Christmas 1990, in Reno, Nevada.
It would be my first Christmas Eve rolling my own patrol ride as a Police Officer, working a swing shift from 1500 hours to 0100 hours.
Editor’s Note: Our 2023 Christmas Story, about a fictional Trooper who got a visit from Santa Claus, was well-received by the RevolverGuy audience, who was (as always) generous with their praise. It was a good story, and I was proud of it, but it couldn’t measure up to the holiday memories it evoked from the real-life lawmen in our audience. Their true stories were much more powerful than our fictional account of “Cops and Christmas” could ever be.
This account from my friend Mike Lessman is one of those stories. Like most “cop stories,” it’s a great tale, but I know you’ll quickly recognize, as I did, that it’s much more than that. Mike’s story is a testament to the way that Jesus Christ works through us to accomplish His will, and a reminder of His eternal love for us.
Our police officers do the Lord’s work every day, and I think Mike’s story is a good reminder of that. I’m honored that he’s chosen to share it with us, and even more honored to call him my friend.
As we gather this season, to celebrate the birth of our Savior, and to give thanks for all of His gifts, let’s remember to say a prayer for our officers and their families. They’re a special gift from God, and a blessing for us all.
Merry Christmas,
-Mike
I had been a police officer for approximately 18 months, and had been out of the FTO program for almost a year–still learning an ever-changing, calls for service job, where the day-to-day was never the same, and an adventure was always just around the next corner . . .
By the time my shift would end, it would be Christmas Day, bringing the Joy that comes with it . . . for most.
In Service
One of my first calls for service came as I was leaving the motor pool in my Black and White 1987 Plymouth Fury. I was off to one of the less affluent neighborhoods in South Reno, to respond to a Missing Person report. An Adult Hispanic Male, early-40s, with a mental handicap, had wandered off from his family’s new home.
When I arrived on scene, I met with an upset family. The wife stated that her husband, the father of her children, had suffered from a brain tumor. He’d had an invasive medical treatment to surgically remove it a few years ago, which left him mentally handicapped with the capacity of (approximately) a six-year-old child. If left unattended, he would wander off into the neighborhood. They had just moved into this neighborhood a couple of days ago, and were unloading a moving truck today, when their family member vanished.
in peril
They had just moved from our sister-city of Sparks, Nevada (there’s an old saying that, “Reno is so close to Hell, you can see Sparks”). Our missing male had wandered a few times from his old residence in Sparks, whose Police Department had taken a missing persons report a couple of months earlier, and the family still had a flyer from this occurrence.
While getting a statement from the wife, I could see their children (who were of elementary and middle school age) were visibly upset, since they just had moved in, and their father didn’t know the neighborhood. Nor did the neighborhood know him–on previous occasions, concerned neighbors had returned him home, knowing that he would wander off, if not kept under a strict eye, but we couldn’t count on that this time. Of major concern: We had just had a cold front move into the area, and the early morning hours were hovering around -15 degrees. Forty to Fifty-degree swings are not uncommon in the high-altitude desert during the winter season . . . where you wear a down coat in the morning, shirt sleeves in the afternoon, and go back to a down coat, as soon as the sun drops below the western mountains.
After writing her statement, the wife pleaded with me to attempt to find her husband. She was acutely aware that the dropping temperatures could result in a disastrous Christmas morning for her and her children.
the search begins
I finished taking the report and contacted Sparks PD for any further information they could provide on previous locations where our missing male had been located on other occasions, and to see if they could check those locations now, to see if he wandered back to them, or his old residence. Dispatch was advised of the missing male’s description and announced the ATL (attempt to locate) on the airways every hour, to remind officers to keep an eye out.
After making several missing person flyers, I headed out to distribute them, and notified my Sergeant that I would be occupied for a few hours, trying to locate the missing male. I told the Sergeant that if we didn’t find our male this evening, we would surely find him by morning (and not in the good kind of way). He agreed, and told me to stay on the case for a few hours. I got busy passing out flyers at local businesses and casinos.
Several hours went by with no success. We had a few possible sightings, but nothing fruitful was discovered. Six hours into my shift, I went back in-service, to help our patrol team shag calls for service. I kept an eye on pedestrians as I rolled from call to call of families acting in a not-so-Christmas spirit, on this Christmas Eve. A little voice in my head kept reminding me that if I didn’t find our missing male tonight, patrol units would find him in the morning, frozen to death on Christmas, which weighed heavy on my mind.
intervention
At approximately 2330 hours, the temperature had dropped dramatically. It was now about -2 degrees and I was heading eastbound to a domestic violence (DV) call, crossing our main street that runs multiple miles from the north end to the south end of our city (Virginia Street–Business 395, at the time). I then spotted a male that matched our missing person report on the southeast corner of the intersection. His clothing matched the description, but he had his hood pulled up, so I couldn’t see his face.
I told dispatch to send another unit to cover the DV call, and notified them that I had possibly located my missing person. I pulled to the curb line, activated my emergency lights (to divert traffic around my vehicle, and possibly gain the attention of our missing male), and exited my patrol vehicle to make contact.
It was him. I spoke with him about finding his family. He was cold and shivering, and appeared confused. He had a jacket pocket full of candy bars that he had apparently taken/shoplifted from a supermarket, trying to stay warm and finding something to eat. After shaking him down, I placed him in the back of the vehicle and took him to a local hospital to ensure he was not hypothermic.
While the hospital staff was attending to our missing person, I made telephone contact with the family, telling them that I had found their Husband / Father, and that he was in the ER in good condition. I told them we were making sure he had not become hypothermic during his adventure, and that he was no worse for wear, after he wandered off.
It was the BEST Christmas gift I could ever give that family . . . and a Christmas Eve I will remember forever.
reflection
I would not understand the gift the Lord had given me, until more than a decade later. He had given me divine intervention multiple times in my life, placing me in the right place, at the right time, to save lives. I realized this during a reflection period after a successful hostage rescue, and also realized the connection to an event that happened 22 years earlier, around midnight, on a lonely, deserted train station platform in NYC. On that night, at age 15, I had saved a gentleman in his 70’s from choking to death from an obstructed airway, by performing a Heimlich maneuver that I had only learned a few weeks earlier . . .
But that’s a story for another time. Merry Christmas!
-Michael Lessman
This is an example of the day in and day out services of modern American law enforcement, yet it is largely ignored by the news media: quietly looking out for, and saving, the most vulnerable in our communities.
That is a great Christmas story Sir. Thank you for sharing it with us! It reminded me of the many Christmas seasons and other holidays I grumbled about having to work at the time, but then realized later, I was no doubt there for a reason and sent to those calls for service not just by dispatch. The good Lord not only sent me during those troubled times but also looked out for me while I was there. God Bless and Merry Christmas, may we continue to watch out for each other and stay safe everyone.
Thanks Mark. I have no doubt that you were being dispatched by a higher power, at times! Merry Christmas!
Absolutely, Spencer. They’re more interested in telling you about the bad cops, not the good ones we hold in such esteem, here.
Great story. People who are anti-police these last few years try to pretend officers aren’t often in the role of saving angels!
Indeed, Dick! They don’t understand how quickly everything–EVERYTHING–would fall apart without good men and women in uniform.
Thanks for the great story! It brought to mind similar calls I worked as a Reserve Officer for a large west coast city’s police force. Since we almost never were assigned a patrol district of our own, Reserve Officers had discretionary time to “find stuff”. I’ve found suspects in a bedroom closet, a PTSD – affected Vietnam Vet wandering away from home, dementia patients who snuck out of their care facility, peeping Toms slithering away from the scene, and the like. My favorite find was a few days before Christmas, when a local motorcycle club (actually, good guy bikers) was to make a toy delivery on their motorcycles to a children’s hospital. Santa’s Harley Davidson chopper broke down somewhere along the route to the hospital. I was sent in search of Santa and after about a half hour of back-tracking, there he was, astride his dead bike, in his complete, red Santa suit, with a big bag of toys! Boy, the kids loved it when we rolled up at the main entrance, blue lights and siren, and Santa stepped out of my car. Wonderfully memorable to this day!
Vulture, that’s a GREAT story! Thanks for sharing it with us! Merry Christmas to you and yours
Thanks, Mike for emphasizing the reason for the season, and for bringing your friend’s story to the pages of RG. Thank you, Mike Lessman, for telling it. I have no doubt God placed you where he needed you multiple times during your career as a police officer (and before it) to do his will. I don’t know how anybody makes it through a police career without faith. Your story reminded me of times in my career that God used me to help others, and times where I wouldn’t have gone home were it not for his Angels. Blessed are the Peacemakers! Merry Christmas, all.
I don’t know any foxhole or patrol car atheists!
I never had the opportunity to find someone who had gone missing, so I can not relate to the feeling of the job well done in that regard. In the early years, I had no Frau und Kinder (that’s a wife and kids for those in Rio Linda), or other family, so I usually offered to work double shift on Christmas Eve midnight through Christmas Day morning (loved that comp time for double shifts) and other family type holidays so the married troopers could get some family time. Christmas Eve was for the most part low key, with truck stop dining, and lots of coffee, and dispatch checking in on you every 30 minutes to make sure you’re still around – Unlike New Year’s Eve which hopped all night without much time catch your breath much less chow. If the mood was right, we might call in a faux pursuit of a fat guy in a red suit erratically driving at a high rate of speed in what appeared to be a sled. Imagine doing a PIT maneuver on a speeding sleigh, and not laughing in the process. Oh to have had dash cams in the 1970s and 1980s.
A downer to working the doubles on Christmas Eve would be the dispatch to MVAs involving families on their way to visit relatives. Minor benderfenders were innocuous though highly frustrating to those involved. In more serious metal crunchers, watching EMS taking folks off to ER, having gifts that got scrambled in wreckage, and watching what started off as good times turn sour could only leave one feeling sorry for those affected. Bodies heal, cars get replaced, insurance adjusters get cursed, gifts get collected and everone eventually would make it to their destinations. There was nothing worse than working traffic fatalities on Christmas Eve. Talk about taking all the joy out of everything, and it left me asking myself on too many occasions “what in the h3-ell am I doing here”. I would try to keep a straight face, but apparently on nights like that, those coming on to second shift to relieve me could tell I’d lost the Christmas spirit.
Police work is a mix of the good, the bad, and the ugly (not to be confused with the movie of the same name). The good is where you are able to finish your shift and go home in one piece. The bad is seeing folks physically injured at the hands of someone else, or you being injured and getting that ambulance ride to the hospital, or sitting in court for hours on end waiting to testify. The ugly is having to knock on the front door of someone’s home to give them bad news, or to be a pallbearer for an officer who came to his End Of Watch. Making it to retirement is sort of a reward in and of itself. It means that you survived the worst of the human experience, and you came through it with a twisted personality and a warped sense of humor to show for it.
This is why we value the good men and women who do it–the ones who do the job with honor, and give of themselves, to help their fellow man. They’re a blessing to us all.