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SeaCat

Hey, my Halo is smoking
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This is from the local news today. I'm not going to make a comment at this time, although I have a few choice ones.

By KEVIN DEUTSCH, LESTER J. DAVIS, KELLY WOLFE

Palm Beach Post Staff Writers

Friday, August 10, 2007

POMPANO BEACH — Police continued a massive manhunt this afternoon for two suspects who they say shot and killed Broward County sheriff's deputy and Wellington resident Chris Reyka, 51, behind a Walgreens early this morning, sheriff's officials said.

Described by friends and colleagues as a dedicated law-enforcement officer and family man, Reyka was looking for stolen vehicles around 1:20 a.m. when he was shot multiple times, Broward Sheriff Ken Jenne said.

At an afternoon news conference, Jenne stared into the television cameras and gave this message to the person or people involved in the shooting of the second sheriff's deputy in a week:

"We're at war. Get out of the county. "We'll get you. We'll find you."

Reyka had noticed a white car behind the Walgreens and pulled up near it to run the tag, stolen, he discovered, from another vehicle, Jenne said. The white car started backing up. Reyka started to step out of his car. The shooter, probably the passenger, stepped out and rushed Reyka, firing at least 10 shots in rapid succession. Five struck the deputy, Jenne said.

"We believe the shooter came forward, came forward, came forward, and was rushing him aggressively," said Jenne. "It was an aggressive rushing to execute and assasinate our deputy."

Because of the location of some of his wounds, investigators believe Reyka was signaling someone to stop when he was shot. His weapon was still in its holster. Investigators believe he never had a chance to draw it because the gunman moved so quickly. Some of the shots may have been fired from as close as two to four feet away, Jenne said.

Reyka was pronounced dead at North Broward Medical Center.

Van Roberts, who lives across the street in the 6,000-unit Palm-Aire condominium complex, said he was watching TV after 1 a.m. when he heard what he thought was a series of gunshots. He pulled on a shirt, shorts and shoes and jumped in his car to check out what had happened. Emergency lights were flashing at the Walgreens.

"I watched (the fire rescue truck) drive off with all of the police officers,'' Roberts said. "It had a big escort.''

Police are looking for the suspects, considered armed and dangerous, in a white, full-size American car with tinted windows and Florida tag F16-8UJ, according to a release from the sheriff's office. A vehicle fitting that description was captured by a security camera at Isle of Capri Casino about two minutes after the shooting, heading north on Powerline Road near the Pompano Beach store. The tinted windows were a continuous pane from the front to rear passenger area with no divider between the doors.

The license plate is registered to an Oakland Park plumbing company that hadn't noticed it was missing.

Jenne had this message for anyone driving a similar looking vehicle during rush hour today.

"You're going to get pulled over," he said. "Just cooperate."

Jenne announced a $70,000 reward for tips leading to an arrest in the second shooting of a deputy in a week.

NEWS 12 announced that reward had increased to $105,000 during its 5:30 p.m. newscast.

"Whether is takes a day, a week, a month or a decade, we will find the thugs responsible for this assassination," Jenne said. "We will find these folks and they will be arrested for murder."

Reyka lived in the Grand Isles development in Wellington with his wife, in a home they bought in 1997.

Friends and neighbors called Reyka a dedicated law enforcement officer and family man who divided his time between work, scouts, church and sports.

"He was a great guy, and you're not going to hear anything else," said Cara Thompson, a friend of the family for roughly a decade. "He was a total family man and a wonderful neighbor."

Reyka and his wife, Kim, have four children, Ashley, Sean, Autumn and Spencer. A son serving in the U.S. Marines was scheduled to go to Iraq in two weeks, Jenne said.

Thompson said Reyka's family is heartbroken and cloistered.

"(Kim) is shocked and devastated," Thompson said. "She's trying to be strong for everyone around her. Especially her kids."

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office sent 15 deputies to provide backup during the search for the shooter, said sheriff's spokeswoman Teri Barbera. In addition to the deputies, Palm Beach County also sent over a sergeant, lieutenant, captain, seven police dogs and a helicopter, she said. The Palm Beach sheriff's deputies are working road blocks and other details to free up Broward deputies to concentrate on the search, she said.

Deputies, police and troopers are patrolling every bridge in Broward County. Investigators believe the car, and the men in it, may still be in the county.

"Every inch of Broward county is going to be searched," Jenne said.

Dozens of officers mapped out search grids of the whole county at a command post, which they used in driving up and down every street looking for the car.

The sheriff's office had a sketch of someone seen near the scene, but the witness was unsure the person was involved, according to a department spokesman. It has not been released.

This shooting came just days after another deputy, Maury Hernandez, was shot in the head Monday after a traffic stop.

"This has been one of the most difficult, saddest, most challenging weeks this agency has ever had," Jenne told reporters this morning. "You look back at the summer, deputies have been shot. Deputies have been stabbed ... We're telling people: Let your emotion out. The men and women are very brave. There's a lot of macho people feeling very sad."

A suspect has been charged with attempted first-degree murder in the Hernandez shooting. He remained in critical condition at Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood.

"Hernandez is lying in bed ... clinging to life, fighting for life," Jenne said. "We were hit very hard this week."

A deputy told The Miami Herald a rash of recent robberies at Walgreens stores may have prompted Reyka to check out the suspicious cars at the Pompano store. The Walgreens was closed and cordoned off.

A former member of the SWAT Team and more recently BSO's Selective Enforcement Team, handling auto crimes and road patrol, Reyka was the deputy that colleagues clamored to work with because of his experience and expertise.

"Chris was, tactically, one of the finest deputies that we had," Jenne said.

In April of this year, Reyka was named deputy of the month for doing exactly what he was doing early Friday. On two separate occasions, he was checking out suspicious cars and his actions led to arrests or the recovery of property. In one case, the car turned out to be stolen, and in the other, a man burglarizing a nearby business was arrested. Promoted to sergeant in 2004, Reyka was also named deputy of the month in October 2001.

"He's the best auto-theft person we've ever had," Jenne said. "That's the way he was thought of."

Jenne had spoken with Reyka recently for his deputy of the month award. He asked him what he liked most about the job.

"He said he liked the chase," Jenne said.

Reyka was an 18-year-veteran of the Pompano Beach police department and later the sheriff's office, which took over law enforcement in the city in 1999.

"This is a person that lived life with honor and integrity," said Detective Martin Hedelund, a friend of Reyka's for 18 years. "Chris was the epitome of a family man."

News organizations from as far south as Miami were camped outside Reyka's comely suburb Friday morning. Volunteers at his church, St. Therese's, said they were tired of media inquiries. Law enforcement officials parked outside the gated community and made sure no one got to the family without permission.

Thompson remembered Reyka as a dad who, when he wasn't working, was front and center for his children. Even vacations were spent visiting far-flung family members. Reyka was the friendly neighborhood jogger who greeted passing, familiar faces with a grin and a wave.

Palm Beach County Sheriff's Captain Gregory Richter, a neighbor of Reyka's for four years, echoed those sentiments.

"He was one of those super good guys," Richter said. "It's such a tragedy, to hear something like this."

Richter said Reyka was fastidious about his uniform and his daily work outs.

"We don't have a lot of people like that," Richter said. "We can't give them up so easily."

Rick Marcus, a Broward deputy for the past 14 years, has lived in the same neighborhood as Reyka for the past two years.

"It's just heart wrenching," he said Friday, standing outside his community. "I'm broken up right now."

He said he knows that officers are always aware of the dangers associated with their jobs. But two shootings in a week has shaken the department.

"Something needs to be done, it's getting crazy out here," Marcus said. "When does it stop?"

To report information about the shooting, call BSO at 954-765-4321.

Staff writer Rochelle E.B. Gilken and The Associated Press and the Miami Herald contributed to this story.


Cat
 
Ok...first, I feel for the deputy's family, and what they are going through. That said, the first thing that comes to mind for me is, why is his life so much more important than anyone else's? Why are they at "war" to find his killer? Why expending those kinds of resources when they won't for anyone else?

That's only one reason why police are looked at as corrupt to the core.

Yes, I know there are some very good men/women that serve as policemen, but their lives are worth no more than anyone else's. If the dept. can expend those kind of resources looking for a cop killer, they can do the same for any killer. PERIOD.
 
Seacat,

Per your comment in the other thread...I understand why they go after a copkiller like they do, but to me, anyway, it makes it glaringly obvious that a cop's life is much more valuable than mine. I'm sure I'm not the only one that sees it that way.

I know there are some really good cops out there, good men and women that would lay their lives down for someone else. Unfortunately, the counties where corruption is the rule rather than the exception (like the one I live in) ruin things for everyone.

Go all out to find a cop killer. I think that's admirable, but at the same time, I wish the general public was as important to them as it should be. It's painfully obvious that we aren't. To way too many cops, the general public is nothing more than a pool of suspects, and guilty unless proven innocent.
 
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cloudy said:
Seacat,

Per your comment in the other thread...I understand why they go after a copkiller like they do, but to me, anyway, it makes it glaringly obvious that a cop's life is much more valuable than mine. I'm sure I'm not the only one that sees it that way.

I know there are some really good cops out there, good men and women that would lay their lives down for someone else. Unfortunately, the counties where corruption is the rule rather than the exception (like the one I live in) ruin things for everyone.

Go all out to find a cop killer. I think that's admirable, but at the same time, I wish the general public was as important to them as it should be. It's painfully obvious that we aren't. To way too many cops, the general public is nothing more than a pool of suspects, and guilty unless proven innocent.

Cloudy,

I completely understand your feelings. Looking at it from our viewpoint outside their community it would seem that way.

What is needed is to look at it from the Police Officers Viewpoint. They are a fairly small group in our society. They are often hated and reviled. They are underpaid in most cases, they are under armed and they are always inside the goldfish bowl. Everything they do is scrutinised. They feel, sometimes justifiably, that they are under siege by everyone else.

When someone kills one of them they all react. It is a small community after all.

Also they justifiably feel that if a Cop Killer gets away others will be tempted to do the same. (Hey he got away so why wouldn't I?)

As for their not pursuing the local criminals with the same fervor, sometimes they do and sometimes they don't. I recently posted a thread about a gang rape down here. The Police have arrested three out of eight people involved. The others they feel are out of state, but the case is not closed. The Police have not given up on it, although the state has.

Cat
 
From the Local Newspaper today.

Remembering Sgt. Chris Reyka
Thousands turn out to honor slain deputy
By KELLY WOLFE, LESTER J. DAVIS

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

POMPANO BEACH — Thousands of people paid respects to slain Broward County sheriff's Sgt. Chris Reyka on Tuesday, waiting for hours in a line that stretched from his closed casket through three rooms, out the funeral home's front door and into a slow, steady drizzle.

"It shows how great he really was," said Ashley Reyka, 21, the deputy's eldest daughter.


Ashley said her family was doing well, thanks to unwavering support from the law enforcement community, friends and neighbors. The deputy, who lived in Wellington, left behind his wife, Kim, and four children: Sean, a Marine; Ashley, a lacrosse player at the University of Florida; Autumn, a sophomore at Palm Beach Central High School; and Spencer, a 13-year-old Polo Park Middle School student.

"He was a father to us like no other," Ashley said, her older brother standing behind her. "I was definitely daddy's little girl."

Reyka was looking for stolen vehicles early Friday behind a Pompano Beach Walgreens when someone stepped from a car he was checking and shot him five times. The Broward County Sheriff's Office went into crisis mode, calling for any information about a white sedan seen fleeing the scene. There have been hundreds of tips, but no arrests.

A makeshift memorial now stands where Reyka fell.

Reyka, 51, lay in a wooden casket carved with a relief of an eagle and an American flag. A flag was draped over the casket and four more were folded nearby. Flowers from law enforcement agencies across the state, the Boy Scouts and Walgreens were arranged neatly. A photo montage played on a television set.

In line, mourners retold Reyka's tale in whispers: A man who didn't want to work anywhere but law enforcement, a dedicated father and community leader.

The line stretched on and on around the Forest Lawn North Funeral Home. By 8:30 p.m., an estimated 3,000 people had paid their respects. Another 100 or so were still in line. Reyka's family hugged every one.

They had surrounded their father with personal items: his favorite hat, removed only for church; a flashlight; running shoes; a tin cup with a Boy Scout emblem on it; a stuffed animal squirrel.

Ashley said the squirrel was a family joke. It began with a trip to Washington. She said her dad, for no apparent reason, began chasing one of the fat squirrels that live in the city's many parks. After that, she said, the squirrel jokes didn't stop.

"There was even a Squirrels Gone Wild T-shirt," she said.

Ashley said her father had a dry wit and big smile. She said he left for his last shift as if it were any other. He told his family he loved them and said, "I'll see you later."

"He liked to work the night shift because that's where all the action was," she said.

She said her father never spoke of the dangers of his job. If her parents spoke of it behind closed doors, they kept the matter private.

"They were partners and best friends," Ashley Reyka said. "She knew, possibly."

A dozen Broward sheriff's deputies on motorcycles escorted the Reyka family to the funeral home for the 2 p.m. visitation, which wrapped up at 4. A second visitation started at 6 and lasted until 9.

A funeral will begin at noon today at the BankAtlantic Center in Sunrise, home of the NHL Florida Panthers. Reyka, a Marine, then will be buried in the South Florida VA National Cemetery west of Lantana.

Diane Harvey said she didn't know Reyka, had never seen him. But she lived in a neighborhood near the Walgreens where Reyka lost his life.

"He worked in the area where I live," said Harvey, a nurse. "He was protecting us. This is unthinkable, horrible."

Harvey said she put her arms around Kim Reyka and one of Reyka's daughters.

"I told them I was so sorry," Harvey said.

Harvey said she takes nightly walks in her Cypress Bend neighborhood. But these days she feels less safe.

"Last night when I walked, I took my cellphone with me," Harvey said. "I felt scared."

Ashley Reyka said she was undaunted by the sea of well-wishers. She said she wanted to tell them all "thank you."

"It's an honor to him and it means a lot to us," she said.



Slain Broward deputy and Wellington resident honored
Click-2-Listen
By MITRA MALEK

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

UPDATED: 6:07 p.m. August 15, 2007

LAKE WORTH — Chris Reyka, the slain Broward County sheriff's sergeant and Wellington resident, was laid to rest late this afternoon at South Florida VA National Cemetery.

Some thousand mourners and thousands more uniformed officers stood for a procession so silent, they instead communicated through slight movements. There was the gentle squeeze of the hand shared between deputies or the light pat on the back.

As the ceremony continued seven helicopters flew overhead. Bagpipers played "Amazing Grace," and a bugler played "Taps."

Earlier today, about 4,500 mourners filled Sunrise's BankAtlantic Center to honor 51-year-old Reyka, who last week lost his life in a Walgreens parking lot when a suspect shot him five times.

During the 80-minute service Reyka's wife and four children sat just steps from his flag-covered casket, surrounded by hundreds of deputies.

Father Donald Munro from St. Rita Catholic Church called Reyka "our hero."

"He put on his uniform every day to make society safer. He gave his life for us," Munro said.

As the PA system played "When I get Where I'm Going,'' Reyka's children wiped away tears.

Family and friends told stories of a young Reyka: building snowmen outside Camp David as a young Marine was one of them. Sometimes goofy, he once finished a sweaty run by singing the Marvin Gaye song "Let's Get it On" to his wife.

The sergeant had an unyielding moral compass, said his oldest son, Sean, a Marine.

"Everything was black and white," said the 20-year-old, dressed in his red and blue uniform. "Only right and wrong."

Kim, Reyka's wife of 22 years, remained composed throughout, smiling and nodding her head in agreement as colleagues and family members spoke of her husband.

Sheriff Ken Jenne eulogized Reyka as "one of the best, one of the brightest of our protectors."

Large video monitors showed a montage of photographs from the time Reyka was a baby. There were photos of him with his infant children, of him in his office with his wife. At sporting events with his kids.

More than 250 law enforcement officers from across South Florida had escorted Reyka's remains from the Pompano Beach funeral home where thousands had come the night before to pay their respects to a man who lost his life trying to recover what had been stolen from others.

An Ohio native, Reyka joined the Pompano Beach Police Department in 1989. Later he became part of the Broward County Sheriffs Office when the two departments merged.

The sergeant most recently worked with the sheriff's Selective Enforcement Team, handling auto crimes and road patrol. In April he was named deputy of the month for his work in two separate crimes that led to arrests or the recovery of stolen property.

Reyka was in the same mode, doing what he does best, at about 1:20 a.m. last Friday when someone quickly stepped from the vehicle whose tag he was checking at a Walgreens parking lot in Pompano Beach. They shot 10 times, hitting him five.

The killing sent South Florida law enforcement on one of its biggest manhunts, searching for a long white sedan that a video camera captured on film two minutes after the shooting.

Tips poured in from the public, but officials have yet to crack the crime.

Reyka left behind his wife and four children: Sean; Ashley, a University of Florida student; Autumn, a sophomore at Palm Beach Central High School; and Spencer, a Polo Park Middle School student.

The sergeant was known to many as a man with a friendly smile, always ready to volunteer. He helped set up his church when it moved. He served as a Scout master, and a born leader at that, those who knew him said.

Cat
 
Cloudy, I don't know if cops think their lives are more valuable than other people's lives, but I think that they (and other professions) put their lives in danger for the protection of the general public, and that makes these sorts of tragedies have a greater symbolic importance. It's not simply that this was a cop, it is that it was a cop killed 'in the line of duty'.
 
Huckleman2000 said:
Cloudy, I don't know if cops think their lives are more valuable than other people's lives, but I think that they (and other professions) put their lives in danger for the protection of the general public, and that makes these sorts of tragedies have a greater symbolic importance. It's not simply that this was a cop, it is that it was a cop killed 'in the line of duty'.

I understand that, and I'm not without compassion, but when they go all out to find a "cop killer" but barely make an effort for a hooker, what does that tell you?

All cops are not like that, I understand that, too, but enough are to make it cliche'.
 
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