Group: All Else Lounge

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For a brother public servant....

rev8ball
rev8ball
Posts: 3,081
Joined: 2001/12/27
United States
2006/02/08, 11:38 AM
Been a little busy these last few days. Please read, and remember.....

(For a beautiful photo slide show, go to reviewjournal.com)


Thousands mourn officer

Police, family, friends, strangers pack roads, church to pay respects

By LYNNETTE CURTIS
REVIEW-JOURNAL


Las Vegas motorcycle officers participate in the procession Tuesday for slain police officer Sgt. Henry Prendes.
Photo by John Locher.


Henry Prendes
The Las Vegas police officer, 37, was a 14-year veteran


The turnout for Tuesday's memorial services for slain Las Vegas police Sgt. Henry Prendes overwhelmed one of the valley's largest churches, forced authorities to close stretches of two of the valley's busiest roadways and tied up traffic for hours in some parts of the city.

Thousands of fellow police officers, friends and strangers from as close as next door and far as Lehi, Utah, gathered to remember and celebrate the officer, who was killed in a shootout last week.

"It's the biggest brotherhood there is," Utah patrolman David Boss said of the law enforcement community. Boss drove from Lehi with his partner to attend the service for Prendes, though he had never met the man.

"He was our brother," Boss said.

Melanie Kidwell, who lives next door to Palm Memorial Park, where Prendes was to be laid to rest, put her two children in a stroller and rolled them to the cemetery to await Prendes' arrival with thousands of others after services at Henderson's Central Christian Church. She, too, never met him.

"I felt like I knew him after I watched that funeral on TV," she said. "What an amazing man. It's a huge loss. Just unspeakable. I get choked up talking about it."

Prendes, 37, was gunned down Feb. 1 while responding to a domestic disturbance call in the southwest valley. Police shot and killed the gunman, 21-year-old Amir Crump.

During Tuesday's service for Prendes, friends, family and co-workers described the charismatic officer as a funny, faithful man who carried a Bible in his patrol car, cheered for the Dallas Cowboys, loved his family and job and strived to live life to the fullest.

"His life was all about love," Prendes' childhood friend Danny Garcia said, "love for his family, love for his friends and love for his community. This building couldn't hold all the people whose lives Henry touched. Imagine that."

The extraordinary community response to Prendes' death was evident as the Henderson church's 3,400 auditorium seats filled with mourners 40 minutes before the service was scheduled to start.

A procession led by motorcycle officers and a police pickup carrying Prendes' flag-draped casket started about 10 a.m. at Palm Mortuary downtown. The procession was late arriving at the church because of its size, which police said was much larger than expected. Law enforcement personnel from across Nevada and several other states joined in the procession.

As the line of vehicles neared the church, officers marching on foot flanked the truck carrying Prendes' casket. Family members followed. A bagpiper and drummer brought up the rear.

Hundreds of people heading to the service were delayed by the procession and arrived too late to get a seat inside the church. They were accommodated in an extra room, where they watched the service by video feed on a large screen. Still hundreds more filled the church's lobby or stood outside the building watching on televisions.

The service, which was slated to start at 11 a.m., started about a half hour later and lasted nearly two hours.

Prendes' wife, Dawn Prendes, remained composed and fidgeted with her wedding ring as she spoke about her husband.

"I want to thank the entire community for your prayers," she said. "It is with your prayers and through the grace of God that gives us the strength to be up here today."

Dawn Prendes, who married Henry Prendes in 2004, emphasized the celebratory theme of the memorial service. "Every loss of a loved one in Christ is a celebration," she said. "(Henry) is more alive now than he ever was, if that is even possible."

Prendes' daughter, Kylee, 13, talked about how her dad always made her smile. She read a poem she composed about how her father had always been her hero. "Now he is (a hero) to you, too," she said.

Prendes' older daughter, Brooke, remarked on how "amazing" the turnout for the service was.

"My dad's probably looking down right now, saying, 'Yep, this is all for me,'" she said. "I'm so proud of my father, how he affected so many people's lives. In everything I do, I'm going to honor my father."

Sheriff Bill Young called Prendes, a native Las Vegan, a "Las Vegas kid."

"He was a product of this community and what we stand for," said Young, whose voice cracked with emotion at one point during his remarks. "All he ever wanted to be was a police officer. Henry was a good cop his very first day out of the academy, and he just kept getting better. To Sgt. Prendes, to protect and serve was not just some phrase on the side of a police car, it was a way of life."

Prendes joined the Metropolitan Police Department 14 years ago as one of a few Spanish-speaking officers. He was promoted to sergeant and took a post supervising sex crime detectives.

One of Prendes' friends compiled a video tribute to him for the church service.

It showed high school pictures of Prendes, who was the captain of his Las Vegas High School football team. It also showed Prendes enjoying some of his favorite activities: hunting and playing golf. The tribute also featured video of him being sworn in as a police officer.

"All he talked about was being a cop," Prendes' long-time friend Dennis Claycomb said. Claycomb said he had known Prendes since junior high and had graduated from Las Vegas High School with him in 1987.

"Everything that's been said about him is true and more," Claycomb said. "He was the greatest dad, the greatest person. If you could do it right, he did it right."

After the service, another large procession escorted Prendes' body from the church to Palm Memorial Park at 7600 S. Eastern Avenue.

The procession "was three times as big as we thought it would be," said trooper Kevin Honea of the Nevada Highway Patrol. "We had people at the cemetery before some people got out of the church."

That distance is roughly 12 miles, traveling along U.S. Highway 95, the Las Vegas Beltway and Eastern Avenue.

A count of how many vehicles were in the procession was not available, but Honea said some were estimating that as many as 2,000 cars and trucks participated.

Because of the massive procession, southbound U.S. 95 between Russell Road and the Beltway and the westbound Beltway between U.S. 95 in Henderson and Eastern were shut down for as long as a half hour, causing traffic disruptions on those heavily used highways Tuesday afternoon, Honea said.

Las Vegas police spokesman Bill Cassell estimated that about 3,000 of Tuesday's memorial attendees were officers from police agencies across the state. He said the majority of Las Vegas police were off-duty at the time.

"The number of individuals who really wanted to go and couldn't is small because the department worked it out," he said. "If somebody wanted to trade a shift or something like that, I'm sure the supervisors allowed that to happen."

As the miles-long procession traveled from the church to the cemetery, mourners gathered around the park's Garden of Reflection to await the arrival of Prendes' casket.

"This is a stark reminder of why police officers exist in the first place," Las Vegas Sgt. Rory Tuggle said as he waited. Tuggle, who has been with the department for 26 years, said he met Prendes when the younger officer was just a rookie.

"He was a great guy, and losing him is unacceptable," Tuggle said. "There are 1,700 other Sgt. Prendeses on this police force. This occupation absorbs risks so others don't have to."

The procession arrived about 2:30 p.m. at Palm Memorial Park.

Central Christian's Senior Pastor Jud Wilhite said a brief prayer, and Young presented Dawn Prendes with the flag that had covered her husband's casket.

Seven officers each fired three rifle shots, and five police helicopters flew overhead. Officers then filed past Prendes' casket, each pausing to salute.

During a short graveside service, Wilhite said Prendes had died a hero.

"More importantly, he lived as a hero," he said. "We can honor him by living our lives to the fullest."



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Michael

Powerlifters -
We eat raw meat, and sleep naked in the snow...
bb1fit
bb1fit
Posts: 11,105
Joined: 2001/06/30
United States
2006/02/08, 12:03 PM
Wow, this should happen more often.

How easily we forget our police and firefighters, what they go through daily.

Their lives are on the line on a daily basis.

Nice post Rev.

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Strength and Honor!
gangstershoes
gangstershoes
Posts: 641
Joined: 2005/05/27
United States
2006/02/09, 07:29 AM
good post rev.
Mojo_67
Mojo_67
Posts: 1,299
Joined: 2003/09/23
United States
2006/02/13, 07:27 PM
It took me awhile of looking at this thread to address it because I'd become somewhat detached reading it. I'd just sit there, kinda numb. probably as many have. I'm finally ready now.

I for one would just like to say, things like this just shouldn't happen, but they do. It's part of the oath they take when they're sworn in. They do it knowing good and well a day may come where the worst could become reality and they still do it, and with great pride.

With that being said I think people should take time out to think every time your pulled over, detoured around an accident, or any other circumstance you may feel is an inconvenience to you. This individual may walk away from you and end up giving their life in the hope yours will be safer.

I'm sorry to say it rev, but even though I know I respect our public servants, it takes articles like this to remind me sometimes just how much. It makes me want to go out and just stop one and tell them thanks for being there...that's all.

So here's to everyone who has at least at one time or another said something like, "Always a cop around when you don't need one" or "Cops dont do nothing but eat donuts. THIS man won't be going home to his family tonight...YOU will.
He gave his life so yours would be safer.

May this also serve as a reminder like bb1 pointed out. Our public servants put their lives on the line for us each and every day and do it with pride.

Take a moment of silence to remember all those that have fallen when you read rev's thread...it's the least we can do...
kp823
kp823
Posts: 1
Joined: 2006/02/13
United States
2006/03/07, 11:59 PM
Great post rev. It's not easy hearing about a "brother of the badge" losing his or her life in the line of duty. Every day before starting my patrol shift I read these four words that I wrote on the back of my wife and kids picture, "I WILL WIN BECAUSE...". Just wanted to say thanks.
Ravenbeauty
Ravenbeauty
Posts: 3,755
Joined: 2002/09/24
United States
2006/03/08, 12:16 PM
Ah, how sweet was that. Rev you've touched people out there with this post, wish T-babe was here to read this too. She is a fellow officer in Scotland.:)

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Bettia.... You can't depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.
-Mark Twain

ravenbeauty@freetrainers.com