michigan trooper
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michigan trooper
President Tpr. Michael Moorman Vice President D/Sgt. Christopher Luty Tpr. Tim Horan (Acting) 1st District Representative Lansing Tpr. Nate Johnson Brighton Tpr. Michael Sura Ithaca Tpr. Michael Zeilinger Corunna Tpr. Tim Murphy Jackson Tpr. Larry Rothman Adrian Tpr. Bill Strouse Jonesville Tpr. Keith Pillar Collins Ctr. D/Sgt. Bill Eberhardt Training/Lab S/Sgt. Jan Johnson Tpr. Chris Tuckey 2nd District North Representative Metro North Tpr. Ray Pechman Richmond Tpr. Jay Morningstar Ypsilanti Tpr. Jim Smiley Groveland Tpr. Trevor Radke Tpr. Tim Permoda 5th District Representative Paw Paw Tpr. Richard Carlson White Pigeon Tpr. Tim Wagner Niles Tpr. Tim Thompson Bridgman Tpr. Steve Vrablic South Haven Tpr. Paul Gonyeau Saugatuck Tpr. Taylor Bonovetz Wayland Tpr. Kellie Summerhays Battle Creek Tpr. Adam Starkweather Hastings Tpr. Ray Durham Coldwater Tpr. Todd Price Region 1 (Representing Districts 1, 5, and 6) Sgt. Rep: Sgt. Dennis Harris D/Sgt. Rep: D/Sgt. Duane Hickok Tpr. Scott Wilber 6th District Representative Rockford Sgt. Tom Draves Reed City Tpr. Paul Stone Mt. Pleasant Tpr. James Ciochetto Grand Haven Sgt. John Tillman Newaygo Tpr. Paul Campbell Hart Tpr. Mike Stites Lakeview Tpr. Norma Makl Ionia Tpr. James Yeager Lab S/Sgt. Jason Sinke Secretary/Treasurer Sgt. Richard Hale Tpr. Craig McDonald 2nd District South Representative Metro South Tpr. Jake Liss Monroe Tpr. Herman Brown Detroit (d) Tpr. Joseph Pendergraff Detroit (a) Tpr. Rich Fell Detroit (m) Tpr. Gary Melvin Gaming Tpr. Scott Singleton Lab S/Sgt. Tim Ketvirtis SECID D/Sgt. Bill Terry Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh 3rd District Representative Bay City Tpr. Jay Kurowski East Tawas Tpr. Gregg Kopkau Bad Axe Tpr. Larry Verga Sandusky Tpr. Dale Brywig Flint Tpr. James Swain West Branch Tpr. Paul Frechette Bridgeport Tpr. Joshua Coulter Lapeer Tpr. Eric Hofmeister Caro Tpr. Amy Hofmeister Gladwin Tpr. Everett Renauld Lab S/Sgt. Ryan Larrison Tpr. Mark Tamlyn 7th District Representative Traverse City Tpr. Rick Doehring Cheboygan Tpr. Ron Beckett Gaylord Tpr. Chris Belt Alpena Tpr. Michael Lorenz Houghton Lake Tpr. Michael Harger Cadillac Tpr. Rick Pearson Manistee Tpr. Wes Smith Petoskey Tpr. James Armstrong Kalkaska Tpr. Stephen Porter Rogers City Tpr. Steven Bullock Lab S/Sgt. Joe Stoddard Tpr. Jerry Mazurek 8th District Representative Negaunee Tpr. Jonah Bonovetz Newberry Tpr. Eric Johnson St. Ignace Tpr. James Wachnicki Manistique Tpr. Eric Gravelle Gladstone Tpr. Lisa Kanyuh Iron Mountain Vacant Wakefield Tpr. Steve Koskela L’Anse Tpr. Patricia Butler Stephenson Tpr. Joseph Racicot Calumet Tpr. Steve Lanctot Munising Tpr. Rich Cole Iron River Tpr. Dave Stuck Sault Ste. Marie Sgt. Frank Keck Lab S/Sgt. Jay Peterson Region 2 (Representing Districts 2, 3, 7, and 8) Sgt. Rep: Sgt. Dale Garrow D/Sgt. Rep: D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens Know your rights...protect your rights! Administrative Assistant Ms. Erika Barraza Office Manager Ms. Patricia Strzalkowski Labor Counsel Ms. Kathleen Boyle, Esq. White, Schneider, Young & Chiodini, P.C. General Counsel Mr. Larry Schneider, Esq. Knaggs, Harter, Brake & Schneider, P.C. COMMITTEES Transfer Review Board D/Sgt. Duane Hickok, Alternating Chair Tpr. Tim Permoda Tpr. Scott Wilber Drug & Alcohol Testing Tpr. Craig McDonald D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens Mr. Larry Schneider, Esq. Discipline Advocates D/Sgt. Chris Luty Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh Tpr. Scott Wilber Tpr. Tim Permoda Tpr. Mark Tamlyn Sgt. Dennis Harris Tpr. Chris Tuckey D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens Constitution & Bylaws Tpr. Scott Wilber, Chair Tpr. Bill Strouse Tpr. Chris Tuckey D/Sgt. Duane Hickok Tpr. Eric Wilber Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh Finance Sgt. Richard Hale, Chair D/Sgt. Duane Hickok Tpr. Mark Tamlyn Sgt. Dennis Harris D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens Tpr. John Grimshaw Tpr. Craig MacDonald Safety Tpr. Jerry Mazurek, Chair Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh Sgt. Dale Garrow Bargaining Team Tpr. Michael Moorman, Chair D/Sgt. Chris Luty Sgt. Dick Hale D/Sgt. Duane Hickok Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh Tpr. Scott Wilber Tpr. Jerry Mazurek Associate Membership (Retiree Committee) Gordon Gotts (Ret.), Chair John Boggs (Ret.) Alan Shaw (Ret.) Roger Warner (Ret.) Chris Luty Dale Garrow Dennis Harris Publications Tpr. Brenda Hoffmann, Editor Pat Strzalkowski, Typesetting Tpr. Yvonne Brantley Tpr. Eric Byerly Tpr. Joe Donovan Sgt. John Faccio Tpr. Scott Nichols Tpr. Steve Vrablic Tpr. Eric Wilber Elections Tpr. Chris Tuckey, Co-Chair Tpr. Steve Skrbec, Co-Chair Sgt. Dennis Harris D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens Tpr. Mark Tamlyn Tpr. Scott Wilber State Police Retirement Board: Sgt. Richard Hale MCOLES: Tpr. Michael Moorman ETSC: Tpr. Craig McDonald Grievance Tpr. Michael Moorman, Chair Tpr. Amy Hofmeister D/Sgt. Bill Eberhardt Tpr. Scott Nichols Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh Tpr. Heather Johnston Tpr. Trevor Radke S/Sgt. Allan Avery Tpr. Jim McRae Tpr. Mike Fink Tpr. Kellie Summerhays Sgt. Dennis Harris D/Sgt. Jay Poupard D/Tpr. Bob Tomassi Tpr. Mike Sura Tpr. Jay Kurowski D/Sgt. Sally Wolter Uniform Equipment Tpr. Steve Skrbec, Chair Tpr. Rick Doehring Tpr. John Grimshaw MICHIGAN TROOPER 1715 Abbey Road Suite B East Lansing, MI 48823 Telephone: (517) 336-7782 Facsimile: (517) 336-8997 Website: www.mspta.net Published by the Michigan State Police Troopers Association MAGAZINE Vol. 44, No. 6 November/December 2008 On the Cover Troopers Bret Smith and Marc Moore (both of the Monroe Post) pose with the Budweiser Clydesdales at the Monroe County Fair. (Photo courtesy of Pamela Smith of Finer Arts Photography). See page 39 for more. Merry Christmas to all from the MSPTA staff. In this Issue 10 16 26 40 51 Editor-in-Chief: Brenda Hoffmann Typesetting: Pat Strzalkowski Cover Design: Cherie Morehouse Submission E-mail: [email protected] Departments State Boosts Thin Blue Line........................................................................................10 Relay for Life – Houghton Lake.................................................................................14 Relay for Life – Elberta................................................................................................15 A Memorial for Our Friend and Comrade...............................................................16 2008 Verde Open..........................................................................................................18 Be Careful Out There...................................................................................................19 Practical Pointers for Preventing “Suicide by Inches” – Part 2 of a 2 part series........................................................................................20 Honor Detachment News...........................................................................................23 2008 Michigan State Fair..............................................................................................26 Michigan Law Enforcement Gets New Tool to Find Missing Kids and Fugitives.......................................................................28 117th Recruit School Celebrates 10 Year Anniversary.................................. 30 Law Enforcement Torch Run......................................................................... 32 Mt. Pleasant Youth Academy......................................................................... 35 The Ironman Triathlon................................................................................... 36 2008 Fletcher Match...................................................................................... 38 2008 Monroe County Fair.............................................................................. 39 13th Annual MSP Fall Color 5K Run & Walk............................................... 40 National Troopers Coalition 2008 Fall Conference....................................... 43 Ohio Fires 12 Troopers for Cheating............................................................. 45 Too Many of Us Have Surrendered............................................................... 46 5th Annual MSTAF Golf Classic................................................................... 48 MSP Graduates Three New Canine Teams.................................................... 51 2008 October Quarterly................................................................................. 54 Two Detroit Troopers Awarded for Bravery.................................................. 57 Nearly 7-Foot Long Snake Shot by State Trooper......................................... 63 West Michigan Motorcycle Troopers............................................................. 63 President’s Point.................................................................................4 Vice President’s View........................................................................5 Post Spotlight – Lakeview Post #67...............................................6 Unit Spotlight – Accident Reconstructionist Unit........................8 Back In The Day..............................................................................24 From the Streets...............................................................................52 Making the News.............................................................................53 Good Job Troops!............................................................................58 A Few To Make You Smile.............................................................64 Register of Deeds............................................................................65 In Memory of Our Retirees...........................................................65 Final Call............................................................................................66 Final Word.........................................................................................67 Editorial Policy The Michigan Trooper is the official publication of the Michigan State Police Troopers Association. Opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily represent those of the MSPTA. Articles represent the opinions of the author. Any similarity between the people and places in the fiction and semi-fiction of articles printed, and real people and places is purely coincidental. All rights in letters to the Michigan Trooper will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes; and as subject to the Michigan Trooper’s unrestricted right to edit and to comment editorially. No responsibilities can be assumed for unsolicited materials. Letters or articles must be accompanied by the writer’s true name and address. Due to legal requirements and the potential financial liability for libel imposed upon the Michigan State Police Troopers Association, the Editor of the Michigan Trooper reserves the absolute right to select, edit, and reject all articles for publication. When an article is selected for publication, writers are assured of freedom of expression within necessary limits of good taste, available space, and legal requirements. The Michigan Trooper is published bi-monthly by the Michigan State Police Troopers Association. For information about securing permission to reprint Michigan Trooper articles, please address inquiries to the Editor. President’s Point Tpr. Michael Moorman To your enemy, forgiveness;. to an opponent, tolerance;. to a friend, your heart;. to a customer, service;. to all, charity; . to every child, a good example;. to yourself, respect. – Oren Arnold Christmas gift suggestions As this issue of the Michigan Trooper is arriving at your door, the holiday season should be in full swing. The holidays are such a special time of year. They are a time to look back on the closing year and to be thankful for all that we have. It is also a time to look forward to new days and the challenges that they bring. Contract bargaining is moving along steadily. The Association’s Bargaining Team and I were hopeful that when we began negotiations in July, that we would be through each topic before the holidays. Due to the complexity of some of the issues and our commitment to attempt to improve on certain quality of life issues for our membership, it does not appear that we will have all matters resolved before December 31. If we have not obtained a negotiated agreement by the termination of this contract, the current agreement would extend itself. Your Bargaining Michigan Trooper Team continues to work diligently for you in all areas of our contract. Back in September, the Depart ment announced four worksites that they were offering transfers to. These worksites were identified as needing additional troopers after the mass transfer of 24 troopers from opportunities offered in late August. When the Department posted these positions, they forgot to announce how many troopers they were seeking for each of the worksites. Thinking this may have been an oversight by the Department, I contacted them to inquire how many troopers would be needed at each of the locations offered. I was informed by a senior MSP commander that the Department would not be posting their staffing needs since Article 13 of the contract does not require them to do so. While correct in that there is no specific contractual language requiring the Department to post the number of troopers (or sergeants if applicable) that are needed to transfer to a worksite, the Department is compelled to announce this information since it is their only way to provide the required proof to the Association if they exercise an exemption or invoke mandatory transfers. An Association grievance was filed immediately and while we must wait for the grievance process to unfold, it is troubling when contractual issues that are true “no brainers” are violated by the Department. I would like to take an opportunity to thank a few people that have served the membership and this Association in key capacities. I would like to thank 1st District Representative Steve Skrbec and 2nd District North Representative Chris Tuckey for their faithful and loyal service to the Executive Board, their respective districts, and to the Associations membership as a whole. Steve has transferred to the Flint post in the 3rd District and had to relinquish his seat on the Executive Board. Chris sought not to seek re-election to his seat this year due to family obligations. Both were assets to the Association and will be missed. I would also like to thank Brenda Hoffmann, Editor in Chief of this publication for her selfless service as well. Brenda has asked to step aside due to her “overly full plate.” Brenda brought a fresh, progressive approach to this magazine when she became editor. Her leadership and commitment has made this magazine a standard setter that other law enforcement organizations measure their publications by. I would be remiss if I did not express my sincere thanks for the outpouring of heartfelt support shown to me after my Dad passed away this past September. The cards, e-mails, and kind comments that I received were truly appreciated by my family and me. In closing, I’d like to say thanks to the men and women of our Armed Forces for protecting what most American’s take for granted – our freedom. I salute you. Remember: Be more concerned with what you can do for others than with what they can do for you. May you have a Merry Christmas, a safe, prosperous and happy New Year, and may all your patrols be safe. Vice President’s View “Layoffs to slice 85% of State Police staff.” 1 Who can forget those Detroit Free Press headlines just one short year ago? Gov. Jennifer Granholm had ordered a shutdown of most state services and the layoff of about 35,000 state employees – including over 1300 state police troopers and sergeants. A chaotic and embarrassing interruption of state services was narrowly avoided when a 4 a.m. Senate vote raised taxes and erased a $1.75 billion deficit in the 2007-08 budget. While the aversion of a government shutdown left many of us breathing easier, the budget ordeal highlighted the ever-increasing com-pe tition between public services for the same monies. State police will continue to compete with other general fund appropriations like higher education, corrections, community health, and the 19 or so other programs such as agriculture, natural resources, and Secretary of State that all depend on general fund monies. Not to mention the School Aid Fund, which receives revenue from a variety of sources, including sales tax, income tax, lottery, real estate tax, and tobacco, cigarette, and liquor excise tax monies. Add in the general fund contributions and the K-12 funding represents a hefty 33% of the total state budget.2 The Citizens Research Council of Michigan projects that Michigan’s budget challenge will continue to grow through Fiscal Year 2017 (FY17) because virtually every area of the State budget faces spending pressure increases that outpace projected revenue growth. This “structural deficit” will persist even as the economy improves.3 So what does all this mean to the MSPTA? How can we influence state budget priorities and tax policies that impact our members? How do we protect our piece of the pie, especially in competition with well-funded and politically savvy groups like the Michigan Education Association (MEA)? According to data compiled by the Michigan Campaign Finance Network, Michigan’s top 150 political action committees are setting new fundraising records, and investing more than ever to move the political process in Lansing. The MEA is included as one of the significant monetary contributors to the political process in Michigan. These increasing amounts of money also increase the likelihood that interest groups could trump public interest.4 I believe there are two key factors to ensuring that lawmakers listen when the public demands adequate funding for the state police. First, we must understand how to influence the state budget, and then we must continually identify and grow opportunities that can make it happen. For the past 15 years, The State Fiscal Analysis Initiative (SFIA) has supported research into how organizations can influence state budgets. Funded largely through the Ford Foundation and the Annie E. Casey and C.S. Mott foundations, SFIA funded groups have shown that successful organizations have strong relationships with policymakers, human service coalitions, advocacy groups, and the media. While SFIA pointed out that most state budget negotiations and decision making are conducted in private, these decisions must be responsive to the needs of the citizens. Michigan is highlighted as one of only four states where achievements were made in this type of reform-resistant realm.5 Another study published by PolicyLink, a national non-profit organization working to build strong, organized communities, proposes that police departments gain public confidence and support by being more open D/Sgt. Christopher Luty about how they work. They believe that most people know very little about the mission and operations of the police and that increasing the public’s knowledge in areas such as personnel and performance is a key starting point.6 The PolicyLink study and its findings garnered additional national support as a special feature on the PBS program, Every Mother’s Son. Earlier this year, the MSPTA was approached by a filmmaker who is interested in creating a cable television documentary focusing on our recruit school. Recent legislation that offered tax incentives to the film industry made the idea financially attractive. Coming off the heels of last year’s budget battle, and with research pointing the way, the MSPTA staff jumped at this media opportunity to open up our agency and build positive citizen support. The proposed documentary could include a history of the department, actual footage of the training academy and recruits, interviews with recruits and instructors as the academy progressed, and a tribute to the troopers who have lost their lives in the line of duty. A “real” reality show! We also discussed see VICE PRESIDENT, page 44 November/December, 2008 Post Spotlight... Lakeview Post #67 Tpr. Jeff Hoffman Lakeview Post 118th Recruit School Hello, from Lakeview! I just returned to the Post after serving twoplus years on the fugitive team. Many things changed while I was gone – a different Post area, a new trooper, and computers in our cars. So, I thought I would update everybody on the status of the Lakeview Post. The Lakeview Post, #67, is located in northwestern Montcalm County. Some of you might not have known, but after the last Departmental realignment, we stopped covering the southern part of Mecosta County. Currently, we are responsible for all 20 townships covering 720 square miles of Montcalm County, including two prisons. With the loss of Mecosta County, and all of our resources dedicated to Montcalm County, several doors have opened for the troopers here. We are considered to be somewhat “fat” with troopers compared to the rest of the District. Due to this, we have been recruited by District to supply our talents to different teams. Another change is our Post has essentially been split in two: the Post covers the northern half of the County and a newly-opened Detachment in Sheridan covers the southern half of the County. Prior to the Detachment opening, we rarely spent time in the southern parts of the County. I’ll provide all kinds of statistics (provided by our very statistical F/Lt. Steve Rains) later on. The Post is commanded by F/Lt. Steve Rains (I can run 20 miles backwards in my sleep) (108th RS). As every Post knows, we are run by our wonderful secretary Colleen Crawford. We have two desk sergeants at the Post: Sgt. Angel Ouwinga (the State is getting three sergeants for the price of one) (110th RS) is our daytime administrative sergeant, and Sgt. Mike Minnis (Buck-back) (96th RS), who is riding out his final two plus years in DROP, is our afternoon supervision. Just ask him… he’ll tell you how many days he has left. We have two Detectives assigned to the Post: D/Sgt. Sally Wolter (Black Widow) (100th RS) is currently assigned for two years to a regional cold-case team based out of Lakeview Post personnel. Front row (l-r): Tpr. Ray Sowa, Tpr. Pat Agema, Tpr. John Looney, Tpr. Rich Bell, Tpr. Chris Frayre, Sgt. Angel Ouwinga, Tpr. Delynn Rice, Tpr. George Haw. Back row (l-r): D/Sgt. Ed Doyle, Sgt. Mike Minnis, Tpr. Norma Makl, MCO Pattock (no longer at Lakeview), Tpr. Cheryl Nemeth, Tpr. Jason Medler, F/Lt. Steve Rains, Tpr. Kevin Ryan, Tpr. Jeff Hoffman, Tpr. Casey Lalone, Tpr. Paul Metiva, Mrs. Colleen Crawford, D/Sgt. Sally Wolter. Not pictured: Tpr. Dan Parker. Michigan Trooper I nvestigative Support/Fugitive Team. We generally cover from 7 a.m. until 12 midnight, working a mixture of 8’s and 10’s with every fourth weekend off. The Lake view Post is trooped by Tpr. George Haw (Hee) th (100 RS), Tpr. Cheryl Nemeth (I dislocated my shoulder boxing the Inspector) (105th RS), Tpr. Norma Makl (cats and Detective Sergeant Ed Doyle, Tpr. Norma Makl, and Tpr. Dan Parker dogs don’t talk sweeping up the range. back) (109th RS), Tpr. Deyou’ll know why we call it that. For lynn Rice (send me back to the isthose of you familiar with the area I land) (114th RS), Tpr. Jason Medler know you’ve got a grin on your face (Moose) (116th RS), Tpr. Dan Parker and a little laughter going on. (Backstrap) (120th RS), and Tpr. Casey We currently have LaLone (fute15 Troopers assigned woop) (120th to the Post. Twelve RS). Trooper troopers are assigned Makl is curto “road-duty” and rently our Administraare split 50/50 between Lakeview and tive Trooper. the Sheridan DetachHowever, Tpr. Rice will ment. One trooper is the “Administrative be taking over Trooper” assigned to and enjoying every weekcourt duties, SOR enforcement and upkeep, end off next PCSO (what does that shift bid. stand for anyway) duTrooper Parkties, and maintaining er transferred our lot of digital camto Lakeview eras and pictures. We in November Chris Frayre after recent firehave one trooper, Tpr. Trooper of 2006 from arms training. Chris Frayre (I don’t Metro North. ever want to come I’m still waitback to the road) (119th RS), assigned ing for Tpr. Parker to cook me up to the Central Michigan Enforcement some freshly harvested venison backTeam (CMET). Finally we have one straps. trooper, Tpr. Rich Bell (Tinker) (110th The Sheridan Detachment is RS), assigned to the Sixth District trooped by Tpr. Paul Metiva (I can Kent County, and D/Sgt. Ed Doyle (handyman) (106th RS) keeps busy tracking down all the thieves in Montucky. Yes, that’s right – Montucky. Come spend some time here and Sergeant Angel Ouwinga at “the desk.” dig that pond for you) (106th RS), Tpr. Kevin Ryan (da yooper) (116th RS), Tpr. Jeff Hoffman (118th RS), Tpr. John Looney (work is a break from the screaming kids at home) (118th RS), Tpr. Ray Sowa (Oh, you’ve got some land I can hunt on?) (119th RS), and Tpr. Pat Agema (Dr. Phil) (120th RS). Duties around the Post have been spread out. Trooper Ryan takes care of our P.B.T.’s. Trooper Medler and Sgt. Minnis are the firearms instructors (thanks for the recent Sig-DAK training). Trooper Medler is taking care of the radar units while Tpr. Bell is away. Trooper Looney and Tpr. Makl are Evidence Techs. Trooper Hoffman is being trained by our Sixth District Computer Crimes Unit as a “digital evidence tech.” Trooper Haw, Tpr. Bell, Tpr. Rice, Tpr. Hoffman, Tpr. Sowa, and Tpr. Agema are at-scene traffic crash investigators. Trooper Haw, Tpr. Makl, Tpr. Bell, Tpr. Ryan, Tpr. Looney, and Tpr. Sowa are FTO’s. We’ll take as many cubs as you want to give us! Trooper Rice, Tpr. Frayre, and Tpr. Hoffman are background investigators. Trooper Bell, Tpr. Lalone, and Tpr. Parker are D.T. instructors. Trooper Hoffman is our First Aid Instrucsee LAKEVIEW, page 22 November/December, 2008 Unit Spotlight... Accident Reconstructionist Unit his expectations.” My wife read that and said “Wow, you’ve always hated stupid people …” After seven years at the Alpena Post, the opportunity to pursue a job in traffic reconstruction presented itself. The position being in Traverse City made it even more tempting as I had grown up there. Sometimes I wonder how things come together. BRIEF HISTORY OF THE RECONSTRUCTION NON-UNIT S/Sgt. Jerry Hilborn 7th District Headquarters 114th Recruit School THE TRAFFIC CRASH RECONSTRUCTION UNIT It doesn’t seem like 12 years ago, but there we were, recruits being subjected to our required block of instruction pertaining to accident investigation. Sergeant Bill Brandt showed slide after slide, some of them closeups of pea-sized stones in the asphalt, each showing the fine signs of “striations?!?” At the time my thoughts were 1) So? 2) What a nut job! and 3) I’m glad we have this guy on our side. Today my thoughts are “Wow, I can’t believe I have become Bill Brandt!” I joined the Department as a member of the 114th Recruit School on March 10, 1996. Like many of us, it wasn’t my first real job, I was 30 years old. After six years in the 911 environment, I decided that I should do no more than another four years in that capacity. More and more I was fighting the urge to just choke some people. This was something that I have dealt with since I was five years old. My mother kept one of my kindergarten report cards that read “Jerry needs to learn more tolerance and patience towards his classmates when they make mistakes or do not meet Michigan Trooper The Department of State Police originally selected and trained three traffic service sergeants in the late seventies. They were Tom Bereza (6th District), Weldon Greiger (Northville), and Les Austin (4th District). A second wave of nine more troopers were then selected in 1983. They were trained by an instructor from the Minnesota Highway Patrol. The nine troopers were: Tpr. Bill Brandt - 1st District Tpr. Larry Richardson - 2nd District Tpr. Dan Smith - 3rd District Tpr. Mark Dougovito - 3rd District Tpr. Bob Ezinga - 4th District Tpr. Jerry Kerns - 5th District Tpr. Gary McDonald - 6th District Tpr. Joel Mars - 7th District Tpr. Lenny Dawson - 8th District These men were not recognized as a “Unit,” and referred to themselves as the Reconstruction Non-Unit. At the time, the Department did not consider them specialists, like the Underwater Recovery or Canine Units. In 1988, the Department decided that if these members were recognized as highly-trained experts by the courts, they could no longer consider them non-specialists so they were then allocated to Specialist Sergeants. As a budgetary “savings” move they were disbanded in 1990 as the Traffic Services Division was gutted and reduced to a unit under the Special Operations Division. Unit mem- bers were transferred to the desk or pursued other opportunities. In late 1992, Sgt. Bill Brandt was reassigned from Auto Theft to Headquarters with the task of re-establishing the Unit. All but one of the displaced members returned. Brandt recalled taking a couple of years to rewrite position descriptions and establish the testing policy for applicants, along with the Accreditation Commission for Traffic Accident Reconstruction (A.C.T.A.R.) requirement. Civil Service then agreed that the members would be Specialist Sergeants rather than Uniform Sergeants. It should be noted that Special Sergeants, when in uniform, look very similar to Uniform Sergeants. Captain Dan Smith of the 1st District is the last member of those nine still working in the Department. THE PROCESS New members to the Reconstruction Unit are normally troopers. They take an initial 80 hours of instruction in Advanced Accident Investigation, and Basic Reconstruction. From there they are committed to a life-long learning process, completing the core classes and then generally taking one class a year or so for the rest of their career as a MSP traffic crash reconstructionist. At the twoyear mark, the trooper reconstructionist is required to pass an exam given by the A.C.T.A.R. before being allocated to a sergeant. A.C.T.A.R., IN THEIR OWN WORDS The Accreditation Commission for Traffic Accident Reconstruction is an internationally recognized commission with approximately 700 A.C.T.A.R. Accredited Reconstructionists practicing throughout the United States, Canada, Australia, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates. These Accredited Reconstructionists core training could be scheduled and about it, compared to my colleagues completed. This is testimony of how I am the ugliest girl at the dance. he was able to quickly adapt to the Eighth District – Sgt. John Bruno, demands of the First District. 1998, only half-jokingly referred to as Second District (Metro South) – our “closet engineer,” John is highly Sgt. Kevin Lucidi, joined the unit in respected for his computer and elec2003 and was sent to the University tronic/technical capabilities. John of North Florida for the same initial has spent years developing his own 28 day session I attended. There is no crash calculating programs with Excel doubt my success there was directly spreadsheets. Although he is modest related to having Kevin available as an about these projects, he was asked additional resource. to formally present them by worldSecond District (Richmond Post) renowned crash expert W.R. “Rusty” – Sgt. Tim Brown, 2000, easily one of Haight at a recent seminar. In addithe top three crash minds in the entire tion to being a total station resource, state. There are two kinds of losers, John also instructs Mapscenes CAD those who play scratch off tickets and software, the current MSP issued those who play defense expert oppos- drawing program. Despite advances Sergeant Al Avery (Traffic Crash Reconing Tim Brown. made in caller I.D., John still answers struction Unit – 1st District Headquarters) operates a Total Station used to document Third District – Sgt. Tim Robbins, his phone whenever I need “technical evidence at a fatal traffic crash scene. 2002, one of the brightest, highly assistance.” capable crash guys with plenty of East Lansing – Lt. Gary Megge The MSP is the only agency in irons in the fire. Besides working solo joined the Unit in 1998. He was proMichigan that requires its recon- in a district providing him with 100 moted to Specialist Lieutenant (aren’t structionists to be A.C.T.A.R. accred- plus crashes a year, Tim has instructed ALL Lieutenants special?) in 2004. ited. In courtroom testimony, I once hundreds of police compared A.C.T.A.R. accreditation to officers nationwide being a Certified Public Accountant in the use of Visual as opposed to being an accountant. Statements CAD OUR MISSION software, becoming Our mission is to assist troopers, recognized as a true deputies, patrolman, and any other resource and a key member of the law enforcement component in allowcommunity with their reconstruc- ing our team to intertion requests. We do what is required face and assist other to present the facts, and if necessary agencies, almost all present them as solid cases for prose- of which use this cution. We also work with the labs and software. forensically map (measure electroniFifth District – Sergeant Kevin Lucidi (Traffic Crash Reconstruction Unit cally) crime scenes. Our electronic Sgt. Jim Campbell, – Metro South Post) operates a Total Station while assisting measurement gear allows us to reduce 1997, another sharp Brownstown Township Police Department with a pick-up vs. car the time required to produce scale guy with irons in the vs. two motorcycles double fatal traffic crash on Telegraph drawings based on hand measure- fire. Jim is also a child Road (US-24). The driver of the pick-up (not in picture) causing the crash was arrested for OWI Causing Death. ments. Our capability to download seat/restraint expert. airbag modules is highly sought after In addition, Jim is Gary has the unenviable job of iminside and outside the Department. the lone Traffic Safety Division rep- plementing change into the unit and The MSP recognizes that anyone can resentative serving the District. Jim is challenging us to question the old receive the training, but immersing us required to serve those functions as paradigm. Why does a wheel need 360 in crash work as a full-time job makes needs arise in addition to working a degrees? Why not 359 or 361? us highly-skilled and effective. significant crash load. TODAY Sixth District – Sgt. Doug Roesler, CURRENT MSP RECONSTRUCTIONISTS BY DISTRICT Currently there is still some debate 1994, our (youthful looking) grayFirst District – Sgt. Allan Avery, beard of the unit, Doug has served as to whether we are a Unit or non- Unit. our newest member in 2005, Al was the Recon Unit for 14 years. Seventh District – Sgt. Jerry hired and began responding to callsee TRAFFIC, page 47 outs immediately, even before his Hilborn, 2003. I make no bones are engineers, physicists, police officers, consultants, former police officers, and those of other backgrounds working in the profession. November/December, 2008 State Boosts Thin Blue Line Michigan runs first trooper school since 2004 to fill depleted ranks By: Charlie Cain Detroit News (Lansing Bureau) September 11, 2008 Reveille blares over the speakers at 5 a.m. sharp and 95 weary recruits crawl out of bed to begin another exhausting day of physical and mental drills that brings them one step closer to becoming a Michigan State Police trooper. “March sharply,” a drill instructor barks to the group later that morning as they head to the cafeteria for lunch. “Yes sir,” comes the collective response from the men with shaved heads and the women with closecropped hair. These are the remaining recruits – six have dropped out since the 121st Recruit School began last month. They were selected from more than 4,000 applicants. The training comes at a critical time as the number of troopers assigned to the State Police posts across the State has slipped to a four-decade low, meaning slower response time to crime scenes and traffic accidents, and lower visibility on the roads. The 1,011 troopers serving at posts today represent a 24-percent decline from a decade earlier. The impact has been obvious. During the early 1990s a motorist could pull up to any of the 64 posts at any time of the day or night and find a desk sergeant on duty. Today only 29 posts have round-the-clock patrols. And just eight posts have a 24hour lobby with someone staffing the front desk. The number of posts has been trimmed to 51 with the other 13 turned into “satellite” facilities that don’t have a post commander, a way to save money. “They are stretched thin everywhere,” said Tpr. Michael Moorman, 10 Michigan Trooper President of the Michigan State Police Troopers Association. “Every single post is suffering from the lack of personnel.” That’s why State Police brass are so pleased a new wave of troopers will graduate on December 19, 2008, don the crisp blue and gray trooper uniform and be assigned to posts across the State. “If you think you can...you will. If you think you can’t... you’re right,” greets recruits on their way to physical training at 5:29 a.m. STAFFING PROBLEM COULD GROW Unlike past decades where trooper schools were held nearly every year, the cash-starved State has been forced to cut back. Today’s trooper school, which costs $8.3 million to run, is the first since 2004 and only the third this decade. During the 1970s an average of 117 new troopers were sworn in each year. In the 1980s there were an average of 62 new troopers each year and the average rose to 106 annually during the 1990s. This decade, however, the average of troopers coming on board each year dipped to 36. With 400 State Police officers eligible to retire between now and January 2014, the staffing problem could grow more severe. Back at the training academy, the recruits have 14 weeks left in an arduous training program that is a combination military boot camp and college classroom. The physical demands are huge during the days that don’t stop until Taps is sounded at 10 p.m. and lights go out in the two-person rooms. Between 13 percent and 15 percent of the recruits will drop out because they can’t handle the challenge, according to officials. “They really kill us with PT (physical training). It’s challenging and I don’t heal up the way I used to,” said William Long, who at 44 is the “old man” of the class. Long, a tool-and-die welder and father of 7-year-old twins from Howell, gets paid about $750 a week during trooper school. If he makes it to the December 19 graduation, he’ll earn $41,000 as a trooper, a salary that increases to $62,000 after 20 years. Long, a deeply religious man with a black belt in taekwondo explains why he wants to be a trooper: “I believe we’re all called to service and what better outfit to serve in than the State Police.” Gail Grzybowski, a 23-year-old Troy resident with a criminal justice degree from Ferris State University, is among the nine females in the class. She said the military discipline took a little getting used to. “I had to learn about ‘right face,’ ‘left face’ and marching in general,” she said, adding the instructors don’t cut the women any slack when it comes to the sit-ups, push-ups, and hand-to-hand combat training. He said while troopers what the impact of that can be,” said will still respond to emer- Shanon Akans, spokesperson for the gencies anywhere, the job State Police. has been made more difficult She said a later review determined with the declining ranks. He that there were only two patrol units said the State Police out of available at the Metro North Post and necessity has closer work- both were involved in other priority ing relations with county sheriffs and in some areas of the State the sheriff deputies will patrol during one shift and the state troopers during another. Getzen said Recruits learn how to properly shoot their firearms Silent recruits wolf down a quick breakfast between PT and inspection. that the priority during firearms training. of traffic enforcement has resulted in fewer troopers calls. In fact, Akans said, there was She left her hair long for the first week of classes, but by the second available to respond to calls for ser- only one State Police vehicle not on a priority call in all of Metro Detroit week she had nine inches of blonde vice. “We simply can’t respond to ev- that night, and it was 24 miles away hair shorn off. from the shooting scene. “There’s no time to dry your hair erything,” he said. A classic example of how slim the She said it’s not unusual to have because we are constantly busy,” she ranks of troopers have become oc- fewer than 10 troopers assigned to a said. curred in July 2007 when a man and post today. The number of troopers IMPACT OF CUTS women were shot and lay bleeding in is down at posts across the state comFELT ELSEWHERE the street in Royal Oak Township. pared to 2001 levels. For instance, the Major Barry Getzen, commandnumber of troopers at the er of the State Police Field Services Bad Axe Post is down 45 Bureau, said it’s not just the troopers percent, it’s dropped 42 who have felt the sting of state budge percent at the Sandusky troubles. Post and 37 percent at In April of last year, the state the Metro South Post. was set to lay off 29 troopers. Jeremy Nunez, a 30year-old Lansing man, is At the last minute the Troopers Asamong the current resociation intervened and donated cruits anxious to swell the $400,000 to the State to keep those trooper ranks. A legislatroopers on the streets. tive staffer, Nunez is no Over the years, many have retired stranger to boot camps and not been replaced. having gone through Air “We’ve also lost a tremendous Recruits practicing their traffic stop skills. National Guard training number of command officers and and an Army parachute A 911 call was placed around 3:30 school and he’s confident he’ll survive sergeants (due to retirement) which impacts our ability to have close su- a.m. and it was nearly a half-hour be- this one as well. pervision of our troopers,” he said. fore troopers arrived on the scene. “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever The 208 command officers (lieuten- Royal Oak Township has no police done mentally and physically, but it’s ants, first lieutenants, inspectors, and patrol on the overnight shift, leaving exciting,” he said. captains) is down 22.4 percent since the State Police as the only backup. (Reprinted with permission.) “That night it was glaringly obvi2000 while the 479 sergeants is down ous just how short-handed we are and 8.4 percent. see RECRUITS, page 12 November/December, 2008 11 from RECRUITS, page 11 Defensive Tactics training. Recruits are called into their room when dust is discovered on a light fixture during morning inspection. Defensive Tactics begin to look rough as Michigan State Police Academy recruits go through a day of training. Attentive recruits listen in a class on constitutional law. Recruits taking notes on their computers. 12 Michigan Trooper A recruit practices approaching a suspect vehicle. Plenty of push-ups are done by recruits. Sergeant Jason Williams reviews recruits outside their dorm rooms during the morning inspection. Thumping feet in step aerobics pound out a hypnotic beat during the morning PT session. Photos by Dale G. Young Detroit News Recruits conducting patrol scenarios. November/December, 2008 13 Relay for Life – Houghton Lake Tpr. Harold Terry Houghton Lake Post 116th Recruit School On July 12, 2008, the Houghton Lake Post, along with their families, participated for the second year in the local Relay for Life for the fight against cancer. For those of you who are not familiar with Relay for Life, it is a 24-hour event that raises money to help find a cure for cancer. To participate in the event, you raise as much money as you can prior to the close of the event, and during the relay you have to have at least one person walking around the track at all times. The Houghton Lake Post Relay for Life team. 14 Michigan Trooper Why did we get involved? I arrived at the Houghton Lake Post two years ago and thought that this event was a great chance to bring the post closer together and raise money for a good cause at the same time. The event is a family oriented atmosphere which is a hard thing to find these days. This event didn’t just bring the post together for the 24 hours, it started months before. This year the post got together and put on a car wash in front of the post. While the kids did their part and sold lemonade, we were able to raise an amaz- Houghton Lake Troopers Bradley Stimac and ing $473. Jennifer Flick, Tpr. Michael Vranish pose in front of the dunk tank with Kevin Flick’s wife, sells Pam- Tpr. Michael Harger inside. pered Chef products and she held a sale where all her commis- didn’t just walk around the track. We sions went to the took the opportunity to raise even relay. She wasn’t more money with a dunk tank. That’s the only one to right we did “Dunk a Trooper” and do this. Amy at three balls for a buck we had them Stemic, Tpr. Brad lined up for what seemed like miles, Stemic’s wife, sells at least that’s what it felt like when it Lia Sophia jew- was your turn in the tank. We raised elry and she also $228 in the tank; that equals to a lot held a sale where of softballs being thrown. Of course all of her commissions went to the the wives had to take their turn at relay. Once at the event, our team dunking their spouses. I can’t begin to tell you how many people came up and commented on our involvement and how they loved seeing us there. The event is also a great way to show-case our agency. So, if you’re looking for a good time and a great way to get the post together, then join your local Relay for Life. Our team raised a total of $1800.07! Relay for Life – Elberta The following was written by Mrs. JoAnn DuVall, wife of recently deceased Tpr. Blair DuVall, to friends and family. The local Relay for Life was recently held and I wasn’t aware it was even scheduled; but was able to purchase luminaries and decorate them myself. I cried, but it was somewhat healing. In the past I was very involved and helped head a team in Gaylord. This year was different. My friend, Doreen, and I went later in the evening prior to the luminary ceremony. We walked the path and I received many tender hugs. I was so touched to see many luminaries for Blair around the park. We made several laps and I tried to read every name honored. Doreen held my arm, or I held her, during the power point presentation and reading of the names from the “In Memory Of ” list and the “In Honor Of ” list. I was grateful Blair was not suffering and I wondered if the survivors felt like they had won the lottery. Two very different lists that have such a lasting impact on families. I loved the fact they used little glow lights instead of real candles as they have in the past. I was very windy and many would have burned. Great thinking folks! Congratulations on a wonderful showing. November/December, 2008 15 A Memorial for our Friend and Comrade The statue serves as a reminder of the On August 30, 2008, a friend and sacrifice Kevin comrade was forever memorialized. made for the The first ever Michigan State Police c o m m u n i t y trooper statue was unveiled at the of Newaygo Marshall Memorial Park in the City of County, and Newaygo. This has been a very labor- the citizens ing goal that has been reached by the of the State troopers of the Newaygo Post and of Michigan. the Marshall Memorial Park ComLastly, I mittee members. I especially want to want to thank express my appreciation to Newaygo YOU for dona City Manager Rich Blachford, Neway- tions, playing go City Chief of Police Pat Hedlund, golf, particiand Newaygo City Clerk Kim Biegal- pating in the Trooper Kevin Marshall statue. le. Their support in making this hap- c a n d l e l i g h t pen has been overwhelming. It could vigil, purchasing a challenge coin, tions we have gone through whether not have happened without Rich’s raffle tickets for the ATV, and buying we were laughing or crying; the true participation in making the park as t-shirts or attending the hockey game. and meaningful support that many beautiful as it is today. This also goes And, a strange thought just occurred have given us while we walked down for the Flower Garden Girls of Ne- to me when I was typing this last para- this road; the horrible feeling that we waygo, who have volunteered count- graph. It’s overwhelming to just now may have to go through this again realize the energy and effort that has one day, but also the triumphant feelless hours to beautify the park. I would also like to express my been put into this project. The emo- ing that we have survived this. That we have become more deepest appreciation to Ginger Hadd, resilient to life’s chalthe talented sculptor who designed lenges and more sympaKevin’s statue. The statue is so eerily thetic to those who are similar to Kevin’s features that I think going through similar no other sculptor could have come hardships in life; that we closer. The uniform and badges are hold life and our famivery distinct and perfect, making me lies more closely to ourvery proud of Ginger’s work. The selves. size of Kevin’s head right down to Although this is not the smirk on his face is right on target, the end of working on and sent chills down my back. Kudos the park, it certainly to Ginger and her work, which played feels like the end of our another crucial part in this labor of quest to memorialize love. Kevin. Speaking for myI took an opportunity to visit the statue one evening when it was dark. self, I am overwhelmed I tell you, when Kevin’s statue is lit up with the feeling of acit is so breathtaking. You must see this complishment and very during the night, it is a very powerful proud to have been part statement of what we officer’s are up of this. This will certo everyday. Kevin is holding Danielle tainly be part of my life Angie, Kevin’s wife, along with his children, Anthony and on his right arm, and his left hand is Danielle, and Kevin’s mother, Kathy, pose with the statue until the day I meet my of Tpr. Kevin M. Marshall during the dedication ceremony. resting on Anthony’s right shoulder. maker. I look over my By: Sgt. Linda Mys Detroit Post 102nd Recruit School 16 Michigan Trooper shoulder now and see what has happened in the last five plus years and can’t believe I made it through all this. But I didn’t make it on my own, I had several people help me if not down right carry me through what had happened in July of 2003. Special thanks to Dr. Robert Wolford of Behavioral Sciences who is very dear to me, and I thank God that he was there to help me. Words alone cannot express my gratitude, our Department is very fortunate to have him with us. Thankfully he was so tenacious in our meetings and carrying me through my hardest times. He has no idea the impact he has had on my life, and I will be forever grateful. Thanks for the “tow.” With that, I will leave you with the photos of the Dedication of the Statue. Thanks all, and stay safe. Fellow ES Team Members with the statue of Tpr. Kevin M. Marshall: Lt. David Bower (Special Operations Division – ES Team), D/Sgt. Dave Simon (Third District Fugitive Team), Sgt. Rich Gorajec (Grand Haven Post), Tpr. Pat Darrow (Bridgeport Post), Tpr. Chris Clute (Wayland Post), Sgt. Mic Benjamin (Special Operations Division – ES Team). Fast Facts: Marshall’s children, Anthony and Danielle, are depicted in the statue as the ages they were upon his untimely death. Two pennies lay at the statue’s feet marking his birth year and the birth year of his sister, Shelley Meares. The time on his watch is 7:12, the time he left home every morning for work. A dragonfly on Danielle’s back symbolizes Marshall’s parents. On the day he died, a dragonfly hung around his parents’ swimming pool all day. Anthony has the number 11 on his shirt – this was the number Marshall and his best friend, Mark Fontana, wanted when they shot craps. This is a culmination of a true labor of love by the people of Newaygo. It’s been an outpouring of love.” – Mike Marshall, Tpr. Kevin Marshall’s uncle. The project resonated with me on many levels, and after some discussion, I was honored to be offered this commission,” Ginger Hadd, an Ann Arbor-based sculptor who created the bronze statue of Marshall and his two children. Quotes courtesy of the Muskegon Chronicle. The statue is very heartwarming, and it really helps memorialize and cement his memory in the park,” said Sgt. Kevin Sweeney, who served with Tpr. Kevin Marshall at the Newaygo Post for eight years. “But it never really ends, at least the memory of Kevin.” The Fifth Annual “Marshall Run” was held on Saturday, August 30, 2008. It was the run’s largest year, with nearly 180 participants. Many law enforcement agencies were represented, including the Michigan State Police, Grand Rapids Police Department, Newaygo County Sheriff ’s Office, Muskegon County Sheriff ’s Office, Newaygo Police Department, and the Grant Police Department. Over $1,100 was raised for MI-COPS. Following the conclusion of the Marshall Run, the Tpr. Kevin M. Marshall statue was dedicated at the Marshall Park. Thanks to everyone who helped make this race a success. We look forward to the Sixth Annual in 2009! November/December, 2008 17 2008 Verde Open By: The Grand Haven Post On April 26, 2008, Tpr. Jayme Green (114th Recruit School) suffered a stroke while on duty at a traffic stop. Fortunately, another trooper and a Muskegon Police Department officer happened to be on the scene as Jayme collapsed. Medical assistance was immediately requested and, again fortunately, there were two paramedics that happened to be in an adjacent parking lot. Due to help being so close, Jayme arrived at the hospital approximately 12 minutes after suffering the stroke and received the critical treatment needed. Since then, Jayme has been undergoing extensive rehabilitation for some left side paralysis at Mary Free Bed Hospital in Grand Rapids and is progressing every day. On August 15, 2008, a benefit golf outing was held at Grand Haven Golf Course to assist Jayme and his family. The turnout and support was incredible, raising $15,000. Thirtythree teams were registered for the event with many being law enforcement officers from around the State. Numerous businesses and individuals donated money and prizes that were raffled off, including: a one week stay at a vacation house in Colorado, an LCD TV, U of M football tickets, etc. Thanks goes out to everyone for their donations and support. Jayme is working very hard and continues to progress every day. He has also maintained a positive attitude along with his typical Jayme sense of humor. We are all behind Jayme and his family and hope to see him back at work real soon. If you wish to send a donation to Tpr. Jayme Green, you may send it to: Grand Haven Post 1622 S. Beacon Blvd. Grand Haven, MI 49417 18 Michigan Trooper Trooper Chris Bush (6th District Hometown Security Team) “Networking” with Tpr. Charley Bartley (Bridgman Post). (l-r): Trooper Brian Cribbs (Grand Haven Post), Marcy Green, Tpr. Jayme Green (Grand Haven Post), and Tpr. Rob Bilacic (6th District Hometown Security Team). Trooper Jayme Green (Grand Haven Post) and his wife, Marcy. Above all things let us never forget that mankind constitutes one great brotherhood; all born to encounter suffering and sorrow, and therefore bound to sympathize with each other. – Albert Pike Be Careful Out There! By: F/Lt. John Card Bay City Post 103rd Recruit School Trooper Joe LaBelle (Bay City Post) was responding at a high rate of speed to an aircraft that had crashed into a field. He was southbound on Euclid Avenue just before noon on Saturday, August 30, 2008, when an 82-year-old man pulled out in front of him. When Tpr. LaBelle took evasive action, risking great personal injury to protect the life of another, he lost control of the vehicle, struck the curb and rolled his vehicle, a number of times, into a nearby marsh area. The marsh area seen in the photo is actually quite small, perhaps only 150 feet wide, and does not adequately provide the viewer with a good picture of how fortunate we were. Trooper LaBelle actually was first able to correct the vehicle enough to avoid a telephone pole. If his vehicle had left the roadway to the north or the south, measured in mere feet, Tpr. LaBelle would have likely rolled across parking lots and the outcome may have been quite different. With the time just prior to noon, there was also plenty of traffic on the five-lane roadway. Both Tpr. LaBelle and his dog, Chip, walked away from the crash. However, Tpr. LaBelle suffered nonlife threatening injuries to his neck, back, and shoulders. He was admitted to Bay Medical and kept over night for observation. Trooper LaBelle was released without work restrictions on September 15, 2008. A point that should not be overlooked when considering how quick an incident like this happens, is how Tpr. LaBelle takes care of himself. He prepares himself daily for both the mental and the physical demands of the job. Just the day before the crash, Tpr. LaBelle had arrested a driver and recovered a stolen vehicle for the City of Bay City. Trooper LaBelle simply made the statement, “I love my job!” He takes pride in his work and his physical condition. It is clear that had he been out of shape and therefore unable to withstand the punishment of the crash, his injuries would have been much more severe. Trooper Joe LaBelle’s (Bay City Post) patrol car’s final resting place. The lights and siren were still activated. Look close to see Tpr. LaBelle’s (Bay City Post) patrol car! November/December, 2008 19 Practical Pointers for Preventing “Suicide by Inches” Powerful new documentary explores officers’ trips to the edge and back Part 2 of a 2 part series By: Force Science News [In the last issue, a new documentary film, “The Pain Behind the Badge,” was featured in which three officers who experienced emotional melt-downs from the cumulative stress of life on the street. Two contemplated suicide and the third saw the near-dissolution of his marriage before they sought help. This time measures are explored that you can take to keep a career-related stress buildup from overwhelming you or another officer.] “There’s no doubt that law enforcement is a tough profession,” says Dr. Bill Lewinski, the behavioral scientist who heads the Force Science Research Center at Minnesota State University-Mankato, “The stuff you run into can emotionally bury you unless you take care of yourself.” Suicide, the most emphatic form of self-destruction, is one potential outcome, as “The Pain Behind the Badge” makes clear. In a typical year, an estimated 400 of the 870,000 law enforcement officers in the United States take their own lives. But many more are committing what the legendary psychiatrist Karl Menninger called “suicide by inches,” Lewinski points out. This refers to more gradual behaviors of self-destruction, like excessive spending in an effort to buy happiness, excessive drinking or compulsive adultery as a means of escape, addictively overworking at the cost of relationships with spouse and kids. “For a relatively few officers, these patterns may eventually culminate in suicide, but for a great many more, 20 Michigan Trooper such behavior dramatically erodes the quality of life as it’s being lived. They experience a kind of suicide of the soul that long-range can be as devastating as pulling the trigger.” Police recruits are selected in part “for their good mental health, and most officers maintain that status by and large throughout their careers, despite the ravages of the profession,” Lewinski says. “But for some, their innate personality traits and professional circumstances conspire to push them toward a breaking point.” Adds Dr. Beverly Anderson, a police psychologist who heads the Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police Employee Assistance Program: “No human being, no matter how healthy, well-trained or well-adjusted, is immune to the long-term effects of cumulative stress or sudden critical incidents. A police officer’s 20-plus years of ‘peacetime combat’ can wreak a heavy toll personally and professionally.” What can you do to strengthen your defenses against the emotional risks of the job…or to pull a fellow officer back from an abyss of self-destruction? Lewinski and other experts offer these practical suggestions and observations: OPEN UP TO A ‘TALK BUDDY’ “The way to have a long and successful career [in policing] is to realize very early that you are going to see and experience things that are not normal,” says Sgt. Tom Harmon, Director of the Las Vegas Police Employee Assistance Program, a 22-year veteran who appears in the documentary. “The way to survive that is to deal with your emotions and reactions as they come along. Don’t let them build up.” “That means genuinely opening up – recognizing and unloading what’s troubling you emotionally to someone who’s a good listener and supportive, in a non-choir practice atmosphere,” says Lewinski. That can be a tough assignment for cops, who often tend to be heavily invested in maintaining an impermeable, “rub dirt on it and get back in the game” façade. Yet hiding behind a thick emotional wall, which may seem to be self-protective, usually proves to be “the greatest stressor over the years,” Harmon explains. A spouse, a civilian friend, a fellow officer, a pastor – “anyone who cares about you and is warm, trusted, nurturing and insightful could fill the role” of a talk buddy, Lewinski says. In turn, you can help them by providing a sounding board for any issues they may want to share. Officers with this kind of give-and-take communication in place, he says, “tend to survive tough times much better.” DEVELOP A PURPOSE OUTSIDE OF POLICE WORK “Officers can become so addicted to the unique excitement of the job that they over-invest themselves in the cop lifestyle. They live for working,” Lewinski says. “Then they find out later that they’ve sacrificed everything that’s truly meaningful in life – family relationships, for instance – for a profession that too often is not very supportive or nurturing, and they end up bitterly disappointed and disillusioned. “The police world can be so seductive that your life can get really out of balance unless you find something outside the job that gives you purpose and helps replenish you emotionally. Maybe it’s coaching Little League or riding your motorcycle in charity runs or hunting or running marathons. I knew one really tough SWAT commander who built dollhouses as a hobby and won prizes in competition. The key is getting a self-fulfilling mix in your life that’s emotionally nourishing rather than draining like the job can be at times. “An important part of that needs to involve tending to loving relationships. Have lunch with your spouse without other cops present. Devote time on a regular basis to being alone as a couple, doing fun things you both enjoy. Look for creative ways to say ‘I love you.’ Nurture what’s important to you. “An officer who develops a life that’s balanced does so because he makes that a priority. He controls his life to make it happen.” BE ALERT FOR TROUBLESOME SYMPTOMS “In today’s relentlessly plugged-in world of cell phones, iPods, computers, and other sources of constant mental racket, it’s important to take time periodically to calmly and candidly assess your emotional state,” Lewinski notes. “That can help prevent an unconscious drift into dangerous waters.” These are among the symptoms that Washington’s Beverly Anderson and Dr. Kevin Jablonski, a psychologist with the Los Angeles Police Department recommend checking for. Unacknowledged and untended, they can lead to crippling depression, even suicide. • Withdrawl from friends and family • Loss of interest in activities you usually find enjoyable • Thoughts/feelings of hopelessness • An increase in the use of alcohol or “deadening” medication • Obsession with “unsolvable” personal or financial problems • Mood swings • Longing for a relationship that has broken up • Persistent feelings of gloom, sadness, lethargy • Poor sleeping patterns • A dread of going to work • An increase in sick days • Chronic irritability, impatience, lashing out and criticism of others • Emotional numbing, where you “just don’t feel anything.” Officers who are contemplating suicide may talk about “getting their things in order quickly,” such as writing a will, or state that “their problems will soon be completely resolved,” says Jablonski. “The everyday stress of being a police officer can lead to serious difficulties when you add personal problems too,” warns Anderson. “When such stressors are prolonged and overwhelming, your ability to cope becomes difficult.” In “The Pain Behind the Badge,” Dr. David Joseph, a police psychologist in Oakland, California, observes that the self-sufficient “can do” attitude toward problem-solving that serves officers so well on the street can sometimes be a detriment in facing emotional warning signs. The belief that you “can fix any problems that come up” may cause you to delay or avoid seeking outside help when it is critically needed for the challenges you face. In reality, Joseph says, if symptoms like those listed above persist for more than two weeks, professional intervention may be in order. CONSIDER A YEARLY “PSYCH CHECK” The police-run website, www.badgeoflife.com, devoted to psychological survival for officers, recommends that cops “visit a mental health professional once a year, with the same diligence they get their teeth cleaned or go for an annual physical examination.” Dr. John Violanti, a retired New York trooper who has written several books on law enforcement stress and trauma, endorses this idea as “a possible useful tool in preventing fully developed PTSD and possible maladaptive coping,” such as self-destructive behavior. “In a sense,” he says, an annual mental health prescription “is ‘inoculation’ against future psychological problems.” Lewinski agrees. Committing to the ritual of a yearly psych check “forces you to focus on what’s going on in your life, to take stock of yourself and how you’re doing,” he explains. “Without that obligation, when do we take time to evaluate our mental health and our relationships?” Anderson points out, however, that before officers can overcome their “inherent distrust of mental health services” and seek counseling, no matter how distressed they may be, they usually need assurance of “strict confidentiality.” Most will engage in a productive meeting only if the counselor involved pledges not to report back to the officer’s department anything discussed in the session, or even that a visit was made. Generally, she says, the confidentiality of what’s revealed to an independent, licensed therapist is protected under the Supreme Court decision of Jaffe v. Redmond (1996). But before discussing problems, an officer should get in writing from the therapist a precise clarification of the limits of confidentiality. Otherwise, what’s said may be subpoenaed. Normally, legal privilege is not extended to fitness-for-duty evaluations or peercounselor conversations. INTERVENE SUPPORTIVELY Often troubled officers won’t – or can’t evaluate themselves critically see SUICIDE, page 22 November/December, 2008 21 from SUICIDE, page 21 enough to confirm the need for help. In Anderson’s words, cops “are champions at the art of emotional coverup.” More likely than not, it will take an astute friend, family member, supervisor, or fellow officer to spot that an officer is on the slippery slope of deterioration. “If you see warning signs in another officer, it can literally be a life-saving show of friendship and concern for you to intervene,” Lewinski says. “The primary resource for an officer in need has always been fellow officers who step forward and throw him or her a lifeline. Changing destructive behavior is always easier when you have someone willing to work with you on it. “You need to be direct, perhaps even harsh, in laying out the negative behavior you’re seeing and the consequences it’s having on the officer and other people around him. But your directness needs to be expressed with some sensitivity in a way that is encouraging and supportive rather than just blatant criticism. He needs to know that you’re going to be there for him and help him find the resources that can lead him out of the woods. “Of course, ultimately the affected officer has to make the decision to do some things differently in his life. Once he moves out of denial and accepts that he needs to change, then he opens up numerous possibilities for creating positive change.” 22 Michigan Trooper LOBBY YOUR DEPARTMENT The old attitude among agencies regarding any emotional problems officers might have was ‘If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen,’” Lewinski says. “Fortunately, that is changing.” Progressive departments are now instituting such services as: • Police suicide prevention training for recruits, in-service personnel, and management at all levels • Family seminars and support groups to discuss relationship problems, communication skills, and conflict resolution • Stress awareness programs • Methods for tracking high-risk officers and getting them professional intervention when needed. Still, Lewinski laments, “there remain many agencies that do not understand that they have an obligation to help their officers who are out there protecting people. “Officers need more than cars and guns to do their job well and come home safely at the end of their shift. Agencies need to be lobbied vigorously to proactively provide services that address their officers’ psychological well-being. It’s an important way of saying, ‘We appreciate who you are and we will help make the most of working for us.’” This article was originally published July 8, 2008 and is reprinted with permission. To register for a free subscription to this e-newsletter, visit www.forcesciencenews.com or e-mail [email protected]. from LAKEVIEW, page 7 tor. Trooper Parker is a Small Squad Tactics instructor. Trooper Parker is a Laser instructor. With all of these talents we’re still waiting for some P.I.T. training, taser training, and Tpr. Sowa told me the other day he would like the Department to teach him to fly helicopters. A few years ago, our dispatch center became a separate entity from the Sheriff ’s Office (finally!). With that, they have purchased and installed several in-car computers for our patrol cars. Hey look … we are catching up with technology. Soon, maybe this decade, almost all of our cars will have a computer. Speaking of cars, can we borrow a slick-top or semimarked for traffic duties? Now for some stats ... We have averaged roughly 3,800 complaints per year for the last few years. Of those, almost 25% are traffic crashes (a lot of car vs. deer). The rest are criminal, non-criminal, and civil complaints. For those of you not familiar with Montucky we handle an above average amount of CSC investigations. As mentioned earlier, we are responsible for two prisons in Montcalm County. Historically, we have had little time for proactive traffic patrols. Recently our lieutenant has been rotating a couple of troopers per pay period as dedicated “traffic” cars. We have 12 plus miles of freeway (US-131) running through our area and over 105 miles of “M” roads. The average trooper’s age at the Post is almost 38 years with an average of 10.5 years of service. The “Stripes” and above, average almost 46-years-old with 18 years of service. Prior to opening the Sheridan Detachment we averaged 1.5 responses to the southern part of the County per day. Some of the areas saw us as little as once every twelve days! Now, hardly a day goes by that I don’t hear someone thanking us for being around. Are you getting to all of your Post area? Trust me, the people will thank you. Now you know a little bit about Lakeview. Be safe! Honor Detachment News This is an e-mail sent by Tpr. Rick Doehring to the many friends and family members of the late Tpr. Blair DuVall. For those of you that do not know, I am Rick Doehring, and I was fortunate enough to be Blair’s partner for the past nine years. Several weeks ago, JoAnn asked that I compose an e-mail in regard to our (JoAnn and I) sorting and packing Blair’s items that were in our office. I told her that I would and will attempt to describe it as best as I can. As a disclaimer, please do not expect the same high quality as you get with JoAnn’s e-mail. Before the thought of removing Blair’s items from the Honor Office came to be, another difficult task was completed a month earlier. For those of you not with the State Police, our patrol cars are leased and a certain amount of miles need to be put on the cars each month. If this is not done, the post could lose that car. Blair had been in the hospital approximately a month and his patrol car had not been driven. The car needed to go back to Traverse City so that some miles could be put on it. Before taking it back, I had to remove his items from the car. For Blair and I, our cars are our offices and we carry our equipment and items we need with us in that car, where it stays. JoAnn and I decided not to tell Blair about this right away because we did not want him to feel we were giving up on him. Everyone at the Traverse City Post was worried about the same thing and kept reminding us to tell Blair that this was only temporary. His car is his car. The afternoon came for me to go and remove his items from the car. I drove his car to our office so that I could put his items in the office, at his desk. The feeling of taking his items from that car made me feel very uneasy. This was Blair’s personal domain and I felt as if I was treading into that domain. We had each rode with each other and each of us set our cars up the way we wanted them. Of course, knowing Blair, everything was in its proper order and in a certain place. From his clipboard next to his seat and flashlight on his seat, to his own personal lifejacket and 100 feet of nylon rope that he kept in the trunk. Each item tucked into a particular spot. I removed each of the items and placed them at or around his desk in the office. There they would stay until he came back and put them back into the car the way he wanted them. Unfortunately, that day would not come. On the day of Blair’s funeral, I drove his car in the procession. Everybody knew Blair’s car by the “35” that was on the overhead “bubble.” At the conclusion of the service, I was approached and handed the bubble with the “35” on it and noticed that it had been replaced with a generic bubble. 7135, Blair’s call sign, had been retired. I took the bubble to our office where it is displayed today on the shelf above our computer for everyone to see. After Blair passed, I had a very hard time spending any time in that office. Normally, we did not work the same shift and would only see each other in passing in the office. But there was still a lot that was now missing. I would find myself just looking around and remembering conversations we had while sitting in our office. Often, people would stop in to talk about Blair and I would spend an hour or two with people. It was not uncommon for one to walk in as another was leaving. After awhile, I would just go to the Benzie Sheriff ’s Office and do reports there so that I could try and concentrate. Even other officers that would stop into the office would just look around and comment that they just could not believe he was gone. Nothing changed in the office and nothing was moved for a month and a half. JoAnn and I had spoken as she wanted to come help collect and pack Blair’s items. We picked a date and spent the afternoon going through his things and talking. Five hours and a few tears later, we were done. It was ironic looking at a 20-plus year career packed into several boxes. The office looked so empty! His desk was cleared off and only a few manuals were left on his shelf. Gone were the “Far Side” cartoons and notes that had been there. The desk drawers that had been so well-organized were empty. His clipboard and notebook that had been on the desk, gone. It was as if he had never been there. Yet he was everywhere I looked in there. So many little memories that will never go away no matter what was taken out. But another feeling also came over me as I looked at the empty space. I did not want that space to stay empty. I felt that the time had come to start the process of finding someone else to come into the office. I cannot say partner or someone to fill the space because no one will every “fill” that space. But it was time for someone else to be there. I decided that I would call the Post Commander and the District Captain the next day and tell them that I was ready. The next day, I went to the office. Before making the call, I decided to check out the MSP Intranet. This is where activity around the State, memos and job postings are listed. As I was looking, there it was, a posting for the opening at the Honor Resident Trooper position. I thought to myself about how ironic that was! I did not even have to make the call! At this time, letters are being accepted for those troopers interested in coming to Honor. The person selected will never be able to fill Blair’s shoes and will be scrutinized as “Blair’s replacement.” But that person will also have the benefit of coming to a community that loved Blair and will love the new trooper if that trooper shows that same love and respect that Blair did for this community. November/December, 2008 23 Back In The Day... Bay City, Michigan, Post Moved to New Location, Gets Better Home By: State Trooper December 1920 The Bay City Post of the Michigan State Police, by January 1, 1920, will be in its new home on the outskirts of the city, on US-23. The old Post was located in a residence in the heart of the City. The new Post is on a piece of countyowned land out where considerable room is available and where one of the main Eastern Michigan highways passes the door. One of the old barrack buildings at East Lansing, which had served as the Headquarters Post virtually since the inception of the organization, has been razed in sections, loaded on a flat car, and dispatched to Bay City. Reassembled, with a new plaster-board interior and lots of fresh paint, inside and out, it will make a most attractive and comfortable post. The Post is in command of Lt. Joseph Carney, and he and his men have built plenty of good will for the organization in the Bay City territory. When it became necessary to relocate the Post and Commissioner Olander was considering moving it elsewhere in the Bay county territory, an expression in tribute to the Post was made editorially by the Bay City Times. Later, the board of supervisors of the County, in their annual two-week fall session, not only provided the land for the relocation of the Post but appropriated $2,000 in aid to cover expenses in moving it from the City to the nearby site on one of the County highways. The action of the supervisors, together with the editorial endorsement of the Michigan State Police, particularly the Bay City detachment, by the Bay City Times, is of particular interest and of considerable significance in 24 Michigan Trooper that this same county, not so many years ago, voted to abolish the Michigan State Police. Friendships have replaced the old sentiment, however, and the worth of the organization has been generally proven. How exercised the metropolitan newspaper of that area became over the possibility of losing the detachment is indicated in the following editorial in the Bay City Times: “The value of a State Police Post to Bay City and Bay County is known and recognized by the majority of citizens. These good-looking, fearless minions of law and order do more to prevent crime in this section than any other body of law enforcement officers. They have no axes to grind and they favor no one – their duty is to see that the laws are enforced and that, if a crime is committed, the culprit is captured, regardless of who he is or where he may be. And let it be said to their credit that they almost always get their man. “And now it appears that Bay City is to lose the troopers because of the lack of proper quarters of a permanent nature. The funds in the State Department of Public Safety are low, and economy must be the watchword. If the State had permanent barracks here, things might be different. But a house must be rented, meals must be paid for at hotels, etc. And all that costs money. A piece of land has been offered to the troopers free of charge if they will build on it, but there are no funds to put up the home. “The Board of Supervisors recognize the value of the State Troopers to the County, as was demonstrated at the session previous to the present one, when a resolution was drawn commending the work of these men and requesting that they be left here. Chief of Police Davis has been quoted, to the effect, that their loss to Bay City would be a severe one. But nothing has been done by the County authorities to see that provisions are made to retain the Post in Bay County. “Right now seems a logical time to act. The supervisors are in session, and will be working on the budget. An item should be included that would provide funds to establish a permanent post here. No large outlay of money would be required. The Ways and Means Committee should see that the matter is settled once and for all. “Other Counties are asking for the troopers and offering to provide barracks and pay their salaries. Bay has offered nothing. If some action is not taken, local citizens will awake some day to find that the State Department of Public Safety has transferred the Post, bag and baggage, to some other county.” MICHIGAN TO BE RE-DISTRICTED The western district of the Michigan State Police, of which Capt. Archie Downing has recently been made commanding officer, has been extended to include the Manistee Post. Posts comprising that district, in addition to Manistee, are: Grand Haven, Paw Paw, and White Pigeon. In the establishment of the district, a plan is seen ahead, whereby the entire state will be separated into four districts, each with a commanding officer in charge who will also serve as commanding officer of one of the posts in his own district. That the lower peninsula of Michigan will eventually contain three districts, as seen from the plan, known to be entertained to supplement the string of border posts up either side of the State and across the southern border with a line of posts extending up the center of the State. That the lower peninsula will come to be divided into the western, eastern, and northern district, with Lt. Demaray recently transferred to that responsibility. With Capt. Downing at Paw Paw in charge of the western district, two of the four districts are established and allotted. Two promotions stand ahead for the commanding officers of some of the other posts falling in the subsequent new districts. Historically Speaking: No Slackers Were Allowed in 1918 By: James Mann, The Ann Arbor News When the United States entered World War I, the government instituted the draft to secure the manpower needed for the armed forces. At the time, this was a popular action and many young men willingly registered for the draft. Those who failed to register were looked upon as cowards or traitors, and were known as slackers. There was little sympathy for them. At about 6:15 p.m., on Saturday, August 24, 1918, members of the Michigan National Guard and State Police arrived in Ypsilanti to search for slackers. Sentries were posted on all roads leading into the City, and all card carrying young men of draft age, 21-31 were stopped. The young men were asked to show their registration card, which they were to carry at all times. Those who failed to show their cards were ordered to report to City Hall. There they had an opportunity to make their explanations. As the evening progressed, the line of cars and carriages in front of City Hall increased, until it extended the length of North Huron Street. “And while the visitors coming in to the city were going to City Hall in scores, the squad of police assigned city duty started in to comb the streets,” reported The Daily Ypsilanti Press of August 26, 1918. “Every young man who failed to produce required evidence as to his status in the draft was escorted to one of several central points where a motor patrol soon picked him up for a ride to the office of Chief of Police Charles Cain where he took his place in a long line and awaited his turn to satisfy officers who were in charge of the investigation,” reported continued. “It did not make any difference whether the young man had his lady friend with him or not. The man in khaki was firm and was also very nice, but nevertheless that young man had to come across and satisfy the solider boy that he was all right before he was allowed to go on his way, many of them having to make the trip to City Hall while the young lady friend had to shift for herself until his return,” noted The Ypsilanti Record of August 29, 1918 It was estimated that some 300 young men were caught in the net, and of these, not one was a slacker. Every young man questioned had done his duty and had registered for the draft. At City Hall, as each young man was released, he was issued a pass that protected him for the rest of the evening – if he was lucky enough to have been taken in early and there was still time to enjoy the company of friends. “The young man also reflected credit upon the City by the gentlemanly manner n which they accepted their lot and their attitude toward officers,” noted The Ypsilanti Daily Press. November/December, 2008 25 2008 Michigan State Fair – 8/22 thru 9/1 After speaking with Tpr. Andrea Barber (Detroit Post), the little girl calmed down and her parents were eventually found. Trooper Andrea Barber (Detroit Post) consoles a scared and lost little girl at the State Fair. Photos by: Ray Holt, Tpr. Mike Tilley, D/Tpr. Sarah Krebs Trooper Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post) helping a lost child. 2008 Michigan State Fair personnel. 26 Michigan Trooper Forensic artist Heather Johnson (Lansing Lab) makes this girl’s face into an artistic creation! (l-r): Trooper Aaron Martin (Lapeer Post), MSP mascot “Metro,” Sgt. Jeff White (Reed City Post), and Tpr. Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post). D/Tpr. Sarah Krebs (Second District Fugitive Team) spent time using her forensic artist skills on this young boy at the State Fair. Back row (l-r): Tpr. Rob Metivier (Grand Haven Post), Tpr. Scott McMannus (Cadillac Post), Tpr. Dan Parker (Lakeview Post), Sgt. Jeff Smith (Metro North Post), Tpr. Don Dutcher (Mt. Pleasant Post), and Tpr. Aaron Martin (Lapeer Post). Front row (l-r): Tpr. Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post), Tpr. Tom Vaughn (Flint Post), Sgt. Jeff White (Reed City Post), Tpr. Mike Tilley (Gaylord Post), Tpr. Tony Weldy (Jonesville Post), and Tpr. Andy Williams (Bridgman Post). November/December, 2008 27 Michigan Law Enforcement Gets New Tool to Find Missing Kids and Fugitives Digital Billboards Will Post AMBER Alerts Statewide Michigan’s largest outdoor advertising companies announced a statewide program to help law enforcement agencies find missing children and suspected criminals by broadcasting AMBER Alerts and photographs of wanted fugitives on digital billboards. Under the program, member companies of the Outdoor Advertising Association of Michigan (OAAM), which includes CBS Outdoor and Lamar Advertising Co., along with Adams Outdoor Advertising, will volunteer their digital billboards across the State when AMBER Alerts are issued. The companies will also use their digital billboards to broadcast the photographs and names of fugitives wanted by the FBI and local police when a suspect is believed to be in the area. “As I’m sure any law enforcement official would tell you, time is precious in these cases,” said Tom Carroll, president of the Detroit-based Outdoor Advertising Association of Michigan, and vice president of Michigan Region for CBS Outdoor. “When an Amber Alert is issued or local law enforcement gets word a dangerous criminal is in the area, we can have information up on our digital billboards in a matter of minutes.” Though some billboard companies periodically use digital billboards for law enforcement purposes, this program formalizes a commitment from the major Michigan billboard companies that have digital signs. Today’s announcement was welcomed by public safety and elected officials across Michigan including Lansing, Saginaw, and Port Huron. “In these tight budget times, it’s important for law enforcement to find 28 Michigan Trooper new ways of partnering with private entities to boost public safety,” said Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero. “The efforts of Michigan’s leading billboard companies to catch criminals and find missing children is a perfect example of the kind of partnership that will help keep Lansing, and other cities, safe.” Using digital billboards to fight crime has a proven track record of success. Crime Stoppers is a 501(c)3 nonprofit international organization funded by local donations which has operated in Saginaw and Bay Counties since the 1970s. In the past two years, the program has caught a number of suspects after placing their picture on local digital billboards. “The digital billboards have been a huge help,” said Bart R. Dexter, Crime Stoppers Coordinator. “We’ve had a number of instances where we put a suspect’s picture up on a billboard, and within minutes, we’re getting calls from neighbors, coworkers, and even family members.” When an AMBER Alert is issued or police officials believe a suspect is in a specific area, all pertinent information will be sent to the billboard companies – description of the suspect or missing child, a phone number to call with tips, suspected crime, and a photo or photos if available. The companies use electronic templates to quickly create a digital image, which can be posted on the digital billboards within moments. “It’s a tremendous public service to have this commitment from all of the major billboard companies in Michigan that have digital signs,” said Chief Mark Alley, Lansing Police Department. “Having the ability to quickly get information, including pictures, to motorists where the suspect could be traveling will be an enormous help in saving kids and catching criminals when time is of the essence.” Lamar, Adams, and CBS own a combined 32 digital billboards in Michigan in the areas of Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Detroit, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Mt. Pleasant, Port Huron, Saginaw, Bay City, and Traverse City. “This is another example of the important public service role Michigan’s billboard companies play in the local community,” said William Jackson, manager, real estate and government affairs for Adams Outdoor Advertising – Lansing. “Over the years, our efforts have helped feed the hungry, encouraged motorists to drive safely, and assisted charities in raising money.” “Our goal is to help authorities apprehend potentially dangerous criminals and help keep our streets safe,” said Mark Sherwood, Vice President and Regional Manager of Lamar Advertising. Lamar has donated billboards to help the Crime Stoppers campaign in the past. “I hope the success billboards have had in catching suspects in the Tri-Cities area is replicated throughout the State.” The Crime Awareness and Prevention Through a Unified Reporting Effort (C.A.P.T.U.R.E.) program in Port Huron and St. Clair Counties can attribute the apprehension of 20 suspects in 2007 (out of 30 total arrests) to the use of digital billboards urging people to call their tip line. “These billboards are located throughout the city in high traffic areas; people obviously pay attention to them and call us with tips,” said Lt. Dennis Maurey from C.A.P.T.U.R.E. “Digital billboards provide us a network to quickly get the word out that we wouldn’t otherwise have.” Digital Billboards in Michigan Ann Arbor US-23 near Whitmore Lake Road Detroit Area M-39 north of West Chicago Road I-75 north of 6 Mile Road I-75 north of 8 Mile Road I-275 north of Ecorse I-94 at Inkster Road I-96 east of Wixom Road I-94 at 14 Mile Road Grand Rapids US-131 north of 28th Street Kalamazoo 5319 South Westnedge Avenue Lansing Corner of Grand River and Coolidge Avenue 511 Hazel Street near the intersection of I-496 and Cedar Street I-496 near Pennsylvania Avenue Mt. Pleasant Business Route US-27 south of M-20 (two signs) Port Huron 10th Street north of Lapeer M-25 south of Carrigan I-94 north of the Blue Water Bridge 24th Street north of White Pine Grove at I-94 Saginaw Area I-75, 2.7 miles north of US-10, .2 miles north of Wilder Road I-75 north of M-46 I-675 at Davenport Exit Tittabawasee Road, west of Bay Road I-75 south of Vienna Road (Clio) M-46 and Shields Drive M-84 north of Tittabawasee Road M-74 south of Tittabawasee Road Traverse City US-31 at 3 Mile Road (two signs) South Airport Road west of Barlow November/December, 2008 29 117 th Recruit School Celebrates 10 Year Anniversary August 23, 2008, marked the 10 Year Anniversary for members of the 117th Trooper Recruit School. Former classmates Tpr. Scott Rothermel (off-duty disability retirement) and Tpr. Todd Parsons (Lansing Post) arranged for a reunion at Lake Lansing Park in Ingham County on Sunday, August 24, 2008. Classmates, along with other family members, caught up with one another on a beautiful afternoon and reminisced about the many memories that were made during their time at the Michigan State Police Training Academy. Trooper Scott Rothermel (Ret.) and Sgt. Michele Dunlap (Governor’s Detail) share a laugh as they recall a memory from the 117th Trooper Recruit School. Trooper Mike Vranish (Houghton Lake Post) with his son, Michael. 117 Recruit School Members (l-r): Sgt. Jeff Yonker (Major Case), Tpr. Todd Parsons (Lansing Post), Tpr. Mike Vranish (Houghton Lake Post), Sgt. Brody Boucher (Battle Creek Post), S/Sgt. Brett Sojda (Firearms Unit - Sterling Heights Lab), Tpr. Kevin Curtis (Metro South Post), Tpr. Scott Rothermel (Ret.), Tpr. Kellie Nightlinger (Ret. - now with the DNR), Tpr. Brenda Hoffmann (Richmond Post), and Sgt. Michele Dunlap (Governor’s Detail). th 30 Michigan Trooper Trooper Kevin Curtis (Metro South Post) with his wife, Kelly, and their three children, Natalie, Clay, and baby Abigail. 117th Fast Facts * On August 23, 1998, the 117th Trooper Recruit School began with 121 Recruits. There were 108 males and 13 females. * On January 8, 1999, 96 Recruits completed the 20-week school and were sworn in as Michigan State Police Troopers. 85 were males and 11 were females. * Ten members have since been promoted to sergeants. Other members have become specialized in various areas within the Department, such as: Canine, ES Team, Underwater Recovery, Motorcycle Unit, and Lab, just to name a few. * Nine members are no longer with the Department due to various reasons (resigning, sought other employment, off-duty disability, etc.). * 87 members still remain. 78 are males and 9 are females. * Only 15 more years until retirement!! Trooper Misty Long-Birgy (Newaygo Post), Tpr. Brenda Hoffmann (Richmond Post), Tpr. Kellie Nightlinger (Ret. - now works for the DNR), and Sgt. Michele Dunlap (Governor’s Detail). Front Row (l-r): Tpr. Misty LongBirgy (Newaygo Post) and Tpr. Scott Rothermel (Ret.) Back Row (l-r): Tpr. Chris Croley (Metro North Post), Tpr. Kevin Curtis (Metro South Post), Sgt. Michele Dunlap (Governor’s Detail), Tpr. Kellie Nightlinger (Ret. - now works for the DNR), Sgt. Brody Boucher (Battle Creek Post), Tpr. Brenda Hoffmann (Richmond Post), and Tpr. Todd Parsons (Lansing Post). November/December, 2008 31 Law Enforcement Torch Run Mr. Charlie Fick (shown on page 33) always gives a generous donation and allows us to stay in his Super 8 hotel free of charge year after year. This year we ran into a bridge out near Mount Pleasant. The detour would have added several miles to our trip and we were on time restraints. The construction crew had a small boat (with a hole in it) that they used to get back and forth across the river. Sergeant Kevin Sweeney and I loaded the runners on that leg (Tpr. Liz Hunt – with her husband Tpr. Doug Hunt Tpr. Craig Felix Brighton Post and daughter, Haley) into the boat 120th Recruit School and walked the boat across the river. Once on the other side, the runners Every year for the past 26 years, finished their leg on time. the Michigan State Police has had The Midnight Madness run in Lanmembers run the Law Enforcement sing included recruits and staff from Torch Run (LETR) for Special Olymthe 121st Trooper Recruit School, pics. The LETR’s goal is to provide members of the 82nd Mid-Michiawareness and funding for Special gan Police Academy, and many other Olympics. The 2008 MSP team conmembers of the MSP and area desisted of F/Lt. John Card (team cappartments. A big thanks goes to Tpr. tain and Post Commander of the Bay Brody Boucher (Lansing Post) who City Post), D/F/Lt. John Porter (Sixth took the initiative to arrange for buses District Headquarters), Sgt. Kevin from Dean Trailways to transport the Sweeney (Emergency Management runners back after the run. and Homeland Security Division), Tpr. Everyone on the team contributes Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City to the best of their ability. Post), Tpr. Carissa Horan But by the end of the week (Lansing Post), and myself. we were all sleep deprived The Fraternal Order of and sore. A question that Police and the Michigan was brought up around Department of Corrections the end of the week was if both have teams that run someone wanted to punch with us. We run the Central another team member, Route, which is a 750 mile would it be considered dorelay that began in Copper mestic violence because we Harbor on Monday, Separe living together on the tember 8, 2008, went into RV? Hmmm.... Another year on the the City of Detroit and books for Central Route, ended in Sterling Heights but don’t forget about the on Friday, September 12, 2008. Together there are The Central Route team at Copper Harbor (l-r): Sgt. Kevin Sweeney Polar Plunges (various 18 runners (six from each (Emergency Management and Homeland Security), F/Lt. John Card weekends in the winter) and (Bay City Post), Tpr. Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post), Tpr. Craig Felix the Copper Cup Hockey team) who cover every step (Brighton Post), D/F/Lt. John Porter (Sixth District HeadquarTournament (in March) for ters), and Tpr. Carissa Horan (Lansing Post). along the way. Our tradition has been to run the Mackinac Island eight mile run on the Saturday before the Torch Run starts (as if we don’t run enough during the next week). Sergeant Kevin Sweeney took fourth place overall on that run (oh, by the way, he set a goal for himself and personally ran 100 miles that week!). A special thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Spata (parents of Tpr. Joseph Brodeur, Ypsilanti Post) for their hospitality and allowing the team to stay with them on the island again. Five members of the MSP Underwater Recovery Unit swam the Straits of Mackinaw on Wednesday, September 10, 2008. This year the water was smoother than last, but it always proves to be a difficult swim. This year’s swimmers were: Sgt. Larry Schloegl (head of Underwater Recovery Unit), Tpr. Jennifer Hodgson (Brighton Post), Tpr. Randy Parros (Detroit Post), Tpr. Dale Girke (Flint Post), and Tpr. Craig Dorenbecker (St. Ignace Post). We stop along our route in various cities and towns and sell t-shirts and raffle tickets. The locals wait for us to come and show their support. 32 Michigan Trooper more fun things and to do that raise money for Special Olympics. 2008 Central Route Team F/Lt. John Card (Bay City Post) D/F/Lt. John Porter (Sixth District Headquarters) Sgt. Kevin Sweeney (Emergency Management and Homeland Security) Tpr. Carissa Horan (Lansing Post) Tpr. Craig Felix (Brighton Post) Tpr. Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post) Recruits and staff members of the 121st Trooper Recruit School participated in the Midnight Madness Run during the Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics. Trooper Lizabeth Hunt (Bay City Post) leading the pack! The Central Route Team carrying the torch in Mt. Pleasant. Troopers Lizabeth and Doug Hunt (Bay City Post and Bridgeport Post, respectively), with their daughter, Haley, being escorted across the river in the “boat with the hole!” The Central Route Team with Mr. Charlie Fick, owner of the Super 8 Motel. Mr. Fick graciously allows the MSP LETR team to stay for free every year! see LETR, page 34 November/December, 2008 33 from LETR, page 33 2008 Dive Team (Swim the Straights) Tpr. Craig Dorenbecker (St. Ignace Post) Tpr. Jennifer Hodgson (Brighton Post) Tpr. Dale Girke (Flint Post) Tpr. Randy Parros (Detroit Post) The Central Route Team with the Mackinac Bridge in the background. The Dive Team going across the Straits and preparing for their swim. Trooper Craig Dorenbecker (St. Ignace Post) helps Tpr. Randy Parros (Detroit Post) with his dive equipment. 121st Recruit School lined up on the Capitol steps waiting for the Midnight Madness run. 34 Michigan Trooper Mt. Pleasant Youth Academy with assistance from local fire and police specialists. This year’s school ran from July 7 through July 31, 2008. Tpr. Joshua Lator Mt. Pleasant Post 117th Recruit School The Mt. Pleasant Youth Services Unit has officers from the Michigan State Police, Mt. Pleasant Police Department, Isabella County Sheriff ’s Office, and the Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Police Department. This year was our 8th Annual Youth Police Academy, of which I have been a part of for three years. The academy runs the entire month of July with approximately 31 cadets who are hand-selected from Isabella County Schools. The cadets are entering sixth through ninth grades, and over 250 children have graduated from this program in the last eight years. The idea of this academy is not to get the kids to be police officers, but to encourage lives of character and integrity. The academy is paramilitary and strict in regards to the “sir-yessir” style of business we in law enforcement are accustomed to. Kids are instructed in defensive tactics, driving, firearms, investigation, criminal law, court process, dispatch procedure, traffic crash investigation, physical training, fire safety, traffic patrols, water safety, and rescue along with many other areas. All classes are hands-on and instructed by the members of the unit (l-r) Sergeant Doug LaLone (Mt. Pleasant Police Department) and director of the Youth Services Unit, Cadet David Merrill, and Tpr. Joshua Lator (Mt. Pleasant Post). The class is instructed to vote for the “Most Outstanding Cadet Award,” and Cadet David Merrill was the person they felt represented the character and image of their graduating class and could also represent them at community events to speak on their behalf. Photos by Ryan Evon Morning Sun This young man was the little brother of one of this year’s graduates. He approached Tpr. Joshua Lator (Mt. Pleasant Post) to ask if he thought that he could be a cadet someday. In true trooper form, Tpr. Lator encouraged him to maintain a good attitude in school and to complete an application when he was old enough. November/December, 2008 35 The Ironman Triathlon, The Pursuit of Excellence, and the Michigan State Police D/F/Lt. Ron Hnilica (Ret.) 85th Recruit School There are times over life that epiphanies occur. Mine was this past Labor Day weekend. The setting was the Ironman Triathlon in Louisville, Kentucky. Jack Taeff and Steve Unruh were two of about 2,000 participants. You may recognize them as fellow Michigan State Police troopers as Jack is stationed at the Detroit Post and Steve at Metro North Post. I want not only to express my pride and admiration for their accomplishment, but also to draw an analogy between the dedication and commitment of these athletes and the same attributes I’ve observed in the Michigan State Police. It all began a year ago, when Jack and Steve told my wife Sandy (Jack’s mom) and I that they registered for the Ironman competition. We didn’t give it much thought at the time, but soon noticed the intense dedication to a training regimen and a most definite diet change. We first met Steve and his wife, Lynette, at Jack and his wife, Karen’s, home during last year’s holidays. Again, talk of training and things Ironman became topics of conversation. We also noticed several huge reference books about triathlon training 36 Michigan Trooper schedules, suggested workouts, and letes with the approach of their special day. healthy eating. Let’s just do this...I’m ready...I can’t As 2008 progressed, the number stand this waiting around… were the and intensity of training hours inmost common comments we overcreased. It became the norm to exheard. pect 5-7 hours per day in some swimEvent day, August 31, 2008, began run-bike combination. Workouts as a comfortable 68 degrees at dawn were six days a week with one day with 2,000 athletes ready to face their (usually Monday) as a recovery day. Of course, Jack and Steve’s training individual aspirations, anticipations, regimen required a back-up team ef- and doubts. Finally, at 6:50 a.m., the first swimfort, especially from Karen, Lynette, mers entered the water. The field inand other relatives, especially “grand” cluded 12-15 professional Ironman moms (and they were!) who watched triathletes competing for the $10,000 the little ones when both mom and first-place prize, one each to the windad either worked or trained. ning man and woman. At 7 a.m., the Event weekend came all too rapidly. Most athletes arrived a couple 1,900 plus Ironman triathletes (the of days prior to the Ironman to an ones with real jobs) entered the waoverwhelming welcome in downtown ter, in designated lines, until all were Louisville (pronounced “Louieville” swimming the 2.4 mile course. In 37 - don’t ever forget that if you visit minutes all of the athletes were in the water - an amazing feat in itself. there!). They were encouraged by tremenIt didn’t take long to figure out who Louisville’s celebrities were this dous noise and cheering from their weekend, with all the signs, personal- supporters and their new Louisville ized t-shirts and area business promo- friends. Sandy and I were among the 2,100 tions. volunteers. No kidding, that many Like Jack and Steve, many athletes people really are needed to put on a came with their special back-up teams successful Ironman. We worked the -- support groups of spouses, relatransition lane from the bike to the tives, and friends. run. At this point in the day (about 1 We watched athletes practice swimming in the “less than clean” Ohio River, and bike and run around the city two days prior to the event. We even felt the nervous anticipation Trooper Steve Unruh (shirt) (Metro North Post) and Tpr. Jack Taeff of the ath- (no shirt) (Detroit Post) ready to start the 2.4 mile Ironman swim. The real winners of this competition were all the athletes who endured endless months of training to put forth better than their best effort to compete in this Ironman. Regardless of finishing time, if they finished at all, the most compelling aspect of their race was their spirit and the journey itself. And every competitor had their own heartwarm(l-r): Trooper Steve Unruh (Metro North Post) and Tpr. ing story. Jack Taeff (Detroit Post) at the Ironman finish line. The one I’ll share is of a 33-year-old woman p.m. for the first athletes to finish the competing in her first Ironman. She 112 mile bike ride - another amazing first enjoyed competitive running in feat considering the heat and the Ken- her 20s, before developing a rare neutucky hills), the temperature reached rological disease. This disease, which 88 degrees. Later in the afternoon, it I can’t pronounce, makes her feet feel would peak at 96 degrees. We couldn’t as if she is constantly walking on, in even guess how many gallons of wa- her words, red hot coals. This conditer, Gatorade, or other liquids were tion confined her to a wheelchair, cost her a job, and ended her running. Her consumed during the entire event. We witnessed anguish, determina- doctors said that she would never run tion, pain, concentration, frustration, again. Her pain and depression became humor, and anger (as the result of an so unbearable that one night she injury) - as athletes completed the bike wrote a suicide note to her parents course and transitioned to the 26.2 and placed it under her pillow where mile marathon route. The age range they would find it “after.” When she of the triathletes was said to be 18 to woke up, she decided that she was 78 with an average of 27 years. The either going to die that morning or common denominator was a desire begin running again. to finish, regardless of fatigue, injury, Happily, she chose the latter and or time of day (some athletes didn’t at 33, she competed in the Louisville finish until after midnight). Ironman. After completing the swim The finish line in downtown Louis and the 112-mile bike ride, she had to ville was the place to be as triathletes go to the medical tent for treatment completed the marathon portion of of her bleeding, blistered feet. When the triathlon. The fastest male crossed the bleeding could not be stopped the finish line at 8 hours and 38 min- after 45 minutes, the doctor would not utes while the fastest female came in allow her on the marathon course. at 9 hours and 25 minutes. An excepBut she vowed to come back and tional accomplishment considering I’m sure she will. they racked up 140.6 miles swimming, Hers is just one example of the running, and biking. spirit and courage we witnessed in Jack and Steve both finished in very Louisville. respectable times and they can tell you So, back to the epiphany… their individual stories. What’s imporWhile witnessing the Ironman, it tant is that they took on the challenge struck me that these men and women, and completed the Ironman. many first-time Ironman participants, display a determination and courage that will transfer to their daily lives or vice versa. As I alluded to, the epiphany has to do with those men and women that are, or have been, Michigan State troopers. Like the Ironman triathletes, they take on personal challenges or set goals that transfer to the workplace. They want to, and do, serve the citizens of this State to the best of their abilities and often “above and beyond.” This is why the Michigan State Police has had, and continues to have, a reputation for excellence. The Ironman is the analogy in this article, but it could just as easily have been the troopers who run the Torch Run for charity, volunteer in a hospice, lead a boy scout or 4-H group, or assist those that need transportation to a medical facility. Or those who work with their faith group to feed the hungry, volunteer as a big brother or sister, tutor, or otherwise contribute in numerous untold ways to the Thin Blue Line of Michigan. You get the idea. Now I’ll go a little further out. Have you seen the movie “The Bucket List?” It is well worth the time just to see the constant interplay between two of the greatest actors ever, Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson. The title refers to those things that one wants to do before “kicking the bucket.” We should all have some things on our personal bucket list. Some of yours, in one way or another, will make you a better person for having tried, and will, in many cases, benefit others whose lives you touch, either personally or professionally. If you haven’t yet realized it, life is fleeting. Do not hesitate to start on your bucket list, regardless of your age. Again, congratulations to Jack and Steve and to all of the other State Troopers, retired and active, that continue to do things that actively enrich their personal lives and, by extension, the lives of others. November/December, 2008 37 2008 Fletcher Match Major Barry Getzen and Capt. Gary Nix appear at the left and right respectively in each of the photos below. FIRST PLACE TEAM: Traffic Safety Division MC Ofcr. Jennifer Stolberg – Alternate, MC Ofcr. Brett Black, MC Sgt. Susan Fries, MC Sgt. Steve Harmon, MC Sgt. Mike McLaughlin. SECOND PLACE TEAM: 2nd District Team Sgt. Mike Green, Tpr. Tom Mathis, Tpr. Joshua Henry, Tpr. Matt Kiser - Alternate. Tpr. Craig Ziecina (not pictured) THIRD PLACE TEAM: 3rd District Team Tpr. David Stoppa, Tpr. Don Dutcher, Tpr. Jim Abel, and Tpr. Robert Blair. MATCH WINNER: Tpr. Jim Abel – Mt. Pleasant Post. 38 Michigan Trooper GUN WINNER: Sgt. Michael Benjamin – Special Operations Division – ES Team. 2008 Monroe County Fair – 7/9 thru 7/13 MSP Monroe personnel (l to r): Tpr. Marc Moore, Sgt. Scott Beard, Tpr. Stephen Bolo, F/Lt. Mary Kapp, Tpr. Jonathan Wickwire, Tpr. Bret Smith, Tpr. Sharon McDonald. Lower row (l to r): Tpr. Sharon McDonald, Tpr. Marc Moore, Tpr. Jonathan Wickwire, Sgt. Scott Beard. Upper row (l to r): Tpr. Stephen Borello, F/Lt. Mary Kapp, Tpr. Tressa Duffin, Tpr. Bret Smith. The group photo in the middle of the collage is the same as listed above. Photos courtesy of Pamela Smith, Finer Arts Photography Trooper Tressa Duffin (2nd District Hometown Security Team) A Blue Goose leads the Clydesdales. November/December, 2008 39 13th Annual MSP Fall Color 5K Run & Walk Event: Location: Date: Participants: Benefitting: 13th Annual Michigan State Police Fall Color 5K Run/Walk Maybury State Park Saturday, September 20, 2008 225 runners and/or walkers Thin Blue Line of Michigan and the MSP Fallen Trooper Memorial Photos by John Bates, Second District Regional Dispatch A Blue Goose is parked near the registration area with the Fall Color Run banner in the background. Trooper Rose Ford (Richmond Post) and D/Tpr. Adam Kolbas (SECID - Violent Crimes) helping to check runners in at the preregistration table. Event Winners: John Tarkowski (Overall Male Winner), Laura Smaczniak (Top Law Enforcement Female Winner), and Bob Bridges (Top Law Enforcement Male Winner). Not pictured: Jennifer Hutchison (Overall Female Winner). THE WINNERS ARE . . . Chaplain Pete Nickel (Metro North Post) saying a prayer before the race. Name Department Age Time Pace 29 19:27.7 6:16/M 55 18:23.0 5:56/M 31 20:56.5 6:45/M 46 20:17.1 6:33/M Overall Female Open Winner Jennifer Hutchison Overall Male Open Winner John Tarkowski Overall Female Law Enforcement Open Winner Laura Smaczniak Dept. of Homeland Security Overall Male Law Enforcement Open Winner Participants follow bagpiper Molly Wyber to the start line. 40 Michigan Trooper Bob Bridges Federal Bureau Prisons Warren Cousino High School girls cross country team participated in the event! Trooper Mike Zarate (Metro North Post) and his 19-month old son, Jason, helped out by volunteering! Trooper Scott Singleton’s (Gaming Unit), daughters, Anna (four months old) and Allison (four years old) were all smiles! Trooper Andy Osborne (Metro South Post) congratulates Robert Prehn with his medal for the Male 70 and over division. Participant Rick Schulz not only celebrated his 85th birthday on the day of the race, but he also travelled the furthest as he came all the way from California. Laurie Reinacher (Executive Director of the Thin Blue Line of Michigan) gave him his own birthday cake to celebrate! Trooper Andy Osborne (Metro South Post) lets two-year old Ben Ulmer check out his patrol car. Some of the MSP Personnel who participated or volunteered at this year’s MSP Fall Color Run. Front Row (l to r): D/Tpr. Adam Kolbas (SECID - Violent Crimes), Tpr. Derek Hoffmann (Richmond Post), Tpr. Rose Ford (Richmond Post), Tpr. Scott Singleton (Gaming Unit), with daughter, Anna, and Tpr. Regina Margosian (Richmond Post). Back Row (l to r): Tpr. Andy Osborne (Metro South Post), Tpr. Brenda Hoffmann (Richmond Post), Tpr. Dawn Zonca (Metro North Post), Tpr. Randy Servia (Alpena Post), Tpr. John Sholtz (Richmond Post), Tpr. Kevin Primel (Richmond Post), Tpr. Paul Martinez (Metro North Post), and Sgt. Deb (Lapp) Andjusic (Retired). River Servia (son of Tpr. Randy Servia - Alpena Post) enjoys the yummy Krispy Kreme doughnuts! see Fall Color Run, page 42 November/December, 2008 41 from Fall Color Run, page 41 Thanks to all who participated in the 13th Annual Michigan State Police Fall Color 5K Run/Walk! This event would not have been possible without the help of sponsors, donators, contributors, volunteers, and participants! The funds raised from this event benefitted two very important organizations: the Michigan State Police Fallen Trooper Memorial and the Thin Blue Line of Michigan. Thanks to the following businesses and people who have helped make this event possible. Expert Sponsor National City Sharpshooter Sponsor Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office Marksmanship Sponsors Adler’s Towing Advanced Care Pharmacy Athens Coney Island Body by Bruce/BBB Towing Michigan State Police Troopers Association, Inc. Primo’s Pizza of Oak Park Service Towing St. Clair Systems Wal-Mart of Chesterfield Township #2692 Walt’zz Mechanical Repair Waste Management Honorary Sponsors Bill’s Towing Cass Collision Dr. David R. Zamler, D.D.S. Elegant Jewelers Embassy Market Fern Hill Country Club Imperial Beverage - Elite Brands Kelly Services Mark’s Auto Service Nino Salvaggio Quality Towing Ruehle’s Towing The Race Route 42 Michigan Trooper Recognized Sponsors A-1 Indoor Comfort Systems A & M Service Center Achatz Catering and Soup Allied Cycle Shop Area Towing & Recovery Burgett’s Towing Buschlen Farms LLC Caniff Electric Supply Centennial Pines Farm Central Distributors C.M.P. Distributors, Inc. Cruisers Cuda Uniform Dave’s Towing Don’s Towing Dublin Fish and Chips Elite Personal Fitness Glen’s Towing Grand River Chiropractic Life Center Greenia’s Service Center Hadley’s Towing J & T Crova Towing Joe Ballor Towing Keford’s Collision and Towing Knaggs, Harter, Brake & Schneider, P.C. Larry’s Service & Towing Laws Printing & Promotions Lyons Servicecenter, Inc. Karoub Associates MEEMIC Insurance – Longuski Agency MHM Construction Mini’s Towing Munson Cleaners Nesci Chiropractic Nick’s Towing Novi-Motive, Inc. Official Towing Park Tire Company Preferred Towing Rickert’s Auto Glass Rusko’s Service Center Servpro of Novi Shepherd Lincoln Mercury Signs & Shapes International, Inc. Steel City Health & Fitness Stitch Wizard Embroidery Taylor Ford Taylor Wearmaster Town N Country Collision Warthogs Motorcycle Club - Mt. Clemens Winder Police Equipment White, Schneider, Young & Chiodini, P.C. Donators for Refreshments Big Apple Bagels (Clinton Township) Elaine’s Bagels (Clinton Township) Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (Troy) Vince and Joe’s (Clinton Township) Donators for Raffle Blooming Bakery Darrow’s State Police Merchandise Fern Hill Country Club Prince’s Embroidery Leipprandt Orchards Post Cleaners Running Fit (Northville & West Bloomfield) Salon Reaction Contributors Bean Brothers Trophy & Award Co. Blight’s Custom Lettering Crown Awards Dana Knapp Fox 2 News Hickman Race Services Maybury State Park WYCD 99.5 Volunteers Too many to list – you know who you are!! Thank You!! Mark your calendar ... 14th Annual MSP Fall Color 5K Run & Walk September 19, 2009 Maybury State Park 10 a.m. National Troopers Coalition 2008 Fall Conference The National Troopers Coalition 2008 Fall Conference (94th Session) was hosted by the Indiana State Police Alliance in Indianapolis, Indiana, September 29-30, 2008. The conference was also held in conjunction with the 75th Anniversary celebration of the Indiana State Police. Tpr. Craig MacDonald, 2nd District South Representative (Detroit Post) and D/Sgt. Duane Hickok, Region 1 D/Sgt. Representative (Jackson Post) attended along with President Mike Moorman. In addition to other NTC business, the conference focused heavily on the impact that the 2008 national elections will have on state troopers around the country. The following pictures are from the 75th Anniversary celebration. (l to r): Brian Hawthorne - President, Texas Department of Public Safety Officers Association, D/Sgt. Duane Hickok, and Tpr. Craig MacDonald. (l to r): Brian Hawthorne - President, Texas DPSOA, Mike Edes - President, Maine State Troopers Association, Jim Kiernan Vice President, New Jersey State Police Non-Commissioned Officers Association, Tpr. Craig MacDonald, and D/Sgt. Duane Hickok. (l to r): D/Sgt. Duane Hickok, Mike Wooten - Alaska State Troopers, Tpr. Craig MacDonald, Rob Cox - President, Alaska State Troopers, and Mason Haycock President, Utah Highway Patrol Association. (l to r): Mat Hodapp - President, Minnesota State Patrol Troopers Association, Brian Hawthorne - President, Texas DPSOA, Buddy Parker - President, Illinois Troopers FOP Lodge 41, and Tpr. Craig MacDonald. November/December, 2008 43 Guess Who? from VICE PRESIDENT, page 5 He was in the second grade and was seven years old. It was character dress-up day and the students were suppose to dress up like something they wanted to be when they grew up. Even then he knew what the future held! (Answer on page 62.) Future Troopers! the possibility of follow-up programs spotlighting MSP special units such as Emergency Services, the Canine Unit, the Bomb Squad, the Motor Unit, and others. Our initial hope was to have the project in place for the current recruit school, though that ended up not being the case. After meeting with Col. Munoz and other key members of the Department, it was clear that a project of this enormity would require more planning and preparation than we had time for. To Col. Munoz’s credit, he agreed that the idea has tremendous possibilities for the agency, and supports moving ahead with the plan for the next recruit school. The potential national media exposure from a project like this could garner an enormous amount of public support for the Michigan State Police. I believe that this is exactly the type of project that studies have shown can build visibility and credibility for MSP and the MSPTA, and give us an additional opportunity to favorably influence state fiscal policy. Endnotes 1.Detroit Free Press, September 29, 2007. 2.Moore, Elizabeth. Michigan’s Current Budget Situation. January 2004. <web1.msue. msu.edu/home/current budgetpiece.pdf> 3.Citizens Research Council of Michigan. Michigan’s Budget Crisis. May 2008. <http://wwwcrcmich.org/PUBLICAT/ budgetcrisis.html> 4.Mediamouse. Top Michigan Political Action Committees Setting New Fundraising Records. May 15, 2006. <http://www.mediamouse.org/features/051506top_m.php> 5.Ford Foundation. What We’re Learning. State Fiscal Analysis Initiative 3 Oct 2008 <http://www.fordfound.org/impact/ learning/statefiscalanalysis> 6.West, Maya H., principal author. Community-Centered Policing: A Force for Change. PolicyLink 2001. Cousins Luke Tucker (5), son of Tpr. Rich Tucker (Alpena Post), and Tannon Boyer (4), son of Tpr. Steve Boyer (Iron Mountain Post) already on the road and enjoying time together with their families at Van Riper State Park. Notice they’re already in uniform! (Photo courtesy of Samuel and Carol Boyer) 44 Michigan Trooper Ohio Fires 12 Troopers for Cheating By: Canton Repository A dozen Ohio Highway Patrol officers, including 11 of 40 at the patrol’s Canton post, were fired on Monday, September 8, 2008, resulting in a significant loss of manpower that could benefit drunken drivers and speeding motorists. Three sergeants and eight troopers at the post, along with a Woosterbased trooper, were dismissed after investigations found that they cheated on a written alcohol detection device certification test or knew about the cheating and failed to stop it. The terminations come more than a week after Jackson Township Patrolman Todd Macaluso was fired by the township for receiving a “cheat sheet.” Ohio Highway Patrol spokesman Lt. Tony Bradshaw said it is the first time in the patrol’s 75-year history that a dozen of its officers were terminated at once. He said they can appeal the dismissals to an arbitrator. “It caught everybody off guard,” said the Jackson Township post’s commander Lt. Eric Sheppard, who was training in another state when the cheating occurred. “We’ve been tasked with a lot more because we’re down from eight sergeants to five.” The fired troopers were placed on paid leave in late August. Since then, posts in Medina and Wayne counties and with the patrol’s office in Massillon have provided troopers to help the post respond to crashes in Stark and Summit counties. Sheriff ’s deputies and other local police departments have been asked to handle some accidents. Despite the assistance, Sheppard said his remaining troopers now spend nearly all of their shifts responding to traffic accidents and motorists’ calls. The post commander said he has had to reduce DUI checkpoints. His officers no longer conduct law-enforcement operations with local police in crime-ridden neighborhoods. Troopers have far less time to deter speeding. Bradshaw said troopers will be transferred to Stark County from other posts, but it’s not clear when. EFFECT ON CASES In Canton Municipal Court, prosecutors have had to change charges from DUI to reckless operation in at least three cases involving the fired troopers, said Canton City Prosecutor Frank Forchione. He said a couple of defendants likely got lighter sentences. With the troopers’ certifications in doubt, the convictions of up to 70 defendants with cases in Canton Municipal Court could be overturned. Meanwhile, the suspended officers underwent pre-disciplinary hearings August 29. Ohio Director of Public Safety Henry Guzman upheld recommendations to fire the dozen patrol officers and demote and transfer two sergeants. The fired troopers based at the post are Anthony Maroon, Sharon Papineau, William Hoberg, David Blubaugh, Todd Bradic, Shawn Milburn, Justin Smith, and Tara Worner, the patrol said. The fired sergeants at the post are Pamela Gowen, William Bower, and Mark McDonald. The terminated trooper in Wooster was Daniel Laubacher. Sergeant Terry Helton in Columbus and Sgt. John Hromiak at the Wooster post were demoted to troopers and transferred. Attempts to reach the troopers’ union were unsuccessful. CAUGHT Ohio’s Inspector General launched an investigation after an inspector for the Ohio Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Testing reported that several troopers had cheated on a test he was proctoring at the Canton Post in April. Troopers have to take a 50-question multiple-choice test annually to demonstrate they can properly operate devices that measure alcohol content in a motorist’s breath. About 99 percent of test takers pass. The inspector said he caught Tpr. Blubaugh looking at a cheat sheet, and other troopers were found to have the same answer sheet. Released in July, the inspector general’s report said Maroon admitted to making a copy of the answer sheet while taking the exam in 2007 when the proctor left the testing room. He then distributed copies of it to other troopers during the next 13 months. Among 22,000 answer sheets filled out in a two-year period, only six match the cheat sheet. All those tests were taken at the Canton Post, which is in Jackson Township. Bradic, Milburn, Bower, Laubacher, Gowen, Hoberg, Helton, and Papineau admitted receiving copies of the answers from Maroon, the report said. Laubacher said he got the answers over the phone from Maroon and wrote them on an index card but never looked at the card during his test in Ashland. Worner denied cheating, but her answers in an October test match Maroon’s answers, the report said. Smith’s answers matched Maroon’s in a March 2007 exam. There’s no evidence Gowen, Bower, McDonald, Helton, and Hromiak used the cheat sheet. Investigators found that Bradic, Milburn, Worner, and Hoberg definitely did. Maroon said he offered the answers to Sgt. McDonald, but McDonald declined, the report said. Ultimately, Maroon gave out copies of his answer sheet to at least 10 officers and placed them on a pile in the testing room, the report said. Maroon’s supervisor, Gowen, along with Sgt. Helton and Sgt. Hromiak saw Maroon pass out the sheets, but did nothing in response. One trooper told investigators that when he told Gowen he didn’t have time to study for the test, she told him to see Maroon, the report said. In late June, Gowen was commended for jumping out of her cruiser onto the path of traffic on Interstate 77 and then directing the vehicles to stop to prevent them from colliding with an out-of-control truck. Sheppard said the troopers that remain will seek to move on and focus on serving the public. November/December, 2008 45 Too Many of Us Have Surrendered Paperwork Doth Not Determine Efficiency By: Jim Donahue Macomb Police Academy In recent days, I was on a ride-along with a buddy who works in a small police department near my home. We were on the road by 1900 and before clearing the parking lot, dispatch sent us to a residence where a disturbance had been reported by the resident. “Oh, great” I thought, “another shift with nothing to drink or eat where we’ll be chasing the radio for hours on end.” When the shift starts off bad, it’s a sign of things to come. Two units arrived on scene. The resident is complaining of a home improvement contractor who is in her garage, drunk, and demanding money. She wants him gone. The guy is told to pack up and find someone to drive he and his van out of there. “Don’t drive,” my partner reminded him as we departed. Well, you know the rest of the story. We set up on the van down the block. The other unit cleared. Within a minute, the drunk is driving down the street. The stop is made. The drunk is arrested, taken to jail, and all the while he is complaining about the money-grubbing cops who had entrapped him. For my buddy and me it’s paper, paper, and more paper; waiting at the jail for the breath test; waiting at the jail for the intake process to complete. At 2300, we finally clear the jail (yes, four hours after this all began) and my buddy still has to write the report back at the station. As we drove back to our area, he comments that a lot of guys here won’t make DUI arrests. They’d sooner call a cab for the offender or dispose of it any other way – sometimes by looking the other way. The time required on paper is just too much. 46 Michigan Trooper My memory flashed to a meeting I’d attended many years ago at Michigan’s Office of Highway Safety Planning. Although part of the state police, this bureau was run by civilians who’d seemingly never spent five minutes in a patrol car on the street. The office-types were pondering if there could be a correlation between the day of the week and the volume of DUI arrests. They mused about how cops might have distractions on certain days of the week that would reduce enforcement. After listening to as much of this nonsensical babble as I could stand, I interjected, “If you want to measure DUI arrests, look at how the rise and fall as compared to the beginning and end of a cop’s shift.” The bureaucrats were clueless. I offered a theory: the rise and fall of DUI enforcement tied directly to each cop’s willingness and ability to handle the overwhelming amount of paperwork required for such an arrest. It had become so huge that is was ridiculous. If DUI enforcement was down, the majority of the blame would lie at the feet of the people who demanded an ever-increasing amount of reports from the cops on the street. I charged that it was the very people leading this state bureau who bore primary responsibility for the drop in drunk driving arrests. Of course, I expressed myself in a very sensitive and compassionate manner. Yes, I was banished from State Police headquarters for more than a year for having shown such insolence to those in positions of great power. I am now a Florida transplant. As a trainer, I have been on ride alongs in agencies across the county. I worked in Michigan and became reasonably proficient in handling drunk drivers. I’ve concluded that Florida may be the state where it is most difficult to make the arrest, process the person into custody, and ultimately get a conviction of any that I’ve witnessed, anywhere. The courts here have tipped the scales in favor of the offender to the point of absurdity. In Florida, we do not administer Field Sobriety Tests; no, in Florida they must be termed “Tasks” because after all, we cops are not qualified as teachers and therefore lack qualifications to administer a test. If by chance, the cop should use the wrong term in his report, the court has been known to dismiss the case. Unlike Michigan, where cops have a variety of tests they might use, cops in Florida have a script that includes the specific tasks, with unwavering requirements (9 steps up, 9 steps back, and pivot on your right foot at the turn), and a senseless series of questions to ensure that Joe Drunk understands the instructions in his drunken stupor. Cops here often read it aloud from a book, without any deviation. Other wise the judges (who are elected to protect us) may well dismiss the case. In Florida, judges routinely dismiss cases for the simplest technicality. It has become so bad that some agencies have schooled certain officers to handle all DUI arrests. When a patrol officer suspects a drunk, he makes the stop, holds the subject, and transfers probably cause to a cop from the anointed DUI unit. The real fact of life is that paper and procedure have created so enormous a burden on the street cop that it’s led to non-enforcement. Drunks are not being taken to jail. Illegal aliens are routinely cut loose when they should be deported. Domestic Violence participants are counseled into withdrawing or changing their complaints. Is this what the legislators envisioned when the underlying statutes were enacted? I suspect not. Is this what John Q. Public expects from its law enforcement systems? Again, I suspect not. The entire process has become perverted by practicing lawyers and lawyers who have moved on to become judges. To quote a recent article from fellow columnist, Jeff Baker, these people have “sodomized” our basic freedoms and our representative form of government through these egregious and perverted acts. Florida is not unique. WHAT DO WE DO? The worst of all choices: give up and going along with the program. It’s not the American way. It’s not what men have fought and died to protect. It goes against the very grain of our forefathers’ vision for this county. We must each take personal responsibility to work the system from within. There are many ways to do that. Years ago, I was so disgusted with my local government that I ran for office and served a term. I put my money where my mouth was, so to speak. While I realize that there are some limitations to free speech for cops, those limits don’t gag us. We can and should speak out on what we believe are problems that need legislative correction. Through our representatives, we can effect change that will bring relief to the ocean of paperwork that has been the result of activist judges who have attempted to legislate from the bench. It’s time to speak out about judges who are doing a bad job. It’s time to hang them out to dry so the public realizes the part they have played in thwarting the intent of the people and its elected representatives. We can speak through letters to the local newspapers. We can speak through newsletters at church or in clubs to which we belong. We can speak by getting involved in the campaign process. Many judges are seeking reelection to office right now. I’ve offered my time to pass out literature at the polls on election day in support of those whom I think have done (or will do) a good job. You can do the same. You needn’t stand alone, like a reed in the wind, if that frightens you. Speak with your union. Speak with the PTA at your kid’s school. Speak as a member of any group that mirrors your views on these issues. We cops have been unreasonably burdened. It’s a burden of paper that has been created by a judiciary that has gone crazily out of control. Some cops have chosen to push forward in silence, with little or no complaint. Others have sought the relief brought about through non-enforcement, arguably with good reason. Too many have remained quiet in the face of this ever-growing adversary when it was time to speak. This is a major election year. The time to speak is now. Jim Donahue is a native of the Midwest, getting his education at Michigan State University. At mid-life, he has spent most of his life working in his own business, has been an elected official, and most recently has embarked on a career in law enforcement. This article first appeared on September 9, 2008, on Officer.com. It is reprinted with permission. from TRAFFIC, page 9 Further questions arose following our merger with the Motor Carrier Division to become the Traffic Safety Division (TSD). According to the Traffic Safety Division/Traffic Services Section’ web page we are referred to as “Program.” In the current organizational chart we are listed as a “Unit.” We are mentioned in the TSD website, but it sounds like we are all “Instructors.” The Michigan State Police (MSP) has revised its organizational structure to combine the functions of the former Motor Carrier Division and Traffic Services Section into the new Traffic Safety Division. The change is part of an ongoing effort to identify efficiencies within the MSP and utilize the Department’s resources to best serve Michigan citizens and other law enforcement agencies. The main responsibilities of the Traffic Safety Division are commercial vehicle enforcement operations and training for law enforcement officers in alcohol enforcement, accident reconstruction, speed enforcement, and the Michigan Vehicle Code. Commercial vehicle enforcement operations include the enforcement of trucking safety laws and weight restrictions, conducting school bus safety inspections and ensuring the safe transport of hazardous materials. Call us a unit, call us programmed, call us instructors . . . just call us before the skid marks are gone and the vehicles are sent to the crusher. My thanks to Capt. Dan Smith and Retired Lt. Bill Brandt (nice guy, not really a nut job) for their contributions on the history, and Sgt. John Bruno for his research on unit versus non-unit status. The rest of the writing is my own, and does not necessarily reflect the sentiments of the Reconstruction Unit/Non-Unit nor the parenting Traffic Safety Division. I thank God every day for letting me serve the people I serve in this capacity, and in doing so giving me a life better than I deserve. November/December, 2008 47 5th Annual MSTAF Golf Classic September 8, 2008 – Otsego Club and Resort, Gaylord 48 On September 8, 2008 the Michigan State Troopers Assistance Fund held its Fifth Annual Golf Classic to support the efforts of the fund’s scholarship program. This year’s event was held at the Otsego Club and Resort in Gaylord. FINALLY, we are happy to report that the weather, just a bit on the chilly side, was the best we’ve had for this event yet! With 19 teams participating, the “Tribute” course was both beautiful and challenging. The staff at the Otsego Club and Resort did a very nice job to help make our event successful. The first place team this year was a repeat team from our first outing, consisting of Scott Bates, Phil Ackley, Kevin Ackley and Jimmy Meigs. Second place went to the team of Brock Elliott, Barry Beck, Andy Elliott and Gary Elliott. The third place team included Greg Kilbourn, Bill Janego, Mike Larsen and Paul Cohen. Last, but certainly not least, was the team of Tim Permoda, Ken Hardy, Scott Wilber and Nate Groya taking the coveted last place spot! Individual contest winners were: Daryl Massaway – Closest to the Pin; Longest Drive (Men) – Andy Elliott; Longest Drive (Women) – Jessica Janego; Longest Putt – Dan Yarsevich. Every golfer in attendance received a door prize, and congratulations to the many lucky winners of our donated raffle prizes! Also back this year was the sponsorship of Chrysler with their “Drive for the Chrysler” program. Ms. Nancy Barrett was on-site all day assuring things ran smoothly and convincing as many people as possible to join in the fun. Our thanks to Mr. Rick Harland from Feeny Chrysler of Gaylord who was the local dealer responsible for bringing the “Hole-in-One” car to the course. This Chrysler program makes a $5 donation to the Assistance Fund for each person who participates, as well as giving each person a sleeve of golf balls as a personal thank you for helping the cause. This year we raised an additional $530 through Chrysler’s program. MSTAF is very grateful to have developed this partnership with Chrysler. The day ended with a delicious dinner of barbecued chicken and grilled rib eye steaks. A heartfelt thank you goes out once again to Health Alliance Plan for sponsoring the MSTAF golf outing dinner. The focus of MSTAF is to support educational projects and other 501(c)(3) charities. The Graduating Senior Scholarship program (each year there have been 15-21 recipients, each earning $1,000 toward their college endeavors) and the purchase/ donation of Automatic External Defibrillator units remain our top priority. In addition, MSTAF supports other worthy charities such as DARE, the Red Cross, Lions Club, Toys for Tots, Chaplain Corps, Law Enforcement Torch Run, MI-COPS, Thin Blue Line, etc. None of the monies donated to the MSTAF fund are used to pay for any administrative purposes or to pay any member of the MSTAF Board of Directors. The Assistance Fund could not exist without the support of our friends. We offer our sincere thanks and appreciation for the generosity of those who supported this year’s golf outing. Thank you to our golfers, thank you to our tee sponsors, and thank you to everyone who obtained and donated prizes – all are key to the success of this outing. We are proud to report raising just over $11,000 for the Assistance Fund this year. Enjoy the pictures of our 5th Annual Golf Classic, and please patronize our sponsors! (see list on page 50) Let them know that we appreciate their support of the Michigan State Troopers Assistance Fund! Next year’s MSTAF Golf Classic will again be held at the Otsego Club and Resort in Gaylord, Michigan. It will be held on September 14, 2009, the first Monday after Labor Day. Mark your calendar now! Trevor Radke, Nate Ellis, Chad Gruenwald, Jeff Decatur Rick Doehring, Mark Tamlyn, Richard Doehring, Andy Miller Scott Adams, Scott Black, Craig Simmons, Hager Anderson Dan Yarsevich, Nancy Yarsevich, Nancy VanSyckle, Jim VanSyckle Tim Permoda, Ken Hardy, Scott Wilber, Nate Groya Dale Garrow, Lorne Hartwig, Gary Demers, Robert Merrick Michigan Trooper Mike McEwen, Zachary Hesse, Keith Martin, Dale Wheatley Mary Kay Larsen, Debbie Kilbourn, Janet Cohen, Jessica Janego Greg Kilbourn, Bill Janego, Mike Larsen, Paul Cohen Mel Grieshaber, Andy Potter Barry Beck, Gary Elliott, Andy Elliott, Brock Elliott Steve Nahs, Bill Meier, Jason Nahs, Bill Redmond Scott Hammond, Chuck (LNU), Ken Marone, Marlin Flatt Jim Laboda, Chris Luty, Denny Harris, Mitch Stevens John Grimshaw, Tom Weichel, Steven Weichel, Steve Thorpe Jim Curran, Terry Schimke, Jon Bowerman, Joe Denay Hubie (from Jamaica), Mike Nasser, Chris Belt, Able Cruz Scott Bates, Phil Ackley, Kevin Ackley, Jimmy Meigs Congratulations to the winning teams . . . Greg Tamlyn, Erik Tamlyn, Jon Langley, Daryl Massaway Congratulations to the First Place Team: Scott Bates, Phil Ackley, Jimmy Meigs, Kevin Ackley. Taking Second Place: Gary Elliott, Andy Elliott, Barry Beck and Brock Elliott. Third Place Team: Bill Janego, Greg Kilbourn, Paul Cohen, and Mike Larsen. Last Place Team (and still smiling!): Scott Wilber, Nate Groya, Tim Permoda. (not pictured, Ken Hardy) and thank you again for supporting MSTAF! Trevor Radke, winner of a set of irons, with Mark Tamlyn, MSTAF President. see MSTAF Golf Outing, page 50 November/December, 2008 49 from MSTAF Golf Outing, page 49 The Michigan State Troopers Assistance Fund would like to thank the individuals and business that sponsored this event, as well as those that contributed prizes for our contests, raffles and door prizes. Our sincere apology to anyone inadvertently left off this list. Please know that any oversight is not intentional, and your support is greatly appreciated. Thank you to all for supporting MSTAF! MAJOR SPONSOR HAP – Health Alliance Plan 3M Traffic Safety Systems Division A. Papano's Pizza Amway Grand Plaza Arrow Sanitation, LLC Aventric Technologies, LLC Beverly S. Pearson Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Cardiology Consultants, P.C. Chris Luty Chrysler - Drive for the Chrysler Program Corrigan Towing Detroit Police Lieutenants and Sergeants Association Detroit Police Officers Association Diane Garrison / MSPCOA Diebold Insurance Agency Doubletree Hotel Bay City Riverfront Georgie's Towing Grand Traverse Resort Great Wolf Lodge Hackney Grover Hoover & Bean, PLC Hanba & Lazar, PC Hilton Grand Rapids Airport Holiday Inn Express/Splash Universe Image Builders Unlimited Joe Cavanaugh Karoub Associates Kathleen C. Boyle Knaggs, Harter, Brake & Schneider, P.C. Law Office of Daniel Martin, P.C. Mark Tamlyn Mary & Terry Groeneveld Matt Wesaw Maynes Insurance Services, Ltd. McCamly Plaza Hotel McGuire's Resort Michael J. Ekdahl, PC Michigan Corrections Organization Mike Moorman MSP Traverse City Post #71 Michigan State Police Troopers Association MSPTA Retirees Association Plante & Moran Police Officers Labor Council Rho-Mar Agency, Inc. / Raider-Smith, Inc. Ron's Auto & Wrecker Schultz's Party Store, Inc. Scott Wilber The Flour Garden Theut, Theut & Theut, P.C. Tim Permoda Varga & Varga, PC Wayland/Saugatuck Post Yarrow Golf & Conference Center Without your support,. this would not be possible.. Thank you! 50 Michigan Trooper MSP Graduates Three New Canine Teams Lieutenant Ric Hetu (Special Operations Division – Canine Unit), Tpr. Jason Nemecek (Metro South Post) and Mako – K925, Tpr. Steve Olson (Stephenson Post) and Rambo – K989, Tpr. Jamie Bullis (Alpena Post) and Bane – K974, and Tpr. David Yount (Special Operations Division – Canine Unit). QUICK FACTS: There were approximately 25 applicants. The run took the top nine times for the interview. Basic Canine School is 14 weeks long. The school started on 2009 Trooper Magazine Deadlines: June 2nd and graduated September 5th. All three teams are tracking/ patrol/narcotics detection. Tpr. Steve Olson is going to Stephenson, Tpr. Jamie Bullis to Alpena and Tpr. Jason Nemecek to Metro South. Watch for next issue’s Unit Spotlight by Tpr. David Yount featuring MSP’s Canine Unit. January/February 2009............... extended to December 2, 2009 March /April 2009....................................................January 20, 2009 May/June 2009............................................................ March 17, 2009 July/August 2009............................................................May 19, 2009 September/October 2009............................................ July 21, 2009 November/ December 2009............................. September 15, 2009 January/ February 2010...................................... November 17, 2009 November/December, 2008 51 From the Streets Trooper Troy Meder (Bay City Post) has been keeping track of all his large ‘busts.’ All but the one pictured in the top left corner of this page were discovered after a consent search. Each of these took place in March and April, 2008. Trooper Troy Meder (Bay City Post) pictured with a pound and a half of marijuana. Both subjects were out of the greater Traverse City area and had picked up the package in Flint. Trooper Troy Meder (Bay City Post) with two vacuum-packed packages of marijuana. They were in a tool box in the trunk. These guys were going from Detroit to Cadillac. The driver said that he had just dropped his mother off at the airport there. The passenger (driver’s mom’s boyfriend) said that they had gone to Flint to visit the driver’s aunt, but couldn’t remember her name. They also had a half ounce of cocaine in a fake spray can under the passenger seat. 52 Michigan Trooper Trooper Troy Meder and Tpr. Matthew Jordan (both of the Bay City Post) with a six pound brick of marijuana. Both subjects were from the Marquette area. They had different stories as to why they had gone to Detroit that day. One of them said that they went to Traverse City in the morning and picked up a girlfriend of the other and took her to the airport in Detroit. The other said that his girlfriend lives with him and they went straight to Detroit from Marquette. Trooper Troy Meder (Bay City Post) with a pound of marijuana. Tpr. Meder searched this vehicle for about 25 minutes before this was found. The driver said that they had just gone to Saginaw to eat and were on their way back to Midland. The passenger said that they had just driven to Detroit so that the driver could visit her grandmother. Big difference. He knew he had something. Tpr. Meder had a faint smell of marijuana in the void where the convertible top goes when the top is put down. He was sure that it was there. He told the passenger (owner of the car) that he was going to cut it open with a knife if he didn’t tell him how to get in to it. It wasn’t an empty threat. He showed Tpr. Meder how to open the top half way and then get the pound of marijuana out. Making the News Trooper Yvonne Brantley (Bay City Post) speaks to the driver of a car that slammed into the side of the Cass Avenue Party Store on the corner of Michigan and Cass Avenues in Portsmouth Township. Trooper Brantley said the crash caused two workers inside the store to be pushed across the store. The driver, an 80-year old woman, told police she was trying to park when she accidentally hit the accelerator instead of the brakes. Paramedics attended to the two employees at the scene, but they declined further treatment. (Scott Mussell/Bay City Times Photo) Det. Barry Kenyon (Bay City Police Department), left, and Specialist Sgt. Lenny Jaskulka (Flint Post) secure a piece of fire evidence. (Dan Staudacher/ Bay City Times Photo) Lieutenant Ric Hetu (Special Operations Division – Canine Unit) leaves the crime scene in Bay City where the bodies of Sharron and David Hetzel were found after an early morning fire. Lieutenant Hetu had led an accelerant-sniffing dog around the house to search for evidence. (Dan Staudacher/Bay City Times Photo) Troopers Jason Davenport and Brenetta Milhouse (both of the Metro North Post) examine food allegedly stolen from Kraft Foods/Nabisco. (David Posavetz /Macomb Daily Photo) November/December, 2008 53 2008 October Quarterly Great Wolf Lodge – Traverse City Trooper Jim Yeager (Ionia Post), D/Sgt. Mark Russo (CID-MET), and Tpr. Chris Bush (Ionia Post). Sergeant Jeffery “JJ” Smith (Metro North Post). Trooper John Beemer (Bridgeport Post), Tpr. Joe Cavanaugh (Third District Representative, Bridgeport Post), and Tpr. Eric Hofmeister (Third District Hometown Security Team). Standing (l to r): Rosalind Reece and family friend Sherri Malone. Seated (l to r): Tpr. Brian Reece, and sons Brian Reece II and Kevin Reece. 54 Michigan Trooper Trooper Cary Clark (Detroit Post) is presented with a commemorative statue from Tpr. Mark Tamlyn (Seventh District Representative, Cheboygan Post) in recognition for his service as the Traverse City Post Representative prior to his transfer to Detroit. Trooper Tiffany Robbins and Sgt. Tim Robbins, (Bay City Post and Third District Headquarters), with children Harmon, 5, and Dominic, 2. Association Watch Presentations ... Following the dinner banquet at the October Quarterly, three Association members were honored with the pre sentation of their retirement watches. Tpr. Mark Tamlyn, Seventh District Representative, presented Tpr. Brett Nichols (Traverse City Post) with his retirement watch. Brett took a deferred retirement from the department to become the Director of Public Safety for the Interlochen Arts Academy. President Mike Moorman had the honor and privilege of presenting retirement watches to surviving spouses of two of our members that died in 2008. Debbie Marble was presented a retirement watch on behalf of her spouse, Tpr. Rob Marble (Manistee Post). Rob was tragically killed in a car crash on February 1 of this year. JoAnn DuVall was presented a retirement watch on behalf of her spouse, Tpr. Blair DuVall (Honor Detachment). After a two month battle with cancer, Blair succumbed to this disease on July 7 of this year. Trooper Mark Tamlyn (Seventh District Representative, Cheboygan Post), presents Tpr. Brett Nichols (Traverse City Post) with his retirement watch. MSPTA President Mike Moorman presents Mrs. Deb Marble, wife of the late Tpr. Rob Marble, with Rob’s retirement watch from the Association. Standing (l to r): Lew DuVall (Blair’s dad), Mary Herst (JoAnn’s mom), Ernie Herst (JoAnn’s dad), JoAnn DuVall, Tpr. Rick Doehring (Blair’s partner), and his wife Melanie Doehring. Seated (l to r): Lynne Barnett (Lew’s friend), Jerry Crane (Blair’s friend since childhood), Barb Hart (Blair’s aunt). D/Sgt. Chris Luty (MSPTA Vice President) with grandson Ashton Reinke. Alex Reinke (grandson of Chris Luty) and Tpr. Herman Brown (Monroe Post) show off their matching MSP shirts. November/December, 2008 55 Michigan State police troopers Association Retiree Associate Membership Application Membership Year: July 1, 2008 – June 30, 2009 Retiree Name Spouse’s Name Last First Middle Last First Middle ARE YOU A SURVIVING SPOUSE: BOX A Date of Birth YES NO IF YES, SKIP TO BOX B Retirement Date Rank at Retirement Health Insurance Carrier Please indicate if you are currently employed or active in law enforcement: Agency YES NO Position Please indicate if you hold an elected public office: YES NO Governtmental Entity BOX B Position Please Complete/ Verify Address Information Permanent Address Street City Permanent Phone State Zip State Zip Cell Phone E-mail Address Alternate Address Street City Alternate Phone Months at Alternate Address to Month / Date Month / Date YES – I WANT TO CONTINUE TO RECEIVE THE MICHIGAN TROOPER MAGAZINE. NO – I NO LONGER NEED TO RECEIVE THE MICHIGAN TROOPER MAGAZINE. REtIREE MEMbERShIp DUES: Dues are for 7/1/2008– 6/30/2009 $15 if retired prior to October 1, 1987 $40 if retired on or after October 1, 1987 $0 (No Fee) Surviving Spouse pLEASE NOtE: Checks or Money Orders Only – Please Do NOT Send Cash! (Sorry – we do not accept payment by credit card.) payable to: MSptA Retirees 56 Additional PAC Donation $ Total Amount Enclosed $ Michigan Trooper Check # FOR OFFICE USE ONLY ENTERED Two Detroit Troopers Awarded for Bravery Upon reviewing the circumstances At a special ceremony held on Sep- ited the rear vehicle, also firing at the of this incident, the MSP Board of tember 25, 2008, in Lansing, Michigan troopers. State Police (MSP) Director, Colonel While Lambert exchanged fire Awards determined the heroic actions Peter C. Munoz, presented Trooper with the gunman, Whitfield ran to the of Lambert and Whitfield, and their Mark Lambert and Trooper Keyonn lead vehicle to assist the female driver. willingness to ignore their own perWhitfield of the Detroit Post with the Whitfield placed her on the ground sonal safety and well-being, played a MSP Bravery Award. Lambert and and used his body to shield her from significant role in saving the lives of Whitfield are credited with placing the continuing gunfire. As a result of both victims. Lambert, a native of their lives in serious danger in the apprehension of two Detroit, enlisted in the dearmed subjects. partment in 1994, and was While on patrol on Noa graduate of the 110th Trooper Recruit SchooL. vember 21, 2007, Lambert He was first assigned to the and Whitfield observed two Mount Pleasant Post and vehicles stopped at a traffic transferred to the Detroit light. A man exited the rear Post in December 1996. vehicle, approached the pasWhitfield, a native of senger side of the lead vehiDetroit, enlisted in the decle and began firing a handgun through the window. partment in 1999, and was Immediately, Lambert a graduate of the 118th and Whitfield ordered the Trooper Recruit School. Tpr. Keyonn Whitfield Tpr. Mark Lambert armed man to drop his He was first assigned to the the gunfire one suspect was fatally Ypsilanti Post and transferred to the weapon. Instead, the man began firing at wounded and the other suspect was Detroit Post in January 2001. the troopers and a second suspect ex- wounded and taken into custody. Colonel Peter Munoz, Tpr. Keyonn Whitfield (Detroit Post), Tpr. Mark Lambert (Detroit Post), and Lt. Col. Eddie Washington. Trooper Mark Lambert (Detroit Post) poses with his daughter, Lauren. November/December, 2008 57 Good Job Troops! Kidnapping: While on patrol on M-24 near Lapeer on August 29, 2008, Tpr. Denis McGuckin observed a male passenger punching the female driver in an approaching vehicle. The victim/driver jumped out screaming for help and ran to the patrol car while the suspect made an attempt to flee, but was placed under arrest by Tprs. McGuckin and Jason Mercier. The suspect had beaten the victim, repeatedly threatened to kill her, grabbed her when she attempted to flee, and attempted to remove her eyeballs with a set of keys. The victim was convinced the suspect was going to kill her when they arrived at her nearby home. The victim is the mother of his former girlfriend and grandmother to his children (who were in the car). The victim is being treated for injuries at Lapeer Regional Hospital. The 45-year-old convicted felon was lodged for kidnapping, assault with intent to maim, and second degree child abuse. Good work by the troopers involved. (Lapeer Post, Sandusky Satellite) Quick Response: Trooper Paul Plangger was on patrol when dispatch put out a carjacking in Hartford. While en route to the scene, he observed the suspect and stolen vehicle heading in the opposite direction. After a short pursuit, the subject crashed the stolen vehicle and fled the scene on foot in a corn field. Trooper Toby Marshall and his Canine, Remy, were able to track, locate, and arrest the suspect, along with locating the weapon in the field that was used in the carjacking. Subject lodged at Van Buren County. (Paw Paw Post) “Let’s Build Something Together”: Trooper Phillip Stanton arrested seven male Mexican nationals while performing a routine property inspection at the Lowe’s store, under construction, in Marquette County. 58 Michigan Trooper The seven were determined to be illegal aliens by Tpr. Stanton, (who speaks Spanish). They were on site as employees of an out-of-state roofing sub-contractor. The arrested aliens were turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Sault Ste. Marie for deportation. (Negaunee Post) Troopers Give Little Girl A Chance: On August 28, 2008, Tpr. Denis McGuckin responded to a one car crash. Upon arrival, he was directed to a four-year-old female who was not breathing and had no pulse. After struggling to obtain an airway due to the girl’s broken neck, Tpr. McGuckin began CPR, along with a citizen who had stopped to help. Trooper Jason Mercier arrived and Tprs. McGuckin and Mercier then continued CPR at the scene. En route to Lapeer Hospital, Tpr. McGuckin continued CPR in the ambulance with medical personnel. The little girl was airlifted to Flint Hurley Hospital where she remains in critical condition but has been given a fighting chance due to the quick actions of Tprs. McGuckin and Mercier. (Lapeer Post) Hometown News: A vehicle was stopped on I-96 on August 29, 2008, for speed. The driver had several warrants with a total bond of over $35,000. In a search subsequent to arrest, 50 tablets of Ecstasy were located under the driver’s seat. Trooper Chris Bush and his Canine, Rock, indicated on the front dashboard, driver’s side. In checking further, a loaded .38 with laser sights fell out from under the dash. They then were able to locate an ounce of marijuana, 20 more pills and over $1,000. (Sixth District Hometown Security Team) Saginaw Detail: Troopers Chuck Barker, Eric Hofmeister, Troy Szukhent, and Eric Wilber had a productive night while work- ing a detail in Saginaw. Three of their traffic stops yielded the following; #1 - 9.6 oz cocaine, $568 and a Buick Regal seized, driver lodged: #2 – a loaded semi-automatic handgun seized from a vehicle, and: #3 – a parolee on a bicycle impeding traffic with a loaded .25 semi-auto handgun who was lodged. (Third District Hometown Security Team) What’s Your Name?: On August 26, 2008, Tprs. Daniel Stickel and Bradley Popilek stopped a 2007 Range Rover for expired registration and improper lane use on Grand River at M-10 (Lodge Freeway). A LEIN check of a passenger revealed Identity Fraud issues. The passenger kept asking Tpr. Stickel “What’s your name?” The passenger was taken back to the Detroit Post for a Livescan to confirm his identity. While processing the passenger, Tpr. Stickel observed several pieces of paper with account numbers, personal information, as well as passport photos. Further investigation revealed the passenger was involved in a large scale Identity Theft ring, identifying seven victims. A fourcount warrant was issued against the suspect for Fraudulent Identity Theft and Habitual Offender for activity involving two of the victims. Additional warrants are being sought against him for fraudulent activity regarding the other five victims, with the assistance of SECID Identity Theft Task Force. (Detroit Post) Two More Guns: While working the Saginaw City Detail Tprs. Jason Bledsoe and Douglas Hunt stopped a vehicle and located a loaded .22 cal. pistol in the vehicle and also a quantity of marijuana. The suspect was lodged for CCW, Possession of marijuana, and felon in possession. Troopers Jasen Sack and Ryan Rich heard city dispatch put out a ‘shots fired’ call and responded to the area where they observed two subjects hiding behind a garage. Located five feet away from one of the subjects was a .38 cal. handgun. One subject gave the story he did not know anything about the gun but when asked if his prints would be on the gun he advised, “Yeah, I saw it and touched it a few days ago.” Nice try! (Bridgeport Post) Poaching: Troopers Keith Carlson, Raymond Kenny, and Geno Basanese received a call regarding two subjects in a vehicle, poaching deer, in the Stonington Peninsula. Troopers located the vehicle and a subsequent traffic stop revealed blood dripping from the trunk area. Upon approach, an uncased rifle was located between the driver and passenger. The occupants were ordered from the vehicle, a scoped rifle, ammunition, alcohol, and two freshly killed deer in the trunk were located. The driver was arrested for OWI II, felon in possession of a firearm, possession of firearm while intoxicated, and taking a deer out of season. The passenger was arrested for taking a deer out of season. Both confessed to the crimes and were lodged. The DNR assisted and took possession of the deer. (Gladstone Post) Shots Fired: On August 25, 2008, troopers assigned to the Pontiac detail responded to a shots fired call on the north side of the City. Two known New World Order (NWO) gang members had fired shots at subjects in a vehicle, narrowly missing the female driver who was treated for lacerations from glass. A vehicle description was broadcasted and the vehicle was spotted in the distance by Pontiac Police Department officers who began to follow the car until the troops could arrive. Troopers Eric Whitcomb, Aaron Weinrick, Chad Gruenwald, and Ray Pechman were in the area and were able to box the car in before it had a chance to flee. Troopers Weinrick and Whitcomb extracted one subject who resisted and was tasered; the other two subjects complied and were arrested. In the subjects’ pockets were ammunition and a 9mm magazine was located under the rear seat, but no gun. Troopers Pechman and Gruenwald traced back the vehicle route and recovered a 9mm pistol along side the road. Two subjects in custody facing assault with intent to murder charges. (Pontiac Detail, Detroit Post) Copper Thief Arrested: In the early morning hours of August 25, 2008, an alert neighbor observed a suspicious vehicle in the driveway of a vacant residence in Summit Township, Jackson County. The landlord was notified, who in turn responded and notified police. Trooper Andrew Pinkerton arrived and upon checking the residence found evidence of a breaking and entering, and apparently interrupted the theft of copper piping. With the assistance of the Jackson County Sheriff Department, the suspect, a 38 year old parolee out of Jackson, and his girlfriend were located on foot nearby. They immediately explained how glad they were to see the police as they wished to report their vehicle as “recently stolen.” After Tpr. Pinkerton completed his investigation and interviews the suspect was lodged at the Jackson County Jail for the copper theft and a parole violation. (Jackson Post) Jail Escapee Captured: On August 24, 2008, at 12:00 a.m., Tprs. Jason Sylvester and Jeremiah Carlisle were notified an inmate worker had escaped from the St. Joseph County Jail on foot. Troopers responded to the area, with other area agencies, to assist in the manhunt. A tip was received of a possible vehicle the suspect may be fleeing the area in after two suspicious individuals stopped at a local convenience store saying they were from out of town and going to the St. Joseph County Jail to visit an inmate; even though there were no visitation hours. At 1:00 a.m., the troopers spotted the suspicious vehicle on M-86 east of Centreville. A traffic stop was executed and the escapee was located lying curled up hiding on the back seat in his underwear. He had discarded his inmate uniform in a nearby ditch. It was determined the inmate had used a stolen cell phone to contact his relatives to pick him up. He had been working several days on his escape plan. The 26-yearold suspect was taken into custody and returned to the St. Joseph County Jail where he was lodged. The driver and other occupants of the vehicle were arrested and lodged on felony charges for assisting in the escape. (White Pigeon Post) HEMP Flights – Saginaw County: On August 22, 2008, Lt. John Kenny and Sgt. Patrick Lawrence of the Michigan State Police Aviation Section conducted HEMP flights in Saginaw County, working between the rain drops. Officers seized a total of 81 marijuana plants measuring from 2 feet to 12 feet tall. The plants were pulled from 14 different plots, the largest being 30 plants. The majority of the plants were found in the back yards of residences. Complaints were generated at nine separate residences with five consent searches conducted. During the searches, officers seized approximately two pounds of processed marijuana, unknown pills, two sawed-off firearms, scales, and $18,247.00 in cash. One subject has been lodged in the Saginaw County Jail. Remaining subjects were released pending further investigation. (BAYANET) CCW Arrest: On August 21, 2008, Tprs. James Swain and David Stokes responded to a report of shots fired in Flint. A large group of males loitering in the vicinity of the call denied they fired any shots or had any weapons. The troopers obtained consent to search from each see GOOD JOB, page 60 November/December, 2008 59 a seatbelt violation. The driver was nervous and stumbling his words. individual. While patting down one of Trooper Reece observed a book bag the subjects, the troopers found a .22 on the floor of the vehicle. When Tpr. caliber semi-automatic pistol in his Reece questioned the driver about the rear pocket. He was lodged for CCW. bag, he denied it contained any illegal (Flint Post) items and refused to give consent to Two Good Stops: While on pa- search. After running a CCH on the trol in Benton Harbor, Tprs. James driver and discovering a previous Janes and Alois Seal made a traf- drug charge, Tpr. Reece requested a fic stop resulting in the arrest of the K-9 for an exterior search of the vehioccupant for possession of Heroin, cle. When the K-9 arrived, the driver possession of Marijuana, Resisting admitted there was a gun and mariand Obstructing, as well as DWLS. juana in the vehicle. Trooper Reece After lodging the first subject, their found a .40 caliber Taurus pistol innext stop resulted in an arrest for side the center console. The bag on CCW, possession of Marijuana, MIP, the floor contained individual bags of and No Ops on Person. Not bad for marijuana, a digital scale, and calculatwo traffic stops. (Bridgman Post) tor. The subject was lodged for CCW B & E Arrests Brighton: The and PWID Marijuana at the Genesee Brighton Post area has experienced a County Jail. (Flint Post) number of night time B & E’s over the Still Working Dope: On August last several weeks. In the early morn- 18, 2008, Tpr. Matt Kanitz made a ing hours of August 20, 2008, a local traffic stop and found a small quantity party store and a gas station were hit. of marijuana. After some discussion, At 0330 hrs, Tprs. Greg Galarneau Tpr. Kanitz was able to get the driver and Michael Sura noticed a vehicle to disclose the source. SSCENT was back out from a driveway near one of contacted and a search warrant was the B & E’s. The vehicle was stopped served in the early morning hours and three young males were contacted. of August 19. The occupant of the After a brief roadside investigation, drug house was arrested and a loadTprs. Galarneau and Sura realized that ed 9mm handgun was found. Seized they had apprehended the suspects was three-quarter pounds of cocaine, responsible for the business B & E’s. over $10,000, over 30 long-guns and Trooper Galarneau located cigarettes, handguns along with a short barreled liquor, and cash and was able to match shotgun, and several vehicles. Charges the cigarette and liquor lot numbers are pending along with forfeiture proon the seized property with the ones ceedings on the seized items and the at the businesses. All three were taken residence/farm. (Manistee Post) into custody. Later that day, the Post Body Armor Wearing CCW: On received information from a woman August 16, 2008, Tpr. Robert Mossthat she had witnessed liquor bot- ing and Sgt. Patrick Moore stopped tles being thrown on the roadway in a vehicle for seat belt and registration front of her house by a juvenile. That violations. The driver advised he was woman lived near the suspects. Upon suspended and an odor of marijuana follow-up by Tpr. Terry Berdan, it is was detected. The driver was wearbelieved the suspect(s) were attempt- ing a bulletproof vest and a search ing to destroy evidence from earlier of the vehicle revealed a fully loaded B & E’s. (Brighton Post) .40 caliber Glock magazine in the CCW/PWID Arrest: While on hollow cavity in the center console. patrol, Tpr. Brian Reece stopped a Trooper David Stokes assisted in vehicle for defective equipment and the search and located the matching from GOOD JOB, page 59 60 Michigan Trooper pistol (stolen out of Saginaw) in this same area. Marijuana was also found. The driver has prior felonies, including CCW, and felony assault on police. The passenger in the vehicle had just been placed on parole five days prior. The case will be presented to the Project Safe Neighborhood Committee for federal charges. The Department of Corrections was contacted and a parole detainer was placed on the passenger. Later this same shift, Tprs. Wayne Barrigar and Platt Weinrick responded to a reported subject with a gun. Upon arriving on scene, two subjects known to Tpr. Barrigar from a previous arrest were observed walking in the roadway. One of them had a fully loaded .22 caliber semi-auto pistol in his waistband. This makes three guns seized in the past 24 hours for the Flint City Detail. (Flint Post) Patrol Arrest: At 4 p.m. the Detroit Police Department put out a ‘Be on the Lookout’ for a 2008 Maserati taken in a carjacking where the victim was shot twice. At 7 p.m., Tprs. Jonathan Henry and Keyonn Whitfield observed the occupied vehicle parked in a strip mall on McNichols near M-10. The vehicle fled after observing the troopers in a fully marked unit. The suspect eventually struck two parked vehicles, attempted to flee on foot with a broken leg, and was arrested after being tasered. The suspect was turned over to the Detroit Police Department, who had a homicide warrant for him. He was listed on Michigan’s Most Wanted as number five. (Detroit Post) Ypsi Summer: At 1:30 a.m., Washtenaw County Central Dispatch broadcast a report of a felonious assault with a handgun. The victim was reportedly assaulted with the handgun at an Ypsilanti party store. Trooper Joseph Brodeur located the vehicle, which was being followed by the victim. The suspect vehicle dipped into a trailer park, and Tpr. Brodeur made the stop. The 18-year-old suspect fled on foot through the park. The suspect hit a fence that he could not get over and was taken into custody by Tpr. Brodeur. The loaded handgun, that had been pitched during the foot chase was also recovered. Charges include FA, CCW, R & O, Probation Violation, and Felon in Possession. (Ypsilanti Post) Lifesaving: On August 31, 2008, after clearing a traffic stop along Oakwood Boulevard, near I-94, in the City of Melvindale, Tpr. Charlene Green observed a city officer on a traffic stop and stopped to offer assistance. Moments later a vehicle traveling at a high rate of speed stopped abruptly in traffic across from their location. The female driver began yelling that her baby was unresponsive and bleeding to death. As Tpr. Green and a Melvindale Police Officer approached and peered inside the vehicle they observed a child holding a blood soaked towel. As Tpr. Green opened the towel she observed a large laceration to the 11-year-old girl’s left forearm/wrist area. The child was unresponsive, her eyes were open, and she was breathing, but appeared to be going into shock. As blood continued to rapidly spew from the wound, Tpr. Green applied direct pressure to the brachial artery with her hands as the child drifted in and out of consciousness. Once Melvindale Fire Rescue arrived on the scene they advised her to continue with pressure as they attempted to insert an I.V. This became unsuccessful due to the girl’s blood pressure dropping to 60 over 40. The child was transported to Detroit’s Children Hospital for treatment. The attending physician and the supervisor for Melvindale Fire Rescue advised if Tpr. Green had not controlled the bleeding the child’s wound would have certainly been fatal. (Metro South Post) SOR Violation Arrest: Trooper Todd Price from the Coldwater Post arrested a registered sex offender for felony Fail to Change Address on September 9, 2008. He confirmed an anonymous web tip that the suspect was currently living with his girlfriend at her parent’s home, and had not updated his address. With persistent questioning, Tpr. Price gathered enough information from the homeowners, and then received a full confession from the offender that he hadn’t lived at his registered address for more than one year. (Sex Offender Registry Section) Stolen Vehicle/B & E Suspect Arrested: Troopers Bruce Cojeen and Karen Lindstrom heard Kent County Dispatch put out a B & E in progress. Troopers headed towards the address when dispatch put out that glass could be heard breaking and the phone line went dead. Troopers were almost to the scene when they saw a vehicle leaving a driveway near the B & E. Troopers along with a deputy, who had just arrived, stopped the vehicle with one occupant. The vehicle was reported stolen out of Holland. Troopers learned the suspect was a prostitute returning to get some of her belongings along with some of the victim’s property. The suspect was turned over to the Kent County Deputy for lodging. (Rockford Post) Bank Robber Apprehended: The Metro South Post received a tip that a fugitive was staying in a motel just north of the Post. The subject had robbed a bank in Ohio. He was armed and wearing a bullet-proof vest. He then used three different pipe bombs throughout the city as a diversion. He got away with over $25,000 and then faked his death. The Washington County Sheriff ’s Office in Ohio has him on the front of their web page as their most wanted fugitive. Troopers Arturo Hinojosa, Rocco Daversa, Michael Cahalan, and Andrew Osborne drove to the motel and saw the fugitive standing on the sidewalk. He saw the troopers and started running. After a short foot chase a successful taser deployment was administered and he was taken into custody without any further incident. He had a false passport on him and about $2,000. The troopers are currently investigating a storage facility where more money and property may be found. (Metro South Post) SOR Arrests: On August 26, 2008, Tpr. Bret Smith (Monroe Post) investigated a Public Sex Offender Website electronic tip regarding a registered sex offender living within 1,000 feet of a school. Although the offender was living 977 feet from a school, Tpr. Smith gained consent search of the residence and discovered pornography. Trooper Smith immediately contacted the offender’s probation officer to notify him of the violation of his probation. The judge revoked the personal recognizance bond for the subject and mandated he move within 45 days. A probation violation hearing was set for September 5, 2008. On September 2, 2008, another registered sex offender was arrested on a Bridgman Post SOR warrant when he appeared at the Berrien County Jail with his 87 year old, wheelchair bound mother. After the subject was lodged, the lieutenant spoke with the offender’s mother. She advised her son had been stealing money from her and physically assaulting her, pulling her up out of her chair by the hair. Consequently, he has also been charged with domestic violence. (Sex Offender Registry Section) PIT Maneuver: Troopers Jason Byrd and Jeremy Brewer assisted the Lansing Police Department in a low speed chase of a stolen vehicle. They were chasing a 1995 Oldsmobile going at the excessive speed of 25 m.p.h. Stop sticks were deployed during the chase, however due to the low speed, the suspect was able to avoid them. see GOOD JOB, page 62 November/December, 2008 61 from GOOD JOB, page 61 Trooper Byrd attempted an initial PIT and was unsuccessful on the first try. He then executed another PIT and was able to get the suspect vehicle to stall out. Driver and passenger were arrested, and suspected drugs and several hypodermic needles were recovered from the car. (Lansing Post) Party Time: Troopers Chris Shoemaker and Brenda Kiefer stopped a vehicle at 2:30 a.m. with two college kids inside enjoying the late night drive. In the bed of the pickup truck they were driving were two signs from Pardee Road. Both suspects confessed to stealing the signs to place in their college apartment to admire while they were hosting parties. The signs were turned over to the Berrien County Road Commission and the students learned a lesson that troopers are working 24/7. (Niles Post) No Ops On Person: Troopers Jason Bledsoe and Douglas Hunt stopped a vehicle for speed and arrested the driver for No Ops on person. A search of the driver revealed 46 Vicodin pills, 2.5 grams of cocaine, and $347. The troopers asked the suspect if he had any more narcotics at his residence and he advised he did not. The suspect gave them consent to search his residence and located inside was 38 more grams of cocaine, 8 grams of marijuana, $1,000, scales, and packaging materials. (Bridgeport Post) Stop Stick Success: At 6:39 p.m. Tpr. John Looney stopped to investigate a possible OWI from a recent ‘Be on the Lookout.’ As Tpr. Looney was requesting the driver to exit the vehicle, the suspect drove off at a high rate of speed. Trooper Jeff Hoffman positioned himself ahead of the suspect vehicle and deployed a set of stop sticks, disabling one tire on the suspect vehicle. As the suspect vehicle was now traveling at a slower rate of speed, Tpr. Looney was able 62 Michigan Trooper to get ahead of the vehicle and deploy a second set of stop sticks, flattening the remaining tires. The vehicle continued on his rims for a couple of miles, before driving into a cornfield. The suspect was taken into custody, after a brief struggle. He stated he had fled “because he could.” Trooper Patrick Agema also assisted in the pursuit. The suspect was lodged for OWI 2nd, Flee and Elude, and R & O. (Lakeview Post, Sheridan Detachment) Lost In Saginaw: Trooper George Bingham stopped a vehicle occupied by two Gladwin men who had conflicting stories about what they were doing in Saginaw. One said, “visiting a girlfriend” and the other said, “visiting a friend” but neither could give a location. They advised they were supposed to two-way the friend. A two-way went off and a male on the other end asked “Where you at?” Trooper Bingham talked to him and the male on the other end gave him directions to the residence thinking he was talking to one of the male occupants. Trooper Richard Jones and a Buena Vista officer went to the house while Tpr. Bingham kept the subject on the phone. A male was waiting at the end of the driveway until he realized it was the police. A consent search revealed one ounce of marijuana on the subject and located in plain view was a quarter pound sitting on the front seat of a parked vehicle. (Bridgeport Post) Flint Troopers Save Lives: On September 3, 2008, at approx. 12:30 a.m., while on directed patrol in the City of Flint, Tprs. Bradley Ross and David Stokes responded to the dispatch of a house fire with possible entrapment. Upon arriving first on scene, the home was on fire, and a 9year-old was outside in his underwear. The young man advised troopers that his brother and sister were still inside. Troopers attempted entry through the doors but were driven back by smoke and flames. Upon going to the side of the home they were able to locate a young girl screaming for help at one of the windows and a young boy near a basement window. The troopers broke open the main level window and extricated the young girl from the home. The basement window was secured with steel bars. Utilizing the crow bar from the patrol car, the troopers broke the steel bars away from the window frame and extricated the young man from the basement. It should be noted that prior to this incident Tprs. Stokes and Ross made their token P.W.I.D. arrest, getting a half pound of marijuana on a traffic stop. (Flint Post) Guess Who? (from page 44) Tpr. Michael Brown Richmond Post 120th Recruit School Nearly 7-Foot Long Snake Shot by State Trooper A state trooper shot and killed a nearly 7-foot long snake, believed to be a Burmese Phython, after it slithered onto a Port Sheldon Township road and was acting aggressively toward passing motorists. Trooper Bill Coon (Grand Haven Post) used his .40-caliber handgun to shoot the snake after nearby homeowner Brian Ahlin ran it over with his pickup several times to try to kill it. Ahlin and another motorist called police after finding the snake on 156th Avenue south of Croswell Street. Ahlin was worried it might attack children in the area or pose a danger to pets. Police suspect the snake was set loose by someone who no longer wanted the animal or it simply escaped a home. The snake measured 6-foot, 10-inches. Ahlin said his pickup did not seem to cause any injury to the snake, which lunged at his truck. “I didn’t do a darn thing to it. It was like going over a rubber hose,” he said. Coon said the snake also lunged at him as he approached. Neighbors said wildlife is common in the area, but not huge snakes. “This was very different,” Ahlin said. “The only thing you see around here is deer and turkey,” he said. Tpr. William Coon (Grand Haven Post) with the seven foot long snake. West Michigan Motorcycle Troopers By: Sarah Sell, WZZM 13 They’ve been gone for 50 years, but now, the motor cop is coming back to West Michigan. The Michigan State Police is assigning two new motorcycle officers to the Rockford Post. Trooper Chris Bommarito is one of them. He says the assignment can’t be beat. “I get paid to ride a Harley.” Bommarito came from the Metro South Post in Taylor. “I love it. It’s my seventh year on the motorcycle unit and 13 years with MSP and I’ll keep doing it as long as I can,” says Bommarito. Michigan State Police say motorcycles have their advantages. They work well in traffic enforcement areas. On this day, a pack of motor cops from across the state work on a speeding assignment along U.S. 131 in Grand Rapids. They wait for a cruiser to clock drivers about a mile up the road. As soon as a speeder is caught, the motorcycle trooper quickly pulls over the driver. Another advantage of having a motorcycle is when the traffic gets thick, the motorcycle can maneuver through the lanes. Of course, they do have limitations. As soon as the weather turns cold, the troopers will have to return to their cars for the winter. November/December, 2008 63 A Few To Make You Smile MARIJUANA FILLED FIREWOOD Caller: Hello, is this the Sheriff ’s Office? Dispatch: Yes. What can I do for you? Caller: I’m calling report ’bout my neighbor, Virgil Smith . . . He’s hidin’ marijuana inside his firewood! Don’t quite know how he gets it inside them logs, but he’s hidin’ it there. Dispatch: Thank you very much for the call, sir. The next day, the Sheriff ’s Deputies descend on Virgil’s house. They search the shed where the firewood is kept. Using axes, they bust open every piece of wood, but find no marijuana. They just sneered at Virgil and decided to leave. Shortly after, the phone rings at Virgil’s house. Floyd: Virgil: Floyd: Virgil: Floyd: Hey, Virgil! This here’s Floyd . . . Did the Sheriff come? Yeah! Did they chop your firewood? Yep! Happy Birthday buddy! 10 NEW COURSES BEING TAUGHT IN RECRUIT SCHOOL 1. Cleaning and deodorizing patrol cars. 2. Deleting profanity from your vocabulary. 3. Criminals are people too. 4. Origami with incident report forms. 5. Kicking the coffee habit. 6. 1,001 uses for your TASER. 7. Accessorizing undercover fashion. 8. FST techniques for vision impaired drivers. 9. Drive-thru nutrition for patrol officers. 10. Intimate conversations with command officers. 2008 Executive Board General Election Results Ballots were counted on Wednesday, November 12, 2008, with the following elected to office: Vice President................................................................................................................... D/Sgt. Chris Luty Secretary/Treasurer..........................................................................................................Sgt. Richard Hale 2nd District North Representative..............................................................................Tpr. Ray Pechman 6th District Representative..............................................................................................Tpr. Scott Wilber 8th District Representative...........................................................................................Tpr. Jerry Mazurek Region II Sergeant Representative.............................................................................. Sgt. Dale Garrow Region II D/Sergeant Representative............................................................. D/Sgt. Mitchell Stevens 1st District Representative Special Election....................................................................... Undecided* *SPECIAL ELECTION RUN-OFF BETWEEN TPR. NATE JOHNSON (Lansing Post) and TRP. MIKE SURA (BRIGHTON POST). Ballots mailed on 11/14/2008. Ballots will be counted on 12/2/2008. 64 Michigan Trooper Register of Deeds Jason Stephen Sholtz was born on April 19, 2008, weighed seven pounds, 13 ounces, and was 20 1/2 inches long. Proud parents are Tpr. John Sholtz (Richmond Post) and his wife, Gretchen. Jason was also welcomed home by four-year-old big brother, Ryan. Specialist Sergeant Brett Sojda (Sterling Heights Lab Firearms Unit) and his wife, Christine, are happy to announce the birth of Jack Edward Sojda born on September 13, 2008. Jack weighed seven pounds, two ounces, and was 20 1/2 inches long. Both mom and baby are happy, healthy, and resting at home. In Memory of Our Retirees Sgt. Robert J. Moore (Ret.) 44th Recruit School November 20, 1929 - October 18, 2008 Sgt. Harry Houseman (Ret.) 43rd Recruit School September 26, 1930 - August 18, 2008 D/Sgt. Gerald “Jerry” Gertiser (Ret.) 35th Recruit School August 25, 1930 - August 18, 2008 D/Sgt. Roy A. Turner (Ret.) 21st Recruit School March 2, 1919 - November 1, 2008 Sgt. Lawrence A. Seaman (Ret.) 69th Recruit School June 15, 1940 - September 18, 2008 Sgt. James Carol (Ret.) 76th Recruit School June 23, 1946 - September 18, 2008 F/Lt. Zane E. Gray (Ret.) 33rd Recruit School July 30, 1926 - September 25, 2008 Correction: In the September/ October 2008 issue, the birthdate for Sgt. William R. France, Jr. (Ret.) was incorrectly published as April 4, 1922. His correct birthdate was April 2, 1944. We apologize for this error. F/Lt. James J. McGaffigan (Ret.) 29th Recruit School September 28, 1926 - November 2, 2008 Tpr. Kenneth Howell (Ret.) 51st Recruit School May 4, 1936 - November 2, 2008 November/December, 2008 65 Final Call Trooper Evan F. Schneider Montana Highway Patrol Age: 29 Tour of Duty: 4 years, 7 months Cause of Death: Automobile Accident Date of Incident: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 Trooper Evan Schneider was killed in an automobile accident on Highway 2 near Columbia Falls. His patrol car collided head-on with an oncoming vehicle. Two occupants in the second vehicle were also killed. Trooper Evan Schneider had served with the Montana Highway Patrol since January 2004. He is survived by his wife and brother. His brother also serves with the agency. Trooper Andrew Stocks North Carolina Highway Patrol Age: 43 Tour of Duty: 4 years Cause of Death: Automobile Accident Date of Incident: Tuesday, September 9, 2008 Trooper Andrew Stocks was killed in an automobile accident when his patrol car collided with a garbage truck. He was responding to an accident when the collision occurred on Ten-Ten Road. He was transported to WakeMed Hospital where he succumbed to his injuries. Trooper Stocks was a veteran of both the U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps. He had served with the agency for four years. He is survived by his wife and child. Trooper First Class Mickey C. Lippy Maryland State Police Age: 34 Tour of Duty: 4 years Cause of Death: Aircraft accident Date of Incident: Sunday, September 28, 2008 Trooper Mickey Lippy and Pilot Stephen Bunker were killed in a helicopter crash while performing a medical evacuation of two critically injured teenagers from Charles County. During the flight, the EuroCopter Dauphin helicopter encountered severe weather and Pilot Bunker radioed to have two ambulances meet them at Andrews Air Force Base to complete the transport. At approximately 12:30 am, air traffic controllers lost contact with the helicopter. A ground search was initiated and approximately two hours later the wreckage was found in Walker Mill Regional Park. Both troopers, a Charles County EMT, and one of the two patients were killed in the crash. Trooper Lippy was appointed to the Maryland State Police four years ago. He had been in the Aviation Command as a flight paramedic since April 2007. He is survived by his wife and four month old daughter. 66 Michigan Trooper Final Word Men are not prisoners of fate, but only prisoners of their own minds. – Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 - 1945) There is nothing like returning to a place that remains unchanged to find the ways in which you yourself have altered. – Nelson Mandela ‘A Long Walk to Freedom’ Organized crime in America takes in over forty billion dollars a year and spends very little on office supplies. – Woody Allen The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts. – Bertrand Russell (1872 - 1970) Politicians are the same all over. They promise to build a bridge even where there is no river. – Nikita Khrushchev (1894 - 1971) Courage and perseverance have a magical talisman, before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish into air. – John Quincy Adams (1767 - 1848) All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. – Edmund Burke (1729 - 1797) Now I know what a statesman is; he’s a dead politician. We need more statesmen. – Bob Edwards Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward. – Vernon Sanders Law You have to think anyway, so why not think big? – Donald Trump Do you have a favorite quote? Share it with the rest of us by sending it to: The Michigan Trooper, 1715 Abbey Road - Suite B, East Lansing, MI 48823 E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] November/December, 2008 67 Call and make your reservation for the next Quarterly Meeting! (517) 336-7782 January 13 & 14, 2009 McCamly Plaza Hotel, Battle Creek, MI Registration Deadline is December 9, 2008 Call the office and make your reservation today!!! Sine The badge number on the cover of the Michigan Trooper is in honor of Tpr. Kevin M. Marshall, badge number 1529. On July 7, 2003, Tpr. Marshall was shot and killed by a barricaded gunman while engaged in an Emergency Support Team operation. Tpr. Marshall joined the Michigan State Police in January 1995 and was a member of the 111th Recruit School. He was assigned to the Newaygo Post. In 2002 he was selected for the Department’s Emergency Support Team. Tpr. Marshall was the 49th Michigan State Police officer killed in the line of duty, and the first to have been killed in an emergency services operation. Pari TROOPER Michigan State Police Troopers Association 1715 Abbey Road Suite B East Lansing MI 48823 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED Non Profit Org. US Postage PAID Lansing, MI Permit #121
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