Son of fallen officer gets his father’s actual squad car

Kleenex time.

From EOnline.com:

Tanner Brownlee from Colorado attended an auction on Wednesday night to raise money for C.O.P.S. (Concerns of Police Survivors) with one goal on his mind: to win his father’s squad car.

Tanner’s dad, Deputy Sam Brownlee, was killed in the line of duty after a police chase in 2010. His Dodge Charger was one of his prized possessions and 19-year-old Tanner was on a mission to buy a piece of his father’s memory.

From WestWord.com in 2010:

Sam Brownlee, first Weld County deputy killed in line of duty since 1940: Tributes pour in

by Michael Roberts

The last Weld County deputy to die while doing his job was Earl Bucher way back in 1940 — until yesterday, that is. Deputy Sam Brownlee was allegedly slain by Reuben Reyes, twenty, following a chase that reached speeds topping 100 miles per hour. Afterward, Reyes himself was killed by officers.

According to the Greeley Tribune, Reyes stole the car of a woman he knew mid-morning yesterday in Morgan County. Officers from Morgan County and the community of Wiggins gave chase for more than an hour, with Weld County joining in when Reyes passed into that jurisdiction. So, too, did the Colorado State Patrol, and while its use of stop-sticks near Kersey didn’t disable Reyes’s vehicle right away, the car eventually lost a tire in Greeley.

Bystanders report that officers surrounded the car — but then shots rang out, and Brownlee went down. At that point, the officers opened fire on Reyes, who reportedly went by the street names “Smiley” and “Demon.” His rap sheet includes offenses for felony menacing and driving under the influence, as well as an assault beef that was subsequently dismissed.

Brownlee left behind two children, two stepchildren and a wife who works for the Weld County District Attorney’s Office. As noted by the Tribune, he was a training officer, charged with helping his peers survive dangerous situations.

Continuing, from EOnline.com:

“It’d mean a lot to me and my brother. We’ve been through a lot,” he told WKBW.

“This is kind of the end of Sam’s legacy here. It’s the last tangible thing we have that he was connected to,” added Sheriff Steve Reams.

It gets better. And more surprising.

Tanner applauded the amount of money his dad’s car raised, because after all, it was for a good cause (C.O.P.S. provides help for family members and coworkers of officers killed in the line of duty), but he was about to have an even better reason to celebrate.

The second Steve Wells got his hand on the keys to the Dodge Charger patrol car, he turned to the grieving son who lost his father and said, “Tanner, here’s your car.”

Humanity.

We need more of it.

BZ

 

The startling goodness of people

Weld County Deputy Samuel K. Brownlee, a law enforcement officer in Colorado, had his life cut short on duty by a carjacker on November 23rd of 2010. He was disarmed in a physical confrontation, shot three times and killed by the suspect. He left behind a wife and children. One son was named Tanner Brownlee, who was 15 when his father was slain.

His father’s actual patrol vehicle, the one he specifically drove, subsequently came up for auction in 2015.

The son wanted to purchase the car in order to keep the memory of his father alive as long as possible.

Then something brilliant occurred.

This is called humanity.

This is called the goodness of people.

What a stellar display. One man paid $60,000 for a car worth $12,500 with 147,000 miles on the odometer, and then turned the keys over to the son, Tanner Brownlee, of the fallen officer.

That man was Steve Wells, a rancher, who’d made money from oil drilling on his property yet knew hard times as he was adopted himself.

“It never crossed my mind not to,” Wells said. “I wanted to hand the keys to that young man.”

Wells is a man who embodies America. A man who instills hope. Because he himself had no real father but was not aborted.

When Wells learned of the special auction of the fallen deputy’s retired patrol car, he knew he found a perfect opportunity to give back in a big way.

“Here was a man who lost his life as a deputy sheriff for the people of Weld County,” Wells said. “His son wanted something to remember his dad by and the fact that that young man could sit behind the wheel of that car and look through the windshield that his dad did was extremely important to me. It was just something I felt I had to do.”

It was time, he thought, to pay it forward.

“When the auction was over and I walked up and I handed him those keys. That is a lifetime moment. It was for him and it was for me,” Wells said. “That was a moment that, for me, meant everything.”

People insist we’re not an exceptional nation.

BZ