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01/03/22 01:14 PM #5588    

 

W Leggett

THE WORD NOVA USED A LOT when he worked or played golfsmiley

Doohickey / duːhɪki / noun

Definition: Doohickey is a North American informal word with a unique meaning. People use this term to refer to a small-sized gadget or object, especially one that you or any other speaker cannot remember its exact name.

In other words, a doohickey refers to something that someone uses in an unclear way to refer to something else whose name they cannot remember at the moment. So, if you do not know the name of something or have forgotten its name, you can refer to it as a doohickey.

Etymology: Etymology: The term doohickey came into being in the early 20th century. It came from two English words, doodad and hickey. Servicemen initially used this word as slang. A common belief of this word’s etymology is that it derives from a leaf’s left mark after dew evaporation.

So, this mark was essentially similar to the definition of a hickey, which referred to skin blemish. Due to the lack of a common word for such marking, people referred to this dew mark as ‘dew hickey.’ With time, the term evolved to doohickey. Today, people use it to refer to anything that one couldn’t identify with its name.

In a Sentence

I would prefer to have a doohickey in the bench’s central position.

This garage is full of electronic accessories and other precious doohickeys.

The doohickey at the showground is one of the latest inventions.

Synonyms 

Dingus, Doodad

 

Antonyms 

The antonym for Doohickey is the object’s actual name.


01/03/22 05:27 PM #5589    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

HA HA HAwink

I MAY NEED A 

DOOHICKEY or A 'THIMAGIG'

KEEP THEM COMING!cheeky


01/04/22 03:17 AM #5590    

 

W Leggett

READING THE ARTICLE BELOW AND INDIVIDUALS  SAY THAT OUR POLICE ARE NOT DOING ENOUGH. 

 

Monday, January 3, 2022

U.S. Marshals Arrest More Than 6,000 Murder Suspects in 2021, Over 84,000 Fugitives Apprehended

The U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) arrested 84,247 fugitives (27,399 on federal and 56,848 on state and local warrants) in Fiscal Year 2021. On average, the agency arrested 337 fugitives per day (based on 250 operational days).

That number breaks down as follows:

  • Sex offenders - 10,510 (Sex offenses include sexual assault, failure to register/noncompliance with the national sex offender registry and other offenses.)
  • Gang members - 6,240
  • Homicide suspects - 6,119
  • International/foreign fugitives - 1,239 (A foreign fugitive is wanted by a foreign nation and believed to be in the United States.)     
  • Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces Program (OCDETF) fugitives - 1,002 (OCDETF cases combine the resources and expertise of numerous federal agencies to target drug trafficking and money laundering organizations.)
  • Adam Walsh Act violations – 278 (The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act (AWA) categorized sex offenders into a three-tiered system based on the crime committed and requires offenders to maintain their registration information accordingly. For example, Tier 3 offenders – the most serious – must update their whereabouts every three months with lifetime registration requirements.)
  • “15 Most Wanted” fugitives – 1

Additionally, the USMS seized 7,028 guns during numerous violence reduction and counter gang operations in FY21. 

“The outstanding work this year by the U.S. Marshals Service exemplifies that the Department of Justice has no higher priority than keeping our communities safe,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco. “At a time of unprecedented challenges posed by a global pandemic, the U.S. Marshals continue to deliver on their mission, tracking down and arresting more than 84,000 fugitives. The Department of Justice, through our law enforcement components like the U.S. Marshals Service, will continue to prioritize our efforts to reduce violent crime and keep our neighborhoods safe.”

“I want to thank the men and women of the U.S. Marshals Service for their continued commitment and dedication to public safety,” said Director Ronald Davis of the U.S. Marshals Service. “Their steadfast courage and selfless service in bringing fugitives to justice and in protecting our judicial process help to make all of our communities safer and is critical in preserving our democracy.”

Total warrants cleared by USMS arrests: 99,607

  • State and local warrants - 64,565
  • Federal warrants - 35,042

The number of warrants cleared nearly always exceeds the number of arrests in a given year because fugitives are often wanted on numerous warrants, and a single arrest can clear them all at once.

The USMS has a long history of providing assistance and expertise to other federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies in support of their fugitive investigations. The USMS leads 56 fugitive task forces (representing more than 1,500 law enforcement agencies) throughout the United States and eight congressionally-funded regional fugitive task forces. Staffed by federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, USMS-led task forces target the most dangerous fugitives.

The USMS established the 15 Most Wanted Fugitive Program in 1983 in an effort to prioritize the investigation and apprehension of high-profile offenders considered to be some of the country’s most dangerous fugitives – typically career criminals with histories of violence who pose a significant threat to public safety and have remained on the lam for months or years.

On Oct. 6, 2021, the USMS made a 15 Most Wanted fugitive arrest of Jory Worthen, wanted in Camden, Arkansas, for two homicides in June 2019. Worthen was accused of murdering his girlfriend Alyssa and her 4-year-old son Braydon. Immediately after the murders, Worthen fled in Alyssa’s vehicle, which was later found abandoned in a parking lot in Seattle. The investigation led to Burbank, California, where Worthen was located and arrested after a short foot pursuit. He was extradited back to Arkansas where, in September, Worthen accepted a plea deal that includes never being eligible for parole. As part of the agreement, Worthen pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder. He is serving two concurrent life sentences.

July 27, 2021, marked the 15th anniversary of the signing of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act (AWA), which established the USMS as the lead federal agency for sex offender violations. The agency created the Sex Offender Investigations Branch to direct and coordinate the implementation of its primary responsibilities under the AWA – assisting state, local, tribal and territorial authorities in the location and apprehension of non-compliant and fugitive sex offenders; investigating violations of the AWA for federal prosecution; and assisting in the identification and location of sex offenders relocated as a result of a major disaster. In 2021, USMS arrested 278 sex offenders for violating the conditions of their criminal convictions.

In May 2015, the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (JVTA) was passed and clarified the USMS’ discretionary authority to support law enforcement requests for assistance on any missing child cases. As such, the USMS assists state, local, and other federal law enforcement agencies, upon request, in locating and recovering missing children, while focusing agency resources on “critically missing child” cases – those that involve a suspected crime of violence or where factors are identified by law enforcement that indicates an elevated risk to a missing child. In 2021, the Marshals assisted with the recovery of 950 “critically missing children,” an approximate 145% increase over FY 2020.  

The USMS also conducted 591 international removals (extraditions, deportations, and expulsions). The USMS is responsible for carrying out extraditions to the United States from foreign countries and for supporting extraditions to foreign countries from the United States – a complex task involving coordination among the Department of Justice Office of International Affairs, the Department of State, foreign governments, U.S. embassies, and USMS district offices. The extradition process involves country clearances, threat assessments and security arrangements, travel arrangements, and can include medical assessments and accommodations.


01/04/22 01:11 PM #5591    

 

Nelson Evans

Great article on the US Marshals Service. Thanks, Bill.


01/04/22 01:12 PM #5592    

 

W Leggett


01/04/22 05:42 PM #5593    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

Great posts...keep them coming!!!

And, YES, I am PRAYING, PRAYING, PRAYING FOR US ALL!

 


01/06/22 11:38 AM #5594    

 

W Leggett

New Mexico 110th Anniversary of Statehood (1912): January 6, 2022

RELEASE NUMBER CB22-SFS.03

stories-new-mexico-1300x867

 

From the Guide to 2010 State and Local Census Geography – New Mexico – History:

The United States acquired almost all the area of New Mexico from Mexico in 1848. The United States acquired a small area, comprising the southwestern corner of New Mexico, from Mexico in 1853 as part of the Gadsden Purchase. New Mexico Territory was organized from the acquired area on December 13, 1850, and included most of present-day Arizona and New Mexico as well as parts of Colorado and Nevada. The territory was reduced with the organization of Colorado Territory in 1861 and Arizona Territory in 1863 to assume generally the same boundary as the present state.

Census data are available for New Mexico beginning with the 1850 census. The 1850 census population is for the entire New Mexico Territory, including areas not in present-day New Mexico. For an explanation of the revision to the 1860 population of New Mexico, see Richard L. Forstall, Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790-1990, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1996, page 110.

Data for the legally established state of New Mexico are available beginning with the 1920 census.


01/06/22 08:18 PM #5595    

 

Cheryl Corazzi (Essex)

You are a treasure trove of interesting information. I enjoy reading your historical articles. 


01/07/22 12:10 PM #5596    

 

Bob Lewis

Proud to be a New Mexican

The ancient Zia sun symbol in red on a field of yellow. The flag of the U.S. state of New Mexico consists of a red sun symbol of the Zia people on a field of gold (yellow), and was officially introduced in 1925. It was designed in 1920, to highlight the state's Native American Pueblo and Nuevo México Hispano roots.

Adopted: March 15, 1925

Design: The red and gold (yellow) of old Spain. The ancient Zia sun symbol in red on a field of yellow.

Proportion: 2:3

Use: Civil and state flag


01/07/22 04:16 PM #5597    

 

Nova Guynes

Things that make me smile 






01/07/22 05:13 PM #5598    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

Great information!!

AND, Nova, the laughs are GREAT!!

Just TOO funny!!  Keep them coming!!!

 


01/07/22 05:13 PM #5599    

 

Cheryl Corazzi (Essex)

Great laugh for the day. 


01/07/22 09:17 PM #5600    

 

W Leggett


01/08/22 08:49 AM #5601    

 

Randy Richardson (Richardson)

Nova, that Penn pic makes me laugh every time I show it to someone! well done.


01/08/22 11:04 AM #5602    

 

Bill Williams

Bill, that Jr Miss Pageant photo brought back a grear memory, I was really close to one of the contestants, at one time I had a program from the Pageant that my sister kept for years, nostalgia is a funny thing, thanks for pisting it
Bill

01/08/22 11:05 AM #5603    

 

Bill Williams

Posting it, lol

01/08/22 11:46 AM #5604    

 

Bill Williams

I can see now, I have to start proofreading my post more, I also meant Great memory,77 is just a number,huh?

01/08/22 03:31 PM #5605    

 

Nova Guynes

I think these are funny because I am old 

 






 

 


01/08/22 04:07 PM #5606    

 

Connie Schuerman (Von Dielingen)

Hey there everyone!   So great seeing all this posting !  And Bob, I really enjoyed seeing the NM sunburst - I had forgotten what all the four rays meant around the sun !  Thought I would add a funny too ! 


01/08/22 04:31 PM #5607    

 

Connie Schuerman (Von Dielingen)

I'm hoping that James McCluskey gets my message and responds :

Hi Jim - hope you are doing as well as can be expected with your pancreatic cancer battle ... please know you are in my prayers !     


01/08/22 04:32 PM #5608    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

winkKeep them coming....but, I think I need to be warned to empty my bladder BEFORE I look at some of the funnies!!

Love you all, and, KEEP THEM COMING!!heart


01/12/22 03:25 AM #5609    

 

W Leggett

 

 

 


01/12/22 09:06 AM #5610    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

laughGreat ones, and what a way to start the day....

Thanks, Bill!  Keep it up and keep making me SMILE!!smileywink


01/13/22 04:45 PM #5611    

 

W Leggett


01/13/22 09:54 PM #5612    

 

Marie Gaines (Harris)

smileyHA, HA, HA....KEEP THEM COMING...

I NEED TO SMILE AND LAUGH!!laugh


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