Friday, July 10, 2009

The Ultimate Price

In case anybody needed a reminder of just how stressful police work can be, I ran across an article in Wednesday’s Los Angeles Times and wanted to share it with you.

Susan Clemmer was veteran detective with the LAPD. She was a stand-up cop, well-liked by co-workers, and always wore a smile. The other day, she put a gun to her head and pulled the trigger. As of now, nobody knows why.

Of course, it isn’t hard for a fellow cop to imagine the emotions that must have bottled up inside Ms. Clemmer over almost 20 years on the force. Her death and the suicides of another 19 LAPD officers since 1998 are a stark reminder that this job doesn’t end when you hang up the uniform. The things we see and do on a day-to-day basis take a constant toll. In the backs of our minds, we all know that one day we may be asked to pay the ultimate price in the line of duty.

Police officers are some of the finest men and women around, and they chose public service They chose to serve and protect our streets and neighborhoods. They defend the peace and serenity that we enjoy, and they do it under difficult conditions, understaffed and sometimes feeling unappreciated.

I think everybody should take this opportunity to look at cops as human beings, not just blue uniforms in cars.

Stay safe, and have a great weekend.

Bobby Lopez
President, San Jose Police Officers' Association

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LAPD mourns suicide of veteran narcotics detective
By Richard Winton and Joel Rubin
Los Angeles Times
July 8, 2009

Officers throughout the Los Angeles Police Department grieved Tuesday as news spread that a veteran detective had killed herself in the lobby of an L.A. County Sheriff's Department station Monday night.

Susan J. Clemmer, a well-regarded officer assigned to the LAPD's Gang and Narcotics Division, walked into the Santa Clarita sheriff's station about 9:15 p.m. and spoke to the sheriff's deputy at the front desk, according to sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore and LAPD officials.

Clemmer, 41, placed a box of personal items on the counter and asked to speak to a different deputy. After a brief conversation with a second deputy, when Clemmer was briefly left unattended, staffers heard a gunshot and rushed out to find her with a single gunshot wound in her head, police said.

No one else was injured.

What Clemmer said to the deputies, and whether she identified herself as a police officer, remained unclear Tuesday.

The death of the 19-year LAPD veteran left officers throughout the tightknit department stunned.

"We're in shock. It came as a complete surprise," said Capt. Kevin McCarthy, one of the commanders of Clemmer's unit. "She was always smiling and easy to work with. There was no indication that anything was wrong."

Clemmer, McCarthy said, had sent a text message to another detective in the unit saying she looked forward to seeing him at work later in the week.

Clemmer joined the narcotics unit about a decade ago and for the last several years was assigned to a squad that worked with the U.S. Postal Service on cases involving drugs sent through the mail, according to McCarthy.

He praised her as a solid officer.

Soon after joining the LAPD, Clemmer was thrust into the spotlight as a crucial witness for the defense in the Rodney King beating trials of the early 1990s.

She told jurors in a federal civil rights trial that King had laughed about the beating he got from several LAPD officers after a traffic stop and said King had spit blood on her during the ambulance ride to the hospital. She also testified that she had spoken to one of the accused officers moments after the beating and that he appeared frightened by the confrontation.

Clemmer's testimony was central to bolstering the officers' defense that they had been frightened by King and acted out of concern for their safety. She took the stand after an expert witness for the defense testified that King's behavior, as described by the defendants, was consistent with PCP intoxication.

Two officers were eventually convicted in the federal civil rights case. Clemmer gave substantially the same testimony in the officers' state trial, which ended in acquittals and sparked deadly riots in Los Angeles.

Between 1998 and 2007, 19 LAPD officers committed suicide, according to a department study released last year.

7 comments:

  1. RIP Ofc. Clemmer.

    We can only hope that the day to day demons that taunt and torment officers in the couse of their duties will somehow be intersected by a professional, other officer, or family mmember before one chooses to take his/her own life. There IS always another way!!

    Stay safe my brothers and sisters on the street!

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  2. I find it very sad that so many Police Officers feel so isolated, and unappreciated that they would resort to suicide. I think it is time that City leaders and Police Departments find a way to better support their Officers emotionally. My Father was in the military and returned from Nam with severe Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. The Veterans Administration tried to help him through it with meds and counseling, but he wasn’t open to it because he was trained that a “real man/solider” didn’t ask for help. It was heart breaking to watch him struggle through mood swings, nightmares, and bouts of depression.

    I'm sure Police Officers experience this too; given the horrific things they see and hear everyday. We can’t keep turning a blind eye and a deaf ear to this problem. Police Officers need to understand that they are only human, and that there is absolutely no shame in asking for help once in awhile. Their family and friends need them and feel helpless when they see them in pain, or withdrawn. So for you Officers out there, who are reading this, please know that millions of people support you and appreciate you. We need you to take care of and protect yourselves with the same determination and commitment you do we citizens. PLEASE ask for help if you need it. God Bless and stay safe!

    My thoughts and prayers go out to the Clemmer family, and her friends. May this Officer rest in peace.

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  3. The Mercury news fails to point out the even with the wage and benifit package we get we still can't get enough cops. If they stopped blaming us for moving to fast and shooting someone the moving to slow and implying that we cause a death we make get some qualified people. I can't wait for the Merc to just fold up and die

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  4. Crime Fighter,
    The Mercury News has been DOA for years. They are so desperate to sell papers that they have to make things up like a gossip rag to sell papers. In today's paper they are attacking retired cops and fire fighters for their benefits. Idiots.
    Yesterday when I was leaving Walmart, I saw a Mercury News stand with several guys trying to "give a way" the paper for free. No one wanted it accept a lady who said she would take it and use it for her student's art project! Now that should tell you something about the way people view the Merc because most people take anything you hand out if it is free.

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  5. After reading the attack on Police pensions by the Murky news they are probably celebrating this news. One less cop collecting on her pension. The day to day operations of our Police is that of a soldier. Who else in the City will put their life in fron of a victim to protect. I certainly believe a victim family of a murder would pay 100% of pensions just to have one more minute with a loved one. I know for a fact this has happened. Cops save lives. People who read this blog tell your family and friends not to sbscribe or advertise with the Mercury News. I doubt if this will get posted.

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  6. I don't buy the Murkey News and never will. They couldn't get any more bias than the Metro if they tried.

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  7. RIP Officer Clemmer.
    I don't know what you were experiencing that could have driven you to suicide. Our hearts and prayers go out to any cop, their family, and loved ones, that are mentally strong enough to deal with seeing what others wouldn't dare. We too are not supporters of the Mercury News. Have any of their reporters gone downtown after hours? The cops are doing a good job in restoring order. Don't knock it til you try it!

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