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As each of the 30 names was read, a bell tolled and a white dove was
released to the sparkling sunlit sky. The solemn ceremony was held on the
grounds of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington,
D.C.
It was the 17th year that the Metropolitan Washington
Council of Governments (COG) has held the wreath laying ceremony honoring
correctional officers who have made the supreme sacrifice. The ceremony
has become the traditional kickoff event for National Correction
Officer/Employee Week (May 4-10, 2008). A special tribute was given to
those who served in Washington, DC, Maryland and Virginia, but the
correctional officers killed in the line of duty nationwide in 2007 were
also acknowledged and honored.
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Keynote speaker Gary D. Maynard, Secretary of the Maryland Department
of Public Safety and Correctional Services, made special mention of two of
his officers who were brutally murdered by inmates in 2006.
Maryland Corrections Officer II Jeffery A. Wroten, 44, was shot
to death on January 27, 2006, by an inmate in his custody at a local
hospital;
and Maryland Corrections Officer II David W.
McGuinn, 42, was stabbed to death on July 25, 2006, while conducting a
nightly prisoner count.
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Officer II Jeffery A.
Wroten

Officer II David W.
McGuinn |
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The story of Washington, D.C. Correctional Officer Ronald Richardson,
36, was also told. In November 1990, while on duty, he smelled a strange
odor coming from one of the inmate's rooms at the halfway house where he
was employed. He went in and discovered crack cocaine and a large amount
of cash. The inmate involved then produced a gun, took Correctional
Officer Richardson and another employee hostage, and made an
escape.
The prisoner was soon recaptured and about a year later
Officer Richardson was scheduled to testify against him in court. As he
walked out to his car that morning, though, Ron Richardson was
assassinated in his own driveway. A witness said she saw Officer
Richardson lying face down behind his car as his wife kneeled over him.
She could hear his wife screaming, "Get up. Don't die. Get up." But, it
was not to be.
Ron Richardson died simply because he was a law
enforcement officer doing his job, like so many other correctional
officers before and after him.
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The walls of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial contain the
names of 527 correctional officers who died in the performance of duty. The
first of those fatalities was William Bullard, a Missouri corrections
professional who was beaten to death during an escape attempt on June 14,
1841. The most recent was Elizabeth G. Franklin, 54, who fell from the
watch tower at the Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women in Alabama and died six
days later on December 7, 2007.
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Officer Elizabeth G.
Franklin |
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Officer Franklin is one of 23 female corrections professionals to be
killed in the line of duty and the second to die in 2007. Corrections
Officer IV Susan L. Canfield, 59, of the Texas Department of Criminal
Justice was killed during a prison escape on September 24, 2007. She was
on horseback and supervising a group of inmates on a work detail when two
inmates overpowered another officer, stole his weapon and then fled the
scene in a pick-up truck. As they sped away, they ran over Officer
Canfield and her horse, killing them both.
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Officer IV Susan L.
Canfield |
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For 91 years, The District of Columbia had the distinction of being the
only U.S. city to run its own prison system. Prisoners were housed at a
large complex outside the City in Lorton, Virginia. The facility closed in
2001, but at the COG wreath laying ceremony, two of the correctional
officers who lost their lives there were remembered. On February 13, 1958,
Correctional Officer Michael G. Hughes was stabbed to death while trying to
break up a fight between inmates. Fifteen years later, on November 30,
1973, Correctional Officer Michael Kirby was also stabbed to death. While
walking to his post, he encountered two inmates who were engaged in
illegal drug activity. After killing him, they stuffed his body inside an
eight-foot deep manhole in one of the recreation yards.
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Another of the officers honored at the COG wreath laying ceremony was
Alexandria (VA) Deputy Sheriff William G. Truesdale. On a cold gray
afternoon of January 27, 1981, Deputy Truesdale, 47, was escorting an
inmate from the courthouse to the old city jail when the inmate attempted
an escape. He managed to grab Deputy Truesdale's gun and shoot him in the
chest. The inmate's getaway lasted just eight blocks before he was
recaptured. Instead of simply serving out his sentence for a robbery
charge, the inmate was executed in Virginia's electric chair for killing a
law enforcement officer.
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Deputy Sheriff William G.
Truesdale |
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In addition to Officers Susan L. Canfield and Elizabeth G. Franklin,
four other correctional officers were killed in the line of duty in 2007.
New Jersey Senior Corrections Officer Cecil A. Smith Sr., 68, died on
March 29 from complications following surgery for injuries he sustained
when he fell from a truck while on duty. Macon County (MO) Deputy Sheriff
David L. Gwin, 67, suffered a fatal heart attack on June 24 after being
assaulted by an inmate while attempting to place him in the lock-up cell.
Broward County (FL) Deputy Sheriff Paul Rein, 76, was shot and killed on
November 7 while transporting a prisoner to court. The prisoner was
already facing two life sentences for armed robbery and he was facing
additional charges that day in court.

Officer Cecil A. Smith,
Sr. |

Deputy Sheriff David L.
Gwin |

Deputy Sheriff Paul
Rein |
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On June 25, 2007, Utah Corrections Officer Stephen R. Anderson, 61, was
shot and killed by an inmate he had transported to the University of Utah
Medical Center for an MRI test. As Officer Anderson released the shackles
from the inmate's feet, the prisoner overpowered him, gained control of
his service weapon and fatally shot him. The prisoner was recaptured after
a 40-minute high speed car chase that ended after the escaped felon took
hostages at gunpoint inside a fast-food restaurant. "I don't know that
[the inmate] had this planned really well. I don't know that this was
planned at all," Utah Department of Corrections Director Tom Patterson
said. "A situation presented itself and he took advantage of
it."
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Officer Stephen R. Anderson
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Mark Anderson, a cousin of the deceased corrections officer, said
Stephen "loved working with people who had challenges. Many people have
benefited from his care and his tenderness." He added that his cousin was
very well respected by his colleagues "and, incredibly, by many of the
prisoners as well."
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| Craig W. Floyd is chairman of the National law
Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund and is a regular contributor to
AMERICAN POLICE BEAT. Visit www.nleomf.com
for more information about law enforcement officers killed in the line of
duty. |
Reprinted with permission of the
author and AMERICAN POLICE BEAT
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