What this means for you as police officers is that you have a lot less help when you need it. Backup takes longer to arrive. Police presence is minimal. Some crimes aren't investigated. And the dominos fall, leading to more violence, more crime, and even fewer people willing to serve as police officers and face down that violence.
You are in the crosshairs. In the last few months alone, a lot of cops have been killed, including two police volunteers in New York City, an FBI agent gunned down as the result of a bank robbery, and two patrol officers in Charlotte, N.C.
As this issue of POLICE arrives in your mailbox, thousands of officers and their supporters are traveling to Washington, D.C., for National Police Week. The culmination of this event is a candlelight vigil at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, where the names of those Charlotte officers, the NYPD volunteers, the FBI agent, and dozens of other heroes who died this year serving in the Thin Blue Line will soon be engraved on the memorial wall.
Undoubtedly, more names will follow. That is the tradition of service that you represent. You are a rare breed, warriors in a life and death struggle with those who prey on the weak and victimize the peaceful. Sometimes you suffer losses in that fight. And names go on the wall.
Keeping names off the wall is job one for all law enforcement trainers. It's also job one here at POLICE Magazine. We offer you information that we hope will help you do your job better and come home safely to your loved ones. But right now, in light of all of the challenges you face, I offer you the immortal words of Sgt. Phil Esterhaus from the old TV show "Hill Street Blues" who voiced the best advice anyone ever gave an American police officer: Be careful out there.