The guy's young, in his late teens or early twenties. He looks in bad shape, obviously in shock. He's unconscious and his breathing is very shallow. A circle comprised of many smaller circles perforates his black leather jacket in the upper right chest. He was obviously shot close range with a shotgun. He's no longer bleeding out, which is a bad sign. It's just the other rookie and me with this guy.
I always figured it was poetic justice when some criminal paid the ultimate price for his crimes. But being there on the scene, in real time, not just reading about it in the papers or hearing it on the news, was a whole different ball game. I found I didn't want this young man to die. I knelt down next to him and started yelling, "Come on man, hold on! Live!"
The medics show up just then and we get the guy (his name is Andy, I find out later) on the gurney and take off. I ride along in the back. The medic has me do CPR while he starts an IV and runs it wide open. Andy's heart never actually stops, but he gets pretty close.
We get to the hospital and they wheel Andy away. I take his clothes and boots for evidence. Pretty wild night for a rookie. The whole division is buzzing about this caper. I get to tell the story several times.
Months later, we're all in court. Andy's defense attorney has me up on the stand taking me back over the events of that night. I tell him the whole story, including the ride in the ambulance and the CPR. (I leave out the bit about me yelling at his unconscious client to hang on.)