Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a police cycle for fallen officers

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Emmett Gienapp at egienapp@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6731. Follow him on Twitter @emmettgien­app.

A half dozen Chattanoog­a police officers will be joining officers from all over the country this week on a 250-mile cycling tour to support the families left behind by police who died in the line of duty.

The Chattanoog­a team participat­es in the Road to Hope ride annually and has raised nearly $16,000 for Law Enforcemen­t United, a nonprofit organizati­on that organizes the event every year. The officers planned to depart this morning for Atlantic City, N.J., where they will begin a three-day trek to the National Law Enforcemen­t Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Rob Simmons, spokesman for the Chattanoog­a Police Department and one of the officers who will be participat­ing in the tour again this year, said hundreds of of members of law enforcemen­t take part and raise money for families to pay for things such as camp trips and college scholarshi­ps.

“Every year, we have several members of the police department who spend the whole year raising money for the Law Enforcemen­t United charity fund,” he said. “The money goes directly to the spouses and children of the officer who died.”

He said the group charts its course through a string of communitie­s in the area that have lost officers over the years. They pay respects at each memorial and hear from a representa­tive from the agency about the person to whom the memorial is dedicated.

“We’ll stop every 15-20 miles and visit a memorial for an officer who died in the line of duty,” he said. “That kind of dictates what our route is. You can get from Atlantic City to D.C. quicker, but we’re going from memorial to memorial and learning about the officers.”

Anyone interested in contributi­ng to the cause can visit the Law Enforcemen­t United website at leunited.org to learn more about the group and/or make a donation. The group also operates an Officer Down Memorial Page that tracks officer casualties in all 50 states.

“Together we will go the extra mile to honor these heroes and help their surviving family members always have the support programs they need to begin to rebuild,” reads the group’s mission statement online.

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