Albuquerque Journal

Charity lends helping hand to law enforcemen­t

CopsDirect donates vital gear to cash-strapped department­s

- www.DianeDimon­d.com; e-mail to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com.

You know that emotionall­y satisfying feeling you get when you help someone in need? Aaron Negherbon gets that feeling every day. And now he’s doubling down on his generosity.

In 2010, Negherbon establishe­d TroopsDire­ct after a college friend serving as a Marine commander in Afghanista­n told him of the dire need for lifesaving supplies and equipment. Uncle Sam, he was told, had sent U.S. troops to fight on foreign soil without essentials like adequate body armor, medical supplies and footwear that lasted in the desert heat.

Negherbon (pronounced: NEAR-bon) sent a care package to his friend — filled with gun stethoscop­es, gauze and gun lubricant among other items — and was soon inundated with requests from other in-theater U.S. commanders. To date, Negherbon’s TroopsDire­ct charity has shipped about 3 million pounds of requested supplies to military personnel all over the world.

“I, as a civilian, assumed our troops had what that they needed to do their jobs,” Negherbon told me. “But I realized they didn’t so … if our military needs it, we ship it out.” And he ticked off a random list. “Uniforms, sturdy boots, helmets, stethoscop­es, stretchers, sniper supplies, helicopter life-support kits…” He pays for the items with charitable donations, steep vendor discounts and sometimes outright gifts from manufactur­ers.

Not content with that monumental feat, Negherbon has now turned his attention to helping beleaguere­d police and sheriff’s department­s across the United States, especially those in small towns.

After learning that officers in cashstrapp­ed department­s also go to work without lifesaving equipment Negherbon establishe­d a new organizati­on called CopsDirect. His plan: to do for cop shops what he’s already done for troops in need.

“It is sickening that there are police department­s that are actually having to do community bake sales and barbecues to try to get funds for things they need,” he said. And then, with his rapid-fire enthusiasm, Negherbon recited another list: this one of law enforcemen­t groups his new charity has already helped.

“We’re supplying department­s in the Carolinas, Massachuse­tts, Texas, Arizona, Wyoming, Ohio, Florida and New Mexico,” he said.

In early April, Negherbon says, CopsDirect sent the police department in Taos 50 first-responder trauma kits the police were not able to buy for themselves. Since officers are often the first on the scene of an accident, these kits are stocked with all sorts of life-saving items including a tourniquet, bandages, trauma shears, gauze, a pressure cup for wounds and rubber gloves. How a gunshot or other serious injury is treated in the first 60 minutes is crucial to survivabil­ity.

“We believe what we are providing to these police department­s is going to save the lives of the public and, God forbid, the lives of police officers as well,” Negherbon said.

Many department­s have reported that they don’t have funds to stock Naloxone (the antidote for drug overdose) or supplies for their K9 units. There’s just not enough money for new communicat­ions equipment, body cameras, Taser guns, specialize­d helmets, night vision goggles or enhanced body armor.

I hadn’t realized that a bullet-proof vest has a shelf life and is degraded by sweat, water and regular human wear and tear. They should be replaced every five years for maximum safety.

The founder of these two unique charities and I had a frank discussion about how tough it is to be in law enforcemen­t these days. The situation in even a small community can turn into a war zone in an instant. One never knows when civil unrest, catastroph­ic weather, a dam burst or a forest fire might strike. Or where another mass shooting or act of terrorism might occur.

“Some department­s are diligently working to create a first-responder kit for mass shootings,” Negherbon told me. “Lots of department­s just don’t have equipment to take on these bad guys who take over schools, theaters or start shooting in malls,” he said.

“The great thing about CopsDirect,” its founder said, is “if another (disaster) happened again … we could tap into our channel of vendors and get supplies out the next morning.”

We all probably assume that our tax dollars are enough to pay for what our police officers need to do their jobs. But, obviously, it is not.

Negherbon’s organizati­ons are duly registered 501(c)(3) charities, and his open financial records boast that more than 90 cents on the donated dollar goes toward supply fulfillmen­t, not administra­tive costs. He says he quit a rather lucrative job in the real estate industry to concentrat­e full time on his mission.

“I take a salary, but compared to other originatio­ns, my salary is very modest,” he said. “Sometimes there’s a higher calling in life than how many zeros are on the end of your W-2.”

I thought you’d like to know that a man based in San Ramon, Calif., — someone you will probably never meet — might be helping make your community safer.

 ??  ?? CRIME AND JUSTICE Diane Dimond
CRIME AND JUSTICE Diane Dimond

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