REVISED
Los Angeles: Los Angeles Police Department has supported the National Police Officers Memorial since it was dedicated in 1991, by then President George H. W. Bush. May 15 th is designated at National Police Officers Memorial Day, and the entire week is set aside as Police Memorial Week.
In addition to local ceremonies planned, LAPD officers will participate a number of ceremonies and fundraisers in Washington, D.C. The itinerary is listed at the end of this release.
Assistant Chief Sharon Papa will lead a group of about two dozen LAPD officers who will represent LAPD at the various ceremonies, including the commemoration of LAPD Ricardo Lizarraga, whose name will be inscribed on the memorial. Officer Lizarraga was the sole LAPD officer killed in the line of duty last year, February 20, 2004.
A separate contingent of LAPD officers, who are members of the Southern California Chapter of the Police Unity Tour, will arrive in Washington, D.C. on May 12, 2005, having ridden bicycles from New York City ‘s Ground Zero to the National Memorial, some five hundred miles. The local chapters of the tour ride to raise money for the memorial. The leader of the Southern California Chapter of the Police Unity Tour is LAPD Officer Craig Winter, a Senior Lead Officer in Pacific Division. Of the chapter’s 37 participants, 29 LAPD officers, as well as members of Burbank, Riverside, LA Unified Schools, Rialto police departments, and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department have riders in the chapter. The first event in the capital will welcome the Police Unity Tour riders with a police motorcade escort.
The following LAPD officers will be available for interviews and comments at the events listed below:
Chief of Police William J. Bratton
Assistant Chief Sharon Papa
Lieutenant Don Schwartzer
Officer Craig Winter
Officer Sandra Escalante.
ITINERARY (all dates and times are Eastern Daylight Savings time zone)
May 12 2:00 PM Welcome Police Unity Tour riders
National Police Memorial, Judiciary Square Stop of Metro Subway
May 13 5:00 PM Candlelight Vigil (includes families of fallen officers)
National Police Memorial, Judiciary Square Stop of Metro Subway
May 14 8:00 AM LAPD lays wreath at Tomb of the Unknowns
Arlington National Cemetary
May 14 6:00 PM Emerald Society and Pipe and Band March
Check local information for route of parade; begins New Jersey Avenue and F Street
May 15 7:30 AM Reading of names of LAPD officers listed on the memorial
National Police Memorial, Judiciary Square Stop of Metro Subway
May 15 10:00 AM Arrival of Motorcade of Survivors
West lawn of US Capitol Building
FACTS RELATED TO NATIONAL POLICE MEMORIAL WEEK
Fourteen police officers were killed in the line of duty from California in 2004. LAPD Officer Ricardo Lizarraga was killed in the line of duty, February 20, 2004, while assigned to Newton Area.
There are more than 870,000 sworn law enforcement officers in the USA, the highest number ever. Women make up 11.7 percent of the total.
There were 1.4 million violent crimes in the US last year. Violent crime peaked at 4 million in 1993. It has declined 35% nationally since then.
The first recorded law enforcement death in the US was in 1792. Since then, more than 16,500 officers have been killed
In the last 10 years, 1,649 officers have died in the line of duty, an average of 1 every 54 hours, or 164 per year. There were 153 officers killed in the line of duty in the US last year.
On average, more than 57,000 officers are assaulted each year in the US, resulting in some 17,000 injuries.
In 2004, in Los Angeles, 813 LAPD officers were assaulted. Thirty-two (32) of those officers were shot at, and one of them, Officer Lizarraga, was shot and killed. By comparison, 2370 persons were victims of gunfire assaults last year in Los Angeles.