Officers are big wheels at ride-off
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Marisa O’Neil
On his first day back to work, just a month after a car knocked him
off his motorcycle, Costa Mesa Police Officer Jose Torres got right
back on the proverbial horse that threw him.
Torres and seven other Costa Mesa Police motorcycle officers
showed off their riding skills this week at the Orange County Traffic
Officers’ Assn. Police Motorcycle Training and Skills Competition in
Huntington Beach. About 40 agencies from as far away as Oakland took
part in the annual event, which brought together more than 200
officers who share a love of one of police work’s more dangerous
assignments.
“It’s amazing how it’s in the blood,” said Torres, whose shoulder
was broken in the accident. “My wife doesn’t want me to ride anymore.
But here I am.”
Another injured Costa Mesa officer, Dennis Dickens, came with his
1-year-old daughter to watch his friends ride. Dickens is still
recovering from a serious crash in June as he rode home on the San
Diego Freeway.
In that accident, another motorcyclist, who was allegedly
traveling more than 100 miles per hour, struck Dickens’ motorcycle
from behind, knocking him off. The man in that crash is awaiting
trial on drunken driving charges.
Dickens is undergoing physical therapy and is waiting for doctors
to tell him he can ride again.
“I miss this,” Dickens said as he watched the Wednesday
competition. “It’s good to get out here and smell the exhaust.”
The event serves as a fundraiser for the families of motorcycle
officers killed in the line of duty. This year, four motorcycle
officers in the state died, said Huntington Beach Police Officer
Richard Wright.
More than half of Oakland’s 25 motorcycle officers brought their
huge Harley-Davidson Road Kings down to compete and perform a team
drill in honor of fellow officer Will Seuis, Oakland officer Randy
Pope said. Seuis, 39, died in July when a truck struck his motorcycle
as he was riding home from his shift.
Wednesday’s competition included traffic cones set into a series
of courses, testing officers’ skills. Officers had to maneuver their
motorcycles around curves, weave in and out of cones and turn sharp
circles -- without knocking over any of the cones or dropping a foot
to the pavement.
Doing that kind of work in a competitive but controlled
environment helps prepare the officers to avoid accidents in the real
world, said Costa Mesa Police Chief John Hensley. Most motorcycle
officers are injured by careless drivers, not through their own
mistakes, he said.
“Believe it or not, these are the skills that keep you alive when
someone pulls in front of you,” Newport Beach Police Officer Tracy
McKenzie said. “Even if you don’t do well [in the competition], it’s
good to shake the rust off.”
McKenzie and fellow Newport Beach Police officers Brian Haas and
Dave Darling won first place overall in the BMW competition. The
competition was divided into separate categories for larger
motorcycles, like the BMWs and Harley-Davidsons and for the smaller
Kawasaki motorcycles.
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