Aiding and Abetting a Success Story
On my drive home that evening, I remembered that first day in the police academy. I'd been told I wasn't there to make a difference in people's lives. I would now have to say: I beg to differ.
The first day I started at the Chicago Police Academy, my class was polled as to why we had signed on with the CPD. The instructor was just waiting for the first, "I want to help people and make a difference in people's lives" line. It was given by the fourth person to be asked, and the speech began. We were told that we were just there to try and keep a lid on things, not to change the world. I felt differently, but said nothing.
About five years later, I was assigned to a case in which the star witness was a small, wispy 15-year-old Hispanic kid named Andy. He had witnessed the gang-related stabbing of his best friend and, undeterred by threats and taunts from the offenders' gang associates, came through for his badly injured buddy. As a result, the three assailants went to prison.
I kept in contact with Andy throughout the next several years. At one point, he adopted the dress and mannerisms of a local gang, but denied being a gang-banger. He said he was just trying to fit in. Andy had some run-ins with the police over the next year or two. Mostly he was caught in street sweeps of gang members. I ran interference a few times, but he spent more than one evening in a jail cell after he turned 17.
For reasons he wouldn't discuss, Andy dropped out of high school in the middle of his senior year. He asked me for help and a job reference. On the condition that he work towards a G.E.D., I took him to a local McDonald's the owner/operator and I had previously worked together on a loitering problem. On my word, Andy was given a job.
Andy did well at McDonald's and after getting his G.E.D., was promoted to junior manager. But Andy had always admired the Marine Corps insignia pin that I wear on my uniform shirt flap pocket. When we first met, he had talked about joining up but I figured he'd given up on the idea.
My pager went off one afternoon a few months later. It was Andy and he seemed to be upset. He had gone to see a Marine recruiter and was told that because of his past run-ins with the law, he wouldn't even make it past the interview stage.
The next day, I went to see the recruiter to plead my case for the kid, now 19. The recruiter told me he'd never seen anybody, much less a cop, care so much about an inner city kid.
I soon got a call from the recruiter's commander and made an appointment to see him. I went in uniform and was ushered into an inner office. A square-jawed, recruiting poster image major came into the room. He had read the memo faxed to him by the sergeant telling of my wherewithal to get Andy into the Corps.
I told the major of Andy's determination and courage in the stabbing incident and all he had overcome since. I explained that in the inner city, young men sometimes have to "walk the walk and talk the talk" in order to survive and that sometimes the "act" gets them in trouble. I vouched that Andy had what it took for the Corps.
Andy was allowed to take the entrance tests and did well. He passed his physical, his past troubles were waived and off he went to boot camp.
We kept in touch, and one Friday afternoon, three months later, my beeper went off. It was Andy. He told me he had a surprise for me. Later that evening, I was called in to the station to meet a young man, resplendent in a crisp, Marine class A uniform with a P.F.C. chevron on each arm, a rifle expert badge on his chest and his chest puffed out with pride. Andy was not only a Marine; his drill instructors had also awarded him a meritorious promotion. My eyes welled up with tears of joy.
On my drive home that evening, I remembered that first day in the police academy. I'd been told I wasn't there to make a difference in people's lives. I would now have to say: I beg to differ.
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