Mary A. Castillo As we were ushered...
Mary A. Castillo
As we were ushered through the booking area of the Laguna Beach
Police Department, I noticed a sign posted in several prominent
places that read, “It’s not the greatest place to be, but let’s not
make it worse!”
With the overhead lights glaring off the white walls and that
neck-tingling roll and thump of cell doors closing, the city jail
isn’t the place a girl like me visits. But together with my fellow
classmates, that’s exactly where we ended up on the first night of
the Citizen’s Academy.
The academy has now given more than 100 citizens who live or work
in Laguna the chance to glimpse into the lives of the men and women
who wear the badge. We heard presentations about the history of the
department, passed around confiscated narcotics (and no, we didn’t do
any sampling), listened to a 911 caller screaming for help, watched a
K-9 “attack” a suspect, shot a gun on the police firing range and
even got screamed at by two “problem child” residents during a mock
car stop. The only thing I missed was the field trip to the Orange
County Jail and, after watching one too many prison movies, I’m OK
with that.
But what was most challenging for me -- other than nervously
listening to Officer Tom Wall’s presentation while standing inside a
city jail cell -- is that as a reporter, I’m an observer, a collector
of facts, anecdotes and perspectives. I’m not used to being one of
the actual participants. But during the 12-week academy, I, with the
rest of my class, was put in the middle of the action.
“The most important thing to every police officer is that we can
go home at the end of our shift,” Chief James Spreine said earlier
that first evening, encouraging our curiosity and questions. “There
are no secrets, no lies. Our credibility is the most important thing
we have.”
“We’re more critical of ourselves than any news media,” Sgt. Darin
Lenyi said. “We know our mistakes better than anyone else.”
The academy is the brainchild of Lenyi, who wrote his master’s
thesis on the feasibility of such a program within the department.
Apparently, he was so convincing that Spreine gave him the go-ahead
to initiate the program in Laguna. Seven classes later, the program
is an integral part of the training undertaken by department
volunteers and civilian staff.
One of the first things we learned is why cops become cops. Now
they might not admit it if you asked, but Capt. Paul Workman broke
their code of silence. The No. 1 reason, he said, is that cops are
people who want to help other people.
“Are you willing to wrestle with a drunk at 2 a.m. and fall down
on the sidewalk?” he asked.
Hmmm, I wondered. No.
“Police must be prepared to perform day care, marriage counseling
or combat,” he said. “Officers will put themselves in harm’s way to
protect and serve.”
One memorable evening, we got a taste of life on the beat through
mock car stops directed by Training Officer Eric Lee. Now I admit, I
had visions of conducting myself with Wonder Woman-like courage and
skill as my partner, Robin Levinson, and I set out with phony
revolvers, flashlights and rapier wits.
“You’re in control,” Lee said, demonstrating how to focus the
police car’s spotlights. “You tell [the suspects] what to do.”
Keeping his words in mind, our first car stop went well. The
driver ran a stop sign, but because she was polite and didn’t give us
any flak, I let her off with a kind but firm warning.
Feeling good about ourselves, Levinson and I approached the second
car stop. It was not so great.
We pulled over two well-heeled residents on their way to the
country club for drinks and dinner. Academy alumni Hesh Lensky and
Patty Bell greeted us with ear-splitting screams, insults and threats
to not only call the chief, but also the city manager to snatch our
badges.
Officer Bob Van Gorder, who, like all of the presenters, worked
his 12-hour shift and stayed until 9:30 p.m. that night for the
class, consoled us that every officer has had to experience this kind
of scenario many times during his or her career.
“Sometimes [citizens] do get belligerent,” he explained. “This
lets the average citizen put the shoe on the other foot.”
But then, it was time for Levinson and me to make our third car
stop, and well, let’s just say that the spirit of Wonder Woman was
not with us.
Lee said that we were patrolling at 2 a.m. in Downtown Laguna and
spotted a car with no lights driving around. We stopped them and
noticed three male suspects with rap music straining through the
rolled up windows.
Levinson was the contacting officer, expertly rapping the driver’s
window with her flashlight. As she tried to get him to cooperate, I
noticed a red thing laying on the floor between the front passenger’s
feet. A gun.
I remember that my first thought was, OK now what? How do I tell
my partner, who just entered an argument with the driver, that they
have a gun? How fast can I draw my gun?
The look on my face according to Lee and department volunteer,
Ross Fallah, was priceless. But the thing I took home with me is that
an officer never knows if or when he or she may have to make the
ultimate sacrifice to protect and serve. As the community realized on
Oct. 23, one of our own almost did.
Now, just one week after I graduated with class seven, I realize
my job compared to what officers must do on their shifts isn’t so
hard. I’m not asked to investigate an accident on Laguna Canyon Road
or drag an uncooperative arrestee out of the back of my car.
I simply write about it. But I write with a deeper appreciation
and understanding for the facts, the anecdotes and the perspectives I
collect from the members of the Laguna Beach Police Department.
* MARY A. CASTILLO is a news assistant for the Coastline Pilot.
She covers education, public safety and City Hall. She can be reached
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