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It is December 23rd – 0730 hours. I’ll be riding
along with Officer Tony today at 0800 hours (that’s police talk for 8 a.m.) to
get a glimpse of what a day in the life of a police officer in Cape May is like.
Meanwhile, I have about 12,000 presents piled up in
the closet which have to be wrapped. I figure I can get at least 6,000 presents
wrapped before I have to meet
Officer Tony Genaro at the police sub-station in
West Cape May.
I note the time, 7:45 a.m., oops, excuse me – 0745
hours - I drop the scissors and the Scotch tape, grab my coat and run out the
door. As I’m pulling into the parking lot of the West Cape May municipal
building, I realize that I’ve forgotten to eat breakfast. This could be one long
day. Oh, I think, no problem, there’ll be donuts at the sub-station and numerous
stops for more donuts. Whew! I was worried there for a minute.
I’m very impressed. By some magic sense, Officer Tony
knows I’m at the door and comes out to open it for me. It is locked so
unauthorized personnel (like me) can’t get in.
“How did you know I was out here?”
“I heard the door.”
Oh.
Officer Tony is very young looking and very bald – by
intention, he shaves his head – and very fit. Fit is not good. Fit means no
donuts. Indeed, I walk into the office and he gives me a desk to sit at – it is
a pretty big room, three desks – no donuts. No coffee. I’m not worried, I’m sure
we’ll be stopping at a WaWa or a bakery soon.
I, myself, do not take the pressure of the holidays well.
I’m feeling a little disorganized this morning and I’m still thinking about
those presents and just how I’m going to wrap a complete drum set and fit it
under the tree. On the other hand, Officer Tony is well organized and while he’s
going over our schedule – he by the way has been at work since 6 a.m. not 8 a.m.
– that’s 0600 hours to us police personnel - I try to take his picture and
realize I’ve left the battery for the camera at the office. I race out to the
car and drive over to the mall, longingly passing up the Wawa, run up to the
office and back to the police sub-station in a flash – not too flashy though,
getting a ticket would be a bit embarrassing. Whew. Oh no. I forgot a pen to
write with. Now what? I can’t leave again. There are about 50 pens in front of
me. Shall I? I must. I steal a pen from the desk. I immediately feel the hot
lights bearing down on me. I just know Officer Tony saw me swipe the pen. Worse,
what if it’s a marked pen? I can’t take it any longer. I confess.
Officer Tony is very understanding about the pen and says
it’s ok. And by the way, he says, did you see the surveillance camera up there?
No but am I glad I confessed when I did. See? Crime does not pay. Just then a
call comes in.
“We better go see about this,” he says.
Whoo Hoo. Action.
Now, I could have ridden along with Officer Tony at night.
Because of the unexpected death of a fellow officer, Sgt. William Alvarez, a
20-year veteran of the force who died in November, Officer Tony is working both
his own shift and Sgt. Alvarez’s – so he works from 6 a.m. to midnight. But I
opted for the day shift because please, I need my beauty sleep. Besides, what if
there’s actually a crime – that would be very annoying – I might have to shoot
my way out – shoot as in camera by the way. Anyhow – daytime is good for those
reasons and another one: this way I get to glimpse life on patrol and Officer
Tony’s regular work as Cape May’s Juvenile Officer and instructor of the D.A.R.E.
(Drug Abuse Resistance Education program).
Hey, do you think on the way to the possible cardiac
arrest in progress, Officer Tony would consider stopping for coffee and donuts?
I’m sure Cape May Bakery is open.
I LOVE this car. It has all kinds of gadgets. I
wonder what would happen if I touched this button or this one, or this one.
Where’s the flashy light thing? When we arrive at Ohio Street, Officer Joe
Walker is already on the scene. An ambulance is there and the patient is being
hoisted into the back of it. I can see him from the car and he looks alert and
awake. I stay in the car. First of all, it’s too cold to be standing outside.
Secondly, who needs me to be snapping pictures while you’re being wheeled away.
Thirdly, I am alone at last. I wonder if there are any uneaten donuts in the
glove compartment. Before I have a chance to “explore,” Officer Tony is back in
the car. This particular patient has a history of cardiac problems and, although
they are taking him to the hospital, it looks as though everything will be A-O.K.
Officer Tony explains that two patrol cars always try to
come to a scene. A, because the more officers the better. B, because in the case
of a rescue, one officer can administer CPR or whatever is needed while the
other handles the crowd or assists the family until the EMTs arrive. Or in the
case of a crime, four eyes are better than two.
Before we drive off, there is another call. One of the
other officers has pulled someone over for a moving violation and needs to check
on something. Meanwhile, a dispatch call comes in. It seems sometime during the
night someone has thrown a brick through a construction trailer window on New
York. We’re off. No sirens though. Again, Officer Walker has beat us to the call
and is already talking to the construction supervisor. Now, do you think I
should get out of the car and see what’s up or look in that glove compartment?
Give it up, I say to myself ‘cause I just know that there are no donuts around
and Officer Walker is even thinner than Officer Tony. He’s no help. As I get out
of the car, I look in the back seat where –you know – prisoners go. Yo! There’s
absolutely no leg room back there at all. How constricting. And then you have
that wall-like thing going across the back separating the passenger side, I mean
the prisoner side – from the officer’s side. How claustrophobic. I’m going to
have to
suggest ways to improve that. If I were back there, I’d be positively
freaked out.
Here’s the skinny on the brick hurler. Someone did hurl a
brick through the window. Nothing seems to be missing but (the plot thickens) at
the construction site one lot over, run by someone else, an aluminum breaker
came up missing a few days earlier. When we get back in the car, Officer Tony
explains that an aluminum breaker is gigantic in size – certainly not something
you slip in your pocket – it is used to crush aluminum siding. It seems,
however, the construction supervisor there wants to hold off on formally
reporting the incident in case someone, by chance, “borrowed” it.
Well, o.k. that’s a little strange. We have to return to
the Cape May Police Station to pick up a camera to take pictures of the hurling
event. It is during this drive that I realize my search for donuts is greatly
jeopardized. Officer Tony reveals that at one time he and his wife Maura owned
the Cape May Fitness Gym on Park Blvd. He further reveals that he and wife are
health
nuts. Oy!
Officer Tony pops into the Police Station and pops back
out. We return to the scene of the crime, take some pictures and head back to
the station. Officer Tony, you know, is fairly new to Cape May. After a stint in
the army he came to Cape May to spend some time with his folks who had just
bought a Bed and Breakfast in town – the Jeremiah Hand House on Washington
Street. The B&B has subsequently sold but Officer Tony decided he liked the town and tried for six years to get on the
force. In the meantime, he met and married his wife and together they opened the
gym. Finally in 2001, he joined the force full time.
Now here’s a funny thing, when we pull into the station
this time, Officer Tony pulls the car into this corral thing, as though he were
arresting me. Not that that made me nervous or anything but I did jump when he
shows me how he pulls the gate closed behind the car before he lets the prisoner
out. Then, the prisoner is led through a security door to the holding cell.
Before going to the holding
cell, the prisoner can wash his eyes out if pepper
spray has been used. Then, there’s the cell. Can I just say YUK! Yuk to the
extreme! I mean, I’m looking at this tiny space and staring right at the
toilet. Eeyew. There’s a cot and a toilet. That’s it. And it’s not at all
attractive. Someone give me some bleach so I can scrub that nasty floor.
The cell door is from a military base (Navy, I think). The key for the extremely
heavy door is about three inches long and when he slams the door shut – there is
a finality to the slamming of the door. Hence, the term “the slammer,” I guess.
Officer Tony then takes me into the office where they book
you, as in “Book ‘em Danno.” Now I
like this room. There are all kinds of little gizmos here. Two Breathalizer Test thingys. A bar that they can handcuff you to
if they get a call and have to run out of the office or if you prove to be as
Officer Tony describes it, “uncooperative.” A finger print kit. And – this is
best of all – a camera, a background
screen and a thing with a sign that goes
in front on your mug (hence the term mug shot) that says: Police Department City
of Cape May and your prisoner number. I want my picture taken. It’s 1930 and
where’s Humphrey Bogart when you need him? Bogey would never leave a girl behind
bars. Jailbreak!!!
Oh, we have to leave. We trudge upstairs where Officer
Tony introduces me to Kyle Grossman – the dispatcher. Kyle looks like an
airplane pilot. He sits in front of at least four screens, plus the video cam of
various points in the police station. He gets messages from everybody – the FBI,
other police departments. I can’t tell you anymore about this room because it’s
Top Secret and only those of us in the know – can know. So there.
Our next stop is behind the dispatcher’s office where
Claire and Cathy man the
desks spending their time doing tons of paper work. We
don’t linger too long in the office because it is time to get back out on the
streets.
Before we exit the building, Officer Tony and I pop into
the auditorium where City Council meets. On the stage is a Christmas tree with
toys surrounding it. When Sgt Alvarez died, he was in the middle of the Toys for
Tots Campaign which he headed up every season, so Officer Tony took up the
slack.
He already distributed the bulk of the presents on Sunday but more are
flowing in. It would appear as though Officer Tony has a full plate and I
don’t mean with donuts.
Back in the patrol car we cruise the streets of Cape May,
West Cape May and Cape May Point – then Officer Tony suggests we pay a visit to
the schools which is his regular job. Our first stop is the West Cape May
Elementary School. This part of the day, I have to tell you, I found to be very
touching. As soon as we walk in one of the students, Zach Burgin, who happens to
be in the hallway greets Officer Tony with a big smile. I follow them to Ms.
Horvath’s 5th and 6th grade-combined class. At WCM
Elementary D.A.R.E. is taught to 5th graders. Over at Cape May
Elementary, Mr. Doto’s 6th grade is taught. All the kids at both
schools are totally excited to him.
They obviously have missed Officer Tony who,
because of Sgt. Alvarez’s death, has not been able to come to the schools for
the last three weeks.
But they have been peppering the D.A.R.E. questions box
with many pertinent questions regarding resisting drugs like: “Why is your head
shiny? What is your favorite movie? What is your favorite song, Do your boys
want to be policemen when they grow up? (Young Tony, by the way is 6-years-old and
Troy is 18-months). In short, these students want to know everything there is to know
about Officer Tony.
Because it is about an hour or two away from Christmas
dismissal, the students both WCM Elementary and at Cape May Elementary are very
excited. But they do want to hear at least one of Officer Tony’s funny stories.
He tells both classes a story they’ve heard before but like to hear over and
over - about the D.A.R.E. Bear and how he met his demise. No. I’m not telling
the story – it’s his story and you’ll just have to ask him about it. He promises
the kids he’ll visit more frequently once the New Year begins a nd we are back in
the patrol car heading toward the West Cape May sub-station.
Another call comes in alerting Officer Tony that a P.I. is
in town – that’s private investigator to you civilians. He tells me that the
P.I.s often alert the local police that they are working in town. Oh so is that
so you don’t arrest them if you find them hiding the bushes. No, he explains,
that’s so if they get bopped in the nose by a disgruntled spouse, we’ll know
why. My word!
It is approaching 1200 hours as Officer Tony pulls into
the Park Boulevard shops and asks me if I’d like something to eat or drink. Ahhhhh. DONUTS!! Whoo Hoo. Before I can answer, though he’s pulling up
along side the Cape May Fitness Gym and explaining that he’s going to stop and
get a protein shake. Would I like one or perhaps a protein bar? Geez Louise.
This guy’s a rock. No thank you, I say.
Well, when the very trim and very fit Officer Tony gets
back in the patrol car, I say I better be on my way soon. Just as we’re pulling
into the sub-station though, another call comes in.
“Do you mind if we take this?”
Are you kidding, I’m thinking, anything to take my
mind off food.
Another officer has pulled a car over on Seashore Rd. We
slip behind
the first police car and after a short chat with the patrolman, Officer Tony
walk up to the car. That’s weird, I think. After another short chat with the
offending driver, he returns.
It turns out, Officer Tony has pulled the same car over just
a few days before for the same problem. The computer shows the car with an
expired registration but the driver has the correct registration card with him.
Officer Tony thinks something has gone wrong at the Department of Motor Vehicles
but wonders why the driver hasn’t corrected it yet. Really, who wants to be
pulled over all the time? This time
the driver will probably get a ticket so… I
just bet he'll fix the problem now.
“The same things that happen in any city happen in Cape
May, just less of it,” he says. “I know this. I wouldn’t want to be a policeman
in any other city but this one.”
After I thank Officer Tony and bid him a fond farewell –
and yes I returned the pen – I drive out of the sub-station and start heading
over to the WaWa for the illusive donut – but then, I think it really is lunch time, maybe I’ll get a salad instead. |