Cool, Compassionate, and Just Plain Nice Cop Thread

Remington1

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We are fortunate to have police officers. Like any other professions there are some bad cops, but the largest majority are good and without their protection, it would be a sad world, where rape, robbery and murdered, etc.. would be rampant.
 

Dixie Cup

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Sep 16, 2006
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I agree Remington - While my contact with cops has been limited, I've never had an issue with them at all. They've all treated me respectfully. I suspect that people who have issues with cops likely are individuals who, themselves, have "issues". Cops are people too and there are mostly good ones (not unlike civilians) there may be a few bad ones as well. It's the bad ones that get the attention - again, not unlike regular civilians.


Robbery, murder, B&E's - or someone giving someone a helping hand - which one gets on the news? Same as with cops. It ain't a job for everyone and I admire and respect those who do it and do it well.


JMHO
 

spaminator

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'Superman' cop pushes car out of intersection

By Joe Warmington, Toronto Sun
First posted: Wednesday, May 18, 2016 09:26 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, May 19, 2016 07:45 AM EDT
The officer kept pushing and pushing and pushing.

There will be no denying it. It was all caught on video.

Yes, that was a police officer manhandling a disabled car in the middle of an intersection through moving traffic and getting a stranded woman to safety.

This video is already a classic on social media and out in Peel Regional Police’s 12 Division.

“The guy is a super hero,” teased Staff Sgt. Greg Amoroso. “Maybe Denzel Washington will have to play him in the movie.”

Who the heck was that mystery cop?

They certainly knew who he was in at the division at Dixie and Eglinton. And man did they tease Const. Brian Mortotsi when he arrived for parade Wednesday. First there was applause and then came the jokes.

“Here comes Superman,” teased his fellow officers. “The only thing missing is his cape.”

It was some pretty special police work. But for Mortotsi — an officer for almost three years and the proud son of a “wonderful” mother and father who came here from Ghana before he was born — it was just one of dozens of calls he responded to Tuesday.

“The call was a driver was stranded in the intersection at Cawthra Rd. and Eastgate Parkway and when I got there I could see it was stuck in a very tough spot,” said Mortotsi.

In fact at first there were so many cars flying by he couldn’t get his police cruiser out there to help. He did manage to get out into the middle of the intersection and shield the car from one side and after throwing on the police lights jumped out to help the driver.

“She was distraught,” he said.

The car was out of gas and with a terrified driver and trucks flying by almost clipping him, Mortotsi was running out of options.

“I knew I had to get her out of there,” he said. “I looked at the car and I thought the only thing I can do is push it.”

Even he laughed as he recalled the moment.

“It was heavy no question,” said Mortotsi with a chuckle.

That Ford car was no match for the Peel copper. It brings a brand new meaning to strength in policing. If he looked like a football player, there is a reason.

“I play receiver in flag football,” said the married father of a toddler. “But when I played back in high school for Clarkson I was a running back.”

He looked like an offensive guard in this video who picked up a fumble and scored a touchdown. The only thing he didn’t do was spike the car.

A neat part of the story is his police work was not yet done. He found out the woman behind the wheel had a licence under medical suspension.

“She was a nice person and just grateful that she got out of there,” said Mortotsi. “The important thing is she is safe.”

He had no idea any of it was caught on a dash cam of a car at the light.

“I got a call from my sergeant saying I was in a video all over YouTube.”

The first thing he thought was “uh oh, I didn’t have my hat on.”

“I think we will let that slide,” teased Amoroso.

“Mortotsi, Mortotsi, Mortotsi,” his good hearted pals chanted as they enjoyed the moment.

But they did want to put the new super cop to a special divisional test to make sure it wasn’t just a fluke. So a bunch of them piled on a cruiser and put it in neutral to see if Const. Mortotsi is as strong as the video shows.

Poor Brian was a good sport and got behind the car and gave it a shot. Piece of cake. He moved it and there is more video evidence.

“I couldn’t do that now, ten years ago or even 30 years ago,” said an impressed Acting Staff Supt. Rob Ryan, who heads the division. “Long before this, Mortotsi impressed his supervisors and peers. He’s an outstanding officer.”

And they don’t even have to put gas in his cruiser anymore since he can just push it himself.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bv4lNA67pbk
'Superman' cop pushes car out of intersection | Warmington | Toronto & GTA | New
 

Danbones

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Caring cop's good deeds get notice
Former social worker feeds diabetic homeless man

By Joe Warmington, Toronto Sun
First posted: Thursday, March 03, 2016 08:58 PM EST | Updated: Thursday, March 03, 2016 09:13 PM EST
TORONTO - When they first opened the e-mail at police headquarters, they were bracing themselves for a public complaint about one of their officers.
But this e-mail wasn’t a complaint — it was a much-deserved pat on the back.
“I saw an officer see a homeless man outside the Tim Hortons and he quickly pulled over to talk to the man,” the resident wrote. “The officer brought the man inside and bought him some food. Officers who go out of their way to ensure all citizens are okay renew my faith in the police.”
If it had been something negative, they would have tried to find the officer, so it made sense to track down this one who was so compassionate.
After digging, they learned it was 51 Division Const. Ed Parks, 47, who has an incredible life story. He was a social worker for 20 years before he joined the Toronto Police at 38. He put in years at Covenant House, where he described being mentored by veteran coppers like Insp. Sonia Thomas and retired detective sergeant Dickie Neeson.
“From them I learned about community policing and now I can say wearing this uniform is the greatest job in the world because I get to engage people and help them,” he said.
Originally from Michigan, where he earned a degree in psychology, Parks at 15 experienced the horror of losing his 22-year-old brother who was stabbed to death. He knows pain and wants to help people avoid it.
The husband of Barb and proud father of “great kids” Ileyah, 14, Jadyn, 10, and Ethan, 8, says every day is a gift.
Sometimes he hands them out, too.
This story goes back to a cold day in February when the 51 Division officer noticed something unusual at the corner of Richmond and Sherbourne.
“I saw a man walking across the traffic and through the red light,” Parks said. “I was kind of worried about him.”
Parks pulled over his squad car and took a closer look. He noticed it was a homeless man known as Cleo, who often panhandles in the neighbourhood.
“He’s a passive person and I could tell something was wrong,” he said. “I asked him if he was OK, but he was just mumbling and could barely answer. I thought for sure this was going to be a medical call.”
Cleo managed to tell him he has diabetes.
“I was able to determine his sugar levels were off and he told me he had not eaten anything,” Parks said.
The veteran copper quickly brought him inside the Tim Hortons, where he ordered a coffee and a peanut butter cookie.
Then, at Cleo’s request, a pulled pork sandwich.
It was a tasty choice and, more importantly, Cleo was feeling better within minutes. The solid meal was what he needed. All in a day’s work for Parks, who paid for another man’s lunch late Thursday as well, as photographer Dave Thomas and I witnessed.
The last time, somebody wrote in about it.
“We really appreciate it when the public takes the time to send us feedback,” Chief Mark Saunders said. “It is letters like this that remind us we have the public’s support and it inspires our members to continue doing what they do every single day.”
Said 51 Division’s Insp. David Rydzik: “I try and make it a point each and every day to say thank you to my officers for the great work they do. I know they appreciate the positive feedback coming from me, but when that positive feedback, or thank you, comes unsolicited from a member of the public it just means so much more to them.”
Parks said the important thing is Cleo is OK.
“All of my fellow officers do things like that,” Parks said. “It’s just what we do. We get to know people and we want to help them.”
This time, the public has heard about it.
jwarmington@postmedia.com
Toronto Police Const. Ed Parks poses with Cleo after he helped him with a meal at Tim Hortons. (Twitter)

Caring cop's good deeds get notice | Warmington | Toronto & GTA | News | Toronto
homeless peeps know all the shizzle goin down on the street
gotta love the idea of feeding a diabetic a donut though:
feed a man a donut, and you feed him for a day
feed a diabetic a pile of timmie's sugar
and you may just have fed him for life
 

spaminator

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Everything is just ducky in Brampton
Quack-thinking cops and citizens save family of ducks


By Chris Doucette, Toronto Sun
First posted: Saturday, May 21, 2016 04:51 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday, May 21, 2016 04:56 PM EDT
It was a potentially fowl situation as a mother mallard and her ducklings scurried beneath a car at a busy Brampton intersection to hide from a hungry hawk Saturday morning.

But some quack-thinking cops and citizens worked together to save the family of ducks.

“It was certainly an unusual situation,” Peel Regional Police Const. Rachel Gibbs said following the heartwarming rescue.

She said a motorist was turning left from Peel Centre Dr. onto Team Canada Dr., near the Bramalea City Centre, shortly after 9:30 a.m. when the ducklings and their mom suddenly darted out onto the street and took refuge under her vehicle.

The motorist was forced to stop in the middle of the intersection to avoid hurting the family of ducks.

Gibbs said officers at a nearby police station noticed the commotion and rushed over to help.

“It was one of the officers who noticed the hawk,” she said, explaining the bird of prey was perched atop a nearby light standard.

Saving the brood was challenging and the officers had to wing it.

With help from citizens, they used a blanket to “shield” the ducks and keep them in place while the woman pulled her car forward, Gibbs said.

The ducklings were then corralled into a cardboard box and driven, along with their mom, to Norton Place Park, which is nearly 2 km away and has a pond for the flock to swim in.

“This could have been an unsafe situation for the ducks and for motorists,” Gibbs said. “But by working together we ensured everyone was kept safe.”

cdoucette@postmedia.com
Quick-thinking cops and citizens rushed to the to rescue when some ducklings and their mother took cover from a hungry hawk under a vehicle at a busy Brampton intersection Saturday. The ducklings, seen here with Const. Joel Mazzotto, were corralled into a box and later set free in a park. PHOTO TWEETED BY PEEL REGIONAL POLICE


Everything is just ducky in Brampton | Toronto & GTA | News | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Trapped baby moose freed by police gets a ride-along in wildlife vehicle
THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 11:11 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 11:24 AM EDT
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. -- Wildlife officers had an unusual ride-along in one of their trucks after finding a baby moose under a stairwell in St. John's, N.L.
The animal became trapped in an outdoor porch stairwell of a home in the city's east end after getting separated from its mother.
Wildlife officers removed the moose, but police say he was too small to ride in the bed of their truck.
So, he hopped into the back seat.
The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary joked on Twitter that officers caught the "little fella trying to break into an east end home" and then placed him in the car where "this babe is riding shotgun (well not quite)."
Police posted pictures of the moose in the stairwell and curled up at the officer's feet in the wildlife truck, adding that the animal's mother was not be found.




Trapped baby moose freed by police gets a ride-along in wildlife vehicle | Canad
 

spaminator

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'Thank you for your support'; Police buy meal for couple who didn't want to sit near them
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, July 13, 2016 01:18 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, July 13, 2016 01:43 PM EDT
HOMESTEAD, Pa. -- A group of police officers have picked up the check for a couple who didn't want to sit near them at a Pennsylvania restaurant.
A server at the Eat'n Park restaurant in the borough of Homestead tells Pittsburgh's WTAE-TV that the couple wanted another table after being brought to a table near the officers Saturday. Officer Chuck Thomas says he told the man and woman that it was OK to sit near his group and that "we won't hurt you." After the couple walked away, he says he and another officer thought they should pay their bill.
The officers wrote on the bill, "thank you for your support."
Thomas says the gesture was part of an effort to create "a better relationship between the community and police."
'Thank you for your support'; Police buy meal for couple who didn't want to sit
 

spaminator

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Bikini-clad Swedish cop makes arrest while sunbathing
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, July 29, 2016 09:26 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, July 29, 2016 09:36 AM EDT
STOCKHOLM -- She was off duty and wearing a bikini but that didn't stop Swedish police officer Mikaela Kellner from catching a suspected thief.
A photo of Kellner pinning the suspect to the ground was trending on social media in Sweden this week.
"My first intervention while wearing a bikini during my 11 years as a police officer," she wrote on Instagram.
Kellner and three friends were sunbathing Wednesday in a Stockholm park, a homeless man selling newspapers approached, she told Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet.
After he left, one friend noticed her phone was missing. Kellner and a fellow police officer gave chase.
Kellner said she didn't hesitate to make the arrest while wearing a bikini.
"If I had been naked I would have intervened as well," she said.
In this photo provided by Jenny Kitsune, Adolffson Swedish police officer Mikaela Kellner is pinning a man to the ground who is suspected to have stolen a friend's mobile phone as she said, in Stockholm Sweden, Wednesday, July 27, 2016. (Jenny Kitsune Adolfsson via AP)

Bikini-clad Swedish cop makes arrest while sunbathing | Weird | News | Toronto S
 

spaminator

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Italian police cook elderly couple pasta to settle domestic dispute
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, August 09, 2016 03:56 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, August 09, 2016 04:10 PM EDT
ROME -- Police in a Rome neighbourhood have come to the "rescue" of an elderly, quarreling couple by cooking them two plates of pasta.
Police headquarters said Tuesday that neighbours called police one recent, hot summer night because the 94-year-old man and the 89-year-old woman -- married for nearly 70 years -- were doing lots of shouting.
According to a police statement, "it can happen, as it did this time, that they were yelling out their desperation so strongly, in the end someone called police."
The statement said the four officers realized there was no crime in progress, just "two souls to reassure." They set to work treating them to dinner, using ingredients at their disposal: spaghetti, butter, cheese plus a "precious ingredient -- all their humanity."
The couple ate with gusto.
In this recent photo made available by the Italian Police, two police officers serve pasta, after cooking it, to two elderly, after they were called in a Rome neighborhood to check on a couple loudly quarreling on a recent, hot summer night. Police say that four officers who came to the couple's apartment used butter, cheese, spaghetti and "all their humanity" to cook them dinner and ease their loneliness. (Italian Police Photo via AP)

Italian police cook elderly couple pasta to settle domestic dispute | World | Ne
 

spaminator

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Policeman pays for gas of driver who only had $1.79 on him
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, August 10, 2016 04:01 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, August 10, 2016 04:05 PM EDT
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. -- A Massachusetts police officer has paid for the gasoline of a driver who mistakenly pumped $20 worth of fuel into his car with only $1.79 in his pocket.
Paul Zabawa tells The Daily Hampshire Gazette he was in desperate need of fuel Monday when he pulled into a Northampton gas station with less than $2 on him. He gave the money to the attendant but accidentally pumped $20 worth of gas.
The attendant said he would have to call police.
Coincidentally, Officer Michael Szawlowski pulled into the station at that time to buy water before a detail.
The officer paid for the gas. When Zabawa offered to repay him, he said, "Don't worry about it at all."
The officer says he was just trying to resolve a simple misunderstanding.
Policeman pays for gas of driver who only had $1.79 on him | World | News | Toro
 

spaminator

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Parliament Hill shooting hero Kevin Vickers' son saves woman’s life
The Canadian Press
First posted: Thursday, August 11, 2016 01:12 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, August 11, 2016 01:41 PM EDT
MIRAMICHI, N.B. -- The son of Parliament Hill shooting hero Kevin Vickers is being commended for his part in saving a woman's life -- again.
Const. Andrew Vickers of Miramichi police responded Tuesday morning to the city's Centennial Bridge, where a 19-year-old woman had climbed onto the outside girder and appeared to be getting ready to jump.
Deputy police chief Brian Cummings said on Thursday the woman was "about 15 feet above the roadway on one of the steel girders of the bridge hanging out over the water," which was perhaps about 100 feet below.
When Vickers arrived, he climbed out after her, Sgt. Dana Hicks said.
"Vickers got out onto the girder with the young lady to prevent her from falling or jumping off, at considerable risk to himself," Hicks said in a release.
A passing motorist saw what was happening, stopped his vehicle and climbed out to secure Vickers' ankles until Const. Bradley Gallant arrived, Hicks said.
"The second officer was a trained hostage negotiator, just as it happened, and he was able to engage in conversation with the female, and after about 10 minutes, I'm sure what seemed like an eternity, they were able to talk her back in," said Cummings.
"My (understanding) is she's getting some treatment and that's a good thing."
Kevin Vickers, who famously shot gunman Michael Zehaf-Bibeau in 2014 while Parliament's sergeant-at-arms, commended his son on Twitter, saying that he was doing "God's work," and that he was proud of him. The elder Vickers is now Canada's ambassador to Ireland.
Cummings said the officers told him "it's just another day on the job." In fact, it wasn't the first time Andrew Vickers helped save a woman's life.
Vickers jumped into the frigid Miramichi river in October 2011 to rescue a woman after a car crash.
According to a description of that rescue from St. John Ambulance New Brunswick, which gave Vickers and two other people life-saving awards, Vickers saw the woman struggling in the river.
"With a rope tied to his waist, Const. Vickers swam to the woman with great difficulty, as the water was causing him to be hypothermic. Having reached the woman, Const. Vickers worked to tow her to shore even though he was feeling the extreme effects of the cold water. Somehow the rope became unattached," St. John Ambulance said in a Facebook post.
"At this point, off duty volunteer firefighter Stephen Gammon ran into the water with the rope now attached to him and secured by Sgt. Leslie Saunders. Stephen took hold of Const. Vickers and the woman and swam them to shore with the assistance of Sgt. Saunders and the rope."
Andrew Vickers, second from right, poses for a photo in this 2012 handout photo. The son of Parliament Hill shooting hero Kevin Vickers is being commended for his part in saving a woman's life - again. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - St. John Ambulance Saint-Jean - Harry Mullin)

Parliament Hill shooting hero Kevin Vickers' son saves woman’s life | Canada | N
 

spaminator

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Officer pulls man from tracks just before train arrives
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Monday, August 29, 2016 09:49 AM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 29, 2016 11:04 AM EDT
SECAUCUS, N.J. -- A New Jersey Transit police officer is being hailed as a hero for pulling a man from train tracks in northern New Jersey last week.
Authorities say Officer Victor Ortiz says he followed the man he saw exiting a train at Secaucus Junction as the man jumped onto the tracks. Ortiz says the man kneeled down onto the tracks as a train was about a half-mile away.
He grabbed the man who kept saying "I just want to die," and Ortiz eventually was able to pull him off the tracks just as the train was coming into the station.
NJ Transit officials say they couldn't be more proud of Ortiz and hope it reminds people what police officers do every day.
Officer pulls man from tracks just before train arrives | World | News | Toronto

N.J. officer pulls man from tracks before train arrives
The Associated Press
First posted: Monday, August 29, 2016 04:49 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 29, 2016 05:09 PM EDT
SECAUCUS, N.J. -- A New Jersey Transit police officer is being hailed as a hero for pulling a man from the tracks and out of the way of an oncoming train last week.
NJ Transit said in a statement that Officer Victor Ortiz responded heroically when he pulled the man from the tracks at Secaucus Junction on Friday morning, seconds before the arrival of a train.
"Officer Ortiz's selfless and heroic actions demonstrated a level of bravery and a true sense of compassion and purpose that often goes unrecognized but is ever present in our law enforcement community," the agency said.
Ortiz told The Record newspaper he received a report of a disorderly passenger about to exit a train.
The man repeatedly asked why police were called. Ortiz said he asked the man to sit down while he spoke to the conductor, but that he walked down the platform and jumped onto the tracks, saying he didn't want to go to jail.
Ortiz said he checked to see that there were no oncoming trains before following the man, who ran to another set of tracks.
"At that point he's like, 'I just want to die, I just want to die,'" Ortiz told WCBS-TV. "He pretty much went down on his knees and down on his arms. At that point I said, 'You're not going to die, you're not going to die.'"
Ortiz struggled with the man and said he called central communications to stop the oncoming train, but its horn blew.
"I knew at that point the train's not going to stop in time," Ortiz said.
Video showed Ortiz eventually overpowering and dragging the man to safety moments before a train pulls into the station.
N.J. officer pulls man from tracks before train arrives | World | News | Toronto
 

spaminator

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Video shows rescue of dad and son after overdoses on highway
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, September 02, 2016 04:54 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, September 02, 2016 05:00 PM EDT
WEST CHESTER, Ohio — The Ohio State Highway Patrol says a trooper and a nurse helped save a father and son who had apparently overdosed on heroin inside a car along a busy interstate.
A dash cam video shows the trooper finding the unresponsive father and son Monday evening along Interstate 75, 15 miles north of Cincinnati. The doors were locked, so the trooper broke a window to get in.
A nurse who was driving by in an SUV also pulled over to help.
They were given the overdose antidote naloxone and taken to a hospital. A patrol spokesman says they were treated and released that day.
Authorities say the driver of the car has been charged with operating a vehicle under the influence.
Video shows rescue of dad and son after overdoses on highway | World | News | To
 

spaminator

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Cat fished out of Lake Ontario, owner sought
By Maryam Shah, Toronto Sun
First posted: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 11:04 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 01:10 PM EDT
Missing a cat on the waterfront?
The Toronto Police marine unit rescued a soaking wet feline from a tire in Lake Ontario near Stadium Road, by Lake Shore Blvd. and Bathurst St., on Labour Day.
Now they want to reunite the kitty with its owner.
“When the officer got there, it was soaking wet and cold and it pretty much dove at him and he rescued it and now they have it there at the station,” Const. Allyson Douglas-Cook said on Tuesday.
Officers believe it is “definitely” a house cat and not a stray. But they don't want to release any description or photographs just yet.
“They didn't want a random person saying it's their cat,” explained Douglas-Cook.
Police have simply described the feline as “a pretty cool cat.”
“They've all gotten a little bit attached to it.”
Contact Toronto Police if that sounds like your cat.
Cat fished out of Lake Ontario, owner sought | Toronto & GTA | News | Toronto Su
 

Tecumsehsbones

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And in the "don't get mad, get even" category. . .


He sexually abused her as a child. She became a police officer and hunted him down.

By Travis M. Andrews September 8




Erlis Joseph Chaisson is a serial child molester.

He first spent time in prison for sexually assaulting an 8-year-old in Louisiana but was released in 1994, according to KXXV.

The 47-year-old might have remained free if one 27-year-old north central Texas police officer hadn’t gone far above the call of duty.

The two weren’t strangers. In fact, they’re relatives.

And their pasts dovetail in a horrific way. For four years, Chaisson had sexually abused her when she was a young girl, forcing her to rub his p*nis and performing oral sex on her.

It began when she was 8 years old.

She became a cop. And in 2014, more than 15 years after the abuse, she arranged a meeting with him and secretly recorded their conversation.

She had a recorder stashed away in her bra, capturing the entire traumatic conversation.

On that two-hour tape, he described to her, in detail, what he did to her. He blames her for it. He tells her she wouldn’t understand because she doesn’t possess male genitalia. He praises himself by saying that at least, “I kept you a virgin, didn’t I?”

Most importantly, he confessed. Over and over and over again.

Because of that, he’ll spend life in prison, a jury recently decided.

The officer’s name has not been made public and The Washington Post does not name victims of sexual abuse.

A few years ago, the officer decided to begin attending therapy. She learned that her issues likely stemmed from the abuse Chaisson heaped upon her from the ages of 8 to 12 — more than 15 years ago. At first, he would rub and scratch her back, cuddling with the child. Then he made a habit of climbing into her bed at night, as she tried to sleep.

It escalated.

Chaisson began gyrating his genitals between her legs, forcing her hand to rub them. Eventually, he performed oral sex on her.

Through therapy, Doe realized she needed to confront this painful past. And she had a pretty good idea of how she could do it — after all, she had just been trained as a police officer.

“I’ve always, always wanted to be a detective,” she told the Daily Beast. “I was fresh out of the academy. It was kind of, ‘If he’s going to talk, he’s going to talk’ — how do I prove it?”

Added Doe, “I thought to myself: I’m the difference between him and prison.”

Doe decided it was her responsibility to put this predator away for good while facing her own past — two birds with one stone.
“My job is in law enforcement,” she told the Waco Tribune-Herald. “I’m held to a higher standard. I just want to protect people, and how can I do that if I can’t even protect myself?”

So in September 2014, the then-25-year-old told McLennan County Sheriff’s Detective Brad Bond everything she could remember about the abuse. The two decided she could get him to confess, on tape.

So she called Chaisson.

Doe presented a good reason for the conversation — she was in therapy and needed closure.

“He knew that I was in counseling and he knew I wanted to talk about the abuse,” she told the Waco Tribune-Herald.

In the 25-minute phone recording, which was played in court, Chaisson insisted they meet in person to have the conversation, so he could present his side of the story.

“We need to talk, but not on the phone,” Chaisson said. “We need to sit down and talk face to face. Then you can explain and I can explain. There are always two sides to every story.”

“How can there be two sides?” she asked.

“Everything has two sides. If you want to meet, maybe we can go through some scenarios and have some closures,” Chaisson said.
They arranged a meeting in a public park in Granbury, Texas, and she prepared herself — both mentally and physically.

She borrowed a tape recorder from a friend who also worked in law enforcement and hid the device in her bra. She armed herself with her pistol. She arranged for her friend to observe her meeting with Chaisson from her truck, parked about 75 yards from the bench where they were meeting.

She took a deep breath.

In an interview with the Daily Beast, she explained what happened that day.

When she arrived to the park, Chaisson was on a bench, holding a cigarette.

“My heart was racing,” she said.

So many things could go wrong, and the idea of him actually confessing to what he had done likely seemed absurd at that point.
But it shouldn’t have. He poured out the truth.

“He was talking like he was talking to his best friend,” she told the Daily Beast. “Six times, he confessed — in the first hour and a half of that recording.”

He confessed, but he said, “You’re putting, trying to put all the blame on me.” He attempted to shift the blame by saying things like, “I always stopped myself before I went too far,” “It takes two” and “I kept you a virgin, didn’t I?”

He continued.

“You need to control your curiosity. I wasn’t supposed to be the friend you played nasty with,” Chaisson told her. “I’d be laying on the couch and then you got that look in your eyes. I’d pull the covers up and you’d come run in and jump under there and back up all the way to me. In the mornings, cuddle up to you, scratch your back.”

He also blamed his biological sex.

“If you had a p*nis, you would know,” he said.

Police were pleased to capture the confession but shocked.

“We don’t ever get stuff like that,” Det. Bond told The Daily Beast. “It’s better than a confession. Even when they confess, they don’t give us all of the details. It was even better.”

Prosecutors played the two-hour tape in its entirety for the jury.

“I don’t think you can hear that recording — no matter who you are — and have it not have an impact on you,” District Attorney Gabrielle Massey told the Daily Beast.

“A life prison term is the only just punishment,” Prosecutor Andrew Erwin told the jury during the trial, the Waco Tribune-Herald reported.

Stephen Gordon, the attorney representing Chaisson, begged for mercy.

“Can you consider mercy? Can you consider grace? He is going to prison no matter what you do,” Gordon said. “He’s going to be a registered sex offender for the rest of his life.”

The judge and jury agreed with Erwin.

He was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child and two counts of indecency with a child by contact on Aug. 26, which led to automatic life sentence.

He will spend at least 42 years in prison before he’s eligible for parole, the Waco Tribune-Herald reported. By that point, he’ll be 89 years old.

One other victim testified during the trial, and others found the courage to come forward to prosecutors after the trail.

As for the detective, she told the Daily Beast it feels like “a weight lifting over my shoulders.”

“I no longer have to hide the secret or bear the responsibility of it.”


https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...p_rhp-morning-mix_mm-detective:homepage/story


Tough cop. I'm glad I wasn't dirtbag's lawyer.


Still, I don't suppose we're going to hear anybody from that community condemn this guy. What is it with these people?
 

spaminator

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Toronto cop Making Strides for victims of crime
By Chris Doucette, Toronto Sun
First posted: Sunday, September 11, 2016 03:35 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday, September 11, 2016 03:45 PM EDT
TORONTO - Most people choose to spend their vacation relaxing on a beach, hanging out at a cottage or maybe cruising on a boat.
But Toronto Police Supt. Heinz Kuck uses time off to push himself to his physical limits and to raise money for victims of crime.
And the 11 Division unit commander’s latest challenge, dubbed Making Strides — a 500-kilometre trek on an ElliptiGo bike — may be his most gruelling to date.
“I’m always looking for something new and more challenging that can help raise awareness of Victim Services Toronto (VST) and the great work they do,” Kuck told the Toronto Sun recently.
The 56-year-old has raised close to $55,000 for VST since 2012 by taking on arduous expeditions meant to metaphorically simulate the emotional and physical pain that crime victims endure while recovering from injury and loss.
For his latest endeavour, Kuck will ride his strange-looking bike — essentially an elliptical machine on wheels — from Toronto to the Quebec border.
Kuck will leave from Sunnyside Beach in the last week of September or first week of October, depending on the weather forecast. He’ll follow the Waterfront Trail along Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River before finishing up just outside of Coteau-du-Lac, Que.
The trek will take five days and he’ll travel upwards of 100 km each day on the ElliptiGo bike, which the senior Toronto officer explained is easier than running but harder than cycling.
“It’s a lot of fun, but it takes some practice to get your balance,” Kuck said of the tricky bike. “It’s almost like being on a skateboard.”
“There’s a great degree of freedom,” he added.
However, spending six to seven hours a day on the ElliptiGo bike will test his mettle.
“It’s more difficult than riding a standard bike because the wheels are smaller and you’re standing the whole time, so you’re not as aerodynamic,” Kuck explained.
He said he plans to spread the word about the great work done by VST during his travels, which will include stops in Port Hope, Picton, Kingston, Morrisburg and Montreal.
“I’ll also be encouraging people to make a small donation so that Victim Services Toronto can continue their great work,” he said.
He’ll also use the twitter accounts @VSToronto and @TPS11Div to share the “trials and tribulations” he encounters along the way.
Kuck hoped Making Strides would raise $5,500, but he’s already surpassed that goal by nearly $1,000.
Anyone interested in making a donation can visit HK MAKING STRIDES.
BY THE NUMBERS:
• One senior Toronto cop.
• One ElliptiGo bike.
• Five days.
• Five nights.
• 100 kilometres per day.
• Up to seven hours per day.
• 500 kilometres to Quebec border.
Fundraising efforts for Victim Services Toronto:
•Making Waves: In 2012 and 2013, Kuck and some fellow officers raised $35,000 canoeing 55 km across Lake Ontario — from Niagara-on-the-Lake to the Mississauga Sailing Club.
•Making Tracks 1: In 2014, Kuck spent five days dog sledding 120 km through Algonquin Park and raised $8,800.
•Making Tracks 2: In 2015, Kuck upped the ante by mushing a dog sled for 10 days over 250 km of frozen northern Ontario wilderness to James Bay, raising $11,000.
•Making Strides: In the coming weeks, Kuck plans to ride an ElliptiGo bike 500 km — from Toronto to the Quebec border — over five days. So far, he has raised $6,350.
Kuck’s other fundraising efforts:
•Paddle for Provisions: In 2014, Kuck paddled 22 km around the Toronto Islands and raised 7,000 pounds of food for food banks.
•Bang and Olufssen Yorkville Run: In 2015, Kuck raised $2,000 for Victim Services Toronto’s new trauma dog program by running 5 km with VST’s trauma dog, Dandy.
•Push for Hope: In June 2016, Kuck pushed a heavily weighted sled for two hours, travelling 3 km through the city, raising more than $10,000 for the Dovercourt Boys and Girls Club.
cdoucette@postmedia.com
Toronto Police Supt. Heinz Kuck's latest fundraising effort for Victim Services Toronto will see him ride an ElliptiGo bike from the city's west end to the Quebec border. (PHOTO SUPPLIED BY TORONTO POLICE)

Toronto cop Making Strides for victims of crime | Toronto & GTA | News | Toronto
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
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RCMP rescue family from Dauphin fire
WINNIPEG SUN
First posted: Tuesday, September 13, 2016 01:52 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 13, 2016 03:49 PM EDT
Two Dauphin RCMP officers saved a family of four from a house fire early Sunday morning.
The officers responded to a report of a fire about 3:25 a.m. Saturday. When they arrived, they found a shed behind a gas station had caught on fire and had quickly spread to an adjacent house.
“They responded to a call, were presented with a situation and deemed it prudent to enter the house,” Const. Rob Tuff said from Dauphin on Tuesday. “They could hear the fire trucks coming but they were a ways away, so they decided to get the four people out of the house safely.”
The officers banged on the windows and doors, but no one answered. So they entered the home and woke up the mother and three children. Tuff, who was not involved in the rescue, did not know the ages of the children who were rescued.
The four family members were treated by paramedics at the scene and did not have to go to the hospital, Tuff said.
Local fire crews were able to put out the blaze. Damage to the home has yet to be estimated.
“We’re looking at it as an arson,” Tuff said.
The investigation is continuing with the help of the local fire commissioner.
Anyone with information is asked to contact Dauphin RCMP at 204-622-5020 or call Manitoba Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS).
jbender@postmedia.com
Twitter: @bendersun
Dauphin RCMP said the cause of the fire appears to be arson. (RCMP PHOTO)

RCMP rescue family from Dauphin fire | Canada | News | Toronto Sun