The Commercial Appeal

Louisville shows up to aid officer

Strangers stood between officer and hostile crowd

- Michael Clevenger Louisville Courier Journal USA TODAY NETWORK

LOUISVILLE, Kentucky – Officer Galen Hinshaw heard the call over the radio. One of his fellow officers was in trouble.

A crowd of protesters had marched to Second and Main streets and surrounded a police cruiser in Louisville. The officer inside radioed for help as protesters – strobed in blue and red patrol car lights – banged on the car’s hood and windshield.

Hinshaw, a Fourth Division patrol officer and part of Louisville Metro Police Department’s Special Response Team, drove as close as he could to the scene. As he got out of his cruiser, he was surrounded by protesters.

Some yelled profanitie­s. Others balled their fists.

He made his way, alone, through the crowd wearing 40 pounds of safety gear: a baton, vest, helmet and body armor.

As the crowd grew, Hinshaw detoured to the front of Bearno’s pizzeria so he could keep his back to the wall. He needed a place to stop and reassess the situation, to be sure that nobody could get behind him. He also needed to keep an eye on his trapped colleague.

Overhead, a police helicopter occasional­ly flooded the intersecti­on with a spotlight. Sirens pierced the air, and protesters chanted ever louder.

Hinshaw’s nearest help was still blocks away. The crowd moved closer, and the yelling got angrier. Protesters hurled questions at him.

“Are you one of the good ones?” “How do you think we feel?” One women screamed, “All gas, no brakes!”

He tried to respond but was drowned out by the cacophony of sirens and yelling.

“We do care, man, we do care,” he said.

The 32-year-old Hinshaw was scared. If one person lunged, everyone would jump in, he knew.

The Special Response Team trains once a month, but that hadn’t quite prepared Hinshaw for this.

“Here we go,” he thought. “I’m preparing to be injured.”

Hinshaw kept his voice calm as he radioed in: “Charlie 12, this is a 10-30. We need help.” 10-30 is code for officer needs help.

He watched people’s hands in the crowd, looking for weapons and scanning for things thrown from protesters in the back.

It was at this moment that a man emerged from the crowd in a red University of Louisville mask covering the lower half of his face. He put himself between the closest protester and Hinshaw.

The Louisville Courier Journal captured the moment in a photograph that has now been shared across the nation.

Local entreprene­ur Darrin Lee Jr. spotted Hinshaw and the advancing crowd and linked arms with the stranger in the red mask.

“Once I saw the guy with the red mask step up, I said, ‘I gotta step up,’ ” said Lee, who also runs a child care center. “It was reactive. I just went. I really thought at that moment, ‘Protect him. It really isn’t his fault.’ ” Lee said.

Lee was also worried that Hinshaw would react and hit him from behind, so he turned to reassure the officer that they were going to protect him.

“He was looking nervous and scared,” Lee said. “If he panicked, then there was gonna be a war out there.”

Suddenly, the protesters seemed to turn on Lee. One man who had marched with him for nearly the whole protest was surprised. Another shouted in Lee’s face: “How can you protect him!”

Lee got nervous.

Five men formed a human shield to protect Hinshaw, each a stranger to one another. Three were black, one white, one Dominican – linking arms to keep harm away from Hinshaw, a half-pakistani.

“A human was in trouble, and right is right,” said Ricky Mcclellan, a factory worker who was locked onto Lee’s left arm.

Julian De La Cruz saw the men locking arms and jumped in.

“I saw the guys link up and I saw a weak spot,” De La Cruz said, and took up a position on the end of the line.

He was nervous, scared.

“Things could’ve gotten really bad,” he said.

The scene lasted no more than two minutes.

Hinshaw’s squad arrived, and Lee escorted him back to his unit. Hinshaw thanked him.

For De La Cruz, a local businessma­n, the moment was about accountabi­lity.

“If I can hold my brothers accountabl­e, if I can march with my brothers and turn against them to say, ‘This isn’t right,’ that’s where the accountabi­lity comes in,” he said.

“In the end, that’s all that we are asking for,” said De La Cruz, whose uncle is a police officer. “What we need is for those great cops to hold their brothers and sisters accountabl­e at all times.”

As proud as De La Cruz is of that night, he shakes his head and says that this should not be an extraordin­ary event.

“This should be the norm,” he said. De La Cruz also feels that media images of violence, vandalism and looting misreprese­nt Louisville and the protest. “What happened that night with us linking arms was just one of many heroic acts that night.”

He hopes that those are the moments that define Louisville.

“That is Louisville,” De La Cruz said. “Louisville showed up that night.”

Lee agreed.

“Nobody knew anybody but we just stood up and did that,” he said. “If the officer was black we would’ve done the same thing. He’s somebody else’s son. He’s somebody else’s loved one.”

Hinshaw has reached out to the men through social media and texts. But he’s looking forward to meeting them all and thanking them in person.

George Timmering, co-owner of Bearno’s, said he’ll buy the pizza when they’re ready to meet.

“Those guys, they saved me,” Hinshaw said. “There’s no doubt about it. And I am beyond thankful. If it wasn’t for them intervenin­g and recognizin­g that I was in trouble and helping me, I am sure that I would’ve been assaulted in one form or another.”

Hinshaw continues to be moved by the moment.

“I’ve cried over that incident,” he said. “It was a moment where strangers came together to help another stranger, and that stranger was me.”

 ?? MICHAEL CLEVENGER/COURIER JOURNAL ?? George Timmering, co-owner of Bearno’s, says he’ll buy the pizza when the civilians and the officer are ready to meet.
MICHAEL CLEVENGER/COURIER JOURNAL George Timmering, co-owner of Bearno’s, says he’ll buy the pizza when the civilians and the officer are ready to meet.

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