[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 139 (Monday, September 19, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5720-S5721]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SERGEANT JOE SZCZERBA
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I rise today to honor a hero. I rise to
remember the sacrifice of a man I am proud to have known. I rise to
remember SGT Joe Szczerba of the New Castle County Police who was
killed in the line of duty just this past Thursday night.
Sergeant Szczerba and several other officers responded to a
disorderly conduct call in New Castle, DE, just before midnight. The
officers arrived on the scene and set up a perimeter. Sergeant Szczerba
spotted the suspect and gave chase. A seasoned officer, Sergeant
Szczerba attempted to subdue the man, and in a very tough fight that
ensued he was stabbed.
The suspect continued to resist arrest. Although seriously wounded,
Sergeant Szczerba worked with three other officers to take the suspect
into custody. Only then did he acknowledge his injury. Officers on the
scene performed CPR until county paramedics arrived, but it was not
enough. Sergeant Szczerba did not make it.
When I was county executive for New Castle County for 6 years, after
a particularly long or difficult day, as I was heading home, I would
flip on the police scanner in my car and listen to the chatter, to the
calls from dispatch and the officers responding. I was always mindful
in those hours that here I was heading home to my family and safety and
here were our officers heading out on patrol into a dark and uncertain
night.
My phone rang at 5 a.m. this past Friday morning, and it was my
friend, Chief Mike McGowan, the county's police chief--his voice
weighted down with grief. It was the worst news I have ever received in
public life.
New Castle County had only lost one previous officer in a line-of-
duty death when CPL Paul Sweeney was in a traffic accident nearly 40
years ago in 1972, but never had an officer been murdered in the line
of duty. Each year, as county executive, when I attended our annual
police memorial, we would quietly pray that we would never know this
day.
[[Page S5721]]
Just roughly 2 weeks earlier, Delaware had marked the second
anniversary of the killing, in the line of duty, of another brave and
decorated local police officer, Patrolman Chad Spicer of Georgetown. It
was just too soon for this to have happened again. We all know there is
risk--grave risk--in policing, but this could not have happened again.
Delaware is a State of neighbors, and as a State we are still mourning
Chad's death, and we could not possibly have lost another brave police
officer. But we did. This Friday he will be laid to rest.
My State is grieving. In the days that have passed, I have grappled
with two questions. I have asked myself over and over: How is it that
people continue to do these terrible and dangerous things? How is it
that senseless violence continues to claim the lives of the innocent?
As I spoke at the graduation ceremony this past Friday for the
Delaware State Police and the Municipal Police Academy and looked at
the young men and women who were right in front of me about to take
their oath and put on their badge and take on, willingly, this most
dangerous and honored profession, another question emerged to me: Why
is it that we continue to have men and women who volunteer, who step
forward, and who take on this most important and difficult task of
preserving the peace, of protecting our communities? What more can we
do to support them, to protect them, and to honor them?
These are the questions I challenge all of us to consider.
SGT Joe Szczerba was on the New Castle County police force for 18
years. He was greatly respected by his colleagues on the force and in
the community he served. His wife Kathy; his brothers Ed, Gerald, and
Stephen; his sisters Nancy and Karen and a host of nieces and nephews
survive him.
Today, Heaven is a safer place because Joe Szczerba is on patrol. He
was a good man and a great cop, and he died a hero. He died doing what
he was called to do, and he died doing what he loved to do. For that,
all of Delaware is grateful. We will treasure his memory and honor his
sacrifice.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Coons). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
____________________