videotaping claim were recovered, he said, though he declined to describe the recording device. Police were called June 8 after another person attending the game reported someone was recording inside a men's room.

Anaheim police said officers issued a citation to LAPD Detective Ryan P. Caplette and Caplette was released. No criminal charges have been filed.

"These allegations, if true, are deeply disgusting; filming inside a public restroom is unacceptable and inexcusable," the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the officers' union, said in a statement. "Police officers are entrusted to protect the public, not exploit them. There is no room in law enforcement for anyone who violates that trust."

Caplette has been assigned to home while the incident is investigated, an LAPD spokesperson said. He worked at the Department's Employee Relations Group, which handles workplace and labor issues. Caplette also served as one of the departments peer support officers with experience in "Christianity struggles."

LAPD records show he was hired in 2008.

The department declined to comment on his involvement with Big Brothers Big Sisters Los Angeles, which recognized Caplette at an awards banquet in 2017, according to photos from the event posted online.

"We are aware of the allegations and are actively monitoring the situation. Our thoughts are with the individuals who have been impacted," Big Brothers Big Sisters Los Angeles said in a statement Wednesday.

Wyatt said if Anaheim investigators saw evidence that related to additional incidents that occurred in other locations, the local law enforcement agencies there would be notified.

He could not confirm whether or not that had happened.

An official familiar with the LAPD's side of the investigation told NBCLA its internal affairs detectives were checking reports some video records found on the device appeared to have been made inside restrooms and locker rooms at the LAPD's Headquarters building in downtown LA.

Ownership Statement: The written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane which is deemed and construed to be original is the sole and exclusive property of the author, Jacqueline Sebiane.  All right, title and interest in and to the intellectual property rights of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane shall vest solely in the author.  Any unauthorized use or duplication of the written content of The Blog by Jacqueline Sebiane, or any portion thereof, is expressly prohibited.  

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The Eyes Of A Deranged Would-Be Killer


Photojournalist Tom Fox captured this image before running behind a column. Fox's first instinct when he saw the gunman had been to reach for his camera. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News via AP)

THE WASHINGTON POST
By Eli Rosenberg 
June 18, 2019 at 7:20 AM

A gunman clad in a mask, tactical gear and high-powered rifle opened fire outside a federal building in Dallas on Monday, causing alarm and panic but no injuries before the man was fatally shot by the police.

The shooting was reported widely. But perhaps the best documentation of the incident came from Tom Fox, a photographer for the Dallas Morning News.

Fox was there at the beginning of what would have been a typical day for any metro journalist: he was headed to the inauguration for the city’s new mayor but first stopped by the building, which houses a federal courthouse, to take photos of a defendant in a case about charter school fraud.

So he was waiting right in front of the building when the gunman, whom authorities identified as former Army infantryman Brian Isaack Clyde, showed up and opened fire.

Instead of running, Fox’s first instinct was to take photos. The results offered a rare glimpse of an active shooting from the perspective of someone in the immediate path of danger.

Fox captured one of the gunman, taken from just a few meters away, as the man approached the building in a low walk, his gloved hands holding a gun and ammunition clips racked on his belt. Authorities later said that the man had five 30-round magazines.

He also got photos of people, a security guard and a man in a suit fleeing as the gunman released a volley of shots. Then he jumped behind a column near the building’s entrance, attempting to make himself “as small as possible,” according to an account he gave to the Dallas Morning News.

“I just stood there and prayed that he wouldn’t walk past me,” Fox said. “Because if he walks past me and sees me, he’s going to shoot me. He’s already got the gun out."



Fox, who did not respond to an interview request from The Washington Post, shot video as well, including one recorded in the harrowing moments after the gunman retreated across the street.

The video captures Fox talking to unidentified authorities, potentially law enforcement, who ask where the gunman went.

Fox can be heard panting. “He didn’t go past me,” he tells them. “He was here and came this way.”

Video taken by another bystander from high above the street shows just how close Fox was to the shooter. The gunman runs up to the front of the federal building, at one point appearing to shoot toward the front entrance.
The shots reverberate down the block.

“Holy crap,” the person holding the camera says.
The entrance to the building is framed by two bulky columns that jut out from its exterior.

Fox hides behind one, unseen by the gunman, but just a few steps away.

The gunman then retreats, apparently after taking fire himself. He runs to a parking lot across the street; more shots ring out in his direction. Fox continued to take photos.

It is not clear whether the shots that damaged the building’s front doors were fired by the shooter or law enforcement officials.

Eventually, the gunman fell to the ground.

Fox took more photos and video of the gunman, then shirtless and injured, and the emergency responders that surrounded him.

He told the Morning News, where he has worked for 29 years, that the most perilous situation he’d ever faced on the job was a pack of hungry pit bulls he fended off in Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina. He said he’d never been shot at. That his first move was to grab his camera was simple reflex.
“Your journalistic instincts just kick in,” he said. “You use the camera almost as a shield. I also felt a journalistic duty to do all that.”

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Love Eases Pain


Pain is universal. And some pain is inflicted upon us by unforeseen events (e.g., a serious or terminal diagnosis, the death of a loved one, etc.) or unspeakable acts perpetrated against us by malicious, evil people. I know deep pain and I can sense pain in others even when they don't articulate it to me verbally. I learned how to love by the pain that was inflicted upon me. And I give love unconditionally because of it. So I ask you readers to do the same as you never know what someone is going through. The love you give may be the saving grace of that someone you know or encounter that is in deep pain that they don't talk about.

Jacqueline Sebiane


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Sunday, June 2, 2019

Food For Thought For The Cell Phone Addicts


























Have you ever been eating or visiting with someone who abruptly answers a call or rudely sends texts messages while in the middle of your time with them?  Have you ever seen a pedestrian walking on the streets or through a cross walk totally staring at their cell phone instead of paying attention to their surroundings?  People are so addicted to their cell phones these days that they just can't put them phone down. They even risk their own safety and that of others just to talk, send text messages and/or take selfies unbelievably while driving. My estranged brother, Frank Jerry Seviane, is one of those people and he is, astonishingly, a veteran police officer for the Los Angeles Police Department (#32809). And yes he spells our last name slightly different than me; it's not a typo. Anyhow, on the evening of April 28, 2018 he was driving while talking on his cell phone and caused a traffic collision that totaled out his expensive, leased Mercedes Benz (i.e., property of Mercedes Benz). His reckless distracted driving also caused other significant property damage as well as bodily injury. Whereas any civilian would be held legally responsible for this illegal act, he somehow skated away without accountability due, in my opinion, to the thin blue line and his commanding officers at LAPD 77th Community Station repeatedly turning a blind eye to his ongoing, outrageous conduct as well as covering up for him. Police Officers should be held to a higher standard and should lead by example. They should not be given immunity when breaking laws they are supposed to enforce. And when the "no texting while driving" law became effective in California USA, I was dating a 28 year old California Highway Patrol Officer named Bryan Walker who literally said to me that he could care less if people texted while driving. Unbelievable!

Distracted driving is a material consequence of the mass cell phone obsession. Distracted driving is rampant. Don't be reckless or willfully negligent like my estranged LAPD brother. Stay off your cell phone while driving. By all means, enjoy your cell phone but not so much so that you are disregarding or disrespecting the people around you or putting lives in danger; including your own.

Jacqueline Sebiane