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Norfolk Office Down Memorial Challenge Coin
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Norfolk police seek man who fatally shot police officer
NORFOLK – Police are looking for a man in a late-model forest green Jeep Cherokee in connection with the fatal shooting of a police officer in the Park Place neighborhood at about 4 p.m. today. Police described the man as weighing 200 pounds, 6’1 or 6’2” with shoulder-length dreadlocks, wearing a green jacket. The last four digits of the license plate may be 7775. The vehicle has tinted windows. The suspect is described as black, 6 feet tall, with dreadlocks. Ollan Burruss, a police spokesman, said the shooting occurred about 4 p.m. on DeBree Ave. near the intersection with 28th Street. The officer was shot while standing outside his vehicle. Burruss said the officer apparently did not discharge his weapon. Some residents reported hearing two or three shots. A cadre of fellow officers descended on the scene within minutes and detectives fanned out en masse across the neighborhood questioning residents and passers-by. Officers with K-9 dogs were also on the ground in the area. At the scene of the shooting, forensic technicians busied themselves gathering evidence amid a series of numbered yellow markers they had placed beside items of interest. Shortly after the shooting, police responded to Interstate 64 in the Military Highway area where there were reports that a suspect’s vehicle had been located. But police later said the person they were questioning was not being identified as a suspect. Burruss said there was no apparent motive for the shooting. |
By MATTHEW ROY, The Virginian-Pilot NORFOLK — The police officer fatally shot Friday afternoon had no warning that a man was about to open fire, police said Saturday. By MATTHEW ROY, The Virginian-Pilot NORFOLK — The police officer fatally shot Friday afternoon had no warning that a man was about to open fire, police said Saturday. Medallions preserve slain Norfolk officer's memory
The coins sell for $20 each, with $15 of each sale going to Reaves' widow, Treva Rose Reaves, and two young children, Reagan and Ryan. "It's a lasting reminder of what he sacrificed," Norfolk police dispatcher Sandy Smith said. "People forget." Smith, 41, of Virginia Beach, and her husband, Norfolk police officer Ray Smith, 52 - who worked in the same platoon as Reaves - are leading the effort and have sold about 400 so far. ![]() WANT TO BUY ONE? To buy a coin, contact Sandy or Ray Smith at (757) 233-9574 or the manufacturer at The coins are similar to a silver dollar in size and heft, but are slick-surfaced and in color. The idea came from Jay Javey, a retired Virginia Beach police officer who had a similar coin made for Rodney Pocceschi, a Virginia Beach officer killed in the line of duty in 2003. Javey has since retired to Arizona and is making the coins not just for fellow officers but also for soldiers and others involved in the military. Sales of the Pocceschi coin raised $22,000 for the dead officer's family, Javey said. "It turned out to be a real good fundraising tool for sad occasions like this, unfortunately," Javey said. "People don't hesitate to donate money to the family of an officer or a solider, and now they are getting a coin to hold." Thomas A. Porter, accused of shooting Reaves to death on Oct. 28, is in jail awaiting capital murder charges. The officer was killed while investigating a complaint about an armed man on DeBree Avenue in the Park Place neighborhood. Sandy Smith said that working as a dispatcher brings a unique closeness to officers, some of whom they never may meet. And working when an officer is in trouble makes an already-tense job worse. "There's a whole different mood in the room," Smith said. "It's like one of our family members dying." Smith has been spending her off hours delivering Reaves memorial coins to buyers, including many Norfolk businesses the officer frequented. She and her husband also have one of the Reaves coins at home, along with a Pocceschi coin. "When I'm gone, my grandchildren may find that in my possessions," Smith said. "It's something - it's tangible, it's in their hand, they can remember."
Reach Michael McNarney at mike@mcnarney.com.
This story originally ran in the Norfolk Compass on Feb. 23. Check the Community Channel each day for occasional stories from the Suffolk Sun, Norfolk Compass, Virginia Beach Beacon, Chesapeake Clipper and Portsmouth Currents. Please click here to send us questions, suggestions or comments about stories featured on the Community Channel.
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