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Cops are great


Adam

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Colorado deputy shares honor with officer who saved her life

Colorado deputy shares honor with officer who saved her life
 

Escondido police Sgt. Jeff Valdivia saved the life of now El Paso County Deputy Natalie Young when she was an infant

The life of a new Colorado deputy came full circle last week at her graduation from the sheriff's academy.

A Facebook post by the Escondido Police Department in California shared the heartwarming moment one of its veteran officers traveled to Colorado for the pinning ceremony of the new deputy, whom he saved as a baby.

In November 2000, Escondido officer Jeff Valdivia responded to a home in south Escondido to assist state parole with a search, the department said.

During the search, Valdivia found a little girl, believed to be about six weeks old, lying on a bed next to her 17-year-old mother with a meth pipe nearby.

The department said the infant girl was underweight, and her mother struggled with drugs. Valdivia took the baby, who was a "clear neglect victim," and placed her in protective custody.

Over two decades later in October 2022, the woman became a sheriff's deputy in El Paso County, Colorado and wanted that officer to know she was adopted into a loving family and "turned out all right."

Her mother found the officer, who was still at Escondido PD, and invited now Sgt. Valdivia to Colorado Springs to meet Deputy Natalie Young, the little girl he once saved.

In a special moment, Sgt. Valdivia had the honor of pinning El Paso County Deputy Young's badge on her uniform.

Escondido police Sgt. Jeff Valdivia pins the badge on the uniform of El Paso County Deputy Natalie Young following her graduation ceremony.

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2 hours ago, Redondo said:

Colorado deputy shares honor with officer who saved her life

Colorado deputy shares honor with officer who saved her life
 

Escondido police Sgt. Jeff Valdivia saved the life of now El Paso County Deputy Natalie Young when she was an infant

The life of a new Colorado deputy came full circle last week at her graduation from the sheriff's academy.

A Facebook post by the Escondido Police Department in California shared the heartwarming moment one of its veteran officers traveled to Colorado for the pinning ceremony of the new deputy, whom he saved as a baby.

In November 2000, Escondido officer Jeff Valdivia responded to a home in south Escondido to assist state parole with a search, the department said.

During the search, Valdivia found a little girl, believed to be about six weeks old, lying on a bed next to her 17-year-old mother with a meth pipe nearby.

The department said the infant girl was underweight, and her mother struggled with drugs. Valdivia took the baby, who was a "clear neglect victim," and placed her in protective custody.

Over two decades later in October 2022, the woman became a sheriff's deputy in El Paso County, Colorado and wanted that officer to know she was adopted into a loving family and "turned out all right."

Her mother found the officer, who was still at Escondido PD, and invited now Sgt. Valdivia to Colorado Springs to meet Deputy Natalie Young, the little girl he once saved.

In a special moment, Sgt. Valdivia had the honor of pinning El Paso County Deputy Young's badge on her uniform.

Escondido police Sgt. Jeff Valdivia pins the badge on the uniform of El Paso County Deputy Natalie Young following her graduation ceremony.

That probably mad Mr. Valdivia feel really old too 

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  • 2 weeks later...
1 hour ago, Blarg said:

The more frightening part is the judicial are compliant with the corruption. This is a breakdown of any societal checks and balances. 

So what you're saying is that this is a systemic injustice, and the bad actors are merely victims of the system they're a part of. 

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Nope. I'm saying the bigger problem is the judicial. The individuals involved in the crime cannot exist without protections from prosecution. It is Rico Act level of organized criminal behavior. 

Think of it as which is more important to rid of, the street level enforcer that shakes down a couple of businesses or the crime boss that makes sure they never get prosecuted? 

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