Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Henderson police shot a man armed with a knife Saturday morning at a strip mall.

Vegas Walmart scene of annual holiday event

- Julie Wootton-Greener Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on Twitter.

The options were overwhelmi­ng for 6-year-old Cathalina Correa while picking out underwear at Walmart.

Metropolit­an Police Department officer Alexis Hodler showed Cathalina, who was sitting in a shopping cart, a pack of underwear with printed characters from the Disney movie “Moana.”

“Do you like these ones?” Hodler asked Cathalina, whose hair was pulled back into three small pigtails.

“This one and the ‘Frozen’ ones,” said Cathalina, who was looking through a goodie bag full of snacks and a coloring book. She told Hodler: “I’m going to start coloring now.”

Cathalina was among more than 130 children who participat­ed Saturday in the Metropolit­an Police Department’s annual Santa Cops event at Walmart at 4505 W. Charleston Blvd.

Children were paired with officers to shop for toys and basic necessitie­s such as clothing and shoes.

A goal for Las Vegas police was to provide an opportunit­y for positive interactio­ns between the children and officers.

“A lot of people come into contact with police under not very good circumstan­ces,” Metro spokesman Larry Hadfield said. The Santa Cops event, he said, is a chance for police to reach out to the community during the holidays and give back.

Each child had $150 to spend during the event. The money was raised by the nonprofit Las Vegas

Metropolit­an Police Department Foundation.

The event benefited children from disadvanta­ged families; ill children whose families are struggling with medical bills; those from Child Haven, Clark County’s emergency shelter for abused and neglected children; and those who’ve been victims of crime.

Participat­ing children were nominated by officers, Hatfield said. There are a lot of “younger kids,” he said, but some are 12 or 13 years old.

More than 200 Metro employees volunteere­d their time to participat­e in the longtime holiday tradition.

Before the event, children and Metro employees gathered in an area of the Walmart parking lot that was sectioned off using yellow caution tape.

They watched as Santa Claus arrived in a police helicopter. SWAT and K-9 units and mounted police also were present at the event.

Children and officers entered the store through an indoor hallway decorated with a red carpet, fake snow, lights and decorated artificial trees and snowmen.

Inside the store, Metro officer Amy Wyatt, who works in community-oriented policing, was shopping with an 8-year-old girl. They had found jeans and a hair bow and were working on picking out shirts.

Officer Ed Serrano pushed 3-yearold Justus around in a shopping cart, which was full of “PAW Patrol” toys.

Near the boys clothing section, Serrano and a few other Metro employees encountere­d a traffic jam of shopping carts trying to navigate a narrow aisle. It’s all part of the holiday shopping experience.

 ?? Julie Wootton-Greener Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Metropolit­an Police Department officer Alexis Hodler shops with 6-year-old Cathalina Correa on Saturday at Walmart on West Charleston Boulevard. Hodler and the rest of the Santa Cops corps joined more than 130 children for some holiday shopping.
Julie Wootton-Greener Las Vegas Review-Journal Metropolit­an Police Department officer Alexis Hodler shops with 6-year-old Cathalina Correa on Saturday at Walmart on West Charleston Boulevard. Hodler and the rest of the Santa Cops corps joined more than 130 children for some holiday shopping.

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