Date: Fri, 4 Aug 2000 22:15:14 -0500
Subject: Arkansas deputy killed
Lt. Ricky Riggs, 45, of the Benton County, Arkansas Sheriff's Department was shot and killed today at the police firing range. Details are very sketchy as to the cause of the shooting. Subject: Update on Arkansas deputy killed yesterday Here is an update on the Arkansas deputy sheriff shot and killed yesterday: Lee: Deputy dies after shooting himself Ashley S. Kelley, The Morning NewsA deputy with the Benton County Sheriff's Office died after shooting himself on the firing line of a practice range west of Bentonville on Friday, Sheriff Andy Lee said. Lee said the Arkansas State Police and the Washington County Sheriff's Office are investigating the death of Lt. Ricky Lee Riggs, 45. Lee said investigators are waiting for a medical examiner to analyze Riggs' body before determining whether the incident will be classified as a suicide. "It's very apparent it's self-inflicted, but we just won't go comment further to say whether it's intentional or accidental," Lee said. Lee also refused to comment on whether Riggs had been the subject of an internal investigation before his death. Before his death, Riggs was working at the shooting range, located about 5 miles west of Bentonville on Arkansas 72, as an instructor for two deputies
trying to become certified to use certain weapons. Riggs was practicing shooting a Styer 9 mm weapon, capable of firing a
single round or automatically firing its 30-round clip, Lee said. Thespecial-operations group, which Riggs led, primarily uses the assault weaponfor raiding houses or taking an armed suspect into custody, Lee said.Several deputies were in a shelter at the end of the shooting range, preparing to load their weapons, when they heard a burst of fire and looked up to see Riggs collapsing to the ground, Lee said. One deputy was watching Riggs but did not see how the incident occurred because Riggs had his back turned to the shelter as he fired at the targets, Lee said. Maj. Don Anderson, the commander of the reserve division, was also at the range and notified the sheriff's office of the incident.Paramedics from the Bentonville Fire Department were called to the shooting range at 9:32 a.m., but Riggs was pronounced dead on the scene, Lee said. "The death was instantaneous," he said. Riggs started his law-enforcement career at the Hoxie Police Department in 1976 and later worked at the Harrison Police Department for nine years before retiring from the department in February 1997, Lee said. Riggs then joined the Benton County Sheriff's Office in February 1998. Lee said Riggs worked at Benton County Jail and served as a training officer during his two years with the department. "He personally had hands-on training with many members of the sheriff's office," Lee said. Riggs' death is currently classified as a homicide until investigators return with the results of the medical examination, he said. Lee estimated that those findings would be available next week.

Date: Sun, 6 Aug 2000 15:53:25 EDT
Subject: Deputy Killed Update-standoff in WA state continues
Standoff after deputy slaying enters second day
August 6, 2000, 10:45 AM
PORT ANGELES A standoff outside this Olympic Peninsula city entered its second day Sunday, with dozens of police officers waiting outside a home where a deputy was fatally wounded. Clallam County Sheriff's Deputy Wallace E. "Wally" Davis, 48, died early Saturday afternoon after responding to a report of a disturbance at the house. He was found on the porch with a head wound by officers who responded to a second call, nine minutes later, reporting shots fired. Davis was
reported dead on arrival at Olympic Memorial Medical Center. The occupant of the house, identified by neighbors as a man in his 50s named Tom Roberts, resumed answering the telephone at around dawn Sunday, said sheriff's spokesman Jim Borte.
He'd stopped responding to calls at about 9 p.m. after demanding a female negotiator, saying he did not trust men. Male negotiators were speaking with him early Sunday, but a female negotiator was en route from Seattle, Borte said. Roberts has an extensive criminal history, including arrests for domestic violence assault, drug offenses and theft, he said. An early report that Davis was responding to a domestic-violence call was incorrect, Tyrell said. "It was a disturbance call." The slain deputy had two adult sons and a teen-age daughter. Davis's wife, Lisa, is pregnant with a child due in February. He had served for five years with the department after moving to the area from California, where he had worked for more than two decades as a police officer in La Palma and other communities, the sheriff's department said in a news release. He was also a published author of Christian mystery, Western novels and cartoon books.

August 7, 2000
DPS Trooper Randall W. Vetter, 28, died at 10:25 p.m. Monday from wounds he suffered during a traffic stop near Kyle, Texas on Thursday, Aug. 3. Trooper Vetter is the 75th DPS officer to die in the line of duty.
Trooper Vetter is survived by his wife, Cynthia; their eight-month-old son Robert; and his father, Kermit Vetter.
“This is a sad day for the Texas Department. of Public Safety, the state of Texas and the United States of America,” said Col. Thomas A. Davis Jr., director of the DPS. “We ask that the people of Texas continue to uplift Trooper Vetter’s immediate family, and his law enforcement family with your thoughts and prayers, as we grieve the loss of our friend and family member.”
Trooper Vetter was a six-year veteran of the DPS. He joined the DPS on December 6, 1994 and became a commissioned Trooper on June 2, 1995. He was stationed in Brownsville until Aug. 1996 when he transferred to New Braunfels. He then transferred to San Marcos on July 1, 2000. He had four letters of appreciation from the public for his assistance with various educational and law enforcement related issues. Trooper Vetter died from a gunshot wound he received four days earlier while conducting a traffic stop. Trooper Vetter had stopped the 72-year-old suspect for not wearing a seatbelt. While he was sitting in his cruiser the suspect exited his vehicle and opened fire with a rifle, striking Trooper Vetter in the head. Trooper Vetter was able to return fire but did not strike the suspect. The suspect then used the cruiser's radio to say he shot the officer and then attempted to flee the scene. An off duty officer who happened to be passing by witnessed the shooting and alerted other officers, who took the suspect into the custody after a brief standoff on the roadway. The suspect was known to local officers for claiming he would shoot any officer who tried to write him a ticket for not wearing a seatbelt, however, Trooper Vetter was new to the area and was never notified of the risk.

Date: Wed, 9 Aug 2000 19:12:24 EDT
Subject: St. Louis Metropolitan Police Officer Killed in Line of Duty
A St. Louis City Police Mobile Reserve Officer was shot to death Tuesday, August 8, 2000, at approximately 2:00 PM St. Louis time. Officer Robert Stanze and his partner, had just stopped a suspect in a Berkley, MO Police Department shooting that occurred last month. The suspect was wanted for questioning in a shooting of a Police Officer during a traffic stop.
Information is still coming in, but I will give you what is being reported so far. The suspect was handcuffed from behind and in the back seat of the two man unit, when suddenly he produced a handgun from the small of his back. The suspect fired five shots from inside the patrol unit, one, which struck the officer near the point where the two vest panels meet on his side. His
partner returned fire and the suspect was shot in the shoulder area. Apparently the suspect was using the patrol car as a shield. The weapon was missed during a search of the suspect. Officer Stanze leaves behind a wife, who is pregnant with twins and a one year old son.

I wanted to let you know that a brother officer from my department was killed
in an unrelated air crash on August 9,2000. Craig a flight instructor since
the age of 17 was with a student pilot, when they were involved in a mid air
collision over Burlington Twp, NJ. Both Craig and his student were killed as
well as the other 9 people aboard the commuter air craft. After impact the
commuter jet crashed into a home. Luckly none of the occupants on the ground
were injured or killed.
Ptl. Craig R. Robinson #14 28 years old, of the Washington Twp Police Dept
(Mercer County, NJ) died while doing what he loved to do on his off duty
times. He was a member of the department since 1990 and was sworn in as a
Police Officer in 1994. He is survived by his wife of 5 years Tara Robinson
and a 5 month old son Alexander.
Ptl. Robinson was laid to rest on August 12,2000 with full police honors.
Craig was a great officer as well as a husband and father. He will be missed
by all.

Conf: Officer Down/Wounded
Date: Wednesday, August 09, 2000 10:17 PM
At 2357 hours Patrol Officer Greg Garrison was seriously injured in a two vehicle accident while en route to assist another Officer. Officer Garrison was travelling with lights and siren activated when his cruiser was struck by a vehicle exiting Interstate 30 at Geyer Springs Road. Witnesses stated that Officer Garrison had slowed at the intersection and that all traffic had stopped after he activated his horn several times. As he accelerated through the intersection a vehicle struck him from the right and knocked the patrol car across the intersection into the base of a light pole. Officer Garrison suffered numerous broken bones in his right leg and arm and serious head injuries from striking the video camera which is mounted under the rear view mirror. Officer Garrison is in serious but stable condition. He reportedly suffered a stroke as a result of the head injury.

Private Gleason was killed in a single car accident while on patrol at Fort Polk, Louisiana. Private Gleason, assigned to the 209th Military Police Company, was the passenger in the post police car when it overturned. The other officer in the vehicle was able to escape the vehicle and call for assistance. Private Gleason had served as a law enforcement officer for six months and is survived by his parents.

Officer Magan died after falling off a ledge while responding to a fight call at a community festival. He and two other officers were attempting to take a shortcut through a hole in a fence, not knowing there was a 25-foot drop-off on the other side. Officer Magan fell off of the ledge and onto a set of railroad tracks below. He was transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead approximately 20 minutes later. The other two officers were able to catch themselves before falling off of the ledge. Officer Magan had been with the agency for 18 years and is survived by his wife and three young children.

Milwaukee County Sheriff's Deputies Sung Hui Bang, 31, and Ralph E. Zylka, 48, were killed Thursday night, 08-17-00, when their sheriff's department helicopter crashed near Watertown, Wisconsin after they aided in the Capature of a Murder Suspect from Chicago who fled across the border they were on there way home and then the Helicopter when down with out a warning or radio message, the cause is still under investigation.
Funeral director Steven Sass said more than 1,200 attendants signed three guest books during the four-hour visitation Tuesday evening at Max A. Sass & Son Funeral Home, 8989 W. Loomis Road.
Also, a trust fund has been set up for the deputies' families. Donations may be sent to: Firstar Bank, c/o Bob Lamb, 777 E. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53202. For more information, call (414) 765-4055.

Tuesday, August 15, 2000
Wounded Cops Recover
Prayers for third officer
as two leave the hospital
Their wounds bandaged, two cops left the hospital yesterday after surviving Saturday's wild shootout with a deranged, heavily armed Brooklyn man.
At the same time, a police source revealed that gunman Arthur Alalouf's target permit for several pistols expired last year after his mother sent the NYPD a rambling letter saying her son had moved to Pennsylvania and taken his arsenal with him.
Officers Gregory John, 32, and Joseph Ocasio, 43, walked out of Kings County Hospital and went straight to the bedside of fellow cop Jose Guerra, being treated across the street at SUNY Health Science Center, where he was moved Sunday night for surgery.
The cops wanted Guerra — who took a shotgun blast to the face and nearly lost an eye — to know they were alive and praying for him.
"I'm feeling very good," Ocasio said while walking with crutches to ease the pressure on his wounded left leg.
"Thank God," said John, the right side of his face, neck and right arm bearing the wounds of his harrowing encounter with Alalouf, who was killed in a furious gunfight that capped a tense six-hour standoff.
If it weren't for his bulletproof vests, John would almost certainly have been killed. "This could have been a lot worse," said the cop, as his wife, Karen, clutched his left arm. "God is good. I'm glad to be out of here, to see the kids and family."
John, the father of 7- and 3-year-old daughters, recalled how he locked eyes with Alalouf, a former correction officer. "He had a grin on his face. It made me mad," John said.
John managed to squeeze off a couple of shots before retreating to the arms of Officer Pat Coleman, who pulled him to safety. "I said, 'Thanks a lot, bro, thanks,'" John said, adding that Coleman responded, "'Hey, man, I'm only doing what you would have done for me.'"
Guerra — the 33-year-old father of three children, including 1-year-old twins — was able to utter his first words and open his eyes yesterday.
"'Thank you' was the main thing he was saying," said Dr. Jean Charchaflieh.
Dr. Jonathan Sheindlin, Guerra's ophthalmologist, said he plucked up to 12 tiny pieces of bullet fragment from the officer's right eye, including a piece that ripped through the eye muscle and came within a fraction of a millimeter of permanently blinding him.
"I would say he is extremely lucky," Sheindlin said. "This is about as severe an eye injury you can get."
Police initially said Alalouf had a permit for at least some of the 15 guns he kept in his parent's house, along with swords and other weapons.
The police source said Alalouf had a target license starting in 1985, which was renewed each year after he filled out an application, as is standard procedure. But last year, when the NYPD sent out the application, it received a "rambling" letter from Alalouf's mother, the source said.
She said he had moved to Pennsylvania and took all his guns with him. His pistol permit therefore expired, the source said. Alalouf is believed to have a rifle and shotgun permit dating from 1980. He used a shotgun during his Saturday rampage.

Subj: Info - Death of a Chicago Police Officer
Date: 8/22/2000 10:12:47 PM Central Daylight Time
Boyfriend Sought in Cop's Slaying
Woman Beaten to Death in Her Chicago Home
Aug. 16, 2000
CHICAGO, Ill. -- Investigators were searching today for the boyfriend of a female police officer found bludgeoned to death in her home.
Sam Lupo, 29, is "a person of interest" in the killing of Brenda Sexton, said Deputy Inspector Ted Camden. But he had not been officially named as a suspect and no warrant issued for his arrest.
Sexton, the daughter and sister of police officers, was beaten sometime between 10 p.m. Monday night and 7 a.m. Tuesday, Camden said. A neighbor found her young children outside and called police when they told him their mother was dead.
The same night, a burglar took $1,800 from Brown's Chicken, a restaurant Lupo's parents own in the same section of the city, Camden said.
Investigators found a baseball bat in the bedroom, but it had not been determined to be the weapon used, Camden said.
"We won't know until we find a suspect and he tells us," Camden said.
Sexton, 31, had been a police officer in Chicago for three years. She was assigned to patrol in Chicago Lawn in the Southwest neighborhood, where she also lived.
She had five children including a 6-month-old baby police believe was Lupo's child. Four of the children were home when their mother was killed.

Date: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 18:41:20 -0500
Subject: Indiana State Police trooper
TROOPER RESCUED
EATON, INDIANA -- A man who pulled a seriously injured Indiana State Police trooper from her burning cruiser after it collided Wednesday with another car probably saved the officer's life, police said. Carl Eacret, 59, of Eaton was on his way to work about 6:10 a.m. Wednesday when he came upon the scene of the two-car crash, which killed the other car's driver.
Eacret dashed from his car and pulled Trooper Cecilia Wylie, 31, through a backseat window of her cruiser just before it was engulfed in flames, said Sgt. Rod Russell of the Redkey police post. "We're crediting him with saving her. He risked his own life to save her, and the car just went up in flames," Russell said. Wylie, a four-year veteran, was taken to Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis in serious condition. She underwent surgery Wednesday afternoon, a hospital spokeswoman said. Wylie was westbound on Delaware County's Eaton-Wheeling Pike near Eaton when an eastbound car driven by Craig L. Clevenger, 18, of Muncie crossedthe center line and plowed nearly head-on into her cruiser at the crest of a hill. Clevenger was killed, and his passenger, Michael E. Jones, 18, also of Muncie, was badly injured.

Officer killed in hit-and-run
Driver of police car hurt; man arrested
08/20/2000
A veteran Dallas police officer died Saturday and another officer was seriously injured after a hit-and-run driver struck their patrol car as they raced to help a colleague pursuing a stolen car.
Senior Cpl. Harold Franklin Baird Jr., a 38-year-old Mesquite resident who worked in the southeast operations division, was pronounced dead at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas about 3 1/2 hours after the crash at Pennsylvania Avenue and Lamar Street in South Dallas.
The Mesquite father of two worked for the department for 11 years and had received 41 commendations. Cpl. Baird is the 70th Dallas officer killed in the line of duty and the first since April 1997.
Officer Michael Scott Jones, 33, suffered a head injury and broken ribs but was conscious, alert and expected to recover, police said. He is at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. Cpl. Baird was training Officer Jones, who graduated from the academy in April and was in his eight-month training period.
The driver who police believe is responsible for the accident left the 3000 block of Lamar Street near the Martin Luther King Jr. underpass. Witnesses told police that the driver stopped, used a pay phone, picked up his bumper and drove off.
Police arrested a suspect about four hours later at his home a few miles from the accident.
Herbert Lee Madison, 45, was taken to Lew Sterrett Justice Center and faces charges of criminally negligent homicide and failure to stop and render aid. Bail had not been set Saturday night.
"He gave us a statement and admitted the whole thing," said Detective D.T. Marchetti, the accident investigator. "The car matched the damage at the scene, and the bumper was right there in his car. It all matched up."
The patrol car, using its lights and siren, was traveling about 70 mph southbound on a straight stretch of Lamar Street with a 35 mph speed limit, police said. They were approved to assist the officer pursuing the stolen car, but the internal-affairs division will investigate whether there was any policy breach, Detective Marchetti said.
Police said a late-'70s-model white Chrysler, also traveling southbound, turned left from the far lane into the side of the patrol car, causing Officer Jones to lose control. The police car's back tire blew out, and the officer lost control of the vehicle, Detective Marchetti said.
"It doesn't take a whole lot of impact to get you going out of control," he said.
Witnesses said they saw the police car swerving for about 100 yards, trying to regain control before it slammed into a utility pole at Pennsylvania Avenue.
Sgt. Walter D. Elsey, an accident investigator, said both officers were wearing seat belts. The car's airbags did not deploy because the impact to the car was on the side, he said.

Subj: Cop Shot By Partner
Date: 8/22/2000 10:15:28 PM Central Daylight Time
Cop Shot in Groin by Partner
Bullet Meant for Charging Dogs on False-Alarm Call
Aug. 22, 2000
MIAMI, FL-- A Miami-Dade police officer is lucky to be alive after he was accidentally shot in the groin by another officer while they were responding to a false alarm at a home Monday, authorities said.
Officer Henry McAleenan Jr., 50, a 17-year veteran of the Miami-Dade police force, is in serious condition today at Jackson Memorial Hospital, where he underwent surgery Monday to repair a femoral artery that was damaged when he was shot by Officer Itala Elias, police said.
Elias, a five-year veteran, was shooting at one of two Rottweiler dogs that were charging the officers when they entered the yard at a home on Southwest 147 Court around 2:30 p.m. Monday, police said. The dogs were not hit.
Miami-Dade Fire Rescue paramedics, en route to the home in response to a possible medical alarm, arrived within seconds of the shooting, Detective Nelda Fonticella said.
"That's basically what saved his life," Fonticella told APBnews.com. "The bullet took out a main artery and he was bleeding very badly. The surgeon said if it hadn't been for the fact that fire rescue was there, he probably would not have made it. The surgeon said he's not a superstitious man, but this officer was very lucky."
The medical alarm turned out to be false, as did the holdup alarm to which the officers were responding, she said.
The false alarms occurred because the homeowner's mother had hit the wrong buttons when trying to disengage the burglar alarm, Fonticella said.
Elias, 41, remains on duty while Miami-Dade police internal affairs is investigating the shooting, Fonticella said.

Date: Mon, 21 Aug 2000 09:31:37 -0700
Subject: Spanish Officers KIA; AU Bracing for Protests;
I believe we have some list members from Spain. Officers are killed every day in this world of ours just for because they wear a uniform. Remember them all.
<<<Bomb Kills Two Police In Northeast Spain
A police spokesman said that two police officers were killed when a bomb planted in a patrol car exploded in northeastern Spain on Sunday. The bomb went off shortly after 0600 hours local time in the town of Sallent de Gallego, on the border with France. A female officer was killed instantly and a male officer died on the way to a hospital. Town officials said the bomb exploded as the officers started the vehicle to begin the day's patrol. Authorities blamed the killings on ETA. Sallent de Gallego is in the Huesca province, which is not in the Basque region. Police have said the ETA frequently travels through Huesca to transport explosives from France to Spain.

A 14-year veteran of the Minnesota State Patrol was struck and killed by a semitrailer truck Thursday as he made a routine traffic stop on Interstate 90 in southeastern Minnesota. Cpl. Theodore J. Foss, 35, was killed instantly. The driver of the stopped vehicle, her fiance and two children suffered non-life-threatening injuries. The truck's driver was treated at the scene for minor injuries. About 2:20 p.m. Thursday, Foss pulled over a minivan on westbound I-90, about 30 miles east of Rochester, for speeding. He apparently clocked the van driving 82 mph in a 70 mph zone. Foss got out of his marked squad car, parked behind the minivan, and walked up to the driver's side window. He asked the driver for license and proof of insurance. ``That's the last thing the driver of the minivan . . . remembers,'' Weaver said. At that moment, a Federal Express truck slammed into the trooper's car and then the minivan and Foss. Officers were trying to determine what caused the truck to crash, but authorities said the semi had crossed onto the shoulder. The truck driver, John R. Tipka, 42, of Rochester, was interviewed by investigators and was administered urine and blood tests for the presence of drugs and alcohol, standard procedure in fatal accidents. Preliminary reports show Foss ``did everything right,'' Weaver said. The trooper, as well as the driver of the minivan, had pulled off onto the shoulder, far from the road, he said. ``This was not a close call,'' Weaver said. ``It just shows how terribly vulnerable officers are when they make routine traffic stops.'' Foss, who lived with his family in Winona, leaves behind two children, 2-year-old Hannah and 5-year-old Mitchell, and his wife, Andrea Foss, a deputy chief of the Winona Police Department.

Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 13:29:35 -0400
Subject: Another Loss
I am sorry to report the death of Chyenne River Police Officer Robert
Ironroad, who was killed in an auto accident while on duty Aug23d. Officer
Ironroad was a graduate of Class 51 of the Indian Police Academy in Artesia,
NM.
Our prayers go out to his friends and family.

Topic: Camden County, GA Deputy Killed
Conf: Officer Down/Wounded
Date: Wednesday, August 30, 2000 01:54 AM
Early on on Monday morning, about 0030hrs a Camden County Deputy was shot and killed. He had stopped a vehicle described in a BOLO for an armed robbery suspect out of Florida. When the deputy approached the vehicle, the driver exited and shot him four times at point blank range. A passing trucker saw the suspect drive off and stopped to help the deputy who was already dead. Later that morning, about 0300, we got the BOLO for the vehicle and suspect. Two local police agencies stopped the suspect and released him because they had either not been issued the BOLO or had not received it. My partners and I were notified that the vehicle was headed our way. We stopped the suspect about 0455 and placed him in custody. Thank God that we were able to apprehend him before he killed someone else. Please make sure you read your BOLO's carefully and always keep them in the back of your mind. You never know what could be driving through your town. Deputy SGT Dan Jenkins of Camden County, GA was 35 years old and left behind a wife and five children. Please keep him and his family in your hearts and prayers. Services will be held on Friday 9-1-00 in St. Mary's if anyone is interested. Stay safe people.

Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2000 23:59:56 -0400
Subject: OK Officers Down!
"Two suspects, one OHP trooper and one OKC police officer were killed."
"The last radio dispatch from Oklahoma City police officer Jeffery Dean Rominger, who spoke with a dispatcher seconds before a fiery crash early Thursday that claimed four lives, was seeking to protect innocent motorists." "Rominger, 42, and Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper Matthew Scott Evans, 24, and two suspects were killed early Thursday in a high-speed chase on westbound Interstate 40."

Subject: Re: LWF Notification
Date: Friday, August 25, 2000 11:01 AM
Would like to add one to this for you. Chief Dennis O'Brien Bloomington IL PD Died Aug 20/2000 natural causes please add this name to your list he was a great chief and even a better man

Delivery Truck Fatally Injures Jogging D.E.A. Agent
08/29/00
A Drug Enforcement Administration agent jogging before dawn Monday in Forney was killed a block from his home when a delivery van struck him from behind. Special Agent Royce Douglas Tramel, an avid jogger, was hit in the 500 block of FM740 around 6 a.m., Forney Police Chief Rick Barnes said. The 29-year-old delivery truck driver, who lives in Ben Wheeler in Van Zandt County, stopped to help Agent Tramel. A justice of the peace declared him dead at the scene, Chief Barnes said. Police say they believe that Agent Tramel's death was an accident and is not related to his work with the DEA. "At this point and time, it's still under investigation, but I do not expect we'll file charges," Chief Barnes said. Agent Tramel, called Doug by family and friends, had worked with the DEA since 1991, said his partner of nine years, Agent Tommy Hale.
"Both with family and with work, Doug was never a quitter. He would go the extra mile," Agent Hale said. "I've been in law enforcement for 20 years, and he's one of the best officers I've had the opportunity to work with." Agent Hale said his partner, a former Dallas police officer, specialized in complex conspiracy investigation and was highly thought of by the DEA, FBI and the U.S. attorney's office. He had a master's degree in public administration from Southern Methodist University. Agent Tramel, 36, and his wife, Cheryl, celebrated their 12th wedding anniversary this year and have two children, ages 8 and 5. Agent Tramel was part of a specialized task force known as the Mobile Enforcement Team. It is made up of agents who drive from rural town to rural town helping local law enforcement break up violent drug trafficking rings. The close-knit team was finishing up several months of undercover work in the Texarkana area and was preparing to start new operations in Arkansas. Funeral arrangements are pending.

My veri sincere congratulation for yout job in the site copnet, to passion the information representation in your Memorian my observation is you ignore the names of the two Agents of the Guardia Civil spain killer in action terrorist, the past day tuenty of August. I like to send thein names for you get incluyed in your relation in Agents killer in acction the service.
Guardia Civil Mis IRENE FERNANDEZ PEREDA (32 years)
Guardia Civil Mr. JOSE ANGEL DE JESUS ENCINAS (22 YEARS)
I to hope , to serve the informacion four complete your account in the site. Pardon me for my nivel os english isn't the sufficient good for my comunication with Sir in your idiom. You recibe my very cordial greeting and gratitude for your account off outr two company kille in accion the service in Sallent de Gállego (Spain).

Subject: Thanks
Date: Tuesday, November 07, 2000 6:06 PM
I am a female officer, Debra Jaramillo, with the Speedway Police Dept. in Indianapolis, IN. I was hit by a drunk driver on Aug. 20, 2000 sitting on the side of the road during a traffic stop. I am doing fine and I am back at work. It is hard to read about the one's that are not. They will be sadly missing. I believe that you are making all of us more aware. Please keep up the good work and continue to help those that have fallen behind so that they will always be remembered.