Hey, good to see you again.
Speaker:A warm welcome back to Heroes Behind the Badge where we tell
Speaker:real stories about real cops.
Speaker:We expose the fake news about the police.
Speaker:We give you the real truth.
Speaker:This podcast is brought to you by Citizens Behind the Badge, the leading
Speaker:voice of the American people in support of the men and women of law enforcement.
Speaker:For more information about how you could get involved and add
Speaker:your voice and support to the men and women of law enforcement.
Speaker:It's Citizens Behind the Badge.org.
Speaker:Hi, I'm your host.
Speaker:I'm Dennis Collins.
Speaker:I'm a founding director of Citizens Behind the Badge and
Speaker:a proud law enforcement father.
Speaker:As always, my two colleagues join us today, Bill Erfurth, better known as
Speaker:Billy to some of his friends, and even some of it his en, some of his enemies.
Speaker:How you doing today, sir?
Speaker:I'm doing good and just wanna remind everyone to make sure that you click
Speaker:online and you like and subscribe and follow, so that when these podcasts hit
Speaker:the air, you'll be the first to know,
Speaker:that's a good point, Billy.
Speaker:What I have found is that our, there's a lot of people listening,
Speaker:but they're not subscribing or they're not following the channel,
Speaker:and they don't rate it or review it.
Speaker:So it really makes a big impact on Citizens Behind the Badge
Speaker:and Heroes Behind the Badge.
Speaker:please, when you subscribe or you.
Speaker:Or you follow, it tells the platform, Hey, this is something that people
Speaker:like, so please do us that favor.
Speaker:by the way, bill is a retired Miami-Dade police lieutenant, 26 years of decorated
Speaker:service, and he is also a founding director of Citizens Behind the Badge.
Speaker:And now say hello to our fearless leader, Craig Floyd.
Speaker:Craig is the founder, president, and CEO of Citizens Behind the Badge.
Speaker:You probably know Craig as the founding CEO Emeritus of the
Speaker:National Law Enforcement Memorial and Police Museum in Washington, dc.
Speaker:Craig, thanks for founding this wonderful organization.
Speaker:Thanks for being here today.
Speaker:Good to see you.
Speaker:Oh, it's gonna be a great day.
Speaker:Dennis.
Speaker:as you may have noted, I have my special hat on.
Speaker:This is a police Unity tour hat that I wore proudly on
Speaker:special occasions like this.
Speaker:I also have, right behind me a, painting that was presented to me
Speaker:by the Unity Tour over the years.
Speaker:I've known our guest now, close to 30 years, and, wow.
Speaker:It's an incredible story and, I can't wait to share it with
Speaker:our listeners and our viewers.
Speaker:I agree.
Speaker:with, no further ado, let me introduce our guest.
Speaker:First of all, a little background.
Speaker:It was 1997 and Patrick Montori, a member of the Ham Park Police Department
Speaker:in New Jersey, he wanted to raise.
Speaker:Public awareness about law enforcement officers who have
Speaker:died in the line of duty.
Speaker:He created the Police Unity tour.
Speaker:His idea was simple.
Speaker:Organize a bicycle ride from New Jersey to Washington, DC the Law
Speaker:Enforcement Officer Memorial to ensure that officers who have died in the
Speaker:line of duty are never forgotten.
Speaker:They ride for those who died the original tour.
Speaker:18 writers.
Speaker:Today coming up in, in, in police week, May, 2025, there'll be over 2000
Speaker:writers who ride to remember the fallen.
Speaker:when the writers get to the memorial, they're greeted by
Speaker:friends, family, and survivors.
Speaker:That, they fundraise throughout the year for the Unity Tour and it's
Speaker:ultimately donated to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.
Speaker:Pat retired in 2015 as Chief of Police of the Florham, community, but he
Speaker:continues to lead the Police Unity tour.
Speaker:Pat, a warm welcome to Heroes Behind the Badge.
Speaker:A thank you for all you have done.
Speaker:To support law enforcement.
Speaker:A quick personal note, there's nothing more thrilling on the day
Speaker:that the police unity writers arrive at the memorial site in Washington,
Speaker:DC to see thousands and thousands of people riding into the memorial site.
Speaker:I've seen it number of times.
Speaker:It never, ever ceases to give me chills.
Speaker:So again, thank you for all you're you do, and welcome to Heroes Behind the Badge.
Speaker:it's, such an honor to be surrounded towards, gentlemen like yourselves
Speaker:as well as a very close friend, Craig Floyd, for many years.
Speaker:as he said, we've been, together for over 30 years now.
Speaker:and it's been such an honor and such a journey to make sure that we
Speaker:remember our fallen, but not just remember some, remember 'em all
Speaker:from the memorial to our museum.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:Craig and Billy have a bunch of questions they'd like to ask you.
Speaker:I'll turn it over to Craig and fire away, Craig.
Speaker:For starters, I just wanted to show a plaque that I cherish.
Speaker:I have a few plaques, here in my collection, but none
Speaker:more important than this.
Speaker:This, designated me back in 2004.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:We're getting old.
Speaker:as a life member.
Speaker:I. Of the Police Unity Tour and I, display this very proudly and I'm proud
Speaker:to display it here for our viewers and listeners, before we talk about the
Speaker:Police Unity Tour, and I have some great stories about how it all started and how
Speaker:Pat and I got together many years ago.
Speaker:bill, I know you were curious about Pat's background and I,
Speaker:think that's a good place to start.
Speaker:Let's start there, pat.
Speaker:and, interesting thing, and, Craig certainly knows you for 30 years and you
Speaker:guys have had some very memorable times together Great, fundraising that went on.
Speaker:But let's start with things that I don't know, about you and, let's talk
Speaker:about how you got into law enforcement.
Speaker:What was your position?
Speaker:What were you doing at the time actually?
Speaker:And then how did this actually.
Speaker:Manifest itself.
Speaker:Where did the, this idea of the police Unity tour come from?
Speaker:it's funny you asked this question like this.
Speaker:I had the opportunity two Sundays ago to be in front of the Atlantic County and
Speaker:Cape May County 200 Club to be able to speak about, this particular topic, who
Speaker:I was, what motivated, the Unity tour.
Speaker:And it's pretty simple.
Speaker:I, things are, people would say not by accident.
Speaker:I've had the very.
Speaker:I've been very lucky in life to be surrounded around the
Speaker:most amazing people in my life.
Speaker:from the very beginning, I wanted to become a police officer watching my
Speaker:uncle, who was an ESS County police officer come to my house in his uniform
Speaker:to see my grandmother, who we lived with.
Speaker:we grew up in Orange, New Jersey, right in the area where it's a melting
Speaker:pot between Newark, east Orange, Irvington, the larger city areas, in
Speaker:the Essex County District of New Jersey.
Speaker:I had such an, a appeal towards law enforcement and justice from a very
Speaker:early age, wanting to be involved in it.
Speaker:Although my father was, a, auto mechanic, auto body mechanic, repairing vehicles who
Speaker:he wanted me to follow in his footsteps.
Speaker:And I kept pushing towards becoming a law enforcement officer.
Speaker:And one of the challenges that I had very early on, which was really
Speaker:important to me just to mention now, was, is that I had dyslexia.
Speaker:obviously that could be a major issue when it comes to numbers and the
Speaker:ability for you to perform your job in professional way and being concerned about
Speaker:being able to do what you need to do.
Speaker:and when, someone said you had something called dyslexia, thank God for, again,
Speaker:like I said, the people that I've been surrounded around and in my life, a
Speaker:fourth grade teacher, it helped me,
Speaker:To this very day, I, I basically owe it all to a woman by the name of Mrs.
Speaker:Cosgrove, from my school, who basically took the time to make sure she gave
Speaker:me the extra assistance and help to be a part, of the community of education
Speaker:rather than trying to fall behind.
Speaker:And from that point on, I was able to learn and be a part of something to,
Speaker:get past that disability and to see.
Speaker:Maybe in the future become somebody, like a law enforcement officer had
Speaker:the opportunity, to be involved with ESS County Public Safety.
Speaker:for a year after I graduated high school, very quickly went into law enforcement.
Speaker:my uncle from ESS County was able to help me get involved in that.
Speaker:And then very shortly thereafter, there was, politically layoffs and things coming
Speaker:up, and I, all of a sudden reality came to me thinking like, where am I gonna go?
Speaker:What am I going to do and how am I gonna get there?
Speaker:I was.
Speaker:I found Florence Park, New Jersey by mistake, and then I ended up being there.
Speaker:and then just like anything else, the people that surrounded me in that
Speaker:community was a lot different than where I grew up, where people were
Speaker:very apprehensive and cautious around certain people and issues or concerns,
Speaker:thinking that someone was always gonna do something to harm you, or
Speaker:there was always going to be a reason to make sure that you were guarded.
Speaker:I went to a community where if you're directing traffic, people
Speaker:from the community brought you out donuts and iced tea.
Speaker:and quick story to that was, is one time I'm, I just get hired.
Speaker:I graduate from the police academy.
Speaker:I'm on top of the world.
Speaker:I. I feel like this is my home.
Speaker:Amazing, wonderful people.
Speaker:You're not hearing sirens all night from like, when, where in the city
Speaker:or where you, where I previously was.
Speaker:You're, experiencing life the way you would wanna experience life in a beautiful
Speaker:community of, citizens that want to be a part of the safety and, wellbeing.
Speaker:So I'm sitting directing traffic and, Craig will remember, Ridgedale Avenue
Speaker:and Columbia Turnpike, a major county road and county roads, and I'm sitting
Speaker:there directing traffic and waving at people are beeping at you not to yell
Speaker:at you, beeping at you, to wave to you.
Speaker:Then all of a sudden this woman comes out and brings me out a little box and brings
Speaker:me a plastic container igloo container.
Speaker:And she says, here you go.
Speaker:And it's, it's 80 degrees out, maybe not too crazy.
Speaker:Then as soon as she leaves, I. Get rid of the donuts and I empty
Speaker:out the, iced tea thinking that it's, who's gonna leave that?
Speaker:I don't know this person.
Speaker:Yeah, it's tainted or something.
Speaker:And then all of a sudden when I went into work, people are asking me, Hey,
Speaker:did you get dropped off the donuts?
Speaker:And, like people were saying, that's normal behavior here.
Speaker:So I'm saying to myself, what an amazing community that opened up their arms
Speaker:and I wanted to be so a part of it.
Speaker:So at that point in time in my life, I made a big, quick decision, and that
Speaker:was to be involved in the community, to be involved in the church, to be
Speaker:involved in anything I could be involved in that community to make it my home.
Speaker:So the people there would realize I really wanted to be there.
Speaker:I really wanted to be a part of the police department.
Speaker:I wanted to make a difference.
Speaker:And along that journey, I started educating myself
Speaker:about the community I was in.
Speaker:And understanding what was going on around me.
Speaker:and I found out that we lost officers and all of a sudden, who were they?
Speaker:I remember going out, and talking to other officers on my job and
Speaker:they would bring up, I got hired right after, Robert Houtman and
Speaker:Francis Daley, Frank Daley, died.
Speaker:and I'm like, who are they?
Speaker:And, then I started, realizing that, and educating myself and trying to find more.
Speaker:About them.
Speaker:So the, answer to my background is I was very, lucky to be surrounded
Speaker:towards people who cared directly for me and were a part of my life.
Speaker:And they helped me reach my full potential.
Speaker:not only in the very beginning of my career all the way through,
Speaker:I would be remiss not to mention the people I worked with.
Speaker:I, was very lucky in life, to find, this career and I set it at my retirement.
Speaker:If Craig would remember.
Speaker:As he was there, I said I would do this career all over again for free if I
Speaker:was given the longevity and the time to do it, because my experience not every
Speaker:day was great, but most of my career, of being surrounded towards amazing
Speaker:people willing to put on a badge and a gun, and also acknowledge that they
Speaker:could not come home that night, I.
Speaker:Our, I believe, is the greatest gift that you could give to anyone or be around.
Speaker:So I, chose to put myself in that community.
Speaker:I chose to become a brother and a sister to my fellow law enforcement
Speaker:officers, not only in my agency, but all the agencies that surrounded me.
Speaker:And I really wanted to be one of those individuals making a
Speaker:difference, not only by arrests, but by community actions and involvement.
Speaker:Yeah, I was just gonna say, Bill, Bill, first of all, I don't know that
Speaker:you ever told me any stories about you getting donuts and, views from,
Speaker:your, community there in Miami-Dade.
Speaker:I think that may not have, happened down there.
Speaker:We usually would get rocked and bottled or something like
Speaker:that.
Speaker:there different kind of treats.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:now I just wanted to add to it.
Speaker:this is a, neat part of the story and it's.
Speaker:Pure coincidence.
Speaker:my wife Veronica grew up in Florham Park, New Jersey, right?
Speaker:And so I go up there every, year at Christmas, my, in-laws have since passed
Speaker:and I don't make that trip anymore, but for many years I went up there at
Speaker:Christmas and spent a week or so, and, this one year, it was 1996, December.
Speaker:And I got a call from a guy named Jerry Mantone, who was a
Speaker:lieutenant in Madison, New Jersey.
Speaker:Jerry was a good friend.
Speaker:He had helped build the National Law Enforcement Officer's
Speaker:Memorial, and I knew him well.
Speaker:So he said, Craig, there's this guy that wants to meet you and he wants
Speaker:to help, with the Memorial Fund.
Speaker:And I said, sure, let's have lunch.
Speaker:And we did.
Speaker:And it was, of course, pat Montori who walks in with Jerry.
Speaker:We had a wonderful lunch and he told me about this idea he had.
Speaker:he, appreciated the memorial so much, and what it stood for, that
Speaker:he wanted to be a part of it.
Speaker:And he said, I'd love to organize a bicycle ride down to Washington, DC ended
Speaker:at the memorial, but we'll ride 200, 300 miles from New Jersey and, we'll raise
Speaker:money and awareness about, our fallen officers and, help the Memorial Fund.
Speaker:And, I left that meeting.
Speaker:I had so many of these people that wanted to help, and it's a wonderful thing.
Speaker:Everybody loves the memorial.
Speaker:but I was a little, suspect.
Speaker:I, wasn't sure that anybody could organize a bicycle ride for 300
Speaker:miles from New Jersey to Washington.
Speaker:And I kind let it go and, figured maybe I'd never hear from Pat again.
Speaker:But sure enough, may of 1997.
Speaker:Pat comes down, to the memorial after riding 300 miles with 18 riders.
Speaker:And, that was the beginning of the Police Unity Tour in 1997.
Speaker:pat, you have a saying, you did an amazing thing organizing this
Speaker:ride, and it's grown so much.
Speaker:tell our listeners and viewers about the growth from 18 riders in 1997 to
Speaker:what the Unity Tour has become today.
Speaker:Again, it's a hard belief, hard to believe kind of story for me, no matter
Speaker:if I'm traveling somewhere along the line, somebody will say, over the past,
Speaker:29 years, Hey, I'm in the Unity tour.
Speaker:People will say, you'll meet people, and you, this is so hard to believe for me.
Speaker:That, an idea that you had actually touched people, not only in this
Speaker:country, but in multiple countries and has independent, police, unity
Speaker:tour, riots, riot in other countries.
Speaker:So when we first got there with our 18 riders, we never thought that
Speaker:this was going to be an annual event.
Speaker:By the way, I just wanna make that very clear because a lot of people on the
Speaker:first ride, I don't know if Craig will remember, they said, lose my number.
Speaker:Because basically what I did, I just, like Craig said, I had
Speaker:no idea how to run this thing.
Speaker:All I did was have heart, my head, and my will to wanna do something,
Speaker:not demonstrate, not with a sign, something silent, something beautiful,
Speaker:something amazing to remember.
Speaker:Our brothers and sisters who died.
Speaker:That's the only thing we wanted to do.
Speaker:But the problem was I went to AAA in my own community, right in Hanover Road,
Speaker:and I said, how do I get from Washington, from New Jersey to Washington, dc?
Speaker:So they gave me a trip ticket.
Speaker:So basically I looked through it a little bit and figured out
Speaker:what would be the best or ride through there, which really wasn't.
Speaker:It was a lot of hills and a lot of craziness.
Speaker:Hence when we arrived in Washington, everybody was saying two days before we
Speaker:arrived there saying, Hey, lose my number.
Speaker:this is quite difficult.
Speaker:But then when we drove past the Capitol and you took a look over your right
Speaker:shoulder and you saw that beautiful dome, and then you're just passing
Speaker:Constitution Avenue and your heart start in the race, and then you start
Speaker:going closer and closer to where we call home, which is our national law
Speaker:enforcement officer's memorial site.
Speaker:And as soon as we got to the site itself.
Speaker:it's hard to explain.
Speaker:It's almost like I'm home.
Speaker:Welcome home.
Speaker:And as Harry Phillips, our executive director says so beautifully.
Speaker:they're saying, welcome home.
Speaker:All the brothers and sisters are on that wall.
Speaker:And, our ride had a lot of tradition to It it had us educating our riders who they're
Speaker:riding for, contacting their survivors.
Speaker:Taking the bracelet that we had made up from us, made up for us to give
Speaker:to those individuals saying that they rode those 300 miles with us.
Speaker:And then we also carried a dollar, which still goes on to this very day.
Speaker:This dollar represents the token or the donation from the officer on the wall.
Speaker:We carried their, donation that, which they would've been.
Speaker:On a bicycle if they could have, but they were, because they rode alongside and
Speaker:on our heart and in our chest and in our heads and everywhere we could possibly be.
Speaker:When it was tough going up a hill when the weather was just trying, when
Speaker:your emotions got ahead of you and you felt so, overwhelmed by what you
Speaker:were trying to accomplish, and that there were so many odds in some cases
Speaker:against you, when you're not a person who rides a bicycle every single day.
Speaker:And this takes just more background.
Speaker:the Unity Tour takes all year long for that officer to be a part of it.
Speaker:They have to be educated through many meetings.
Speaker:They have to be trained.
Speaker:We have to make sure that they're safe and that they're wearing
Speaker:all the proper gear and it's not just get on a bicycle and drive.
Speaker:This organization, like I said, is surrounded towards the most amazing
Speaker:presidents of all our nine chapters, delegates representation of our ride
Speaker:marshals, our safety, our motorcycles.
Speaker:We are a city, small city going across four states in one district with
Speaker:ambulances and all different types of things that you know we need to make so
Speaker:we don't deplete the resources of our brothers and sisters along our ride.
Speaker:We mess up traffic enough.
Speaker:We wanna make sure that we don't mess up the emotion of what
Speaker:we're trying to accomplish.
Speaker:We're not trying to hang a sign on our bike saying, Hey, we're
Speaker:against one person or another.
Speaker:We're against this what someone may say.
Speaker:We're not against anything.
Speaker:All we're for is making sure we're a member of our fallen.
Speaker:And we let our citizens know that we serve them and we serve them with honor.
Speaker:And we want to make sure that they realize that we do it with dignity
Speaker:and respect and we make mistakes.
Speaker:We're human beings and that's.
Speaker:One of the reasons why I believe this grow from, it grew from 18 riders to
Speaker:2000 riders from an $18,000 donation annually to a $2.2 million donation
Speaker:annually to over $40 million total.
Speaker:For our, first that we've given to the national law
Speaker:enforcement memorial and museum.
Speaker:So did I realize that this was gonna go from 18 to 2000 riders to
Speaker:be from here to Germany, to Italy, to Israel, to other countries?
Speaker:No, but what I didn't never, what I never questioned was the honor and
Speaker:dignity of everybody that was around me, that they showed this true val honor
Speaker:and unbelievable amount of care and responsibility to be a part of the tour.
Speaker:No matter what promotion I go to for somebody or event from another agency,
Speaker:you know what they write on their resume?
Speaker:Member of the police Unity Tour member for five years, seven years.
Speaker:They don't only just say they're a member.
Speaker:Once they say they wanna let everybody know that they were member for years,
Speaker:because to get that jersey on you, you have to earn it to get that white, blue,
Speaker:and white jacket that we call our uniform.
Speaker:You have to earn it.
Speaker:You have to be a part of it.
Speaker:You have to understand we're trying to do, it's not just about riding that bicycle.
Speaker:It's about educating not only the community that's communities and states
Speaker:we go through, but educating everybody on that bicycle about their own
Speaker:agency who s suffered and sacrificed.
Speaker:Themselves for them and their community so they there can educate others so
Speaker:they're not forgotten, especially historicals as Craig did an amazing
Speaker:job for many years, making sure for those who died, not in the active
Speaker:years, but in the previous historical years, dating back to the 17 hundreds,
Speaker:those individuals are not forgotten.
Speaker:And that's a plug that I, always bring back when I speak about Craig
Speaker:was his idea to make sure that.
Speaker:Our research department was very thorough that we were the depository in the
Speaker:memorial to make sure that those names would never be forgotten and investigated.
Speaker:like I said, the Unity Tour grew from 18 to 2100, but we did it as a
Speaker:partnership, a true partnership with the memorial over the past 29, 30 years.
Speaker:pat, you,
Speaker:you guys essentially, you ride.
Speaker:For those that have died, and I'm not sure if we've hit on it yet, but it's
Speaker:my understanding, and correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't each officer carry
Speaker:something that represents who they are personally representing that has died
Speaker:in the line of duty and talk about that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:E every rider that comes on the tour, if they select a specific officer or we give
Speaker:them an officer, it'll be on a bracelet.
Speaker:And, those bracelets are engraved within with the end of watch the
Speaker:agency and the location of where they're gonna be engraved on the wall
Speaker:or were already engraved on the wall.
Speaker:And that they're all given to the officers, that, ride on the tour.
Speaker:And they are to educate themselves regarding that officer, what
Speaker:took place, the story, and to also contact if they can, their
Speaker:survivors, and if they're willing.
Speaker:To meet us when we arrive in Washington, so we could let them know how much we
Speaker:cared and respected their loved one, and that we wanna make sure that we
Speaker:let them know that they were a part of, what we're trying to accomplish.
Speaker:And that's their stories to be told, their memories to be continual, but
Speaker:their duty never to be forgotten.
Speaker:We know the, at the end of each, police week, the Memorial Fund
Speaker:staff and the museum staff.
Speaker:Go to the memorial wall where people have left mementos, thousands of them,
Speaker:the wall has literally come alive.
Speaker:I like to say during National Police Week where people remind you that these
Speaker:are more than just names and numbers.
Speaker:These are families that have been ripped apart by the loss of a loved
Speaker:one, but they're truly treasured, the memories and truly honored.
Speaker:pat, interestingly, you were talking there and I had so many
Speaker:thoughts that came to mind.
Speaker:Number one, I just wanted to make sure everybody saw a photograph of, the two
Speaker:officers that were really helpful in, getting the unity tore off the ground.
Speaker:that's Detective Frank Daley and Patrolman Robert Houtman.
Speaker:they died in 1975 in a, plane crash.
Speaker:They were on a reconnaissance mission looking for marijuana fields when
Speaker:they're playing, experienced mechanical problems, and they crashed and died.
Speaker:so those were the beginning, but, there was something else when you were talking,
Speaker:you were talking about how when you arrive at the memorial and how you've raised
Speaker:$40 million to support the Memorial Fund and, I've said to some of my closest
Speaker:friends, I've said, I. There was a survivor once who told me that, Craig,
Speaker:I'm so glad that you remain, strong.
Speaker:during our various ceremonies during National Police Week and throughout
Speaker:the year, the candlelight vigil especially, she said, if, you break
Speaker:down, we're, all gonna crumble because we're counting on you for some strength.
Speaker:And, and yet I, I tell people that the only time I've ever lost it really, and
Speaker:could not speak, because my, emotions got the best of me was, a couple
Speaker:of years when the police Unity tour arrived in Washington at the memorial
Speaker:and I watched these riders come in.
Speaker:Their knees.
Speaker:Many of them had, fallen, they were bleeding.
Speaker:they were clearly exhausted from the trip, but when they arrived at the memorial,
Speaker:it just, the looks on their faces, it, was, it just meant so much to them.
Speaker:And then you, presented me with checks for, I don't know, it
Speaker:started out with, $18,000, a thousand for each of the riders.
Speaker:And like you said, it increased every year.
Speaker:And I think the first year it got to be $600,000 a million dollars.
Speaker:I just lost it.
Speaker:I could not speak the fact that these men and women were doing so much to,
Speaker:support the memorial and it meant so much to them that it truly touched
Speaker:me and affected me in a good way.
Speaker:and I'll always, remember tho those moments.
Speaker:tell me about.
Speaker:something that, that extraordinary really happened.
Speaker:you expanded the Police Unity tour to Israel, and I happen to be on
Speaker:that first trip with you, and I think it's, continued over the years.
Speaker:help me, correct me if I'm wrong, but, it's an amazing thing that, the police in
Speaker:Israel and the police here in the United States of America have really, found a
Speaker:bond thanks to the Police Unity Tour.
Speaker:How did that come about?
Speaker:it's the most unique thing.
Speaker:we have,
Speaker:a member, Mike Sa, Fri, who, goes back and forth to Israel, is a deputy sheriff
Speaker:here in, in new, in, New Jersey with the Essex County Sheriff's Department.
Speaker:for many years he was going back and forth and, he was talking about this
Speaker:ride and he had asked for, he had, Israeli, border patrol and other police
Speaker:officers come visit him during this time.
Speaker:And they were in Washington and they saw us come in.
Speaker:They wanted to be involved.
Speaker:And then, somehow, we were able to communicate and we
Speaker:did, and they came with us.
Speaker:And it was probably around, I would say 2000 and, I don't know, 10 would
Speaker:be the first year that they came.
Speaker:And then, as they started to come, more and more, riders wanted to come, and then
Speaker:we started sending contingents over, to Israel as they were honoring our fall.
Speaker:And we wanted to honor their, fallen.
Speaker:And also they wanted to show what they did for us for nine 11.
Speaker:'cause a lot of us here in the New Jersey and New York area were rescue
Speaker:workers during nine 11 and realized they sacrificed not only of those
Speaker:who died on that very tragic day, but those who suffer illnesses thereafter
Speaker:and continue to be put on the wall.
Speaker:So they wanted to, and of their own money, they over a couple million dollars, made
Speaker:a monument and a memorial in Israel.
Speaker:for our nine 11, rescue workers as well as those for the future names to go on.
Speaker:It was very unique that year.
Speaker:If I may say something personal, Craig was on the, our first inaugural ride.
Speaker:It was so important for us to go over because we were gonna, for the first
Speaker:time, be on the soil in Israel and ride our bicycles for those who died,
Speaker:whether it was the police or the IDF or the military, or border patrol, whoever
Speaker:it was in Israel, we wanted to do the same that they've been doing for us for
Speaker:many, years By coming to our country and honoring our fallen, we wanted to
Speaker:reciprocate and do something beautiful.
Speaker:And we did.
Speaker:So we traveled out there in 2015, the year that I was retiring.
Speaker:during that period of time, we scheduled a bicycle ride and also many
Speaker:types of, events that were gonna be going on during a period of 10 days.
Speaker:during that timeframe, I suffered a massive heart attack and almost
Speaker:died in the desert of o Faki.
Speaker:I was saved by the gentleman by the name of Igal Lutz, and
Speaker:Igal came with us from the very beginning and happened to be there.
Speaker:And if I, if he didn't carry me out of the desert and get me into a Humvee and
Speaker:get me to a hospital, I probably wouldn't be sitting on this podcast with you.
Speaker:Amazing gentleman.
Speaker:Being able to talk about the wonderful things the police Unity tour does and
Speaker:what the memorial means to us all.
Speaker:He gave me a second chance.
Speaker:I changed my whole life.
Speaker:After that, I became more.
Speaker:Responsive to the little things and realizing that, I could
Speaker:do more and why am I here?
Speaker:And I was so thankful for that opportunity.
Speaker:So when I said nothing's ever by accident in life, nothing is, the
Speaker:growth of this organization, us going to, Israel or other countries,
Speaker:England, who has their own ride.
Speaker:More so in, a personal aspect where I fell in of Faki was about 8.5
Speaker:kilometers from where Jesus was born.
Speaker:I was next to the only tree that I, the only way I could describe where I fell.
Speaker:We were riding bicycles in the desert that everybody thinks like this soft dust.
Speaker:It's not soft dust.
Speaker:It's like rock hard.
Speaker:It, it's not you can't jump out of a plane like you see on TV and,
Speaker:fall into the sand and be okay.
Speaker:you fall into that, you're, it's like falling on concrete.
Speaker:So when I had my heart attack, I rolled on my side and I'm looking
Speaker:to the left northeast of me, and I'm looking up and I see this tree.
Speaker:It's deformed, like.
Speaker:Making a right hand turn.
Speaker:I don't know what it was, but it was going, growing, maybe only 10 feet tall.
Speaker:And it was the same tree that the thorns that were in Jesus' head,
Speaker:and that's the tree that when I came back to show my wife where I fell and
Speaker:being thankful that I am alive in 21 and 2021, I buried a heart next to
Speaker:that tree explaining why I couldn't bury it because it was concrete sand.
Speaker:So I put stones over it and he all asked me.
Speaker:He says, what if someone takes it or picks it up or takes those stones away?
Speaker:And I says, God bless them.
Speaker:I hope they do.
Speaker:I hope they get the same gift.
Speaker:I've been given the opportunity to be around all of you and the opportunity
Speaker:to be able to have a say in the world that I believe and love so much, and
Speaker:that's the law enforcement community and the emergency services community.
Speaker:Unfortunately, let me
Speaker:add one thing to that story, pat.
Speaker:And in typical male fashion, pat was refusing medical aid that day.
Speaker:He, said he, yeah, I feel fine.
Speaker:I'll be fine, no problem.
Speaker:And, if anybody had listened to him, he wouldn't be with us here today.
Speaker:But, that, that's a typical guy's response to a pretty, crisis situation.
Speaker:and, none of us wanna admit when we have some medical issues.
Speaker:let's talk about, memorable moments, in the ride.
Speaker:you've been doing it now for, I guess this is your close to
Speaker:your 28th, 29th year of riding.
Speaker:I'll share one quick memory.
Speaker:I have, I usually ride the first 20 or 30 miles in the old days with the police
Speaker:Unity tour just to kick it off and get me pumped up for National Police Week and all
Speaker:the ceremonies that are about to occur.
Speaker:'cause it really does touch you.
Speaker:And it's right after nine 11 and, we, wanted to go to ground zero
Speaker:where, 71 officers died in the line of duty when, the terrorists
Speaker:attacked, back on nine 11 2001.
Speaker:And we, had closed off.
Speaker:I say we, the police, in, their, amazing ability closed off the Holland Tunnel.
Speaker:To get us from New Jersey into New York to ground zero.
Speaker:And there's a lot of angry motorists probably that are still angry to
Speaker:this day, but they closed it off so that hundreds of bicyclists, police
Speaker:officers, survivors of the fallen could ride their bikes into ground zero.
Speaker:And as I was entering Holland Tunnel.
Speaker:to get to ground zero, I made a typical rookie mistake and I ran
Speaker:over a grate that flattened my tire on my bike, and here I am.
Speaker:I don't know how long the Hol Holland Tunnel is, but it seemed endless.
Speaker:I'm riding my bike with a flat tire.
Speaker:I was the last to arrive at ground zero.
Speaker:But it was one of the most moving ceremonies, I've ever experienced
Speaker:to be there while they were still doing the re recovery work.
Speaker:and finding, remnants of bodies and, the smell I'll never forget.
Speaker:but we had an amazing ceremony there of remembrance.
Speaker:And Pat, I know you probably have a few memories like that stand out in
Speaker:your mind over these last 30 years.
Speaker:could you share a couple of 'em with us?
Speaker:like I said, we brought other people from other countries and,
Speaker:Craig was talking about being in New York, going through them.
Speaker:the, tunnel was probably one of the most amazing things that it's 1.5
Speaker:miles in, 1.5 miles out, three miles.
Speaker:I've had the opportunity of doing it a couple of times and even
Speaker:running through it thereafter.
Speaker:September 11th, 2001.
Speaker:But, we had ride, we had motorcycles from Italy, and,
Speaker:you know how everybody wants to,
Speaker:trade patches and trade uniform things off your uniform?
Speaker:So we are getting, close to Washington DC Somebody comes up to me and says,
Speaker:Hey, we have a little bit of a problem.
Speaker:I said, what's the problem?
Speaker:He says, the Italian officers don't have their address uniforms any longer.
Speaker:I said, what happened to them?
Speaker:And, nobody had an answer.
Speaker:of course, at the end of the day, I grabbed the motor officers and I say,
Speaker:Hey, what happened to your stuff?
Speaker:And they said, New York.
Speaker:I said, what?
Speaker:They steal it?
Speaker:They go, no, we gave it away.
Speaker:I got a patch.
Speaker:Like he got a patch.
Speaker:He gave away a $400, dress blouse for the officers on the screen here.
Speaker:You would say to yourself, you can't give that stuff away.
Speaker:I was one of them.
Speaker:They gave me one, which was nice, but you know that, that year.
Speaker:everybody was in their dress blouses, but they were wearing their blue and
Speaker:white unity tour jackets because they weren't, able to ride, with their
Speaker:uniforms on because they gave 'em away.
Speaker:And, the, things that happen on the tour or,
Speaker:every year there's something amazing that happens in my, in, my
Speaker:mind that is, is always memorable.
Speaker:flagman and the school kids.
Speaker:I, love that story.
Speaker:I.
Speaker:Say that again.
Speaker:Flagman and the school children along the way.
Speaker:to me that was one of the greatest things that these kids come out and Oh,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Scott Hague actually went to the police academy with him.
Speaker:we call him Batman.
Speaker:that's his name.
Speaker:And, and everybody calls him, the kids call him Flagman.
Speaker:He gives out 5,000 flags.
Speaker:To every kid that we, it's the most amazing thing.
Speaker:If someone would tell me that people hate police officers,
Speaker:I would tell you that's a lie.
Speaker:That's media driven.
Speaker:That's individual aspects or momentarily issues that go on around our country
Speaker:that may a law enforcement may be involved in, and it may be negative.
Speaker:When I travel through four states and one district, I watch people
Speaker:slap pots and pans together.
Speaker:This young man, Scott Hay, going from one side of the road to
Speaker:the other, giving out flags.
Speaker:High fiving children, teachers from schools that are coming out and waving.
Speaker:The most important thing for everybody to realize from this podcast, and they're
Speaker:asking me what I believe, and I believe that we are all together, the citizens,
Speaker:law enforcement, emergency responders.
Speaker:We see it when the chips are down, especially like September 11th
Speaker:or whatever goes on in our world.
Speaker:People care about us.
Speaker:However, sometimes we're all misinformed about what truly goes
Speaker:on during some of these incidences.
Speaker:That's why, they go left or people wanna make us look bad.
Speaker:So that's one of the things that I've always seen going on the ride
Speaker:that makes me feel really special.
Speaker:Makes me feel like these.
Speaker:Individual groups of people that come out, they understand who we are.
Speaker:We're going over a bridge.
Speaker:It's so beautiful.
Speaker:It looks like a sea of blue.
Speaker:And then all of a sudden at the end of the bridge, there's people there.
Speaker:How do they get there?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:They're sitting there slinging pots and pans, big four by
Speaker:eight sheets of, plywood.
Speaker:They write things on it.
Speaker:We love you, remember this?
Speaker:Or they put a, the number of where their loved one is on the wall.
Speaker:It.
Speaker:It's just the emotion that drives people through and the stories.
Speaker:There's no rank on this tour.
Speaker:You, we could have a director of the FBI or the DEA or any of the federal agencies
Speaker:or any of the local municipal county and state organ, law enforcement entities.
Speaker:There's no rank.
Speaker:You could be a one year patrolman talking to the director.
Speaker:We want that to happen.
Speaker:Like I said, it's not a demonstration.
Speaker:To me, the greatest thing is, that we are not here to hold up signs saying,
Speaker:here we are, and I, wanna say something that I don't want to be disrespectful.
Speaker:Anybody can take a check and mail it or drive it to the person they're going to
Speaker:give it to, but not everybody is going to be showing you who they really are.
Speaker:The Unity Tour shows you who law enforcement really is through
Speaker:weather, through emotion.
Speaker:Through physical duress, through just the point of where you don't know
Speaker:if you could make it or not, and you rely upon your partner to the left,
Speaker:the right, the front, and behind you.
Speaker:The miraculous things I see is that I watch a rider pointing out
Speaker:a hole, so the person behind him or in front of him doesn't go into it.
Speaker:I have someone pulling off to the side to make sure that they
Speaker:help push somebody up a hill.
Speaker:You want to succeed that has tried so hard, lost 35 pounds to be on this
Speaker:ride, to be a part of what they feel to be the greatest thing in their career.
Speaker:And that's, like I said earlier, it's on everybody's resume.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Because it's real.
Speaker:It's believable, it's honest, and it's true.
Speaker:And the greatest thing, Craig to think about it is that I have the
Speaker:opportunity to be a part of it.
Speaker:I may be the CEO and founder, but I am one spoke that creates 46
Speaker:spokes in that wheel to make it be sound appropriate, true, and right.
Speaker:I couldn't do this without the people.
Speaker:Harry Phillips, Timmy Quinn, hundreds of people.
Speaker:Gil Curtis.
Speaker:Tina and, John Ganser, hundreds of people.
Speaker:I don't want to just mention names, but I want to tell you that everybody
Speaker:I've been surrounding around myself around has been nothing but the best of
Speaker:the best in law enforcement, and being thankful to be a part of their lives to
Speaker:me is the greatest gift God could give
Speaker:me.
Speaker:So Pat, just a couple of quick follow up questions from what
Speaker:you were just describing.
Speaker:So the first one would be.
Speaker:So all these people come out and you say they're, they're banging
Speaker:the pots and pans together, and then the plywood signs and whatnot.
Speaker:Do they know you're coming because you take the exact same route
Speaker:on the same date every year?
Speaker:Number one question, is that, how they know you're coming and
Speaker:the second In some cases, yes.
Speaker:In some cases,
Speaker:yes.
Speaker:like anything else, the world has every, they're always spending money on
Speaker:road construction, so we get detoured.
Speaker:And the last minutes, we have to get permits for the streets.
Speaker:We have to make sure that there's Porter John's in the areas where we take breaks.
Speaker:And thank God for Target as a sponsor.
Speaker:We use their locations as a part of our stops, which we stop every 25 miles to
Speaker:make sure that we regroup and make sure that our riders are together and check
Speaker:out their, physical and mental status.
Speaker:yes.
Speaker:The people along the route eventually know we're coming.
Speaker:They don't know exactly.
Speaker:Sometimes, we may deviate from those tour, those, road areas depending upon,
Speaker:whether they're gonna be milling a street or they're gonna be putting in
Speaker:any type of other street work going on.
Speaker:But mostly we try to take relatively the same routes.
Speaker:we permit them out and doing when we do, so that also alerts the
Speaker:community and letting them know that we're gonna be coming through.
Speaker:And the other thing is that, like I said earlier, we try not to task
Speaker:the agencies that we go through.
Speaker:Some towns are very small popula with law enforcement,
Speaker:not like huge thousand members.
Speaker:Some of them may have only 25, 30.
Speaker:Officers, and it may only be allowed to have one when, if, when we come through
Speaker:with thousands of riders, that's wow.
Speaker:and we don't want to create a detriment.
Speaker:we coordinate with them.
Speaker:So again, by us coordinating with those smaller entities, I. Those communities
Speaker:put it out to their citizens to let them know we're coming through so that they can
Speaker:detour and have the ability to go to work.
Speaker:Because unfortunately, we've stopped weddings sometimes for a little while.
Speaker:people getting ready to go to school as teachers and sometimes these are wonderful
Speaker:notes I received there after the ride.
Speaker:And we hope that, we're able to send something back.
Speaker:And 90% of the time we're the people that we upset them in that way.
Speaker:They, at the end of whatever they write us, they always say, we
Speaker:understand what you're trying to do.
Speaker:I just wanted to be heard.
Speaker:And for those who are listening on, for this podcast, who that has been
Speaker:a part of their life, each may as we travel through their communities, I
Speaker:want to say thank you for your patience.
Speaker:And I wanna say thank you for being a part of the opportunity to see
Speaker:a ride that honors our fallen.
Speaker:And we'll never forget the 24,000 plus names that are on that wall.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:So the other part of the question here is you hit on it briefly
Speaker:about what does each rider bring.
Speaker:So is each rider responsible?
Speaker:I. For bringing in the funds, each person individually goes out and raises
Speaker:money on behalf of the whole group.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Each rider is, raises raises $2,100.
Speaker:we guarantee $1,000 to the memorial each year.
Speaker:The other is the cost to get that rider there, insurances and everything else
Speaker:to make sure that, they're safe, the food and all the things necessary.
Speaker:For, that rider to, get to Washington, DC
Speaker:we raised in the last couple of years, each year, around 2.1 million to 2.3
Speaker:million to, staying above the, north of 2 million as we've been raising
Speaker:over the last eight, nine years now.
Speaker:Amazing.
Speaker:I told you about, how it affects me when I see these checks.
Speaker:who gives you a check for over $2 million every year for the last 10 or so years?
Speaker:it's totally incredible.
Speaker:One of the things, and we'll close it out here with a couple quick questions,
Speaker:but first I want you to tell everybody, you probably got some people excited
Speaker:about maybe becoming part of the Police Unity tour, either as a writer or.
Speaker:A support crew member, but also maybe people that just wanna send a donation
Speaker:to help support such a worthy cause.
Speaker:where can they go for more information?
Speaker:I.
Speaker:Yes, we have, all different, social media, opportunities for people.
Speaker:Our, website is probably the clearest place to go to, www.PoliceUnityTour.com,
Speaker:that will direct every person to where they have to go.
Speaker:It also will give you the opportunity, they'll take a look at the other
Speaker:chapters, if that is closer in your venue.
Speaker:New Jersey, chapter one.
Speaker:maybe.
Speaker:Not able for you to make that ride there, but you wanted to go from the
Speaker:Virginia ride or, from the Philly ride, depending upon where we're coming from.
Speaker:So the best place to, to do that would be, on our website, but it'll also
Speaker:show you our other socials, whether it's YouTube, whether it's, Patreon,
Speaker:whether it happens to be all the different socials, Facebook, TikTok,
Speaker:all the different, variables for any.
Speaker:Person to take a look.
Speaker:So we make sure that we hit all the age groups from 18 all the way
Speaker:up to, retirees and thereafter.
Speaker:So we have that ability to reach that.
Speaker:and I forgot I'd be remiss to say something that really, and Craig, you
Speaker:had asked what was something wonderful on a ride that really struck you watching
Speaker:generations of law enforcement officers, my closest friend, Harry Phillips,
Speaker:watching him and his son ride up the hill.
Speaker:In New Jersey, and I had to, I could barely keep my eyes dry.
Speaker:his son became a cop.
Speaker:they're after him.
Speaker:They both were cops at the same time.
Speaker:And, to watch the generation, go from father to son and then to hear people to
Speaker:say, I have, my son and now my grandson.
Speaker:And to me, I had the opportunity of having my son before he was deployed.
Speaker:He's a Marine, and he came on the tour with us too.
Speaker:So the honor to see a generational thing, to hear the word 30
Speaker:or to hear the numbers, 29 or 30 years, something going on.
Speaker:And Craig, I gotta say to you, a long time ago we said, what makes this happen?
Speaker:And the best thing is it's believable, believability.
Speaker:I. People honor and respect things when they believe in it, and that's when we
Speaker:see what crisis does It need to be around the world for everybody to get together.
Speaker:We don't need a crisis.
Speaker:All the things that we see around us is interpretations of different media people.
Speaker:To me, I stayed focused, like I said, after 2015.
Speaker:My heart attack, I focus on not the negative.
Speaker:I focus on how to create the picture that I hope to see, am
Speaker:honored to see and desire to see.
Speaker:I.
Speaker:Hey, pat, you've done it my friend.
Speaker:This is, what an amazing, visit we've had with you.
Speaker:You've been very generous with your time and your wonderful stories,
Speaker:and, I can't thank you enough.
Speaker:I. On behalf of Heroes Behind the Badge for joining us.
Speaker:I also thank you for your service and thanks for sharing
Speaker:all your amazing stories.
Speaker:There's a quote that I'd like to close with that I remember.
Speaker:I'm not sure who said it, but I think it's appropriate to describe
Speaker:you and your organization.
Speaker:The quote goes like this, those who cannot forget are as heroic.
Speaker:As those who cannot remember, you are truly a hero behind the badge you're
Speaker:making sure that we will never forget.
Speaker:And we thank you for that.
Speaker:Thanks for being our guest.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:I appreciate that's Pat, very much appreciate,
Speaker:we appreciate you my friend.
Speaker:I gotta add one thing.
Speaker:If we didn't have Craig Floyd with his push and tenacity for
Speaker:that memorial to be a reality.
Speaker:It still wouldn't be there, Agreed.
Speaker:I'll say the memorial
Speaker:and the museum.
Speaker:Let's figure museum.
Speaker:Roger that.
Speaker:Roger that.
Speaker:But
Speaker:the biggest hurdle was that having that memorial originally, it was many
Speaker:years we had it without the museum.
Speaker:and willingly, I always say, it should have been there years ago.
Speaker:we're a living memorial.
Speaker:But I would be remiss if I didn't say that, there was a lot of
Speaker:opportunities to say we can't do it.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:but there was always the one voice that was coming from, and that was
Speaker:Craig's making sure that we did.
Speaker:So I wanna say thank you for honoring my brothers and sisters and
Speaker:thank you for being a part of our partnership and to this very day,
Speaker:what you're trying to accomplish.
Speaker:And that is to be a part of something greater than us all, and that's
Speaker:to remember respect and honor those who honor and respect us.
Speaker:So thank you.
Speaker:it couldn't be said any better, my friend.
Speaker:And, again, your words and your actions, do a lot to show us who you are and
Speaker:we appreciate you and all you do.
Speaker:My honor.
Speaker:that's gonna wind it up for this episode of Heroes Behind the Badge.
Speaker:we tell real stories about real cops.
Speaker:We expose the fake news about the police, and we give you.
Speaker:The Real Truth.
Speaker:This podcast is brought to you by Citizens Behind the Badge, the leading
Speaker:voice of the American people in support of the men and women of law enforcement.
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Speaker:their support to law enforcement Citizens Behind the Badge.org.
Speaker:That's Citizens Behind the Badge.org.
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