Emergency Chaplains Report

Thursday, October 29, 2009

DURHAM OFFICERS WOUNDED IN LINE OF DUTY

OFFICER RECALLS DAY HE WAS SHOT
October 27, 2009
By KEITH UPCHURCH
kupchurch@heraldsun.com;

DURHAM -- A police officer who was shot on duty in July said his will to live, support from the community and faith in God helped pull him through."I've been told that I almost didn't make it, so to be here at this point right now -- I'm really pleased about that,'' Officer Damon Youmans, 32, said at a press conference Tuesday at Durham police headquarters. "I feel very fortunate and blessed.''

Youmans, a former New York City police officer who joined the Durham force this year, was shot in the abdomen July 2 while responding to a call about gunfire and a break-in at South Square Townhomes at 3300 Shannon Road.

Doctors at Duke University Hospital used more than 60 units of blood to save his life. Youmans said he knew he had been shot the instant it happened. "I felt the pain. I felt the burning. I didn't see blood and couldn't quite figure out where I was hit, but I knew I was hit somewhere.''

"I remember being transported in the back of a police car to a waiting ambulance, and the coldness of the emergency room,'' Youmans said. ''They're there to help, but it's a cold place. I was sedated and taken up to the [operating room].''

Youmans said he never thought about dying. "It wasn't even a thought, really. I knew once they got me to Duke, I would be alright.''

Three months later, Youmans, looking fit and alert Tuesday, said he's ''not 100 percent, but pretty close.'' He's still undergoing physical therapy and has lost 10 to 15 pounds, but some of the weight is returning. He's back at work on light duty, and his goal is to return to street duty by year's end or the first of next year.

Youmans said he has no hard feelings toward the man accused of shooting him. The suspect, Thomas Rashawn Monroe, 23, is awaiting trial in the shooting.

Youmans said he's been "surprised and grateful'' for the outpouring of support from the community. "I just want to say 'thank you' for all your support. I think it's part of the reason I'm up and about and recovering so well, so quickly, because of all the prayers from the citizens.''

He said the episode hasn't changed his desire to stay with the Durham Police Department and has no plans to retire. "I'm just getting started. ''

Youmans said he's wanted to be a police officer since he was a kid, and his injury hasn't changed that. "It hasn't changed my desire to serve the community,'' he said. "If anything, it's made it even stronger.''

When misfortune strikes, Youmans said, ''you stay focused and get back on your horse and ride. That's my attitude.''


WOUNDED DEPUTY RECALLS SHOOTOUT
September 9, 2009
By KEITH UPCHURCH
kupchurch@heraldsun.com

DURHAM -- He calls it "the scariest time of my life."

But Durham County Sheriff's Investigator Morial Whitaker knows that the bullet he took in his foot last week in the line of duty could have been worse. And he's grateful to his family, friends and co-workers for their support since that painful, dramatic night last Wednesday.

Whitaker, 34, a gang investigator, was shot during an exchange of gunfire outside Cracker Barrel restaurant at 3703 Hillsborough Road during the culmination of a drug investigation, which ended in the arrest of three men.

A single bullet lodged in Whitaker's right foot. "They tried to get the bullet out the night of the incident with a minor procedure when I was still awake," Whitaker said in an interview Tuesday. "But the bullet was too far in, so they couldn't get it.

They said it's not considered an emergency," so he's set for surgery today at Duke University Hospital to remove it.

"It was the scariest time of my life -- to look at a gun barrel and actually have it pointed at you, and you can see the fire coming from the barrel, and you know that the bullet is for you," he said. "And then immediately, I tried to get cover. I got down and did a crab crawl, and unfortunately, one of the bullets hit me in the foot."

At first, Whitaker said, the bullet felt like "debris or a rock had hit me.""I didn't think anything of it. I didn't know what was going on. I just heard a lot of gunfire. I didn't know if this guy was just dumping the bullets toward me. I didn't know what was going on, because I was crouched behind the vehicle."

After the gunfire, he said, "I kind of sat there for a bit to get my composure, and that's when I felt my foot kind of tingle. Then it started burning, and I stood up to try to walk it off. I couldn't walk on it, because it felt like I stood on a nail."

He said he fell back to the ground, "and then it started throbbing real bad, like I was being hit by a hammer on the side of my foot."Whitaker said he looked at his boot and saw a small hole in it.

"I was trying to figure out if I had gotten grazed. And then I kind of limped toward the other detectives. They saw me, and asked if I was OK, and I said: 'I think I might have been shot in the foot.'

"By Tuesday, he said, the pain was nearly gone."But unfortunately, [after today's outpatient surgery,] I'll have to start over with the healing process."

Whitaker wants to return to work by the start of next month, although he concedes that may be pushing it. But mentally, he said, he's doing well.

"I don't think it's hit me yet 100 percent. I sit back and think: 'Wow, I got shot.' It's kind of surreal."

But what stands out in his mind isn't just the pain or drama, but the support he's gotten. "My family and friends are pretty much what's keeping me going right now -- the support that I'm getting. And that includes my co-workers in the sheriff's office."

Three men face charges stemming from the incident.Olvin Alexander Arenda Hernandez, 24, of 1506 Bungalow Ave., has been charged with trafficking in powder cocaine, possession of cocaine with intent to sell or deliver more than a pound of the drug, maintaining a vehicle for the sale of cocaine, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury and assault with a firearm on a law enforcement officer.

Victor Oscar Olguin-Bravo, 21, of 917 Virgie St., Apt. A, and Richanel Sala Sala, 19, of 2816 Ross Road, Apt. 10G, face the same drug offense charges.

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