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Homeland Security News

A collection of open-source homeland security and terrorism news from around the world.
Date: Jun 24, 2018

Two San Diego police officers were shot late Saturday and hospitalized responding to an incident they first thought may be an apartment fire.
 
The suspect who allegedly shot the two officers was pronounced dead at the scene. His identity is not yet known.
 
One officer was last reported in stable condition and the other was in serious but stable condition, police said. 

When police first arrived on scene, they observed and smelled what appeared to be a fire and called the fire department. When authorities tried to open the door to the apartment, they were met with gunfire. One officer shot back.
 
The firefighter attempting to enter the structure along with the police officers ended up in an adjoining apartment, out of the way of the shooter, authorities said. The firefighter was extracted from that apartment by a SWAT team and didn't suffer any significant injuries.
 
Police said they don't know what type of weapon the suspect used or whether he was wearing any type of body armor. Police have not yet entered the apartment and wouldn't confirm whether a robot was used to investigate.
 
Authorities don't have a motive for the suspect at this time. 

News source: ABC News

The Afghan Taliban captured more than 70 Afghan policemen and took over a number of outposts after clashing with security forces in Jalrez district in the province of Wardak, just south of Kabul. The Afghan government is maintaining its unilateral ceasefire despite the current Taliban offensive.

The Taliban, in a statement released on its official website, claimed it “seized control [of] 13 posts and 1 base from the enemy” and “dozens of the enemy suffered casualties” and “72 surrendered themselves to Mujahideen after putting up a small resistance.”

Jalrez directly borders Kabul province and is a short distance from Kabul City, the capital of Afghanistan. Jalrez district has been contested for more than two years, according to an ongoing study by FDD’s Long War Journal. Of Wardak’s seven districts, three are Taliban controlled and three more are contested.

The Afghan government has insisted on maintaining its unilateral ceasefire in hopes of sparking peace negotiations, despite the fact that the Taliban is taking advantage of the lull in the Afghan military’s offensive operations to launch its own attacks.

Read more: Long War Journal