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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Off-duty Providence officer killed in motorcycle crash

Off-duty Providence officer killed in motorcycle crash 

Providence police officer John Reposa Jr., center, with Anissa Otero, 8, and her mother Raquel Hernandez as they present the family with a new iPad in December 2012. Otero, who has autism uses an iPad to communicate and had the device stolen from her hands when she wandered out of her family's home on Manton Avenue in Providence. Reposa helped find the girl and returned to surprise the family with a new iPad. At left is Sgt. Timothy McGann.

JAMESTOWN, R.I. (AP) -- A Providence police officer has been killed in a motorcycle crash while off duty in Jamestown.
Police say 43-year-old John Reposa Jr. was riding a motorcycle through the intersection of North Road and Westwind Drive when it collided with a car at about 8:30 p.m. Saturday.
Reposa was pronounced dead at the scene.
The driver of the car, 44-year-old Marijke Landon of North Carolina, was not injured.
No charges have been filed, but the accident remains under investigation.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

DeKalb County officer dies in traffic accident

DeKalb County officer dies in traffic accident

TUCKER, Ga. — 
A DeKalb County police officer died in a traffic accident Saturday while trying to find a motorist who fled a traffic stop.
Officer Ivorie Klusmann was responding to a call when his patrol car ran off the road and hit a tree at 2:45 a.m. Saturday, said Police Chief Cedric Alexander. Klusmann died at the scene. The 31-year-old officer had been with the DeKalb County Police Department since October and graduated from the police academy in April.
"This is very hurtful and very difficult for us as a police department and a community," Alexander told a news conference.
Klusmann crashed near the intersection of DeKalb Medical Parkway and Heritage Park Trail.
The officer had pulled over a driver during a traffic stop, Alexander said. The officer took the driver's information and returned to his patrol car. When the motorist fled, Klusmann pursued him for a short distance until a supervisor called off the chase.
Then another officer spotted the vehicle. Klusmann was headed in that direction when he crashed. The driver escaped.
"We're going to pursue this right to the end. We won't stop," Alexander said.
Flags at police headquarters were lowered to half-staff in memory of the father of two children, the chief said.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

GA: Deputy dies after collapsing at Clarke County Jail

GA: Deputy dies after collapsing at Clarke County Jail 

A veteran sheriff’s deputy died early Thursday after collapsing at the Clarke County Jail.
Lt. William “Bill” Morgan, 50, was the B-shift supervisor at the jail. He collapsed in the jail’s intake section at about 12:15 a.m., officials said.
Fellow deputies, EMTs and Athens-Clarke firefighters tried to revive Morgan, who was later pronounced dead at Athens Regional Medical Center.
“Lt. Morgan served the Clarke County community and the sheriff’s office for over 23 years as a dedicated and caring member of our law enforcement community,” the Clarke County Sheriff’s Office stated in a Thursday afternoon news release. “Our prayers go out to his loving family.”
The deputy was promoted to lieutenant a year ago.
Morgan is survived by his wife, a son and two daughters.
The sheriff’s office said it will release funeral details and other arrangements once they have been made.

Vests give law enforcement fighting chance

Vests give law enforcement fighting chance 

Like Sgt. Michael Wilson, slain by a suspect’s bullet Monday, more than half of U.S. law enforcement officers killed on the job in 2011 and 2012 were wearing body armor.

Of 119 officers killed through a criminal act, 71 were wearing armor, according to FBI data.

“Of course the face, throat — it’s vulnerable,” Fort Myers police Officer Alain Gagnon said. “But ... it’s more odds on your side when you wear the vest.”

Wilson was responding to a domestic call for the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office when a bullet struck him in the torso above his protective vest. He was killed by the unlucky angle of the shot, with the suspect shooting from above.
Deputy Wilson

Bullet-resistant vests can’t prevent all risks, but Gagnon and many officers in Southwest Florida wouldn’t go without one. Made of layers of synthetic fibers, the vests are designed to absorb a bullet and dissipate its kinetic energy.

The Fort Myers Police Department has 189 vests, purchased for about $600 each with funds from a Bureau of Justice Assistance grant, according to Police Department spokeswoman Shelly Flynn. The vests, which are worn hidden under an officer’s uniform, are replaced every five years.

The Fort Myers and Cape Coral police departments require the use of vests unless an officer is working behind a desk or under severe weather conditions such as heat or humidity.

“They are 4.5 pounds of very thick plastic that doesn’t flex very much and holds in all the heat,” said Sgt. Dana Coston of the Cape Coral Police Department.

Motorcycle officers in Cape Coral have suffered heat sickness wearing vests, Coston said. Some officers purchase hoses that hook into the air conditioning of their patrol cars and blow cold air down their shirts.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office requires uniformed personnel to wear vests. The Collier County Sheriff’s Office highly recommends, but does not require, deputies to wear vests. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office requires deputies wear vests during certain hazardous situations.

Cape Coral police Officer David Wagoner was shot three times during a 2011 traffic stop — two of the bullets struck his vest, but one tore through his abdomen. He needed surgery and seven months to recover before returning to work.

Fort Myers police Officer Andrew Widman was wearing a vest when he was killed in 2008. The suspect shot him in the face.

The suspect also shot at Gagnon, who was Widman’s partner at the time. That night, it was training, not his vest, that saved Gagnon’s life.

Officers are trained to take cover under fire, so Gagnon ducked.

“That’s when he missed,” Gagnon said. “So he hit the wall right where I was.”

Cathy Lowe, vice president of domestic sales and marketing at Survival Armor, has an emotional thank-you card from a Massachusetts officer’s daughter as evidence her equipment saves lives.

Survival Armor, a Fort Myers company that supplies the city’s Police Department, is constantly striving to make officers safer. For example, the armpit area is particularly vulnerable when an officer is wearing a vest, so Survival Armor takes care its vests cover that area. But ever-evolving weapons pose a challenge, Lowe said.

“You can’t stop everything,” she said, “because the minute you make armor that stops something, the ammo manufacturers are making something else.”

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

McCracken County, Ky. Deputy Chad Shaw Collapses, Dies at School

McCracken County, Ky. Deputy Chad Shaw Collapses, Dies at School

A McCracken County, Ky. Sheriff's deputy died Tuesday after collapsing while assisting at a school.
Deputy Chad Shaw was at the Community Christian Academy helping the faculty and staff prepare for their meet and greet that was scheduled to kick off the new school year, according to a department news release.
Shaw was in uniform and was also assisting with security at the school when he collapsed around 6:15 p.m.
The 47-year-old was transported to Baptist Health Paducah where he was pronounced dead.
The McCracken County Coroner's Office is currently investigating the cause of his death.
Shaw is survived by his wife, Margaret, and their two children, 7-year-old Rachael and 8-year-old Elizabeth, who attend the school.
"Deputy Shaw will always be remembered for his love for his family, his love for helping others, and the thoroughness in the way he did his job as a public servant for the citizens that he served," Sheriff Jon Hayden said in a statement.
Funeral arrangements are pending.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Barbara Reed-Trombetta, police officer, died of melanoma

Barbara Reed-Trombetta, police officer, died of melanoma

Barbara Ann Reed-Trombetta, 67, a Philadelphia police officer from 1979 to 1994, died of melanoma on Thursday, Aug. 1, at her home in North Cape May

She worked in the Sixth District at 11th and Winter Streets before spending the second part of her police career as a court liaison. 

After a family member who was a police officer was killed in the line of duty in 1985, she decided to work with the courts, her husband, Stephen, a former Philadelphia police officer, said. 

Born in Roxborough, she graduated from the John W. Hallahan Catholic Girls' High School and completed courses in narcotics prevention conducted by the Police Department. 

Before becoming a police officer, she was a clerk for a pharmacy in Manayunk. The Trombettas moved to the Jersey Shore in 1994, where she had been the office manager for a physician in Cape May Court House since 1997, her husband said. 

Since 2004, he said, she also had worked on weekends in emergency room registration at Cape Regional Medical Center in Cape May Court House. 

Besides her husband Stephen, she is survived by sons William and Robert White, stepsons Stephen and Patrick Trombetta, stepdaughter Marybeth Lolli, a brother, and nine grandchildren. 

She is also survived by former husband Peter White. A memorial service was set for 11 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 6, at the Radzieta Funeral Home, 9 Hand Ave., Cape May Court House. 

Donations may be made to the Melanoma Research Foundation, Box 759329, Baltimore, Md., 21275-9329.

Charlotte County Corporal Michael Wilson killed while responding to a domestic disturbance

Charlotte County Corporal Michael Wilson killed while responding to a domestic disturbance

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. - The Charlotte County Sheriff's Office says Corporal Michael Wilson was shot and killed on Tuesday night.

Deputies say the 42-year-old Wilson was shot while responding to a domestic disturbance.
The shooting occurred at the Lakes of Tuscana Apartment Homes on Veterans Boulevard in Port Charlotte. The complex is located adjacent to I-75 near exit 170.

Shortly after midnight a Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office SWAT team entered the apartment of the shooting suspect. Inside the apartment deputies found the suspect dead.

The investigation into the shooting will continue throughout the night.

Wilson was a 20-year veteran of the Sheriff's Office. He leaves behind a wife and three children.


Monday, August 5, 2013

St. Charles Parish deputy dies in Sunday night crash while responding to call

St. Charles Parish deputy dies in Sunday night crash while responding to call 

St. Charles Parish Sheriff's deputy was killed in a four-vehicle wreck on Sunday night on Paul Maillard Road in Luling at approximately 8:45 p.m. as he was responding to a call for assistance from another officer. Louisiana State Police said 41-year-old Deputy Jeff Watson was driving north on Paul Maillard approaching Post Drive in his 2010 Dodge Charger police vehicle  when Luling resident Dallas Veillon, 56, who was driving a 2004 Toyota Tundra, made a left turn onto Post Drive and crossed into the path of Watson's vehicle. 

Watson, whose police lights were activated, struck the Tundra and then careened into the southbound lane of traffic, where his police vehicle collided head on with a 2004 Ford Expedition driven by Arthur Tregre, 80, of Hahnville.  

Luling resident Aaron Hagmann, 29, who was driving a 2007 Honda motorcycle behind Tregre's vehicle crashed into the rear of the Expedition.

Veillon, Hagmann and Watson, who was not wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash, were transported to St. Charles Parish Hospital in Luling. Watson was pronounced dead at the hospital; Veillon and Hagmann received only minor injuries.

Tregre, who also was not wearing a seatbelt, was transported to the LSU Public Hospital Level 1 Trauma Center in New Orleans with critical injuries.

"It is a sad day for the St. Charles Parish Sheriff's Office," said St. Charles Parish Sheriff Greg Champagne in a release. "Deputy Watson was a dedicated public servant who will be deeply missed by all St. Charles Parish residents. Please keep his family, the other drivers involved in this tragic accident, and the St. Charles Parish Sheriff's Office in your thoughts and prayers."

Although impairment is not suspected to be a factor in the crash, blood was drawn from Veillon and Tregre, and a toxicology analysis will be conducted by the Louisiana State Police Crime Lab. Toxicology results on Deputy Watson are pending an autopsy. Speed is considered to be a factor in the crash.

The crash is under investigation, which is being handled by State Police. 

Police officer dies in Livingston County crash

Police officer dies in Livingston County crash 

An Oswego woman and recently hired Coal City police officer died Saturday night after a crash in rural Livingston County, according to a news release issued by Livingston County Deputy Coroner Marie Margherio.

Heather K. Wandt, 30, was traveling northbound on Illinois Route 47, 1/2 mile south of Saunemin, shortly after midnight when she attempted to pass a semi-trailer and collided with an oncoming pickup truck in the southbound lane, 

Margherio said Wandt was pronounced dead at the scene.

The accident is under investigation by the Illinois State Police, and an autopsy has been scheduled.

According to several other online and news reports, Wandt was a recently sworn-in member of the Coal City Police Department. She was reportedly on her way home from a training session in Champaign.

"I, along with the members of the department, village officials and employees, are deeply affected by this loss," said Coal City Police Chief Thomas J. Best. "I ask that everyone please think of Heather's friends and family at this difficult time."

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Vt. police officer dies in interstate crash - WCAX.COM Local Vermont News, Weather and Sports-

Vt. police officer dies in interstate crash


WATERBURY, Vt. -
A Barre man who worked as an Orange County Sheriff's deputy and part-time police officer in Northfield was killed in a late night crash in Waterbury.
Police say Michael Zemanek, 22, was driving south on Interstate 89 just before midnight Wednesday, when for some unknown reason he drifted to the left side of the road, through the median and across both northbound lanes. The car bounced off the guardrail and went back across the median and both southbound lanes of travel, hitting the guardrail on the other side of the road.
Zemanek was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Police are investigating, but say speed does not appear to be a factor.
Zemanek was an Orange County Sheriff's deputy and part-time Northfield Police Department officer. He was off-duty at the time of the crash.
In a statement, Orange County Sheriff Bill Bohnyak said, "Our entire office is very saddened at the loss of one of our brothers. Michael was a hard-working, intelligent, community-oriented police officer with a bright future in Law Enforcement. This is not only a loss to Orange County Sheriff Department, but to all the communities that he served."
Zemanek had also previously worked for the Barre City Police Department.