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Criminals Overrun State as Police Continue to Pull Back

Criminals in Tehama County, California, are happy to hear that police won’t be working during daytime hours. They can get all their holiday shoplifting done as soon as deputies start acting like vampires.

Police admit they’re outnumbered

There isn’t enough law enforcement to police Tehama County, California. As of November 20, they decided to halt “daytime patrols” because of “catastrophic staffing problems.

Nobody wants to be a cop anymore, especially not in liberal jurisdictions where they aren’t allowed to act like a cop but still have to wear a target on their back.

Sheriff’s deputies generally serve the role of police in rural, unincorporated areas. This one in Northern California has been hit especially hard by recruiting challenges.

Since they don’t have enough deputies to go around, they’re putting them out during the high crime hours of the night.

Officials are also in negotiations with California Highway Patrol. They’re hoping that CHIPs can respond to daylight robberies and assaults, as well as other official police business, according to Sheriff Dave Hencratt in a statement dated Monday, November 7.

He wants his citizens to know they aren’t being abandoned, even though it seems that way.

Time for vigilantes

Because there won’t be any police around during the day, citizens need to be extra alert and exercise all the self-defense remedies they have available to them. Do-it-yourself vigilante justice is becoming more of a necessity across America all the time.

Concerned residents need to gather together with their neighbors and form watch groups. Since those the taxpayers are paying to provide law and order can’t manage to get the job done, responsible citizens are left holding the bag.

Sheriff Hencratt assures residents of the county that his deputies will “continue to patrol and respond to emergencies at night, and also will try to respond to any daytime non-emergency calls.” The police will try real hard but can’t make any promises.

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The county which “contains the city of Red Bluff, straddles Interstate 5 south of Redding and Lake Shasta.” Around 65,000 people call the county home and they like to have cops around, whenever possible.

Even though Tehama County isn’t one of the ones hell bent on defunding the police and decriminalizing crime, they still have “a catastrophic staffing shortage throughout the agency.” They can’t afford to pay deputies what they’re worth and that has created a “drastic rise in attrition.

Young people have been so brainwashed that “all cops are bleepards” that authorities can’t find anyone willing to sign on. They already did all they could by “transferring deputies from patrol duties to staff the jail and courts.” Now, they simply don’t have “enough officers for 24-hour patrols.” The criminals will still be out there.

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