Dressed in dark green polo shorts and khaki pants, the members of the 261st session of the FBI National Academy gathered at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial on Wednesday, July 29, for their traditional wreathlaying memorial service.
With the presentation of colors by the Ceremonial Honor Guard from the Metro Transit Police Department and the National Anthem performed by Samuel Olson of the Big Lake (MN) Police Department, the FBI’s Benny Lamanna welcomed the group. Lamanna congratulated the participants for their hard work and determination that lead them through their 10-week course at the academy.
Ian Stratford, of the Toronto, Canada, Police Service, reminded the officers of the names on the walls of the Memorial around them. “Heroes,” he called them, adding “law enforcement were the ones who ran in when everyone else was running out.”
After the wreath placement ceremony and roll call of fallen officers, Lamanna asked the group to raise their right hand and rededicate themselves to their profession, to keeping the public safe.
The ceremony ended with Rick Pasciuto, retired from the U.S. Capitol Police, playing Taps and the bagpipes of Rob Deer from the Fairfax County (VA) Sheriff’s Office.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Law Enforcement Day at the 'K'
It was a perfect baseball day for the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium.
With the temperature topping out at 93 degrees under a bright sun, the Royals
took an early 4-0 lead against the Houston Astros in the first inning during
their annual ‘Law Enforcement Day at the K’ on Sunday, July 26.
More than 500 law enforcement officers, and their friends
and family, came out to the ballpark to support this special event, as the
Royals won their fifth straight game with the 5-1 final score, remaining at the
top of the American League.
The Cass County (MO) Sheriff’s Department Honor Guard presented
the colors during a pregame ceremony in honor of Missouri and Kansas law
enforcement personnel. The event benefited the National Law Enforcement
Officers Memorial Fund.
Our special thanks to Ariel Peralta and the Kansas City
Royals Group Sales, the Missouri Chiefs of Police Association and the Kansas
City Fraternal Order of Police. Check out www.lawmemorial.org/sports for the
latest law enforcement appreciation sporting events to honor law enforcement.
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Secret Service Commemorates 150th Anniversary
William Craig’s name sits in the shadow of Littleleaf Linden trees on the eastern wall of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial. Visitors might pass it, on the sixth row of Panel 16, without knowing that Craig was the first Secret Service officer to die in the line of duty in 1902.
Craig, who was killed while protecting President Theodore Roosevelt, and 35 other employees who have died while working for the United States Secret Service, were commemorated on Thursday, July 9, at the Memorial in a ceremony marking the 150th anniversary of the creation of the agency.
Secret Service Director Joseph Clancy spoke of the hard work agents put into their day, and the importance of the people they’re assigned to protect. An agency that was first created to stop the spread of counterfeit currency now protects the President of the United States, as well as fights against financial crimes throughout the country.
It is an agency older than both the FBI and CIA, and continues to be one of the most visible as they flank official representatives of the United States throughout the world.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
World Police & Fire Games Host Candlelight Ceremony
As the sun set over the National Law Enforcement Officers
Memorial in Washington, DC, on June 30, a large group from the Fairfax 2015 World Police & Fire Games gathered at the site to honor their fallen comrades with a
candlelight Memorial Service.
Bagpipes were played throughout the ceremony that included
an invocation by Monsignor Salvatore Criscuolo, of St. Patrick Catholic Church
in DC, and a presentation of colors by a combined honor guard from Fairfax
County (VA) Fire and Rescue, Police Department and Sheriff’s Office.
Memorial Fund Chief of Staff Herbert V. Giobbi shared
welcome remarks, in which he described the bravery of those who choose to be
law enforcement officers. He spoke about Lyndhurst (NJ) Police Officer Michael
Keane, who was on Amtrak train 188 when it derailed in Philadelphia in May.
Officer Keane was heading home after having participated in the Police Unity
Tour, as part of the National Police Week festivities in Washington, DC. When
the train crashed, Officer Keane’s immediate reaction, after checking on his
fiancé, was to start helping the others who had been injured.
Later when Officer Keane was asked why he had jumped into
action, he said, “It’s my job. That’s what I’m put on this planet to do.” Mr. Giobbi
stressed that officers throughout the country were put on this planet to do
just that, to save the lives of others.
FBI Director James Comey Jr. took the stage as the keynote
speaker and promised to continue working hard to make sure more officers aren’t
killed in the line of duty, and that the names on the walls of the surrounding
Memorial would always be remembered.
The lighting of the candles immediately followed led by Fairfax
County (VA) Police Department 2nd Lieutenant Bruce Blechl, who
helped bring the World Police & Fire Games to Fairfax. He invited survivors
of fallen officers from Fairfax County to spread the light through the crowd, as
an Air Force bugler played ‘Taps.’
When the ceremony concluded, the athletes were wished well
in their continued games, where thousands of professional and public safety
athletes from around the world compete in more than 65 sports. The World Police
& Fire Games are held every two years, with the 2017 games scheduled for
Montreal, Canada.
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