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Way to go, Sgt. Findley!!

brave-deputy-frees-moose-swing

Bikers, cops ride to honor fallen officer

While bikers are not generally known for reverence, heartfelt respect and gratitude filled the state Capitol grounds Sunday as motorcycle riders teamed with law enforcement to honor officers cut down in the line of duty.

Since 1853, 127 Utah police officers have died due to on-the-job injuries. The first was 30-year-old Salt Lake Deputy Rodney Badger who drowned in the Weber River while trying to rescue an immigrant family.

The last, so far, was North Salt Lake Police officer Charlie Skinner, who was also 30 when he died last November after hisĀ  patrol car crashed on slick pavement during hot pursuit of a car thief.

“It meant a lot to me to have the whole team ride for Charlie,” said his wife, Katie Skinner, who is now raising their 10-month-old twins, born a few weeks before her husband’s untimely death.

She joined a crowd of more than 2,000 gathered at the Fallen Officers Memorial on the Capitol’s west side, graced by a statue of Badger and a wall full of bronze plaques, each bearing an officer’s name.

“I’m so glad we have this memorial,” Skinner said. “At some point, I will have to tell them who their daddy was. It brings some solace that he was a hero and this memorial honors that.”

Sunday’s was the third annual Fallen Officers ride to raise funds for the memorial and families left behind.

More than 3,000 riders made the 75-minute trip from Lindon to the Capitol, estimated Dave Tuomisto, owner of Timpanogos Harley Davidson and one of the event’s chief organizers. At last count, the charity event had raised more than $75,000 this year, Tuomisto said. Those dollars feed an endowment for scholarships and other needs of the families of the deceased.

A day before leaving for China to begin his role as U.S. ambassador, former Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. on Sunday donned denim and leather to ride up Interstate 15 and Salt Lake City’s State Street.

“Riders and law enforcement came together to make this possible,” Huntsman said of the fitting memorial that includes the name of one of his relatives, Salt Lake City police Officer William Huntsman, who died in a Main Street gunfight in 1924.

“Without you,” Huntsman told the crowd, “we wouldn’t be celebrating this remarkable tribute to those who have given all.”

Attorney General Mark Shurtleff, who badly injured his leg preparing for the ride two years ago, drove Tuomisto’s 1969 Camaro Convertible from Lindon this year.

“Two years ago, Dave lent me his Harley and I broke it,” Shurtleff quipped. “Last year they put me in a Hummer so I couldn’t get hurt.”

Next year, Shurtleff plans to arrive on two wheels — after taking the state’s motorcycle safety course.

Pleasant Grove residents Joe and Carolyn “Stitch” Owens participated in Sunday’s ride and memorial — Carolyn riding solo for the first time. Joe’s high school friend, Dave Jones, is memorialized on the wall.

“What matters is that they not be forgotten,” Carolyn Owens said. “They still have families around.”

LINK

Mores state funds quietly budgeted to help cops sweat to health

Methamphetamine Study questions link between exposure and illness, but cops swear by treatment

The Utah Legislature continued funding a Scientology-based treatment for police officers exposed to methamphetamine, despite a state-funded study that was unable to find a connection between the drug and officers’ illnesses.

As lawmakers were slashing funds for other state programs, they sidestepped public debate and appropriated $100,000 — enough cash for about 20 police officers to undergo the regimen of exercise, sauna time and large doses of antioxidants.

The funding was added by Senate Republicans in the waning days of the session, with the backing of Attorney General Mark Shurtleff.

“It didn’t come directly through the committee,” said Rep. Eric Hutchings, R-Kearns, co-chair of a committee that would have reviewed the appropriation. “It was just arranged, I guess, through leadership.”Meanwhile, Shurtleff said plans are underway for two “Hollywood stars” to hold fundraisers to treat more Utah cops. He declined to identify the pair.

The detoxification treatment was first devised in 1977 by L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the Church of Scientology. Some of the best-known Scientologists include actors John Travolta, Kirstie Alley and Jenna Elfman. Actor Tom Cruise, also a Scientologist, raised money for New York City firefighters to undergo detoxification after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Purging poisons? The public and private money is the latest effort to help officers who believe investigating and dismantling meth laboratories damaged their health.Thirty-nine current or former Utah peace officers have undergone the treatment, which currently costs about $5,200 per person, said Sandra Lucas, director of the American Detoxification Foundation. It runs the Orem clinic that has contracted with the state to treat the officers.

Five more officers are about to begin treatment thanks to private donations, and Lucas says she has a waiting list of about 80 officers.

Lucas also keeps another list — the names of 10 Utah drug officers who have died of cancer at an early age or suffered a sudden fatal illness.

During treatment, officers rest in a sauna for hours, exercise and eat a diet high in anti-oxidants and other nutrients that boost the excretory system. The regimen, which aims to purge poisons, consumes up to six hours a day for 36 consecutive days.

Lt. Richard Ferguson of the Utah County Major Crimes Task Force estimates he was exposed to 100 meth labs in an eight-year span. He suffered from headaches and acid reflux until he underwent the treatment.

“Scientifically, I guess there’s something to it because I don’t have to take a prescription anymore,” Ferguson said.

A missing link. But science has yet to determine whether the saunas, exercise and improved diet are simply making cops generally healthier, or are actually tackling illnesses caused by meth exposure.

In 2007, the Orem clinic’s then-medical director acknowledged no studies have been conducted to show the program’s impact on people exposed to meth. And toxicology experts question whether poisons from meth exposure years ago remain in officers’ bodies.

Last fall, the University of Utah published a study examining whether there was scientific evidence to support a presumption that meth sickened police officers who are seeking workers compensation benefits.

The study found “some suggestions” the officers have an elevated risk of contracting lymphoma, melanoma and colon and rectal cancers.

But the study, which cost $500,000, also warned: “These conclusions must be viewed cautiously based on the low participation rates.”

Principal investigator Kurt Hegmann said police departments wouldn’t share names and addresses of officers. Researchers reached out through newsletters, union leaders, police chiefs and legislators, but only 5.3 percent of a possible 10,429 Utah officers completed surveys.

“We went beyond what are normal methods to get participation,” Hegmann said. Researchers did not find previous studies of the issue.

Hegmann said a few officers said they did not have time for the 40-minute survey or did not want to disclose personal information, despite promises to keep it confidential.

‘The process works.’ Rep. Jackie Biskupski, D-Salt Lake City, who works for the Salt Lake County Sheriff, was so upset with the study and its methodology she asked state auditors if they could investigate the university department that conducted it, she confirmed last week. Auditors told Biskupski there were no grounds.

Many police officers share her objections.

“I don’t understand how an online or mail survey constitutes a scientific study,” said Gary Powell, the former president of Utah Narcotics Officers Association. He has undergone the detoxification, and argues the connection between meth exposure and illness is obvious.

“It’s not homicide detectives that are getting sick,” Powell said.

Shurtleff said that although the treatment is called The Hubbard Method, “that is as far as any of these officers learn about Scientology.”

“All they know is the process works,” said Shurtleff. “They still have friends dying, many of them are convinced, from [meth exposure]. It gives them some hope, some help.”

The attorney general’s office gave $50,000 to the Orem clinic in 2007 and in 2008 the Legislature appropriated another $240,000. Shurtleff and a group of officers advocated for the latest funding in a Republican Senate caucus at the end of this year’s session.

Utah Senate President Mike Waddoups said the GOP senators considered it a priority and made it one of two final programs they wanted funded. There was no discussion of its origins, he said.

“It was portrayed as a medical cleansing of contaminants that they picked up doing their public service,” Waddoups said. “If somebody had been pointed it out as the Hubbard program and it’s some sort of a spiritual cleansing, I think it would have died on the spot.”

Powell, who says most of the headaches, fatigue and intestinal issues he once had are gone, said people should not focus on the religious foundation of the treatment.

“It’s about helping Utah cops,” Powell said.

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