Faygo Red Pop used as lure in fatal Saginaw Township bank hostage standoff - Sniped thanks to a soda hanging from a quadcopter drone

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Faygo Red Pop used as lure in fatal Saginaw Township bank hostage standoff​

SAGINAW, MI — It was a Faygo Red Pop that hastened the end of a multi-hour hostage situation inside a Saginaw Township bank branch. The beverage dangled from a drone and, as the would-be robber stood in front of a window to retrieve it, a police trooper fired a shot from a nearby rooftop, mortally wounding the suspect and bringing the standoff to a close.

Police have identified the slain suspect as Quinton M. Allen, 31 of Detroit, confirmed Michigan State Police Lt. Kim Vetter.

Allen at about 5:30 p.m. on Friday, June 27, visited the Mercantile Saginaw Virtual Branch and Lending Office at 5444 State St., Suite 2, though the branch had closed a half-hour earlier. He encountered a lone 40-year-old female employee and said he wanted to cash a check, which turned out to be fraudulent, Vetter said.

The branch does not have cash on hand and requires customers to make appointments. Police did not say how he was able to enter the building after it had closed for the day.

The employee informed Allen she could not cash his check, at which point he attacked her and demanded money, Vetter said. Allen used a sharp object as a weapon but was not armed with a gun, the lieutenant confirmed.

Police from numerous agencies responded to the scene in one of the township’s busiest commercial districts. They erected a perimeter and closed roughly a half-mile of State Street between Center and Wieneke road for several hours Friday evening. A crowd of civilian spectators still gathered nearby, taking photos and videos of the incident.

Police negotiated with Allen as he kept the woman captive inside. During their discussions, Allen requested a Faygo Red Pop, Vetter said.

About 8:05 p.m., an MSP drone flew to the building with a 24-ounce bottle of the red soda hanging from it. As the beverage dangled in front of a window, Allen appeared and a member of the MSP Emergency Services Team fired a single rifle shot from his position on the roof of the AutoZone Auto Parts store located across the street at 5545 State St., Vetter said.

Allen did not step outside of the building prior to being shot, she added. Witnesses reported hearing an explosion, but Vetter said that was just the sound of the rifle shot.

Police rushed in and escorted the Mercantile employee outside, draping a blanket around her shoulders. She was taken to an area hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. She was discharged later the same night.

Allen died from his wound.

Allen absconded from the Saginaw County TRI-CAP Program on June 21, confirmed Executive Director Gary Davis. TRI-CAP is a Probation Residential Center at 2300 Veterans Memorial Parkway offering an alternative placement option to jail or prison for male or female offenders. Residents receive support, counseling, educational services and 24-hour supervision.

Allen had no further contact with TRI-CAP once he walked away, Davis said.

“We are saddened by the events that occurred and extend our heartfelt thoughts to the victim and all those affected,” Davis said.

Michigan Department of Corrections records show Allen was on probation out of Wayne and Macomb counties on convictions of breaking and entering and first-degree retail fraud, respectively.

MLive reached out to Mercantile but did not immediately hear back. The bank’s Facebook account posted Friday night the location would be closed until further notice, with its website stating it remains closed as of Monday, June 30.

“Out of respect for those involved and to avoid interfering with the ongoing investigation, we are not sharing further details at this time,” reads Mercantile’s Facebook post.

Several neighboring financial institutions have shared posts of solidarity with Mercantile.

“Some days demand more than any of us expect. You answered with courage. We stand beside you with strength,” reads a post from Jolt Credit Union.

“Our hearts are with Mercantile Bank, its employees, and everyone affected by Friday’s events,” added Health Advantage Credit Union. “This is a difficult time for our community, and we’re thankful for those who worked to keep others safe.”

The Saginaw County Chamber of Commerce likewise shared its “heartfelt thoughts to our friends at Mercantile Bank.”

The EST member who fired the fatal shot has been placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation, as is standard practice whenever a trooper shoots someone. Once police have wrapped their investigation, they will forward their reports to the Michigan Attorney General’s Office for review.

An MSP policy mandates all use-of-force incidents involving troopers be directly forwarded to the AG’s Office rather than the prosecutor of the county where an incident occurred.

Allen’s death is Saginaw County’s 15th homicide and the first in Saginaw Township so far this year. His death is also the second this year to result from officers’ bullets, the first being that of Corin M. Skinner, 33, shot by two Saginaw police officers the evening of March 30. Skinner attacked a third officer with a knife, prompting the other two to fire.

Prosecutors deemed the officers’ justified in their use of lethal force.
 
Like yeah, the first amendment exists. What are you talking about? I requested a source for the claim and now you're talking about getting clocked by an officer. I don't think you know what you're talking about.
You appear to think cops are constitutional scholars who even give a shit. The vast majority of the time they make completely unconstitutional demands, they completely get away with it. By and large they have no respect for it at all and yes, if they get pissed off, they're not terribly bright and get violent.

If you're lucky five years down the road you get your hospital bills paid, unless you're the family of St. Floyd or some other aspiring doctor or astronaut.
 
You appear to think cops are constitutional scholars who even give a shit. The vast majority of the time they make completely unconstitutional demands, they completely get away with it. By and large they have no respect for it at all and yes, if they get pissed off, they're not terribly bright and get violent.

If you're lucky five years down the road you get your hospital bills paid, unless you're the family of St. Floyd or some other aspiring doctor or astronaut.
I have no problem believing that, I was just asking for a source. The one he provided was basically hearsay. I expected a short clip of footage or something. Again I think it was probably because the perimeter disallowed anyone from seeing anything anyway, so nobody gave enough of a shit in the first place.
 
I have no problem believing that, I was just asking for a source. The one he provided was basically hearsay. I expected a short clip of footage or something. Again I think it was probably because the perimeter disallowed anyone from seeing anything anyway, so nobody gave enough of a shit in the first place.
I more just have no problem believing anyone desperate enough to be a cop in Saginaw is probably corrupt and stupid. They're not doing it for the pay so they have some other shit going on. Maybe it didn't happen, maybe it did.
 
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Article says it’s a ‘virtual’ branch, I’ve never heard that term before, might just be an office space to fulfill some requirement.
So to elaborate: these "Virtual Branches" are basically mini-banks in high-crime areas. They only have 1 or 2 tellers and a couple security guards.

The way they're supposed to work is that someone sets up a time to cash a check/withdraw money in advance, specifying how much. When it's almost time for the appointment, someone from the main branch takes over JUST enough money for the transaction and gives it to the "Virtual Branch"

The idea is that potential criminals will realize that most of the time, there's no money there. And when there is, it's not very much.

Unfortunately there are some obvious flaws in this. Starting with assuming the joggers can read, assuming the joggers can understand that a "bank" doesn't have money, and building any sort of business in a joggers neighborhood in the first place.

Plus it said he broke in "After hours, when there was only one employee on duty", so it sounds like security had fucked off for the night and the dumb worker forgot to lock the door behind them while she was doing closing stuff.
 
wat. is this a common thing in america?
I have heard of this for "savings banks", generally smaller banks that focus on savings accounts, CDs, and loans. They aren't "transactional banks" like Chase/Wells Fargo/BoA/etc., and generally need to order cash beforehand if somebody wanted to fully cash out over taking a cashier's check.

Had a relative who worked at one, and they buzzed people in one at a time after verifying them, and preferred their customers to make appointments. They actually might've missed out on being robbed because of this when two questionable people tried to get in... and then said they needed to come in without having an account because they needed an envelope. No shit, that was the excuse. When the two were told that no, the tellers weren't letting them in, they ran back to their car (which had a third person as a driver) and got the fuck out of there.
 
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How the hell you look like that at 31? this dude freebasing turpentine or what?
 
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Had a relative who worked at one, and they buzzed people in one at a time after verifying them, and preferred their customers to make appointments.
I've seen this a couple times. It was a rough town but not a particularly rough neighborhood. It wasn't an appointment thing, though, so it seemed more security theater than actual security.
 
The one he provided was basically hearsay.
Both articles posted here are from Mlive and I already called the second one out for calling this case a homicide.
Other than that, AnOminous explained it to you in terms a child could understand.

Cop on scene trumps internet law school. They told people to stop filming with their phones, and the people complied. Yes there was a perimiter, but no shit there was a perimiter, it was an active hostage situation.

Please become a cop auditor though.
 
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Both articles posted here are from Mlive and I already called the second one out for calling this case a homicide.
Other than that, AnOminous explained it to you in terms a child could understand.

Cop on scene trumps internet law school. They told people to stop filming with their phones, and the people complied. Yes there was a perimiter, but no shit there was a perimiter, it was an active hostage situation.

Please become a cop auditor though.
If people are recording, the cops tell them to stop recording, and this actually happens, then it stands to reason that these recordings would actually exist, and that they would terminate with the cops telling people to stop recording.

I mean it seems pretty self evident to me. Moreover, the cops can't control what people upload after the fact. I wanted a source, aka proof. Not some journo saying something that may or may not be true.
 
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Cop on scene trumps internet law school. They told people to stop filming with their phones, and the people complied.
We actually don't know if the cops did that (although piggly wigglies in shitty jurisdictions often do) or that people complied, other than that we don't have video.
 

Man in Saginaw Twp. hostage case walked away from hospital, tied to other break-ins​

SAGINAW, Mich. (WJRT) - New details have emerged about a hostage situation in Saginaw Township involving a man who left a probation residential center.

Quinton Marquese Allen, 31, was taken to Covenant Healthcare by ambulance on June 21 for a medical issue, according to ABC12 News.

Allen had been part of the Tri-Cap Program in Saginaw since mid-May following convictions for breaking and entering and retail fraud in the Detroit area.

Tri-Cap, a non-profit organization, provides an alternative to jail or prison for offenders, offering support, counseling, educational services, and 24-hour supervision.

After being taken to the hospital, Allen was allowed to leave, but it remains unclear why Tri-Cap did not pick him up after discharge. Covenant Healthcare could not discuss Allen's visit due to privacy laws.

Saginaw Township police are investigating Allen's possible involvement in break-ins at the Admiral Gas Station on June 22 and another business on June 24, as well as an attempt to cash a fraudulent check at Wildfire Credit Union on June 27.

On Friday evening, Allen held a Saginaw Township business employee hostage after she told him she couldn't cash a fraudulent check. The situation ended with police shooting and killing Allen after an hours-long standoff.

The Michigan Department of Corrections spokesperson said Allen was likely sent to the Saginaw Tri-Cap facility due to limited space in similar facilities in the Detroit area.
 
Why do criminals have more rights than their victims? A B&E should see your legs hobbled, not compassionate day program.
At least the fisherman and the rifleman got their due at the bank.
 
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