I thought I had a good memory. 10-15 years ago, we had a criminal suspect in our cul-de-sac. He’d crashed his stolen car a block or two over, and ended up knocking on my door asking to use a phone. He seemed a bit off, so I declined.
Police officer came by within an hour or two to show me a photo lineup, presumably including the guy. I literally couldn’t pick him out of a line up.
I once looked at a photo lineup because the police called, sounding urgent, wanting me to look at these pictures. It had been about two weeks before I had been assaulted in my own home. So I looked and in the lineup was a guy I was sure was the one. I told them so and they looked disappointed, thanked me for my time, and left. The next morning, in the newspaper, there was an article about a local murder, and the picture of the accused was one I recognized from the lineup, but not the guy who had attacked me… So they weren’t really workin on MY case but trying to pin something else on the shooter. Jerks.
I have a serious question. All FBI Agents are called “Special Agent Jones.” Are any FBI agents NOT special? If so, what does it take to be promoted from Agent to Special Agent? If all agents ARE special, then why bother with the modifier?
I don’t think there are any “agents” in the FBI , but there are in other agencies. Which is part of the reason for FBI agents being special agents - government often uses the same title , pay grades etc for different agencies and special agents need to be distinguished from agents even if a particular agency has either one or the other but not both. Also ( and I’m not 100% sure about this) special agents both investigate and arrests while agents have the authority to do one or the other but not both.
In most all Federal agencies- A Special Agent carries a gun and has the powers of arrest. Look at the different from a IRS Revenue Agent (a tax auditor, with indeed, quite some authority) and a IRS Special Agent who investigates Criminal tax fraud. A Special Agent is a LEO- Law Enforcement Officer. An Agent is not, altho they have more than a little authority.
I worked on a systems implementation for a bank in 1991. It’s the predecessor of one of the five biggest banks today, but was much smaller then (before banks really became coast-to-coast behemoths). They had ~25,000 employees, but in those days banking was a labor intensive business. Lots of tellers and call center employees.
They had over 600 people with VP in their title. A lot of them were Assistant Vice Presidents, which were just Branch Managers of the larger branches. So you’d have an Assistant VP to whom a couple of Teller Supervisors reported, in addition to a few New Accounts Representatives and a couple of Loan Officers.
Anyone can shoot any type of gun, from the classic snub-nosed .38 to a howitzer, in any enclosed environment (e.g., a tunnel inside a mountain, a cellar in a house, a submarine) without suffering any loss of hearing or ear damage whatsoever.
If you have just been involved in a multiple-person shootout that required you to shoot and kill bad guys, you landed a major drug bust and and you are shot…
Best get working on that police report right away. It’s due tomorrow morning.
Well, if you ever watched any of the guys I worked with… To be fair, that was a couple decades ago.
We got woodshop, the girls gut typing.
I did manage to take a one semester typing class, but one person watching me on a computer said my speed was all over the place- usually around 20 wpm, but with bursts of more.
You must be quite a bit older than me. In my high school in the mid-80s, typing was for all sexes. One of the most useful things I ever learned in that school, as a matter of fact.
I was also lucky enough to be in a first-rate school system for elementary and junior high, in the late 70s. My junior high was excellently well-equipped, with full wood and metal shops, as well as a Home Ec room with six full kitchens and six sewing machines. More to the point, all students, boys and girls, had to take Shop as well as Home Ec. The school board didn’t see any reason that girls shouldn’t know how to spot-weld a trivet and patch drywall, or boys how to sew on a button and cook an omelet.
Right. Back in the 80s working at the IT Department, I had coworkers (programmers) who quit and went to work for a bank’s IT Department. They all had Assistant Vice President titles.