All images of the "Thin Blue Line" flag have been directed to be removed from the lobby of the Los Angeles Police Department and police vehicles. LAPD Chief Michel Moore issued a directive to ...
LOS ANGELES – Police chief Michel Moore has ordered the “thin blue line” flag be removed from public view in all Los Angeles police stations, as well as its use on uniform patches and bumper stickers ...
Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore has issued a ban forbidding department personnel from sporting the “thin blue line” patch on their uniforms and similar bumper stickers on police vehicles, it was ...
A man carries a "thin blue line" flag during a pro-police rally in Kenosha, Wis., in 2020. (Morry Gash / Associated Press) To the editor: Those Los Angeles Police Department officers displaying "thin ...
This is a follow-up to my Jan. 30 LNP | LancasterOnline letter about the “thin blue line” flag decals on Lancaster city police cars (“ ‘Thin blue line’ flag takes new meaning”). I recognize that the ...
The LAPD's decision to ban Thin Blue Line flags from its stations' lobbies has pulled the department into the national spotlight and shows how divisive the banner can be. Small memorials, including a ...
This is regarding the Los Angeles Times article “LAPD bans flag, latest salvo in culture war,” which was published on Page A6 of the Jan. 23 LNP | LancasterOnline. Los Angeles Police Department Chief ...
(NewsNation) — Los Angeles Police Department Chief Michel Moore has banned the display of the “thin blue line” flag at public events and station lobbies. The mandate, issued Saturday, comes in ...
To the editor: Those Los Angeles Police Department officers displaying “thin blue line” flags — whether well-meaningly or not — clearly have not seen the 1988 Errol Morris documentary that coined the ...
Small memorials, including a “thin blue line” flag, remain days after dozens of Los Angeles County Sheriff recruits on a training run were struck by a man driving an SUV, on Nov. 21, in Whittier, ...
The mandate, issued Saturday, comes in response to the flag’s divisive symbolism — some believe it represents support for law enforcement, while others say it’s become a symbol of far-right ideology ...