The Avon Police Department will be hosting its ninth annual Latino Police Academy. The goal of this academy is to educate and inform Latino community members of the roles and capabilities of the Avon Police Department, Eagle County Sheriff’s Office, Vail Police Department and Eagle Police Department.
The Academy will take place every Monday starting July 12 and running through Aug. 30. Classes will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. The events provide an inside look at what it is like to work as a police officer in Eagle County.
The academy will include eight classes, covering the following topics:
July 12: State of the police department, crime in Avon, community policing, Avon Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Bureau and crime scene investigations; including fingerprinting, latent prints, dusting and black lights.
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That is having a major impact on how local cleaning businesses operate.
Alan Hernandez started out working for a cleaning company. He worked at night while he went to school for business during the day. He knew he wanted to be an entrepreneur but did not know what he wanted to do. Cleaning became his passion.
“Back in 2018, I decided to start this business because I was just tired of working for someone else.”
Hernandez says that his company ensures employees are making a livable wage without having to be overworked to make ends meet.
His business was a success up until the pandemic.
A Riverside man who believes in QAnon and other conspiracy theories was arrested Thursday on suspicion of participating in the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol, authorities said.
Andrew Alan Hernandez, 44, was shouting and carrying an American flag at the moment when Capitol security video captured him and fellow rioters violently pushing their way into the building, according to an FBI statement.
The mob was trying to stop Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump in the presidential election.
Hernandez had a GoPro camera zip-tied to the flag pole, according to the statement by FBI agent Richard Migliara. He was wearing a hat and shirt bearing the name and logo of the Riverside company where he worked, Milagra said in the statement filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.