Fallen Officers Remembered during Hispanic Heritage Month.

Washington, DC — In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, leaders of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF) and the Hispanic law enforcement community gathered Monday in Washington, DC, to pay tribute to the 637 Hispanic law enforcement officers who have died in the line of duty throughout U.S. history. The ceremony took place at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, where the names of all law enforcement officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice are engraved.

Joining NLEOMF Chairman and CEO
Craig W. Floyd in placing a wreath at the
Memorial's center medallion were Plainfield
(NJ) Police Detective Edwin Maldanado, East
Coast Vice President of the National Latino
Peace Officers Association (NLPOA);
DC Metropolitan Police Lieutenant Juan Espinal,
President of the NLPOA Washington, DC, Metro
Chapter; and Special Agent Zinnia James
of the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, representing the Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association.

"The walls of this Memorial are inscribed with the names of law enforcement officers of myriad races, ethnicities and national origins — all of them heroes who made their communities safer and our nation more secure," said Mr. Floyd. "Today, as our country begins its observance of Hispanic Heritage Month, we come to this sacred ground to pay our respects to the 637 Hispanic law enforcement officers who died in service to the community."

Added Detective Maldanado, "The NLPOA and our National President Roy Garivey are honored to partner with the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. We come to Washington, DC, to honor not only the service and sacrifice of Latino and Hispanic officers at the beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month, but to honor all American law enforcement officers who have given the ultimate sacrifice to keep our communities safe."


As a demonstration of its commitment to the law enforcement profession, the NLPOA recently pledged $100,000 to the capital campaign
to build the first-ever National Law Enforcement Museum, adjacent to the
National Memorial in the nation's capital.

NLEOMF research records indicate that the first Hispanic American law
enforcement officer to die in the line of duty was Joaquin De La Torre,
a deputy sheriff with the Monterey County (CA) Sheriff's Department.
On November 10, 1855, Deputy De La Torre and two other members of
his department were shot and killed while attempting to make an arrest.
He was one of only three Hispanic law enforcement to die in the line of
duty during the 19th Century.

During the first half of the 20th Century,
a total of 90 Hispanic officers made the
ultimate sacrifice. As the Hispanic American
population of the United States grew as a
whole, so did the number of Hispanics
serving in law enforcement — and the
sacrifices endured by these brave men
and women. From 1950 through 1999,
407 Hispanic officers died in the line of duty.

Since the year 2000, more than 140 Hispanic American officers have made
the ultimate sacrifice, including 20 in 2007. Over the last decade, 1 in 10 law enforcement fatalities in the United States has involved a Hispanic American officer.

Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins on September 15, is a nationwide
celebration of the contributions of people of Hispanic heritage to the history
of the United States.


Read the NLEOMF's recent American Police Beat article on Hispanic
officers killed in the line of duty.


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About the NLEOMF
Founded in 1984, the non-profit National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial
Fund works to increase public support for law enforcement by permanently
recording and appropriately commemorating the service and sacrifice of law
enforcement officers, and to provide information that promotes law enforcement
safety. In 1991, the NLEOMF dedicated the National Law Enforcement Officers
Memorial, on which the names of 18,274 officers who have died in the line of
duty throughout U.S. history are engraved. The NLEOMF is now leading the
effort to build the first-ever National Law Enforcement Museum. For more
information, visit www.nleomf.org.

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Hello and Welcome to the San Antonio Chapter of HAPCOA, the Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association!


Please feel free to look around. If you need more information, log on to our National Website site www.HAPCOA.org or contact one of our Executive Board members. We would be happy to assist you.

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A Brief History of HAPCOA

Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association (HAPCOA)

Established in 1973, is the oldest and largest association in the U.S. of Hispanic American command officers from law enforcement and criminal justice agencies at every level.

See A BRIEF HISTORY for more details.

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