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-- Food in Every Country-- Food in Every Country-- Food in Every CountryFood in Canada AboriginalsHere's How 8 Different Countries Officially Define What 'Healthy Eating' Is -- TheHuffingtonPost (23 March 2016)A Berkeley teenager arrested in August after being found by police with a loaded gun has been charged in connection with a shooting on Carleton Street two days prior to his arrest, authorities said. Emauj Roos, 18, has been charged by the Alameda County district attorney’s office with five felonies related to the handgun, Teresa Drenick, spokeswoman for the DA’s office, confirmed Tuesday. According to court papers, Berkeley Police Officer Donovan Edwards responded Monday, Aug. 24, at 7:15 p.m. to Seventh Street and Channing Way in West Berkeley for a report of a suspicious vehicle. Inside the vehicle were Roos, in the backseat, and three juveniles. Roos just turned 18 in August. Edwards wrote that the vehicle’s driver consented to a search of the silver sedan.

During the search, one of the juveniles told Edwards he had a loaded gun in a black backpack. A search of the backpack, wrote Edwards, turned up materials linked to Roos, including a citation from the Berkeley Police Department, an asthma inhaler and photographs. Roos told Edwards, according to court papers, he had just sold the backpack to one of the juveniles for $500. “Based on the fact Roos previously possessed the backpack, there were pictures of him with the backpack on, and his indicia was found in the backpack, I had reason to believe he possessed the backpack with a loaded firearm around minors,” Edwards wrote. Police arrested Roos on suspicion of carrying a concealed firearm, carrying a loaded firearm and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Edwards noted in court papers that Roos had prior arrests related to burglary and battery. On Aug. 26, two days after his arrest, Berkeley detectives asked the DA’s office to charge Roos in connection with a shooting the prior weekend during a party in West Berkeley on Carleton Street.According to court papers, Roos admitted to shooting a handgun into the air “because he was angry about getting ‘jumped’ at the party.”

As reported by Berkeleyside after the shooting, police had responded Saturday, Aug. 22, around 9 p.m. to the 1100 block of Carleton, near San Pablo Avenue, after receiving multiple calls about gunfire in the area. Police said there had been a party during which someone had fired five shots into the air.
aap backpack guidelinesNo one was injured in that incident, which was described as “a large fight” in court documents.
gentleman's ushanka backpack Police said in court papers that the casings found in the street by officers after the Saturday night shooting matched the brand and caliber of the ones found in the handgun confiscated during the vehicle search at Seventh and Channing two days later.
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The weapon was not registered, police said. Three of the felony counts Roos now faces relate to the Carleton shooting: discharge of a firearm with gross negligence; carrying a concealed firearm; and carrying a loaded firearm. The DA’s office also charged Roos with carrying a loaded firearm and carrying a concealed firearm in connection with the Aug. 24 vehicle search.
eceen backpackRoos remains in custody without bail at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin and is scheduled for a sentencing hearing Oct. 2.
hugglemonster backpackBerkeleyside has requested additional information from the DA’s office.
ahp backpack , which includes a highlight video of Roos and identifies him as a member of Berkeley High’s class of 2015.
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Related:Berkeley police arrest 3 teens with loaded gun (08.27.15)Police make arrest after gunshots, disturbance on Carleton Street near San Pablo Avenue (08.22.15)Police respond to shooting near San Pablo Park (08.15.15)Uncovering scraper bikes in West Berkeley (09.10.10) Do you rely on Berkeleyside for local news? Support independent journalism by becoming a Berkeleyside member for or even less, or by making a one-time donation. Members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) use many unique slang terms. The ADF is made up of the Australian Army, the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). We have excluded the more interesting and colourful of the military slang because we're a family-friendly website visited by children all over the world. We hope you understand and enjoy the slang we do share with you here. See also Victoria Cross Australian Military websites Australian Military Ranks � A B C �

Army Chinook heavy lift helicopter Type of bath taken in the bush with limited water: Armpits and Crotch Standard camouflage pattern on Australian Military equipment. Derived from 'AUStralian CAMouflage'. Seconds (when having a meal). Air Force term for a married member living off-base. Refers to 'brown-bagging' meals from home instead of eating in the Mess. Bacon and Egg breakfast roll wrapped in tin foil and delivered in Hot Boxes typically to troops staying overnight at the range. Portable device used to access FM/AM radio stations. Anyone that knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing. Soldier attempting to wash their body in the field utilising any available resource such as baby wipes or a small basin of water. It replaces the normal daily showering or bathing at home. Also refers to the airfield spray system used to wash salt residue from maritime patrol aircraft. Air Defence Regiment (Surface-Air Missiles) member, division of the Royal Australian Artillery.

Refers to either Armoured Corps personnel (Black Berets) or to non-SAS personnel (who wear very dark blue berets that look black) posted to the SAS regiment. M16 when the SLR and M16 were the common service rifles. Bog roll or Date roll Short for bograt, the slang term for a Pilot Officer (the most junior commissioned Air Force Officer rank). Bend Over, Here It Comes Again. Often heard when one is about to be 'shafted' with an unpleasant task.Refers to somebody who is so far up somebody else's backside that all that you can see is his/her boots. To fire a lot of rounds at something. Floppy hat worn by soldiers in the field or in non-barracks training. Beer or food stains on the breast of a shirt or jacket. Disruptive Pattern Combat Uniform (DPCU), working dress for Army and Air Force and worn on exercises / deployment. Also used in the British Armed Forces. Centurion Armoured Fighting Vehicle.refers to their ability to live off the land.

The term comes from the days of Morse Code communications, where an operator transmitting a message resembled a chook (chicken) pecking the ground. 108th Signals Squadron has the famous cartoon chook Foghorn Leghorn as their unit mascot. Hand-held firing device for a 'Claymore' anti-personnel weapon. Air defence branch of Artillery. Ordnance Corps (Supply) person, also referred to as a 'ROACH'. Private in the corps of Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (RAEME) - short for "Craftsman". The word "corps" is pronounced "core". To have a relatively bad landing when parachuting. Source from Wiktionary Military Slang is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. Did you know . . . Since 1891 kangaroo feathers often adorned the slouch hat worn by the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) Light Horsemen. This plume became the light horseman's most distinctive embellishment. When first asked what kind of feather, the cheeky reply was kangaroo feathers.