Wednesday, November 7, 2018
End of Watch Report October 2018
In October 2018, ten law enforcement officers gave their lives in the line of duty. At the end of October, the total number of line of duty deaths in the U.S. came to 123, which is a 2% increase over the same time last year. Automobile related deaths are down this year, but unfortunately gun-related line of duty deaths have increased.
Of the ten officers who died in October 2018, four died as the result of felonious gunfire, two died from 9/11-related illnesses, one from a duty-related illness, one was struck by a vehicle, one died as the result of an automobile crash, and one officer drowned. Two of the officers who died last month were female and the other eight were male.
The Officer Down Memorial Page extends condolences to the families, friends, and agencies who lost a loved one to a line of duty death in October 2018. Full incident details for each of these fallen officers are available on the ODMP site. Please take a moment to read their memorials and remember the fallen:
Sergeant Terrence Felipe Carraway
Florence Police Department (SC)
Sergeant Dennis W. Reichardt
Suffolk County Police Department (NY)
Federal Agent Kristopher David Youngberg
U.S. Dept of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, Office of Secure Transportation (U.S. Gov't)
Deputy Sheriff Raymond Bradley Jimmerson
Nagadoches County Sheriff's Office (TX)
Corrections Officer Mark Anthony Gaspich
Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (PA)
Trooper Kevin Keith Conner
North Carolina Highway Patrol (NC)
Police Officer Antwan DeArvis Toney
Gwinnett County Police Department (GA)
Investigator Farrah Turner
Florence County Sheriff's Department (SC)
Assistant Chief of Police Dennis Vincent
Brigham City Police Department (UT)
Special Agent Dennis P. McCarthy
U.S. Dept of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations (U.S. Govt)
Deputy Sheriff Loren Vasquez
Waller County Sheriff's Office (TX)
Labels:
9/11,
crashes,
Fallen Officers Remembered,
fatalities,
female officers,
gunfire deaths,
line of duty deaths,
Multiple Fatalities,
reports,
research,
statistics
Friday, October 5, 2018
End of Watch Report September 2018
In September 2018, thirteen law enforcement officers died in the line of duty across the country. Five of those officers died as the result of felonious gunfire. Four died from a heart attack; two died in auto-related incidents (one car crash and one vehicle pursuit); one officer drowned and one officer died as the result of an assault.
At the end of September, the total number of line of duty deaths is 112, which is a 2% increase over this time in 2017. The leading cause of line of duty deaths this year is gunfire, which make up 38% of the total this year, followed closely by auto-related deaths at 31%. More information about each of these line of duty deaths as well as overall LODD statistics for 2018 are available on the ODMP site.
The Officer Down Memorial Page extends our sincere condolences to the families, friends, and agencies who lost a loved one to a line of duty death in September 2018. Please take a moment to read their memorials and remember the fallen.
Assistant Chief of Police Kirt Roy Ricks III
Montgomery Police Department (LA)
Deputy Sheriff Aaron Paul Roberts
Greene County Sheriff's Office (MO)
Police Officer David Alexander Tinsley
Fort Wayne Police Department (IN)
Police Officer Oscar Adrian Reyes
Costa Mesa Police Department (CA)
Corrections Officer Armando Gallegos, Jr.
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CA)
Corporal Garret Willis Hull
Fort Worth Police Department (TX)
Chief of Police Frank A. McClelland, Jr.
Ludowici Police Department (GA)
Deputy Sheriff Robert Kenneth Kunze III
Sedgewick County Sheriff's Office (KS)
Deputy Sheriff Mark V. Stasyuk
Sacramento County Sheriff's Department (CA)
Corrections Officer Joseph Parise
Minnesota Department of Corrections (MN)
Deputy Sheriff Mark A. Cox
Real County Sheriff's Office (TX)
Patrolman James White
Brookhaven Police Department (MS)
Corporal Zach Moak
Brookhaven Police Department (MS)
Labels:
auto crash,
Fallen Officers Remembered,
fatalities,
gunfire deaths,
line of duty deaths,
reports,
statistics
Thursday, September 13, 2018
ODMP Vice President W. Scott Humphrey Receives Award for Outstanding Contribution to Law Enforcement
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT
September 13, 2018 Jessica Rushing
ODMP Vice President W. Scott Humphrey Receives Award for
Outstanding Contribution to Law Enforcement
Fairfax, VA-- The Officer Down Memorial Page (ODMP) is proud
to announce that ODMP Vice President W. Scott Humphrey received the award for
Outstanding Contribution to Law Enforcement from the Virginia Association of
Chiefs of Police & Foundation (VACP) on September 11th at the VACP Annual
Conference held this year in Roanoke, Virginia.
This
award “recognizes an individual's conspicuous act or achievement in the
performance of some duty that results in an exceptional and responsible
contribution to law enforcement.” The act or achievement must clearly
distinguish the individual from others in the same or like circumstances.
Lieutenant
Humphrey’s lifelong commitment to serving the law enforcement community sets him
apart. A twenty-five year veteran of the
Virginia Beach Police Department, Scott established the first Virginia Chapter
of the Police Unity Tour in 2000 and created the first chapter of Law Enforcement United in 2009. Together, these two organizations have raised
millions of dollars to support the National Law Enforcement Memorial, the
Officer Down Memorial Page, Concerns of Police Survivors, and the Spirit of
Blue Foundation, all of which provide support to law enforcement officers,
their families, and the larger law enforcement community.
Lieutenant
Humphrey has served on the board of directors for ODMP since 2010. Chris Cosgriff, Executive Director of ODMP,
says “Scott is an essential member of our board and has helped ODMP better
execute our primary mission of honoring fallen law enforcement officers for
nearly a decade. His commitment to serving the law enforcement community is
unmatched and I can think of no one more deserving of this honor.”
More
information about Humphrey’s contributions to law enforcement and the award
ceremony can be found here.
- # # # -
About the Officer Down Memorial Page
Founded
in 1996, the Officer Down Memorial Page (ODMP) is a nonprofit agency dedicated
to honoring the memory of law enforcement officers who have died in the line of
duty. The largest law enforcement memorial in the United States, ODMP pays
tribute to over 23,000 fallen law enforcement officers in its online memorial
and reflection pages. ODMP also honors fallen K9 officers, provides free
resources to law enforcement agencies and officers, and works to keep cop
killers behind bars through its No Parole program. The ODMP database tracks
LODD statistics in the U.S. back to 1791, enabling the law enforcement
community to analyze trends and patterns in order to work toward the goal of
improving officer safety. Learn more at www.odmp.org
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