In honor of officer Bammer
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OUR LAGUNA
Larry Bammer measures 6 feet 3 inches, but in eyes of the Police
Department and the community, he stands much taller.
“Let all people know now and forever that Larry Bammer has earned
the highest honor the Exchange Club can bestow on a police officer,”
John Bush said at a March 12 luncheon in honor of Bammer.
Bush, who is president of the Laguna Beach Exchange Club,
presented Bammer with the national club’s Blue and Gold Award, given
to officers who are wounded in the line of duty.
Bammer, 24, was wounded Oct. 23 when he responded to a 911 call
that shots had been fired on South Coast Highway. He walked into a
hail of bullets fired by the suspect.
“We re fortunate that Larry was only wounded,” Police Chief James
Spreine said. “The suspect was killed.”
Being shot at catches your attention, Spreine said, adding an
aside to federal Judge David O. Carter, a guest speaker at the
luncheon. Both served in Vietnam.
“Your honor, you were wounded,” Spreine said. “I was wounded. And
surely [highly honored veteran] Jim Law, you were wounded. It is not
an insignificant thing.
“There is no doubt that Larry is one of Laguna’s finest.”
Spreine said Bammer is a “crime magnet,” a quality that only a few
police officers have.
“People jump in front of him and say, ‘Take me. I just committed a
crime,’” Spreine said. “Sgt. Robert Rahaeuser is another crime
magnet. You have to be careful what you do around them or you’ll end
up confessing to something.”
Bammer began serving his community while an explorer, a police
department program for young people interested in a law enforcement
career. He put himself through the Police Academy and was hired after
graduation by the Orange Police Department. He joined the Laguna
Beach department on Dec. 18, 2000.
“He had a calling to be a police officer,” Spreine said, and then
spoke directly to Bammer: “I pray to God that you continue because
you have a lot to offer the department and the community.”
John Falk, who was involved in the shootout, attended the
luncheon, along with his wife, Animal Control Officer Joy
Lingenfelder.
Police Capt. Paul Workman, Rahaeuser and officers Ben Teschner and
Ted Falencki also attended.
“I am here to support Larry,” Falencki said, representing the
Explorer program. “We have had a couple of officers like him that
started as Explorers: Lt. Mike Hall and Officer Matt August.”
Other Laguna Beach officers who started as explorers in town were
Bob August, now retired, and reserve officers Sean Prewitt and Lance
Larson.
The Laguna Beach post was chartered in the early 1970s, Hall said.
That was about the time that Judge Carter, a resident of Laguna
since 1970, was trying murder cases as a deputy district attorney.
“I was always amazed when I went to the small [law enforcement]
agencies at how good they were,” Carter said. “You really know your
community.”
But knowing your community doesn’t mean that officers can predict
what will happen when they stop a suspect, Carter said.
“Someone you stop can tell you that he or she supports you through
tax dollars -- if they say that, give them a penny -- or they could
be the most hardened member of the Mexican Mafia,” Carter said.
Bammer’s shooting in October hit close to home for Carter.
“I watched Larry grow up,” Carter said. “He is the same age as my
son.”
Carter learned of the shooting from a neighbor when he got home
that night.
“I jumped in the car and went to the Police Department and talked
to [Capt.] Danell Adams, who told me Larry had been shot but was
holding press conferences at the hospital,” Carter said.
“The amazing thing about your character,” Carter said to Bammer,”
is the first thing you were concerned about was the kids you were
[supposed] to be ministering to that night.”
Carter said the chief must be very proud of Bammer.
“Chief, you have instilled something in your officers that they
ended the incident without huge carnage,” Carter said.
The shootout took place in mid-afternoon on busy South Coast
Highway.
“We killed cars, one motor home and a motorcycle,” Spreine said.
But the only loss of life was the suspect’s, which was
regrettable, but not as bad as losing an officer, to Spreine’s way of
thinking.
“The worst thing I can think of is to tell a family that we have
lost one of our young men or women,” Spreine said. “You can’t imagine
how gratified I am that I didn’t have to tell that to the Bammer
family.”
This spring, Nancy and Jim Bammer lost their daughter, Jennifer,
in a traffic accident.
The Bammers have established a scholarship fund at Laguna Beach
High School in Jennifer’s name for a community college student, based
on need.
“My parents feel strongly that there are a lot of scholarships for
four-year colleges,” Larry Bammer said. “Both Jennifer and I went to
community colleges.”
As did their parents.
“This will make a difference to a child who wouldn’t have
otherwise been be able to go to college,” Larry’s mom, Nancy Bammer,
said. “This is such an affluent community. We forget about single
moms or less affluent families.”
The Bammers want to raise $8,000 to fund a $500-a-year
scholarship. Contributions may be made to the Laguna Beach High
School Scholarship Foundation with a memo that it is for the Jennifer
Bammer Fund.
Guests at the luncheon in Bammer’s honor included his parents, his
sister, Stefani, his godmother D’Anne LeBon and her sons, Philip,
Joey, Derek, Zack and Kenny.
Also: Duane Bickel, Joe Baker, Nancy Lindsay, John Rhodes and
Awards Luncheon committee Sandi and Hal Werthe, Katy Moss and Sande
St. John.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
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