Friday's Heroes - Remembering the fallen officers

 

The Graveyard Shift extends our condolences to the families of the officers who sacrificed everything to keep us safe.

Deputy Sheriff Ricky Isaac, Jr., 24

Natchitoches Parish Louisiana Sheriff’s Office

December 8, 2012 – Deputy Ricky Isaac, Jr. was killed in a car crash during a heavy rain storm when his patrol vehicle hydroplaned and ran off the roadway, striking several trees. He is survived by his expectant wife.

Constable John D. Manuel, 78

Allen Parish Ward 1 Louisiana Constable’s Office

December 5, 2012 – Constable John Manuel was killed in a single car crash when his patrol car left the roadway, striking several trees. He is survived by his wife, daughter, two sons, two grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.

 

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“Man with a gun.”

“He has hostages.”

“A female and three children.”

“Shots fired.”

“10-4. I’m en route.”

Farmhouse

Yelling

Cursing

Glass breaking

Thumps

Bangs

A scream

Kids crying

One peeking outside

A teenager

BOOM!

Shotgun blast

Window up

Teen pulled to safety

Hide

Sirens

Far away

Backup coming

A look inside

Woman and two small children

Huddled together

Beside bed

BOOM!

Hole in door

Man at window

Tall

Muscular

Wild-eyed

No shirt

Sweating

Nervous

Sees police car

BOOM!

Out on porch

Shotgun

Barefoot

Dirty jeans

Yelling

Cursing

“Go away”

“I’ll kill them!”

“All of them”

Doesn’t see me

Eight feet away

Around corner

Aims at police car

Boom!

Run

Tackle

Secure gun

Handcuff

Children crying

Woman crying

“Daddy!”

“Please don’t take him away!”

“He’s my husband”

“I love him”

“He’ll be okay”

“Just too much alcohol”

“That’s all”

“Please, let him go”

“He wouldn’t hurt us”

Hair tangled

“I promise”

Lip bleeding

“He would never hurt us”

“Please…”

Bruised cheek

More tears

“He means well”

“A lot on his mind”

“It was my fault”

Bruises on arms

“Please…”

“We need him”

 *Farmhouse photo by Sunday Kaminski

WPA donates to GTCC

 

The Writers’ Police Academy is an event like no other. Those of you who’ve attended the WPA have seen the size and scope of the event, and you know what a monster it must be to plan and organize. Actually, it’s a massive undertaking involving well over 100 dedicated planners, law enforcement professionals, forensics experts, EMS personnel, firefighters, volunteers, speakers, and others. Hundreds of hours and hard work go into planning the WPA.

Not only are we tasked with coming up with a fantastic program each year, we have to be sure our hands-on workshops are safe. After all, we’re not the typical writers conference. Our attendees don’t sit in hotel meeting rooms for hours on end. Instead, our recruits train at an actual police/fire/EMS academy, and we want you to have the experience of a lifetime—a writer’s Disneyland! Without a doubt, though, the effort is extremely worthwhile.

And then there are the “recruits,” the writers who attend to shoot, drive, handcuff, and fingerprint for nearly three days. There’s door-kicking, underwater evidence recovery (someone may actually get to suit up next year and do a little diving with the team), shallow graves, firefighting, gunshot wounds to treat, police k-9’s, and much, much more! And we get bigger and better each year. 2013 will be no exception. Man, have we ever got some excitement in store for next year!!

Of course, we can’t forget all the generous people who donate books and other items for the raffle and silent auction. And, our wonderful sponsors and guest presenters who help make the WPA possible each and every year…thank you so much. Your kindness and generosity is very much appreciated. We couldn’t do this without you. *A special thank you to Sisters in Crime!

Anyway, you guys know how this works…we pay all the bills, set aside a little for the next year’s start-up, and then donate the remaining funds to GTCC’s criminal justice foundation. The money is used to supplement the college’s strained public safety training and education budget. Remember, the dozens of police, fire, forensics, and EMS professionals all donate their time to help you, so it’s only proper that we, in turn, give back to them!

So, I’ve said all that to say this…Yesterday, Denene and I traveled to the campus of Guilford Technical Community College (GTCC), the home of the Writers’ Police Academy, to present the WPA’s 2012 donation to the Criminal Justice Technology Foundation. Receiving the check from me (pictured above) is Eric Holloman, chair of the criminal justice department. Also pictured, from left to right, are Denene Lofland, Sandra Neal, and Andy Russell.

So, before I reveal the amount, could I have a drum roll, please…

Here goes.

This year, thanks to all of you, we were pleased to present the foundation with a check in the amount of $12,300.00. That brings our donation total to over $30,000.00 over the past three years.

Again, we could not do this without your support. Therefore, on behalf of the Writers’ Police Academy and everyone involved, we thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

See you in 2013!

Cops are people too

We’re traveling, attending meetings, and making plans for the 2013 Writers’ Police Academy. Yes, it’s definite, and the date for next year’s event is September 5-8. And, believe it or not, it’s going to be bigger and better than ever before!

Anyway, until I can get back to my desk and computer, here’s a behind the scenes peek at police work.

Cops: All In A Day’s Work

Police officers have a dangerous job, no doubt about it. They drive fast, dodge bullets, wrestle bad guys, and take knives away from rowdy drunks. But, if you take the time to look closely you’ll see that they’re just people, like you and me. They just happen to wear a uniform and carry a gun.

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Capitola California

 

Capitola, California is located in Santa Cruz County on Monterey Bay. According to Capitola/Santa Cruz lore, in the early 1960s, a large group of normally passive birds began attacking Capitola residents and tourists.

Nearby Santa Cruz was a favorite vacation spot for a well-known movie director. He’d read about the bird attacks and decided to make a movie about it. The director’s name was Alfred Hitchcock. The movie…The Birds.

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One of my favorite spots in the world…

Friday's Heroes - Remembering the fallen officers

 

The Graveyard Shift extends our condolences to the families of the officers who sacrificed everything to keep us safe.

Officer Tom Decker, 31

Cold Spring Minnesota Police Department

November 29, 2012 – Officer Tom Decker was shot and killed during an ambush while responding to check on the welfare of a man whose family believed was suicidal. He is survived by his wife and four children.

Chief Petty Officer Terrell Horne III, 34

United States Coast Guard (Law Enforcement)

December 2, 2012 – Chief Petty Officer Terrell Horne III was killed when the boat he was commanding was intentionally rammed by drug smugglers operating a boat off the coast of Santa Cruz Island, Ca. He is survived by his expectant wife and one child.

Traffic stop: check your knowledge

Officers absolutely must be on high alert during each and every traffic stop. And they must remain in that heightened state of “ready for anything” from the moment they activate their blue lights until the stop is complete and they’re back in the safety of their patrol cars. After all, they never know what to expect. The driver could be wanted for a serious crime, such as murder, or rape. Is he carrying dangerous drugs or other contraband? Is he armed? Are there explosives in the car? Is this an ambush? Suicide by cop? The list goes on and on.

Police academy instructors teach recruits how to be safe. They set up mock exercises simulating every possible scenario that officers could encounter once they hit the streets. Still, traffic stops are one of the most dangerous duties of police work. There are many unknowns. Too many. And the danger level is amplified many times when stopping a car at night.

Imagine that it’s 2 a.m. and you’re patrolling a lonely stretch of highway when you spot a red sports car parked on the shoulder of the road. Headlights and brake lights are both on. The driver has his foot on the pedal. You pull in behind the car and flip the toggle switch to activate your blue strobe lights (to let them know you’re a police officer), and immediately hear loud music blaring from the car’s speakers. The car’s windows are tinted black and you can’t see inside, but the motions of the vehicle tell you people are moving around. To make things even worse there’s no moonlight or streetlamps. For all you know, the driver and an unknown number of passengers could be pointing machine guns at you. Your nearest backup is a good twenty minutes away. Believe me, it’s unnerving, to say the least.

New officers learn to do certain things when making traffic stops. The officer in the picture above, for example, has positioned her patrol car on an angle to the roadway, with the front tires also angled out toward the street. She has her left hand on the trunk of the car. Why not her right hand? She’s looking ahead at the passing car while keeping the driver in her line of vision. She’s standing a certain way. Actually, it appears that she’s doing everything right. Good for her, because she had no idea a photographer was behind her. We were pretty sneaky.

Wait a minute. If a camera-toting writer and her supervisor could sneak up behind her…well, why couldn’t a cop killer do the same?

Okay, enough of my rambling. It’s time to put the shiny shoe on the other foot.  I’m asking each of you to tell me why the officer decided to do the things she’d done. And, is there anything else she could have done to ensure her safety?

Remember, she wants to go home at the end of her shift, and she wants to make it there without any bullet holes in her body.

Castle: Secret Santa

 

Holiday traditions was the behind-the-scenes message in this episode. Well, that and Santa simply cannot fly without his reindeer. But he does make the deepest snow angel I’ve ever seen.

Anyway, the show this week was a great reminder to us all that time, and life, moves on, and that it’s okay to begin a new tradition. And what better way is there to start a new tradition than to do so with someone you care about?

For now, though, I’ll stick to our old tradition of asking Melanie to start off the review. Here goes…

Melanie Atkins

Finally, a Castle Christmas episode! The dead Santa case was rather bizarre, so I won’t really even mention that, but I loved the Casketty goodness. As the show begins, Kate at first assures Rick she’ll come to the loft for his family’s Christmas Eve festivities, and he’s so excited. Not surprising, with his nine-year-old on a sugar rush tendencies and his deep love for Kate.

She seemed startled by his casual description of his huge tree and other elaborate decorations at his place, however, although I don’t know why she should have been, knowing him. Still, after that, she kind of pulled back a bit. I had to wonder if that had something to do with losing her mom right after Christmas all those years ago, or if she were simply overwhelmed by Rick’s lifestyle and exuberance, especially in light of her initial reaction to his huge Hampton’s house in an earlier episode.

Then both Martha and Alexis told Rick they had made other plans for Christmas Eve. He’s crestfallen. How can they abandon their traditions? Why would they even consider it? He’s still reeling from their defection when Kate tells him she has to work that night because the precinct is shorthanded. Rick can’t understand that, but he somehow manages to keep his cool after at first freaking out, and he lets her know it’s okay. Poor Rick. Will he be alone on Christmas Eve?

Even though he seems resigned to the fact that his traditions are changing, he brings Captain Gates a gift and asks her if she’ll please ask someone else besides Kate to work that night. Gates lets him know really quick that Kate asked to take a shift on Christmas Eve. That stuns him.

He confronts Kate a little later, saying, “If you aren’t ready (to join my family for the holidays), why didn’t you just tell me?” Kate explains that Christmas hasn’t been the same for her and her dad since her mother died on that fateful January ninth. Their Christmas decorations were still up, and when they put them away after her death, they put them away for good. The boxes haven’t been opened since. Jim goes to his cabin every year, while Kate “keeps watch” so other families can celebrate the holiday. I teared up during her confession, and for a minute I thought Rick might cry, too. Wow. He was so understanding about that, so sweet. I wanted to hug him. (Well, when don’t I want to hug him?)

When that night finally rolls around, Martha and Alexis join Rick for their traditional Christmas Eve dinner and surprise him by proclaiming they’d changed their plans so they could spend the entire night with him. He is still miserable, however, because he wants to share the holiday with Kate, too. So they send him off to the precinct… only, when he opens the door to leave, Kate’s standing in the hall, about to knock on his door.

“I was just coming to see you,” he tells her, and she says, “I was coming to see you, too.” So sweet! They both decided to start a new tradition, with each other. Sappy, maybe, but I loved it. The decorations were beautiful (as Kate said) and totally over the top, but they also were so Rick. And the kiss in front of the tree… perfection — although I would have liked one a little less chaste, even thought that wouldn’t exactly have been appropriate with Martha and Alexis in the room. And I didn’t exactly like the fact that Rick said he didn’t get Kate a gift. Really? Still, I loved the romance, the Christmas goodness, and the lightness of this episode. Classic Castle.

Welcome to the Christmas hiatus. See you all again in January, when Kate and Rick will have to deal with Meredith, one of Rick’s ex-wives!

Lee Lofland

Beckett – “Was the cause of death the fall?”

Lanie – “Looks like it, but I won’t know for sure until I get him back to the morgue.”

Okay, I did a few cartwheels after I heard Lanie’s comment. Yes, that single bit of dialog was nothing short of a Christmas miracle. And, for two weeks in a row…wait for it…Lanie was totally believable!! Sure, I was on the edge of my seat, waiting for the axe to fall. But it didn’t. What a breath of fresh air.

Even later, when Lanie showed Beckett a bullet that she’d dug out of Dead Santa’s back, a halo floated above her head. Unfortunately, Beckett stepped in and made a goofy comment. They just couldn’t leave it alone.

Lanie – “I pulled this (a bullet) out of his back.”

Beckett – “And that, is a .38.”

So I’m guessing that Lanie gift-wrapped her old crystal ball and re-gifted it to Beckett, because that’s the only way Beckett could have accurately predicted the caliber of that round without testing.

BUT WAIT! (Remind you of one of those TV commercials? “We’ll send you an Acme Slicer-Dicer for only $9.99…but WAIT…if you call within the next 10 seconds we’ll send you a second Slicer-Dicer absolutely free!”)

Lanie continued to impress me when she said she was going to send the red paint chip (found embedded in Santa’s red suit) to the lab for analysis. Great stuff! That’s how it’s done in real life. Labs test and examine evidence. The old Lanie would have taken a mere glance at the sample and instantly spouted off the chip’s entire chemical composition. Again, she was very good this week. Even the manner in which she delivered her lines this week was believable.

– Beckett…well, she searched dear old Santa’s apartment without a warrant. Not a good idea if want your evidence to stand up in court.

– Hey, what about the helicopter seat? You know, the one that’s totally dry and clean, but when pressed with fingertips, oozes a pint or two of fresh, liquid, bright red blood. This is where Santa supposedly bled after receiving the gunshot wound. Yeah, right. How many of you have ever cut yourself? Okay, how many of you have ever seen blood on a surface such as a floor or counter top (cut finger). Does that blood remain in a liquid form, and bright red, until, say, a day later? No way. And neither would the blood inside a foam seat cushion.

– Beckett sees a lot of activity at Case Commerce and asks a uniformed officer, “What’s going on here?”

“Looks like a heist occurred at the office Christmas party,” he tells her.”

Okay, who says “heist” these days? A present-day cop, especially in public, would most likely refer to the crime as a larceny.

Well, that’s about it for the police procedure this week. But I would like to mention this dialog between Ryan and Esposito.

Ryan – It seems like the world is falling apart. How am I supposed to bring a kid into that?

Esposito – The world’s always falling apart, since the beginning of time. But having kids, making a family, that’s what keeps it together.

How appropriate for these troubled times of ours.

*By the way, Esposito delivered the stolen clock to its original owner, Ms. Cabot. Well, there’s a tiny flaw with this heart-warming deed…the clock is evidence in a crime. He couldn’t simply remove it from the PD and give it away.

Until the next episode, ho, ho, ho…

 

Flowing River

 

Life passes much too quickly, so why not stop for a moment and see what it has to offer? Take a drive out into the country, park the car, get out, and take a few steps in any direction and you just might see something like the places I’ve posted here. Besides, it sure beats seeing the wailing, weeping, and gnashing of teeth on social media. And yes, this is indeed a wonderful and beautiful country, as you shall see below …

 

 

 

 

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