Sheriff Aids Law Enforcement in
Mississippi
Bedford Bulletin
John Barnhart | 09.21.2005
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More Photos of this Effort
In
the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Bedford County Sheriff Mike Brown
received the following e-mail from a Harrison County, Miss., sheriff's
deputy:
"Mike, my only contact with the outside
world is our in-car computers. Most of us have lost everything we have.
We have lost 75 percent of the residences and businesses in Harrison
County. When I find the stupid cord for the camera I'll send you some
pictures. I'm tired of locating bodies. You see this stuff on TV all the
time, but until you walk the walk you just can't comprehend the
magnitude of it all. We are already to kill each other...figuratively
speaking.
"This
is the first time in my life I wish I wasn't a police officer. I had to
send my children to live with their grandparents in Pittsburgh. There
won't be any school for at least six months. Power will take at least
six weeks. This is ungodly...I don't know what you guys can do, but your
email gave me a warm and fuzzy. Tell the gang we say hello. Okay bye."
In
June, two members of the Harrison County Sheriff's Office, located in
Gulfport, conducted a criminal interdiction school here. Ten Bedford
County deputies were trained on how to use routine traffic stops to spot
drug couriers, stolen vehicles and fugitives. Gulfport is one of the
Mississippi towns that ended up in Katrina's sights as the killer storm
waded ashore.
Brown
decided to do something. He was able to put out a nationwide request for
help through "American Police Beat" a widely-read police professional
magazine. He also got approval from the Department of Justice to use
asset forfeiture money to buy police supplies. Asset forfeitures are
money and property that criminals have used in the commission of crimes,
or have purchased with the profits of criminal activity.
"They
made a lot of it possible," commented Brown, who was pleased that the
asset forfeiture program meant that criminals ended up helping out
police agencies.
The response brought in $500,000 worth
of police equipment in about a week. Most came here to the Bedford area
and was stored at the Bedford Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart then loaded the
supplies on two 18-wheelers and a 24-foot box van. The trucks, driven by
volunteer professional drivers, then headed for Mississippi on Sept. 10.
They made several stops on the way to pick up more supplies and arrived
in the disaster zone the next day.
"It
was like standing on the moon," commented Cary Pellering, one of the
volunteer drivers. "There was nothing left. I've never in my life seen
anything like it."
Pellering, originally from California,
drove 18-wheelers for 45 years before retiring last year and moving to
the Bedford area.
The
trucks' loads included computers, $45,000 worth of computer software,
ammunition, $65,000 worth of uniforms, flashlights and batteries,
$45,000 worth of police specialty gloves, traffic vests, boots, shoes,
rubber boots, gas masks and riot helmets.
They also included camp stoves. Brown
said that many law enforcement officers had been eating cold food out of
cans for days. The stoves
would allow them to heat it. The load even included underwear. Some officers hadn't been able to change clothes for days.
The
supplies were distributed to polices agencies throughout the hurricane
area by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
Pellering said that it was uplifting to
see law enforcement agencies working together like family.
"Thank God for them," he said.
See
More Photos of this Effort
Contact: Robin Sundquist
540.586.4800
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