By the time they got to the car, the mother had delivered the newborn baby boy and was cradling him on her chest. McCann, a 34-year Port Authority veteran and father of two, checked that the baby was alive, used suction to clear his airway, and administered oxygen before ambulances arrived. Mother and baby are doing well, as are the now calm and happy father and the other two passengers in the car, the man's mother-in-law and the couple's 16-year-old daughter.
Also in lighter fare, Canada's Ontario Provincial Police Association is promoting a
video
on YouTube titled "Here For You" that's designed to communicate to the public that they're here to help. It's an interesting promotional tool that I wouldn't be surprised to see agencies start to make use of.
It seems that the people over at the TV show "60 Minutes" believe Chicago police are not looking to help, but out to get innocent suspects. A piece on the show's Dec. 9 episode proclaimed
Chicago the false confession capital
of the United States, accusing officers of consistently coercing people into admitting to crimes they haven't committed.
Of course, such stories were dwarfed by probably the most reported upon event this month: the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., that ended with 27 dead, including children. Blogger "Officer Smith" wrote a blog post in response to the shootings. His is not a call for gun control, but a call for citizens to do what's necessary to defend themselves and loved ones. "What we as a people MUST do is take responsibility for our own safety," he says.
"Stop relying on others to keep you safe."
POLICE Magazine contributor and photographer Mark Clark wrote a PoliceMag.com Training Channel blog post calling on all officers to do their part and
honor responders
by keeping up on active shooter training. While most media have focused on the grieving of friends and family members whose loved ones died that day, Clark's post focused on what officers responding to the Sandy Hook shooting must be going through after what they witnessed there, especially if they are parents. It's a sad sort of inspiration to train hard. He writes, "We need to be the best mentally and tactically prepared officers we can be and pray that we never have to put the training to use."